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Authors: Mary Reed,Eric Mayer

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BOOK: Four for a Boy
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Chapter Twenty-Six

John’s unease dogged him, abating only as he neared Dominica’s house. His shadower, if there indeed was one, remained as invisible as John’s fears.

The approach to the house he sought might have been just another narrow way cutting between brick boxes, apartment buildings which housed many of the administrative ant-like army that marched into palace offices every morning only to march back out each afternoon, the problems of the empire still largely unconquered.

The mansion was an eccentric affair, a two-story hexagonal structure with a series of porches. Hardly in keeping with the practical, unimaginative personality Anna had described. On the other hand, it had almost certainly been built by Dominica’s deceased husband.

John was halfway across the courtyard when a shout sounded from behind.

“You! Stop!”

He whirled. Several men rushed at him, brandishing weapons.

Dominica’s guards.

“I am here to see your mistress,” he called out hastily, fumbling for the Gourd’s letter of introduction. Further conversation was halted by the arrival of a curtained litter borne by six sturdy servants outfitted in matching red and yellow tunics. The litter was painted red and fitted with yellow curtains. Doubtless it had been accompanied by the guards who had just challenged him.

At a muffled command from within, the bearers set the litter down gently a few paces away. One of the guards snatched the letter from John’s hand and pushed it between the curtains.

John ruefully watched the official talisman vanish inside. He wondered if the Gourd’s magick charms were more efficacious than his seal. So far, the letter of introduction, while having the power to make aristocratic lips move, could not compel them to reveal anything useful.

As he waited, he studied the garishly painted carvings on the litter. Rows of crosses ran around the top, and a large cross was affixed to the front of the litter, tilted forward, pointing the way like the prow of a ship. Upon each yellow curtain had been painted an image of Christ and beneath it a short Biblical verse in Greek.

Before John could finish reading them, there was another murmur from within the litter and the guard drew its curtain partly open.

John stooped to see into the interior. Even in the suffused golden light seeping through the curtains, the widowed Dominica was a woman of stern visage. No makeup softened her wrinkles and her gray hair had been pulled back into a tightly coiled bun.

She gave John a keen look. “If the Prefect wants me to answer your questions, I will have to do so.”

“If you would be so kind,” John responded with a bow.

The interior of the litter was half-filled with blankets and pillows. Its front wall bore a shelf holding a trio of miniature busts of aristocratic mien. John recalled hearing that Dominica had survived three husbands.

“Are you going to question me or just stand there gaping? Senator Opimius told me about your grilling his colleague Aurelius. I think he rather enjoyed the spectacle. I never thought that I would be next on the skewer, especially since Opimius tells me you have been dismissed from tutoring his daughter.”

“A regrettable matter, but I assure you—”

“I don’t take reassurance from slaves. Lady Anna also spoke to me about you. In fact, she has spoken entirely over much about you. She should keep her attention on the aristocratic suitors she insists on driving off. All this talk about her being too plain for anyone to want to marry is nonsense. There are plenty of men who prefer intelligence to beauty, and even more are attracted to wealth. After all, you can rent beauty very cheaply. No, that is just her excuse. What does she think she will do when her father’s gone without someone to look after her? She’s an intelligent young woman, certainly, but not at all worldly. To go about accompanied by only one slave! Such madness!”

“You have not encountered any problems moving around the city?”

“Problems?”

“You have not been approached?”

“What do you mean? Attacked?”

“Yes. Or followed?”

“Certainly not! Besides, as you see, I am well guarded when I venture abroad. However, I don’t believe you sought me out to inquire about my safety. Get on with it!”

John proceeded. Dominica had little to say about Hypatius, although her tone of voice indicated disdain for the departed pillar of the community. She had even less to impart about any connections existing between the dead man and the several names John mentioned, including Trenico’s.

“They may have had business dealings, I don’t know. My steward takes care of the details,” she concluded. “Naturally I look over the account books now and then. When my husband was alive, that was his task. Even so, it is not a bad plan for women to inform themselves about their husbands’ business affairs, if not about the other sort.” A wintry smile lightened her face briefly.

Then she made the sign of her religion. “Lord forgive me,” she murmured. “I have been blessed with fine and faithful husbands, left the most wealthy of women. I do my best to honor their memory and order my life as they would have done.”

“Indeed,” John said. “I had hoped that perhaps you could cast some light on this matter, particularly given your interest in the Christ adorning the Great Church.”

“Co-sponsoring it, you mean? I merely sent a certain sum to Hypatius. Many have said that the work is impious or that it is intended to celebrate the talent of the artist, not the glory of the subject. Yet our talents are granted us by the Lord. If He had not meant for Dio to display his talent, He would not have blessed him with it. If people want to complain about impiety they should be bitterly complaining about this planned marriage of Justinian’s.”

John observed that he had heard numerous comments.

“And impious it is! I am not referring to Theodora’s past, you understand. What I meant is that while Justinian is, thankfully, orthodox in his beliefs, Theodora is a monophysite. How can there possibly be any harmony in such a marriage? More importantly, it bodes ill for both sets of believers. Theodora has such influence with Justinian that their union will doubtless lead to monophysites flooding the church. Justinian can refuse her nothing. It’s well known at court. Most unnatural, I do believe, for is it not the woman’s place to serve the man?”

“Is it wise to speak out publicly against Theodora?”

Dominica sniffed disdainfully. “Do you mean is it wise for me, or for people generally? Some of my acquaintances are already afraid of Theodora. She has a long memory and recalls every slight she’s received at the hands of the aristocracy. No doubt in due course it will suit her on occasion to remember slights she has fabricated. I should however like to see her try to implicate a pious widow such as myself in plotting against the empire, or any such nonsense!”

John, thinking that Dominica would be a worthy foe for many, even Theodora, smiled politely.

“You find me comical, then?”

John said he did not.

The widow looked up at him from her nest of pillows. “You think I don’t know everything I say to you will go straight to your master? You’re nothing but a wax tablet on which I write words for your masters to read. They are much more likely to dispose of their tablet than to harm me.”

“That is probably so.”

“You’ve realized why Hypatius visited the sculpture in the church so often, haven’t you?”

John looked nonplussed and Dominica laughed. “Have you learned nothing about him? After it was installed, he spent part of every day at the church. He liked to watch people admiring his donation, you see. He would often engage them in conversation about its merits. Yes, he was a man who did a great deal of good and he liked to take his reward for it in this world. I certainly hope the Patriarch decides to permit the Christ to remain there. Whatever turns the minds of common folk toward heaven is commendable.”

John murmured agreement.

“There are those who find the admonitions on the curtains of my litter in poor taste,” Dominica went on. “But I guarantee they’re the only spiritual works many in the street will ever read. Provided they can read, that is.”

Dominica paused. John thought she’d decided her wax tablet had been filled until she leaned forward and spoke again.

“Pay attention to what I have told you, particularly about Lady Anna. Consider what a wax tablet looks like when it has been tossed into the fire.”

Chapter Twenty-Seven

“Felicitations.” The white-haired Fortunatus scarcely glanced at the now dog-eared letter of introduction presented to him.

He waved his visitor to a stool beside a long table arrayed with an impressive selection of sacred artifacts. “As you see, even one as old as I can still carry out good works, in this case polishing the monastery’s silver. Yes,” he ran on without giving John time to respond, “we must keep the silver polished and our animals penned and the floor swept clean and all in order in our corner so that chaos, not to mention the Persians, does not engulf us.”

The workshop beneath the monastery had once been a cistern and could still serve the purpose were the city to come under siege, as had happened in the past. Three rows of columns with scavenged capitals displaying a hodgepodge of styles supported a vaulted ceiling. There were other tables scattered around the huge space, which smelled of torch smoke and freshly cut wood.

Lowering himself onto the stool John found himself almost at eye level with the dark stain around the nearest column. He thought uncomfortably that a hundred years ago he would have been up to his nose in water.

He leaned forward and carefully picked up a burnished chalice, turning it this way and that to examine the bands of engraved Greek lettering around its lip and foot. His labors in the office of the Keeper of the Plate had given him some knowledge of the quality of silver. This was a particularly fine specimen. Wondering who had presented it to the monastery, he set it carefully down and broached the matter on which he had come to question the man.

Fortunatus waved the paten he was polishing at John as if shooing away a horse fly. “This is one of several beautiful pieces given to the monastery by the widow Dominica. Do you see the scene engraved upon it?”

John expressed puzzlement.

“I fear, my friend, you are not attending.” The man who had once been a very wealthy merchant now wore shapeless robes of rough, unbleached wool. His hands and face matched his clothing, almost without color, while his nose and cheeks and even his brows had begun to droop like a melting candle. His eyes, John noted, were the sharp blue of shadows on snow.

“Look,” Fortunatus went on, “is this fine work not decorated with the raising of Lazarus?”

“Yes, but what—”

“Consider this. If you had been Lazarus, dead for four days but then called back from that dark journey, would you really wish to return? After all, who knows what you might find when you arrived home. Your children running screaming at the sight of your shroud and who knows what old friend of your wife being entertained in your bed?”

John found himself debating whether the man had reached that age where he had begun wandering in places unseen by others that were nonetheless real to him.

“I have no wife,” he said carefully, “and am still alive so you will have to explain your point further, I fear.” He couldn’t help recalling the reception when he himself had arisen Lazarus-like from Justin’s dungeon.

The old man began to work his polishing cloth more vigorously. “Not one for parables? I will be plainer. When a man is dead is it fruitful to dig him up again by going about asking impertinent questions? Especially someone as respected as Hypatius?”

“Is he respected in this particular religious community?”

“Certainly. He was exceedingly generous. Ostentatiously generous, to be honest. Before I retired and entered this foundation, I knew him as a businessman first and foremost, one with whom I often crossed swords. Usually he got the better of me.”

“Could it have been financial wounds from those battles which brought you to this place?”

“No single wound, my friend. I never wanted to be a rich man. Accumulating wealth is an unpleasant task and retaining it is even worse. Yet what choice does one have? Either a man is rich or he has a foot in the gutter. It doesn’t take long after that to tumble head first into it. So I did what was necessary. You might say wealth was the cross I had to bear.”

Fortunatus sighed again. “And the worst of it was the lying. Look at this old face. White as a shade’s, and why? Because the sun never touched it through the mask I had to wear all my life. Smiling and lying to all the other masks with whom I dealt.”

“So what was it, finally, that brought you here?”

“It was when I had to ask some children playing in the street why the Forum Constantine had disappeared. It had become most annoying. I would venture out and my house would move while I was gone. I could cope with that, but when the forum picked up and wandered off just because I’d gone to the baths, well, I decided to take up the monastic life. I will be happy if I never have to go out into the streets again. Although I did have a fascinating conversation with Emperor Justin once. He was out in Forum Bovis searching for his reception hall.”

Fortunatus did not smile as he spoke, even though, John thought, he must be joking. “Perhaps it’s best to stay off the streets,” John said. “They grow more dangerous all the time. This place is a safe haven, I imagine. You have not been threatened here, have you?”

“Only by the cook’s unspiced offerings.”

John looked around the enormous underground room. “Don’t you ever wish for more comfortable surroundings?”

“At first I did. When Hypatius visited me to discuss the statue, he tried to convince me to resume my former life—at least until he found out I’d donated all my lands to the church. There was nothing left to swindle me out of even if I did reemerge into the world.” He laughed.

“You find it humorous that the man was more or less a thief?”

“Not a thief, a businessman. Besides, I can laugh because who’s sitting in a comfortable and warm place polishing silver and waiting for the evening meal and who is underground, never to taste a good roasted fowl or a cup of Falernian wine again or sample the delights of an obliging young lady? Not that I am suggesting that we sample young ladies here, you understand.”

Was the man incompetent, John wondered, or merely playing at it, turning it to his advantage? Did he know something, some shred of information, that put together with other scraps would make a collection of tesserae that would somehow assemble themselves and turn into a coherent mosaic?

“You have been living here very long?”

“A year or so. It is very different. Noisier for a start. That’s to be expected with being so close to the palace and the Great Church. The food may not be so varied or lavish as that prepared by my personal cook in the old days, but it is nourishing and there’s plenty of it. Last summer I helped with the kitchen garden. My herbs were much praised. It’s a simple life. It suits me more and more as I get older. Also, when I lose my way, there is always someone at hand to help me find my room.”

He flourished his cloth. “Yes, I’m thankful to be here. Besides, although we live behind a wall, we can scarcely avoid hearing news of the goings-on in the city. Now and then, I even learn of interesting developments concerning some of my former business acquaintances. Not all of them do well, alas.” The relish with which he made his final comment revealed his enjoyment of this sad state of affairs.

John observed that such occasional tidbits of news would certainly be of interest to one who had once fought on the fields of commerce.

“Yes.” Fortunatus’ blue eyes glittered under his bristling white brows. “It’s surprising how so often they overreach themselves or invest foolishly, even recklessly. Some are extremely clever. Take Hypatius, the dead man who so interests you. He stole a choice estate right out from under my nose a couple of years ago. Persuaded the heir to sell it to him for less than he and I had already agreed.”

John expressed his condolences.

“That wasn’t as bad as the time he publicly challenged the purity of the wine I was selling. I admit it turned out not to be the exact vintage the importer had held it out to be. It was terribly unfortunate that that particular shipment was destined for the imperial kitchens. That was just before I decided to retire and enter the monastery.”

“I suppose you don’t have much opportunity to discuss such worldly matters here.”

Fortunatus agreed dolefully that this was the case.

It was becoming obvious that the man relished such discussions and did not hesitate to use the safe shelter of the monastery to make comments he might not have dared to utter outside, especially about his former commercial enemies.

“I have heard similar tales of Hypatius’ business dealings,” John said. “Yet you joined him and Dominica in donating the sculpture despite your disputes?”

Fortunatus plied his cloth over a silver and gilt box with a lid that bore a border depicting the rout of the money changers from the Temple in Jerusalem. “I did not like the man. Neither did I dislike him. No, it was because Dominica requested it. I knew her late husband. That is to say, her last late husband.”

“An impressive woman.”

Fortunatus set the box down and John saw it was a reliquary. “Impressive. That’s the word for Dominica, yes. At any rate, she had seen the work of this immensely talented young sculptor by the name of Dio. I was happy to contribute although I paid my portion of the cost directly to Dio just in case Hypatius suddenly developed honey-covered fingers when passing along my money.”

John asked why Hypatius had become involved with the project in the first place.

“He was ever a man for public good works. An art work of that sort is bound to receive attention. Of course, everyone has been talking about it for days, although not for the reason that Hypatius anticipated. I believe also that he thought it would buy him favor in heaven. When you’ve paid half the city officials to overlook this infraction or that, you don’t hesitate to attempt to bribe the Lord, do you?”

“No doubt Hypatius has discovered if it has worked,” John said dryly. “Although it is just as well that the emperor apparently didn’t know about his bribes. I’ve heard he is inexorable when it comes to public corruption.”

“Justin doesn’t seem to be aware of what is going on in his own palace these days. If you ask me, he would be far happier polishing silver here with me. It was the nephew, Justinian, who worried Hypatius. An avaricious man, Hypatius told me. He was completely opposed to Justinian’s inheriting the throne.”

“So despite your disputes, it seems you had a number of conversations of a private nature with Hypatius?”

“Oh, it’s quite true. I used to attend dinner parties where confidences flowed freely as the wine. I could tell you statements several very prominent citizens made at such gatherings that would earn them stripes in public, if not worse. And they weren’t all about Theodora, either!”

John ignored the comment. “Would you say this discontent was organized?”

“No. I took it to be your everyday grumbling fueled by overindulgence in the grape. Bribes costing too much, taxes too high, contracts being sold on the side. However, that was a year or two ago. Often dissatisfaction takes a long time to turn into action. It wouldn’t surprise me if it did perhaps eventually come to something.”

John said nothing, allowing the flow of words to continue.

Fortunatus snapped his cloth at the air. It might have been a gesture of disdain leveled at officialdom in all its guises. “If it’s conspirators you want to talk about, interview Opimius. He seemed to know a large number of, let us say, malcontents who would just as soon Justinian did not become emperor. Why don’t you ask him about it?”

“I don’t think he would be very open with me.”

“I suppose not. Well, let me be open then. I’ve had to spend my whole life behind a mask, mouthing lies of one sort or another, but I would not honor the Lord were I to take shelter in His house and continue lying, would I? It’s been said that Justinian has purchased every senator, but it’s not so. There are those who don’t need his largesse and others who are not of the Christian persuasion, may the Lord have mercy on their souls. On the other hand, it’s true that most of the Senate wants to officially request Justin to step aside. He is only a figurehead now, or was until this mysterious illness felled his nephew, who many suspect rules from the shadows. However, there are still a number of prominent citizens who oppose Justinian becoming emperor. Hypatius was one and Opimius is another. And I should mention two of Opimius’ closest associates— landholders who fear Justinian’s predations—Trenico and Tryphon are of the same thought.”

He began to ramble about how he would advise the latter two to donate their land to the church before Justinian seized it and then retire to the monastery to help him polish silver rather than laying up further wealth.

John barely heard him. He had sought out Fortunatus, as he had Dominica, to pursue his new theory concerning Hypatius’ death: that it stemmed from the donation of the sculpture rather than from political intrigue. Instead what he had found was unexpected confirmation of a possible conspiracy against Justinian.

Worse, it was not information Justinian would wish to hear for it could certainly be twisted to prove he would have had a reason to want Hypatius dead. Not to mention several others. There were many in the city who still believed Justinian responsible for Vitalian’s death, even though the only evidence they could point to was that the death had benefited Justinian.

Beyond that, Anna’s father clearly appeared to be involved with those who were opposed to Justinian ever ruling. It was not just coincidence that he had been talking with Trenico and Tryphon at the baths. The latter had denied acquaintanceship with Opimius for good reason.

Fortunatus talked on, but said nothing more of consequence. Still chattering, he finally escorted John to the monastery gate. Outside, passersby hurried along, bent about their own business. John glanced back at the low building they had just left. He would welcome the opportunity to sink into its peace, he thought, as he stepped out into the world again.

“One thing more,” Fortunatus said as he held the gate open. “If you were thinking of interviewing Dio, there’s no point in going straight to his studio. He visits a friend here now and then so I happen to know that he won’t be back from Proconnesus until late today. He’s been out there for the past few days choosing marble for his next commission.”

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