Six for Gold (20 page)

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Authors: Mary Reed & Eric Mayer

Tags: #FICTION, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: Six for Gold
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Chapter Thirty-nine

“Have more wine, Melios! You're not going to let a dead sheep cast a pall over the festivities, are you?” Zebulon gestured to Hapymen, who promptly filled the headman's cup from a blue glass jug.

Melios' gathering in honor of his esteemed visitor, John, Lord Chamberlain to Emperor Justinian, had been under way for some time. However, to judge by Melios' demeanor the departed animal might have been bleeding to death in the middle of the table. The headman, though dressed for the occasion in a voluminous toga and Egyptian wig, looked glum.

John wished he could reveal what he'd deduced, but it would have to wait a little longer.

Melios was flanked by John, Zebulon, the traveler Thorikos, and several middle-aged men in expensive garments, who had been introduced to John as wealthy local landowners. They sat at one of three tables of unmatched heights arranged to form three sides of a square.

Eye-watering smoke drifted from ill-trimmed wicks in silver lamps set around the room. Beneath the odor of cooked meats, spices, and fruit lay the less appetizing smell of too many guests dining in too small a space.

John glanced around the noisy gathering. Dedi was missing. Naturally, he would not be welcome, and neither would Scrofa the tax assessor. Apollo was not present either. Perhaps one did not invite itinerant beekeepers to formal banquets any more than one invited women.

John mentioned his surprise that Porphyrios was nowhere to be seen.

“Such stories he tells about the races in the Hippodrome,” put in Thorikos. “He could entertain us half the night.”

“He was invited but declined, excellency.” Zebulon answered for Melios, then changed the subject. “Barley beer is excellent for every day, but for celebrations we have something much better. This pomegranate wine is made on the estate. Isn't that right, Melios?”

Melios drained his cup and set it down awkwardly. It tipped over, spilling a few drops of wine and several soggy petals, an ingredient not present in John's cup.

“Aren't those lotus blossoms?” asked Thorikos. “Do they perhaps guard against headaches caused by too much wine? I've been having the most dreadful headaches.”

Zebulon placed a finger to his lips. “Be discreet, my friend. I minister to the soul, but there are times when the body must be cared for just as much. Let us not be overly critical of our host for seeking to enhance the soporific effect of what he's imbibing.”

“You may recall I had a wine-importing business,” Thorikos remarked to John. “There was never any call for Egyptian wine. Wretched stuff, generally speaking. Now I see how it can be made palatable.”

The mixture of wine and petals seemed to gradually lighten Melios' mood even if it did not make his eyelids heavier. He began to speak in slurred tones about his visit to the empire's capital and his opinions of various classical authors.

John, whose preference for less elaborate dishes gave him a distaste for the rich and over-spiced offerings at imperial banquets, enjoyed the comparatively plain fare.

Melios' guests, having already been served platters of smoked fish and lentils, followed by roasted quails garnished with fat cucumbers and chopped lettuce, had just completed consuming a concoction described to John as moon fish sauced by mulberries.

“The next dish is of particular interest to learned men such as you and I, excellency,” Melios remarked. “We are about to dine on the empire's most esteemed leeks, for as Pliny observed, the best of those are grown in Egypt.”

“You have certainly plundered heaven, earth, and the waters for your guests, Melios,” John replied.

“While it is surely but a small thing compared to the wonderful performances at even the humblest gathering at the palace, excellency, when we have finished this dish and while we enjoy more wine and some tempting dates and figs, I hope you'll find our special presentations entertaining.”

In due course, Melios gathered the attention of his guests by clapping his hands several times. “Now, my friends,” he said, when quiet had fallen, “to complete the evening I have arranged entertainment—”

He was interrupted by enthusiastic shouts of approval. When the noise had died away into the shadows in corners not fully reached by flickering lamplight, he continued with a slight smile. “As I was saying, I have arranged entertainment of a classical nature.”

An equally loud burst of groans met this announcement.

Melios ignored the interruption and pressed on. “First, let me present Thorikos, a traveler who has journeyed through great and terrible dangers, the like of which—”

“You mean he passed through Alexandria?” a man at the far end of the table shouted.

Their host flushed, straightened his wig angrily, and glared at his unruly guest. “Thorikos has graciously agreed to sing for our delectation. In honor of our guest from court, he has selected a composition by Emperor Justinian himself.”

Thorikos stood and commenced to sing “Only-Begotten Son” in a well-modulated voice. John recognized the words Peter sang while scrubbing the floor or chopping vegetables. He was surprised at the choice, since it was clearly a celebration of orthodoxy and unlikely to be well received in a land notorious for its heretical religious thinking.

No sooner had Thorikos finished and sat down again when, at a signal from Melios, one of the company left the room briefly to return with a double flute of yellow wood.

He stationed himself in the oblong space fenced in by the three tables and began to play a melancholy tune, while the rest of Melios' guests clapped slowly in time.

As the final sad notes rippled away, Melios leaned over to John and spoke in an undertone. “That was one of our traditional airs, excellency. It's the melody for an ancient hymn once sung in the temple on the Rock of the Snake, but the words have long since been forgotten. Tonight it serves as a fitting lament for my poor sheep and for my time here as headman, for as I told you I intend to make a certain announcement at the conclusion of this gathering.”

“Indeed.” John glanced at Zebulon, wondering what the cleric thought of a pagan dirge being performed immediately after an orthodox hymn.

Zebulon, however, was busy consulting his wine cup.

The flute-player was now joined by two other musicians with sistrums. They began to play a livelier melody, whose soaring notes were soon taken up and lustily sung in the language of the country. John realized it was an example of the type of song men sang while working in the fields, raising water in shadufs, or in this particular instance while harvesting crops. In this almost forgotten part of Egypt, grateful thanks were being rendered to the Nile for its annual life-giving inundations, but the song was closely akin to the songs reapers had sung in the Greek fields of John's youth.

For a short time he allowed the locked door to his past to be opened, admitting memories he had seldom examined in the years since his life had been brutally changed.

Once, in this very country, he had dreamed of returning to Greece with Cornelia, to live out his days as a farmer.

Would that ever be possible?

Perhaps not, he told himself. Fortuna decreed their destinies, and it was possible neither he nor Cornelia had been marked to till the soil.

He pulled his thoughts away from the dead past and unborn future, and back to the present.

Why, he wondered, did Melios' guests sing the praises of the Nile in a settlement nourished by the wells of an oasis?

One possible answer appeared on the heels of his thought.

A girl, clothed solely in a fishermen's net and doubtless intended to remind spectators of that very river, had appeared.

Accompanied by flute and sistrums, she performed a dance consisting mostly of languorous gestures and back bends as her audience loudly voiced its appreciation of her interpretation of the rise and fall of the Nile's life-giving waters.

“Most interesting, most interesting, Melios, although not what I would call entertainment of a classical nature,” murmured Thorikos.

At that point Hapymen made his contribution to the festivities by grasping the net and hauling the brown, writhing girl out of the room to loud, good-natured complaints from the dancer's audience and calls for her return.

The musicians resumed their seats as Melios rose unsteadily to his feet, bowed slightly in John's direction, and then addressed the gathering.

“My friends, this evening I had hoped to recite my panegyric to Emperor Justinian, of whom I was most honored to make some humble personal acquaintance during my visit to our empire's great capital, as you all know. Alas, recent events have doomed my efforts to complete it. However, I shall soon have ample time to accomplish the task. I have made an important decision which I wish to share with you—”

Realizing the headman was about to announce his flight to a monastery, John got to his feet. “My apologies, Melios, but before you make your news known, there is something I would like to say.”

Melios blinked in confusion. The firm pressure of John's hand on his shoulder convinced him to sit down.

A buzz of excited conversation broke out and John waited until the company had quieted before he began.

“I promised Melios, our most gracious host this evening, an explanation of certain rather strange events that recently took place on this estate. I'm referring to the fate of two sheep.”

With a glance down at Melios, who now looked extremely uneasy, John continued. “The first death occurred before my arrival. The second, as you are all doubtless aware, occurred last night. The unfortunate animal was confined to a closely guarded and locked barn and was, furthermore, protected with various charms and a blessing as well as a collar of certain flowers and herbs said to provide protection. Nevertheless, like the first, it was an apparent suicide, having cut its own throat. Dedi, who claims to practice magick, has taken credit for both mysterious deaths.”

An uneasy murmur rose around the tables.

John held up his hand for silence. “Melios, am I correct in saying Hapymen provided the collar?”

Melios nodded silently.

Zebulon observed pointedly it was wiser to put one's trust in heaven than in amulets or charms and here was a perfect example of misplaced faith.

“I have personally examined the dead animal,” John continued. “Dedi does not possess the powers he claims to hold. You have my word he cannot harm any of you, unless of course he attempts to sink a blade between your ribs.”

Melios gasped. “But excellency…”

“The protective garlands that Hapymen—who also assists Dedi on occasion—so handily provided for the animals had several cut bulbs of squill laced into them. You may recall telling me a preparation from the same plant, administered for your rheumatism, had blistered your skin, Melios. It did the same to my servant's hands when he mistook squill bulbs for onions and chopped some in order to cook them.”

John glanced around the room. “The sheep was encumbered with a heavy garland fastened tightly around its neck, and naturally soon experienced such intense irritation of the skin of its throat it attempted to alleviate the itching by rubbing itself on the only sharp thing available to it.”

“The sword!” Melios breathed. “Summon Hapymen here!” he shouted. “And as for—”

He was interrupted by a thunderous knocking on the house door.

Guests began to rise to their feet, hands on blades, as a terrified servant rushed into the room.

“Master, we've just received word! The tax assessor's been found drowned!”

***

“At first I mistook it for a log,” Porphyrios told John. “But there was something familiar about the shape…He was floating face down. Must have fallen in and drowned. I was about to go for help when one of the villagers came by, so I sent him to raise the alarm.”

They stood beside the ditch, staring down at the drowned man whose sightless eyes regarded the starry sky with a steady gaze. Behind them lights moved in the darkness and the low muttering of an unhappy crowd came to them on gusts of a rising wind. Melios had instructed his guards to block the road, to prevent anyone interfering with the body. The headman had chosen to keep his distance as well.

John bent down for a closer look. Scrofa had obviously been dead for more than a day.

“Scrofa wasn't a popular man, excellency,” the charioteer continued. “I fear the authorities will be bound to suspect murder, and whatever the truth of it there will be reprisals on Mehenopolis. Fortunately I'll be on my way soon.”

“You've been able to obtain what you sought?”

“A charm against curse tablets? Sadly, no. Dedi refused my request. It's probably just as well. I'm inclined to think he's not as powerful as he claims to be.”

John moved his lantern above Scrofa, illuminating first the waxen face, wet hair clinging close to the skull, then the torso, and on down across legs whose red-splotched ankles testified to the powerful grip of the charioteer who had dragged the unfortunate tax assessor ashore.

Finally John stood and looked toward the settlement. “I see Melios has obligingly sent someone to take Scrofa back.”

“He'll be more welcome there in his present state than he was when he strolled this way,” Porphyrios remarked.

The charioteer turned and saw the approaching donkey, ridden by a young servant. “Well…um…Lord Chamberlain,” Porphyrios stammered, “I'd better be off.”

“Not yet!” John grasped the man's bulging forearm. He could easily have wrenched away, but his attention was engaged by the small beast which had reached them.

“Do…do you…er…want me to assist the young man in getting the body on the…?”

“That will not be necessary, Porphyrios,” John replied quietly. “However, you will explain immediately why a charioteer is terrified of donkeys. I noticed your reluctance to approach one during the fire, and now I recall you sat at the back of the cart that brought us here from the river. It was less fear of the inhabitants of the beehives piled up behind the driver than of the donkey trotting in front. Am I not correct?”

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