‘So a peasant feels his lot is bettered by becoming a serf on the estate of a Dhynatoi rather than owning his own farm.’ Ostenson shook his head. ‘Then this tax gatherer is one of the bloodsuckers who are turning these soldier-farmers into slaves. No wonder the Emperor wishes to make an example of him.’
Mar grinned. In the matter of thinking like a Roman, Ostenson was a newborn. ‘The obvious deduction, which you must never make if you wish to fathom the Roman mind. It is not the Emperor but the Dhynatoi who have sent this wretch to us, bundled up with a dozen more tax officers from other districts and themes. The Dhynatoi wish to make an example of them.’
‘Why?’ Ostenson looked like a boy playing his first game of draughts with a man.
Mar’s lips contorted with sarcasm. ‘This pathetic fool officially protested that the two largest estates in his district were harbouring former peasant freeholders, now serfs on these estates, who had illegally surrendered their farms to the Dhynatoi. The local judge quickly convicted this troublemaker of fraud and extortion, and then the Dhynatoi sent him along to the Great City for Punishment, so that the message might be spread to overzealous tax officers throughout the Empire.’
Ostenson was astute enough not to have to ask why the Emperor permitted the Dhynatoi to cheat him of taxes and soldiers. Instead he raised the less obvious question. ‘I’m not certain what our interest is in serving the Dhynatoi.’
Mar nodded soberly. ‘As the thematic armies are inevitably weakened by the disappearance of the military freeholds, the Imperial Taghmata will increasingly require the support of foreign mercenaries in times of great need. And with my devotion to our Father the Emperor, and indeed to the ideals of Rome itself, I would like to see that the Roman army is served by nothing less than the finest warriors on the world-orb.’ Mar paused and flashed his perfect teeth. ‘Norsemen.’
Ostenson looked down on the quaking back of John Choniates. ‘Then there is great worth in the punishment of this doubly cursed villain. What is the disposition of his sentence, Hetairarch?’
Mar forked two fingers and pointed them to his eyes. ‘Take him to the basement of Numera Prison and blind him with irons. Then transport him to the Augusteion, chain him upside down between the pillars, and let the simple folk of the Great City show him their charity.’
Ostenson jerked the whimpering tax collector to his feet and dragged him off. This departure was immediately followed by the appearance of a decurion of the Grand Hetairia who handed Mar a rolled and sealed document. Mar looked carefully at the lead seal dangling from the cord. When he identified the author of the missive, he flipped the seal contemptuously.
Mar considered the Grand Domestic Bardas Dalassena, Commander of the Imperial Taghmata, to be, as Mar had once said, ‘a puffed-up, strutting cock who holds his position only because of the position he holds – bent over with his hands on his ankles – whenever the Dhynatoi request protection for their estates.’ The Grand Domestic had vehemently resisted Mar’s initiatives to recruit more Norsemen into the Roman army; his opposition not only reflected the traditional interests of his Dhynatoi sponsors but also his own conservative, defensively orientated approach to battle tactics. As Mar had put it, ‘Dalassena’s idea of an aggressive campaign is to bribe the opposing commander not to transgress Roman borders for a period of six months.’
Mar ripped the seal off with irritation, expecting another protest about his petitions to expand the Varangian Guard. But his face settled into intense concentration as he unrolled the document and began to read. What was this? The Grand Domestic was proposing that he and Mar put aside their animosities and join forces to counter the precipitous ascent of Mar’s fellow Tauro-Scythian, Haraldr Nordbrikt. What? Mar had been nothing less than delighted by Haraldr Sigurdarson’s success; now the fugitive princeling could not only contribute his title to Mar’s ambitions but also his fortune. And why deprive the lad of any incentive to fatten his already considerable purse? Whatever the slave earns, the master keeps. Mar shook his head. Dalassena, he told himself, is a bigger fool than I had thought.
No. No man rises to the rank of Magister without a modicum of cunning, even if he has only acquired his guile by aping the patrons whom he serves. No, Dalassena was not a complete buffoon; was he privileged to information Mar was not? Or was the intent here simply to burden Mar with suspicion? No, Dalassena was not that clever. The Grand Domestic’s concern probably could be taken on the face of it. But then who would be sponsoring Mar’s pet princeling behind his back? Not Nicephorus Argyrus; he was merely a grotesquely inflated merchant masquerading as a Dhynatoi.
Well, such speculation was at this moment pointless. Mar did not want to be like one of these so-called Hellenists at court who read the ancient Greek philosophers and postulated endlessly on ultimate causes; a Hellenist would stay rooted in the path of a runaway horse, debating over the great forces that set the event in motion, rather than just simply getting out of the way. Or better still, taking a horse staff and goading the beast back into its stable. Indeed. If the fugitive princeling was perhaps soaring too high, this would be the time to remind him of the chains that held him to earth.
Mar remained fixed in thought for some time, then took up his quill pen and dipped into the gold ink pot given to him by Romanus on the occasion of the late and emphatically unlamented Emperor’s last Easter among them. He wrote at length, checking the details carefully. Then he removed his ring, lit the red candle he had taken from his writing cabinet, and applied his personal seal to the paper. He clapped his hands with pleasure; in the Imperial Palace a bowshot was not well aimed unless it brought down two birds at once. And this single arrow might just skewer three fat, unwary fowl.
‘These are instructions for our friend on the Street of St Polyeuktos.’ Mars handed the sealed document to the waiting decurion. ‘Double his usual fee. Make certain that he understands everything. And tell him that his brother, who unfortunately has come to lodge in Numera Prison, is well cared for. We have petitioned for his release, and he may be free before he has to spend the winter there.’
The decurion bowed, turned briskly, and headed towards the palace gate. Mar Hunrodarson looked through the large, vaguely green-tinted, arched windows that illuminated his third-storey office; he had set his writing table so that he faced north. There was a uniform greyness to the view; even the great silver dome of the Church of Hagia Sophia was dulled by leaden skies that here and there dipped to earth in wispy, ashen shafts of rain. The waters of the Bosporus, sprinkled with white, resembled gouged pewter. How gentle those waves lulled next to the memories of the vast, furious northern ocean that had tested Mar as a boy and had brought him to manhood. Mar opened the doors to his colonnaded balcony and walked outside. A north wind carrying the first intimations of winter funnelled through the marble portico. Mar savoured the refreshing gust; the air seemed cleansed of the appalling fetor of the long, sweltering southern summer. What these Romans have built is magnificent, Mar told himself as he surveyed the Great City. But think how much more magnificent all this will be when it has been scoured by the tempest that rages out of the north.