‘You owe me, Alaric,’ he said. ‘Where do you expect me to go in my condition, but home?’
‘Don’t be absurd!’ I snapped. ‘You can’t stay here.’
‘And why not?’ he asked. ‘My grandfather built this palace almost for the purpose of hiding people. There are rooms and suites of rooms you’d need an army of surveyors to find. You can get tubby Martin to look after me. You know he’ll never grass us to Heraclius.’ He slumped down in his chair and looked old. ‘Oh, go on, Alaric,’ he whined. ‘You do owe me — and you know I’ll soon be dead. Let me die in the place where I was born. You’ve taken everything from me. You’ve even taken my child. Give me back at least this much.’ He dropped the pretence of feebleness and looked steadily into my eyes. ‘I claim from you the hospitality that no barbarian can refuse and still think well of himself.’
‘And if our positions were reversed?’ I asked.
Priscus shrugged. ‘You do ask some silly questions, Alaric,’ he said. ‘If our positions were reversed, you’d already have noticed the poison in your wine and I’d be wondering how best to get rid of your body. Now, since that isn’t the case, let’s proceed to business.’ He finished his wine and raised both arms. ‘As God is my witness,’ he went on in Lombardic — the closest language he knew to my own — ‘I swear that, if you give me refuge, I will never shit on you again, but will truly and faithfully serve you as my lord.’ He put his arms down and returned to Greek. ‘Refuse my fealty and I beg you to kill me on the spot. I’d rather be dead than dragged off to another monastery.’
I looked for a while into the darkness of my wine cup. ‘You can stay the night,’ I sighed. ‘That’s the limit of what custom lets you claim. And, since you’ve mentioned young Maximin, do bear in mind the danger your presence brings on his head as well as mine.’
‘Absolutely!’ he said, almost hiding a smile of relief. He looked about the room. ‘Any drugs here you fancy sharing with me?’
The Avars left with the dawn. Once it was clear they wouldn’t be back, Heraclius had the Military Gate unbarred and rode out with the whole Imperial Guard for company. Uncomfortable on horseback, I went with him from one heap of smoking ruins to another, mostly religious houses that had ignored the general retreat of population within the cover of the land walls. I counted four dozen bodies in the ruinous streets, all of them hacked about most horribly.
Heraclius stopped his horse beside one of the few Avar bodies. This one, so far as I could tell, had drunk himself paralytic on stolen wine and not been able to resist when someone had cut his throat. ‘There will, of course, be a full inquiry,’ he cried in a voice that accused everyone about him of some dereliction. I didn’t see how that could include me. If I’d set up the Intelligence Bureau once he was Emperor, he’d long since taken it under his own control. For all he might sack and disgrace a few underlings, there really was only one person to blame for the failure of the usual warning systems. The raiding party had got itself through a hundred miles of increasing Imperial control. Why had no one reported its presence? More likely, why had no one paid attention to the reports? Already whispered voices would be asking what use there was in an Emperor who couldn’t safeguard his subjects even within sight of the capital. Forget the siege the Persians were tightening about Jerusalem — the smoke of burning monasteries that had billowed half the morning over Constantinople would normally have been enough to spark a murder plot or calls to abdicate. Because, by general agreement, Heraclius was the best Emperor we were likely to get, there would be neither. But the whispers would go on nevertheless.
Heraclius looked up from the dead barbarian. ‘Lessons will be learned,’ he cried in a firmer voice. The rest of us nodded and set up the buzz of agreement that might have greeted a plan to rebuild our forts on the Danube.
He dismounted at the smashed-in gate of the Fortified Monastery. ‘Barbarians don’t like to go inside a walled compound unless they know there is another way out,’ he said as if he’d been the first to notice what every inhabitant of the European provinces had known for two centuries. This time, we simply nodded. Undoubtedly, the Fortified Monastery had almost lived up to its name. If the gateposts hadn’t been allowed to rot through, the building could have held out. As it was, the intrusion had been brief enough to let most of the monks and inmates survive.
To the plain relief of his carrying slaves, Timothy the City Prefect got down from his chair. He waddled forward to a spot where he blocked further progress through the gateway. ‘Oh sad day, indeed!’ he cried with a melancholy wave at the remains of a monk who’d been nailed to the gate, then disembowelled. ‘But sad beyond reckoning for our young colleague, Alaric,’ he went on, coming straight to the point. He arranged his flabby face into what anyone who didn’t know him would have thought a pitying smile. ‘Is it not here that the Lord Treasurer was a regular visitor to the cell of the fallen traitor Priscus?’ He waited for a dozen disapproving faces to fix themselves on mine. ‘I am told they had quite resumed their old closeness.’ He broadened his smile. ‘Please, dearest Alaric, accept my sincerest condolences on your loss.’
I could almost feel the Emperor’s blank stare at the back of my neck. ‘We haven’t yet taken a roll call of the survivors,’ I said quickly.
Still looking at me, Timothy nodded. ‘Of course not. And was not Cousin Priscus always the survivor? Did he never tell you how he was the only man alive out of Mantella after it fell to the Slavs?’ He paused. ‘That was where he first established his reputation for selfless heroism.’ I looked briefly at the dead monk. How long had he outlived the ripping open of his belly? I wondered. A shame it hadn’t been Timothy. Not that the barbarians would have got very far with him. His weight would have pulled him off the nails and it would have defeated our own executioners to find his entrails among the fat.
Someone came forward with a list of the survivors. Heraclius blinked short-sightedly at the impression of the names on wax. ‘I want to look inside,’ he said. With odd nimbleness, Timothy bounced on to a heap of fallen brickwork and we all passed through the gate.
The Emperor grunted and waited for me to reach out a hand to help him over the charred body of another barbarian. I could see the head had been knocked in from behind. I avoided making it obvious that I knew my way through the chaotic but largely intact front offices of the monastery. We stood together in the chapel as someone went ahead into the central courtyard to get all the survivors lined up for a prostration. I helped him balance himself on a scorched chair so he could stare out unobserved at the faces of the living.
‘So Priscus is finally answering to God for his crimes,’ he said softly. I said nothing, but looked across the room at what had to be the body of the Abbot. He lay face down before the altar. Anyone who turned him over would probably find his face was an unrecognisable mass of charred meat. But I didn’t need to lift the remnants of his cloak to see the shape of his body. It was enough that I recognised the hilt of the knife that had been rammed into the right killing spot between his shoulder blades. ‘I did think of pardoning him and sending him off to lead the armies in Syria.’ He paused and began to look into my face, before his eyes darted away again. ‘But that would have upset Nicetas and the whole Church. And would it have made any difference? It was surely the Will of God that we have lost Syria.’
‘Blessed be the Name of the Lord,’ I said. It was best never to say anything more to the point when the Emperor was going into one of his sad moods. I thought about the burned-out cloakroom beside the main gate. That contained several bodies that I could hope would never be recognised.