‘Whatever he wants, I’ll give him. You’ll do the same, whether you have any current information or not.’
And so we continued about our work. That open permit Theophanes had pulled out with such a flourish had been a sentence of solitary confinement. The main difference between it and prison was that my place of confinement followed me about. I had Martin. I had my slaves. I had formal dealings with all those assigned to assist in our mission. I had discussions with Baruch about making money without ever making any. And that was it.
It all, even so, had its convenient side. With nothing else to distract me by day, I had no choice but to throw myself heart and soul into the work of collecting materials.
Given this kind of consolation, you can get used to most things. Day followed day, and the sun grew hotter. Our work gave shape to our lives, and Martin and I soon barely noticed the Terror around us or the almost general shunning that insulated us from it.
13
Or so it continued until one morning late in August.
I was sat in the University Library. As ever, I sat alone. One of the books Epicurus had written on the good life had finally been located among the reserve stock. I was half into it when Theophanes came into the reading room.
He was announced by the collective intake of breath and the shuffling as several people stood for their formal bows. With a benign look around him, Theophanes waved everybody back to work.
‘I came as soon as I heard the terrible news,’ he said. ‘No, my dear friend, please do not trouble yourself with rising in my presence. This is an informal visit.’ He sat down at my reading table. The cane chair bowed under his weight, but held.
I looked at him and thought hard. My favourite writer on his favourite theme had taken me clean out of Constantinople. Had Antioch declared for Heraclius?
‘Oh,’ I said eventually, pulling myself back into the present, ‘you mean the roof tiles. That could have been nasty. But I knew that warning slide overhead well enough to get away in plenty of time. Shame about the old woman, though.’
‘Alaric,’ he said with slow deliberation, ‘whatever may be the case in Rome, roofs here in Constantinople do not shed their tiles on passers-by. I am informed that every pin had been removed.’
‘Oh!’ I said again. I tried to add something to break the resulting silence, but nothing came.
‘What can you tell me about the man who engaged you in conversation at that very point in the street?’ Theophanes asked.
‘Not much,’ I said. ‘He was in early middle age. He might have been balding – though the hood made that hard to tell. He was well-spoken, but I think his accent was from the East. He wanted me to interpret a new law set up on the wall.’
‘And you think nothing out of the ordinary that a stranger should stop you and ask for a Latin translation?’
‘Not at all,’ I replied. ‘Latin may be the official language of the Empire, but it’s gone decidedly out of fashion in the Imperial capital. I often wonder why you don’t just publish everything in Greek and have done with it.’
In support, I looked down at the uncluttered areas of my table. Generations of students had worn it to a dull gloss. What were obviously the older comments carved into the wood were all in Latin. The more recent ones were invariably in Greek. You could write a book about change in the City on the basis of that table. But I won’t.
Theophanes gave a mirthless smile. He turned to Alypius – as ever by his side – and spoke rapidly in a guttural language I’d never before heard. With a curt answer in the same tongue, Alypius was off. Theophanes turned back to me, now with one of his most charming smiles.
Of course, I’d been suspicious at the time. That stranger had jumped back before the noise overhead, and had been off very sharp. But whatever Theophanes might care to say, roofs did give way, even in the City.
So, at least, I tried forcing myself to believe. A murder attempt in Rome was one matter. I was at home. I had friends. I understood my surroundings. I was in control of my life. If someone tried to end that life, I knew exactly how to respond. In the street, I could carry weapons. My home was fortified.
Murder attempts in Constantinople were different. They rubbed in just how dependent I was on one man whose interests were as beyond calculation now as they had been at the Senatorial Dock.
I smiled weakly back at Theophanes. I tried again to place his accent, but couldn’t. His Greek was admirable. For all his courtliness, he always avoided the diffuse pomposity of the educated. But I’d never imagined he might be a native speaker. He didn’t sound Syrian or Egyptian, but was undoubtedly from the East.
‘Your stay in the city’, he said with an abrupt return to a ceremonious manner, ‘has been prolonged somewhat beyond our expectations. While your presence is a source of infinite pleasure to us all, and to me in particular, I have for some while now been looking forward to discussing when and how you intend to go back to Rome. A sea journey might present certain difficulties at the moment. But an armed guard along the whole length of the Egnatian Way is yours for the asking.
‘We could get you to Ravenna within twenty days. His Excellency the Dispensator could then use his known relationship with the Lombards to ensure a safe journey from there to Rome.’
‘Look, Theophanes,’ I said, growing impatient, ‘it was you and the Dispensator who arranged for my visit. I have every personal need to be out of here by the middle of September at the very latest. If I could go tomorrow, I’d run to the Legation now and pack. It’s hardly my fault if every post from Rome brings letters of further instruction.’
I looked over at the most recent. Martin had wept with horror when it was opened. The Dispensator’s requirements seemed to expand every time he took up a pen. From a straightforward collection of materials against the Arian heresy, I was being pushed into a general defence of Orthodoxy. Was he storing up favours from every Church in the West? I was beginning to wonder.
Theophanes ignored the letter. Why not, after all? He’d probably seen it well before it got anywhere near the Legation.
‘What is the book you are reading at the moment?’ he asked.
‘It is a work of technical philosophy from before the Triumph of the Faith,’ I answered cautiously. ‘Such works are often useful for the light they shed on the terminology of the Fathers.’
Theophanes gave a brief upside-down glance at the unrolled part of the papyrus. He sighed.
‘I am aware, my young Alaric, that you and Martin are a pair of the most wondrously fast scholars. I have been informed of the packets and whole boxes of copies of translations and of original commentaries and glosses you are sending with every post back to His Excellency in Rome. Your diligence, indeed, is the talk of Constantinople.
‘My correspondence with His Excellency, however, did not assume such productivity or such prolongation of stay. You are an honoured guest of the Great Augustus himself. It is my duty to see that your stay is without mishap. But half of every day in this place and only half in the Patriarchal Library may not be the full straining of effort needed to get you home for the birth of your child.’
I was sufficiently used to Theophanes by now not to stare at this latest revealing of knowledge.
‘I am aware, Your Magnificence,’ I said as smoothly as I could, ‘that His Excellency the Permanent Legate is displeased at my presence, and that his displeasure is not wholly to your advantage.’
Theophanes frowned. He looked about at the hushed, bent heads of the students. He dropped his voice, though not by much.
‘When the traitor Heraclius does finally arrive in the City,’ he said, ‘it will be minus his body, and what remains will be put on display in the Circus according to the traditional etiquette. Until then, he remains stranded in Cyprus, his forces dwindling by the day as his means fall short of his need to keep them in good spirits.