The Gods of war e-4 Page 27
The long walk toward the throne seemed to take forever, and Julius found to his annoyance that it was raised on a stone dais so that he must look up as a petitioner to the king. He halted as two of Ptolemy's personal guard stepped across his path, blocking it with ornate staffs of gold. Julius frowned, refusing to be impressed. He thought Ptolemy regarded him with interest, though it was hard to be certain. The king wore a gold headdress and mask that obscured all but his eyes. His robes too had threads of that metal woven into them, so that he gleamed. Julius could only guess at the heat of wearing such a thing in the stifling chamber. Porphiris stepped forward.
"I present Gaius Julius Caesar," Porphiris said, his voice echoing, "consul of Roman lands, of Italy, Greece, of Cyprus and Crete, Sardinia and Sicily, of Gaul, of Spain, and of the African provinces."
"You are welcome here," Ptolemy replied and Julius hid his surprise at the soft, high-pitched tone. The voice of a young boy was hard to reconcile with the wealth and power he had seen, or with a queen renowned for her beauty and intelligence. Julius found himself hesitating. Fumes of myrrh hung in his throat, making him want to cough.
"I am grateful for the quarters provided to me, great King," Julius said after a moment.
Another man stood to one side of the golden figure and leaned down to whisper into his ear before drawing himself up. Julius glanced at him, noting the vulpine features of a true Egyptian. His eyelids were stained with some dark sheen that gave him an eerie, almost feminine beauty. There was no Greek blood in this one, Julius thought.
"I speak with Ptolemy's voice," the man said, staring into Julius's eyes. "We honor great Rome that has brought trade here for generations. We have watched her rise from simple herdsmen into the glorious strength she has today."
Julius found himself growing irritated again. He did not know whether it would be a breach of manners to address the man directly, or whether he should reply to Ptolemy himself. The king's eyes were bright with interest, but gave no clue.
"If you would speak to me, tell me your name," Julius snapped at the courtier.
A ripple of shock went around the hall and Ptolemy leaned a little closer in his seat, his interest obvious. The Egyptian was unflustered.
"My name is Panek, Consul. I speak with the voice of the king."
"Be silent then, Panek. I am not here to speak with you," Julius said. A babble of noise came from behind him and he heard Porphiris take a sharp breath. Julius ignored him, facing Ptolemy.
"My people are indeed a young nation, as Alexander's was when he came here," Julius began. To his astonishment, every single head in the chamber bowed briefly at the mention of the name.
Panek spoke again before Julius could continue, "We honor the god who began this great city. His mortal flesh lies here as a mark of our love for him."
Julius let the silence stretch as he glared at Panek. The man returned his gaze with placid blankness, as if he had no memory of Julius's command. Julius shook his head to clear it of the fumes of incense. He could not seem to summon the words he had intended to say. Alexander a god?
"A Roman consul came here before me," he said. "By what right was his life taken?"
There was silence then and the gold figure of the king was as still as his statues. Panek's gaze seemed to sharpen and Julius thought he had irritated him at last.
"The petty troubles of Rome are not to be brought to Alexandria. This is the word of the king," Panek said, his voice booming around the hall. "Your armies and your wars have no place here. You have the head of your enemy as Ptolemy's gift."
Julius stared hard at Ptolemy and saw the king blink. Was he nervous? It was difficult to judge behind the heavy gold. After a moment, Julius let his anger show. "You dare to call the head of a consul of Rome a gift, Panek? Will you answer me, Majesty, or let this painted thing speak for you?"
The king shifted uncomfortably and Julius saw Panek's hand drop to Ptolemy's shoulder, as if in warning. Now all trace of calm had vanished from the oiled face. Panek spoke as if the words burned his mouth.
"The hospitality you have been offered extends for only seven days, Consul. After that, you will board your ships and leave Alexandria."
Julius ignored Panek, his eyes firmly on the gold mask. Ptolemy did not move again and after a time Julius looked away in fury. He could feel the anger of the guards around him and cared nothing for it.
"Then we have nothing more to say. Your Majesty, it has been an honor."
Julius turned away abruptly, surprising Porphiris so that he had to hurry to catch him before the far doors.
As they closed behind him, Porphiris deliberately blocked his path. "Consul, you have a talent for making enemies," he said.
Julius did not speak and after a moment Porphiris sagged under his stare.
"If the king considers you have insulted him, your men will not be allowed to live," Porphiris said. "The people will tear you apart."
Julius looked into the man's dark eyes. "Are you a eunuch, Porphiris? I have been wondering."
Porphiris moved his hands in agitation. "What? Did you not hear what I said to you?"
"I heard you, as I have heard the threats of a dozen kings in my life. What is one more, to me?"
Porphiris gaped in amazement. "King Ptolemy is a god, Consul. If he speaks your death, there is nothing in the world that will save you."
Julius seemed to consider this. "I will think on it. Now take me back to my men in that fine palace your god provided. The incense is too strong for me in here."
Porphiris bowed over his confusion.
"Yes, Consul," he said, leading the way down.
As night came, Julius paced up and down the marble floor of his quarters, brooding. The palace he had been given was larger and more spacious than any building he had ever owned in Rome, and the room where he had eaten was but one of many dozens available. Porphiris had provided slaves for his comfort, but Julius had dismissed them on his return from the king's court. He preferred the company of his own Tenth to spies and potential assassins.
He paused at an open window, looking out at the port of Alexandria and letting the breeze cool his indignation. As well as the eternal flame on Pharos, he could see thousands of lights in homes, shops, and warehouses. The docks were busy with ships and cargo and darkness had changed nothing. In another mood, he might have enjoyed the scene, but he tightened his grip on the stone sill, oblivious to its craftsmanship. He had been awed at first at the level of ornamentation in the city. His quarters were no exception and the walls around him were lined with some blue ceramic, overlaid in gold leaf. It had palled after only a short time. Perhaps because he had been so long in the field, or because his roots lay in a simpler Rome, but Julius no longer walked as if his steps could break the delicate statuary on every side. He didn't care if they fell into dust at his tread.
"I was all but dismissed, Octavian!" he said, clenching his hands behind his back. "You cannot imagine the arrogance of those courtiers in their paints and oils. A flock of pretty birds without enough wits to fill a good Roman head between them."
"What did their king say about Pompey?" Octavian asked.
He had taken a seat on a cushioned bench carved from what looked to be a single piece of black granite. He too had experienced the Egyptian welcome, with half-naked guards preventing his men from exploring the city. Domitius had managed to evade them for an hour, then been brought back like an errant child, with the guards shaking their heads in disapproval.
"The king might as well have been a mute, for all I had from him," Julius said. "From the few words I heard, I'd say he was only a boy. I never even saw his famous queen. More insults! His courtiers are the real power in this city and they have dismissed us like unwelcome tradesmen. It is insufferable! To think that this is Alexander's city and I have a chance to see it. I could have spent days in the great library alone and perhaps gone further inland to see the Nile. Rome would have waited a little longer for me to return."
"You have
what you came for, Julius. Pompey's head and ring…"
"Yes! I have that grisly remnant of a great man. His life was not theirs to take, Octavian. By the gods, it makes me furious to think of those golden-skinned eunuchs killing him."
He thought of his promise to his daughter, that he would refrain from taking Pompey's life. How would she react when she heard the news? Pompey had not died at his hand, but perhaps the manner of his passing was worse, so far from his home and people. He clenched his jaw in anger.
"They made it sound as if we would have sacked the city in our search for him, Octavian. As if we were barbarians to be placated and sent on our way with a few beads and pots! He was my enemy, but he deserved better than to be killed at the hands of those men. A consul of Rome, no less. Shall I let it pass without revenge?"
"I think you must," Octavian said, frowning to himself.
He knew Julius was capable of declaring war on the city over Pompey's death. Though the courtiers and king could not know it, almost four thousand men and horses could arrive at the port at any time. If Julius sent word back to Greece, he could order a dozen legions to march. One spark and Octavian knew he would not see Rome again for years.
"They believed they were doing your will when they gave you Pompey's head," Octavian said. "By their standards, they have treated us with courtesy. Is it an insult to be given a palace?"
He decided not to mention the humiliations the Tenth had endured from the palace guards. Julius was more protective of his beloved legion than his own life. If he heard they had been ill-treated, he would be blowing the war-horns before the sun rose.
Julius had paused to listen and in the silence Octavian could hear the tap-tap of his fingers behind his back.
"Seven days, though!" Julius snapped. "Shall I turn tail and meekly follow the orders of the gold-faced boy? That's if they were his orders at all and not just the whim of one of his controlling clique. Alexander would be appalled if he could see this city treat me in such a fashion. Did I say they revere him as a god?"
"You mentioned it," Octavian replied, though Julius did not seem to hear him. He stared in wonder as he considered the idea.
"His statue adorns the temples of their gods here, with incense and offerings. It is astonishing. Porphiris said that Ptolemy himself was divine. These are a strange people, Octavian. And why would you cut the testicles from a man? Does it make him stronger, or better able to concentrate? What benefit is there in such a practice? There were some with the king who could have been men or women, I couldn't tell. Perhaps they had been gelded. I have seen some strange things over the years-do you remember the skulls of the Suebi? Incredible."
Octavian watched Julius closely, suspecting that the tirade was finally coming to an end. He had not dared leave Julius alone in the grip of such a temper, but he could not help yawning as the night slipped by. Surely dawn could not be far off.
Domitius entered through tall bronze doors. Octavian rose as soon as he saw his friend's expression.
"Julius," Domitius said, "you should see this."
"What is it?" Julius replied.
"I'm not sure if I know," Domitius said with a grin. "There's a man the size of Ciro at the gate. He's carrying a carpet."
Julius looked blankly at him. "Is he selling it?"
"No, sir, he says it's a gift from the queen of Egypt."
Julius exchanged a glance with Octavian.
"Perhaps they want to make amends," Octavian said, shrugging.
"Send him up," Julius said.
Domitius vanished, returning with a man who loomed over the three Romans. Julius and Octavian heard his heavy step before he came through the doors, and they saw Domitius had not exaggerated. The man was tall and bearded, with powerful arms wrapped around a tube of gold cloth.
"Greetings and honor to you, Consul," the man said in flawless Latin. "I bear the gift of Cleopatra, daughter of Isis, queen of Egypt, honored wife to Ptolemy."
As he spoke the man lowered his burden to the floor with immense care. Something moved within it and Octavian whipped his sword from its sheath.
The stranger spun at the sound, his palms held up. "Please, there is no danger to you," he said.
Octavian stepped forward with his blade and the man knelt quickly, unrolling the carpet with a jerk.
A young woman tumbled out, landing catlike on her hands and knees. Julius's jaw dropped as she came to rest. A scanty patch of yellow silk covered her breasts and another wound around her waist, revealing long legs down to bare feet. Her skin was dark gold and her hair wild from her time in the carpet. Tendrils of it fell forward to cover a face flushed with heat and embarrassment. It may have been Julius's imagination, but he thought he could hear her swearing softly under her breath.
As the Romans watched in astonishment, she put her lower lip half over the other and blew a tendril of hair out of her vision. Her gaze fixed on Julius as she arranged herself in a more dignified position and rose slowly.
"I am Cleopatra," she said. "I would speak with you alone, Caesar."
Julius was entranced. She had the body of a dancer, with heavy-lidded eyes and a full mouth that suggested a rare sensuality. Gold earrings gleamed and a red garnet like a drop of blood hung around her throat. She was as beautiful as he had heard.
"Leave us," Julius said, without looking at the others.
Octavian hesitated for a moment until Julius met his eyes, then he left with Domitius and the bearded servant.
Julius crossed to a table and filled a silver cup with red wine, using the action to give him time to think. She came with him and accepted the cup in both hands.
"Why did you have yourself delivered in such a fashion?" Julius asked.
She drank deeply before replying and he wondered what it had been like to be trapped in the stifling cloth of the carpet for so long.
"If I had come openly, the courtiers would have imprisoned me. I am not welcome in Alexandria, not anymore."
Her eyes never left his as she spoke, and Julius found her directness uncomfortable. He gestured to a bench and she followed him to it, drawing her legs up slowly under her.
"How can the queen be unwelcome?" Julius asked.
"Because I am at war, Caesar. My loyal warriors are at the borders of Syria, unable to enter Egypt. My life would have been worth nothing if I had come by day."
"I don't understand," Julius said.
She leaned closer to him and he could smell a rich perfume coming from her bare skin like smoke. He found himself becoming aroused by the near-naked girl and struggled not to show it.
"My brother Ptolemy is thirteen years old," she said. "Under Panek he has no say in the rule of my lands."
"Your brother?" Julius said.
She nodded. "My brother and my husband, in one." She saw his expression and laughed, a low chuckle that he enjoyed.
"It is a formal thing, Roman, to keep the bloodline pure. We were king and queen together, as my father married his own sister. When Ptolemy was of an age, I would have borne his children to rule after us."
Julius felt lost amidst these revelations. He struggled to find something to break the silence that had sprung up between them.
"You speak my language beautifully," he ventured.
She laughed again, delighting him. "My father taught it, though I am the first of his line to speak Egyptian. Would you prefer to converse in Greek? It was the language of my childhood."
"It makes me glad to hear you say it," he said earnestly. "I have admired Alexander all my life. To be here with the descendant of his general is intoxicating."
"Egypt claims me now, Caesar; runs like fire in me," she said.
Her skin was smooth copper-gold, oiled every day of her life. He knew she would be extraordinary to touch.
"But you cannot take your throne, for fear," he said softly.
Cleopatra snorted. "Not of my people. They are loyal to the goddess in me."
Julius frowned at the statement from such a youthful girl.
"I do not believe such things."
She looked at him with interest and he felt his pulses throb. "The flesh you see is nothing, Caesar. My Ka is divine within me, held until my death. You could not see it."
"Your Ka?"
"My… spirit. My soul. Like a flame in a shuttered lamp, if you wish."
Julius shook his head. Her perfume seemed to fill every breath he took, so close was he sitting to her. He had not seen her move, but the distance between them seemed to have shrunk and the room felt hot.
"You have not said why you came to me," he said.
"Is it not obvious? I have heard of you, Caesar. I have prayed to Isis to be delivered from my exile and you were sent to me. You have an army to tip the balance in the very heart of Alexandria." Her eyes pleaded.
"What of your own soldiers?" he asked.
"They are too few and spies crawl like flies around their camp. I risked death to reach you, Caesar, and I am only one." She reached out to him and touched his face with a cool hand. "I need a man of honor, Caesar. I need him desperately. You may claim not to believe, but the gods led you here for this."
Julius shook his head. "I followed Gnaeus Pompey, murdered on your own docks."
She did not look away. "And what made him come to Alexander's city? There are many ports. If you cannot believe, then give me my revenge as you take yours! The order for Pompey's death bore the name of my family, in dishonor. Panek uses the royal seal as if it were his own. Will you help me, Roman?"
Julius rose clumsily from the couch, overwhelmed by her. The idea of bringing the arrogant courtiers to their knees appealed to him. He thought of the extraordinarii and soldiers coming over from Asia Minor and wondered if they would arrive before his seven days were up.
"How many men do they have?" he said.
She smiled, unfolding her legs until her toes touched the bare marble floor.
Domitius and Octavian watched as Julius paced with new energy. He had not slept or taken time to shave, though the sun had risen over the city and the noise of trade and life came in through the high windows.
"This is not our struggle, Julius," Octavian said, worried and upset. He could see the prospect of returning to Rome dwindling before him and had conceived an instant dislike for the woman who had brought the change.