Chapter 19. Syria

 

The column snaked down the winding path that descended from the plateau. The riders of the vanguard were the first to spill onto the Syrian plain, shimmering in the fierce morning sun. Apion rode near Philaretos, Gregoras, Igor, Sha and Dederic, with the emperor riding in their midst. To a man they marched in full armour. The lessons of Lykandos had been hard-learned.

‘Feel the warmth of the sun on your skin. It feels good, does it not?’ Romanus boomed, sitting proudly on his stallion and looking fresher than ever.

‘Like a salve,’ Apion forced himself to smile as he replied. For although he had slept a deep, dreamless sleep, and woken in the position he had lain down in, he still felt somewhat cobbled together. His bones ached from a light fever caused by the icy rainwater, and now the sun seemed to sear his sweat-soaked skin. Moreover, the neck of his klibanion and his scale aventail were chafing on his collarbone. And then there was the dust. The golden dust seemed to coat his skin and his throat in a matter of moments. He reached for his water skin and then hesitated, shaking his head. Not yet, he chided himself.

Then Romanus leaned in closer and dropped his voice to a whisper. ‘If it is any comfort, I also feel as if I have slept on a bed of cold rocks at the bottom of a cesspit.’ He flashed a grin. ‘But I fear the men would rather not hear this from me.’

Apion chuckled at this. Then he noticed the signophoroi lifting their banners, readying to change the column’s direction.

‘You have decided on our destination, Basileus?’ Apion asked.

‘Indeed,’ Romanus nodded, dropping his voice to a whisper. ‘We march for Hierapolis, Strategos.’

Hierapolis. Apion shivered, despite the heat. It was as if someone had touched an icy finger to his heart. He glanced back over his shoulder to see that the retinue were just out of earshot.

‘Relax, Strategos. You are the first I have spoken to of this,’ Romanus said, pointing to the signophoroi. ‘Even the banner-wielders know only our general direction. I will only announce it to all in a few days’ time, when we are closer to the city.’

Apion saw Romanus’ look darken as he said this. ‘A wise choice, Basileus.

The pair rode ahead a little so they could talk without being overheard.

Apion thought of Hierapolis. He had skirted past the city once, over a decade ago. ‘The city is well-walled, with a strong citadel at its heart. From what I hear, the wells of the settlement never run dry – only a short distance from the broad waters of the Euphrates.’

Romanus nodded. ‘Best of all,’ he glanced over his shoulder to see who was within earshot, ‘the garrison there is thought to be weak. Barely a few hundred line its walls according to reports from last year.’

Apion frowned. ‘When I see few Seljuks, I tend to worry more about those who go unseen.’

Romanus drummed his fingers on his saddle. ‘The Fatimid rebellion in the south still occupies the sultan’s main forces, and it is expected to remain this way until next spring.’

‘Then let us hope the Fatimids are dogged in their battles,’ Apion said, squinting into the strengthening sun.

They trotted on in silence for some time. In that time, the intense morning heat grew into a midday inferno. A golden heat haze blended the dust with the sky in every direction. The popping of corks and gulping of water was becoming as rhythmic as the crunch of boots on dust. Romanus sent the Oghuz and Pecheneg riders on ahead to locate fodder, water and forage.

Apion twisted in his saddle to see how the men of Chaldia were faring, a hundred feet or so back, behind the kataphractoi. He saw Sha, Blastares, Procopius and Dederic marching at the head of the ranks, their faces bathed in sweat. The sight of them fortified his resolve.

Then, as he drew his gaze round again, it snagged on something.

Just a few paces behind him, Strategos Gregoras rode slumped in his saddle, a foul look on his ruddy and sweating face as he cooked inside his armour. But he balanced something on his knuckles, rippling his fingers to move the object back and forth. The sunlight caught it.

A nomisma.

A pure-gold nomisma.

 

***

 

The nights in southern Syria at this time of year were blessedly fresh, and the clear, star-studded sky overhead made it even more so. After nearly two days of ceaseless riding, Nasir inhaled a fresh breath and then slowed his mount as he approached the Seljuk war camp. For miles, the plain was awash with yurts, wandering akhi sentries, and ghazi and ghulam riders leading their mounts to the nearby oasis to drink and eat. The men were beleaguered, their faces smoke-stained and laced with cuts. But the Fatimid rebellions were over, or so he had heard.

‘I bring news from the north,’ he called out to the sentries, who waved him inside. He dismounted and handed his reins to a stable boy, then walked through the camp, bearing in on the sultan’s yurt.

He wondered if this would be the time; the time when finally he could vanquish the past. He touched a hand to the angry welt of burns coating one side of his face, remembering how Maria had winced upon seeing him like that for the first time. Even after all these years, the Haga’s touch still wreaked havoc with his life. A growl startled him, then he realised it was his own.

Then he slowed, hearing another noise. A weak moaning. Frowning, he scanned the tents and then set eyes upon the inhuman sight in the centre of a circle of yurts. A man lay, legs splayed out on the ground, impaled through the rectum on a thick, splintered post. The man’s bloodshot eyes gazed skywards and his mouth lay agape. Every heartbeat saw him shudder and wince.

Nasir squinted, then realised he recognised the man. It was the captain who had been tasked with organising the rockfall in the mountain pass. So the man had failed Alp Arslan and this was his punishment.

He turned from the sight then composed himself as he approached Alp Arslan’s yurt. He nodded to the two dismounted ghulam who stood guard there, their flinty expressions semi-concealed behind finely polished conical helms and gilded nose guards.

‘Bey Nasir!’ they bowed in unison then stepped apart, away from the entrance. One of them fired a furtive glance at Nasir’s ruined face and his eyes sparkled with fear.

Nasir grunted, then brushed past them and into the tent.

Inside, the floor was draped with a sheet of silk and the air was thick with incense. The aged Vizier Nizam sat cross-legged near the entrance, poring over papers; city plans, taxation calculations, deeds of ownership, trade agreements and placement of warriors, warhorses, livestock and grain. This man was the operational prodigy behind Alp Arslan’s military genius.

Nizam looked up. ‘Bey Nasir? The sultan is not expecting you, is he?’

‘No, but he will be glad of my visit,’ Nasir replied.

Nizam raised his eyebrows in intrigue, then motioned to the far end of the tent where a semi-opaque veil of silk divided the space.

Nasir pushed through it, with Nizam following close behind.

There, in guttering candlelight, Alp Arslan was kneeling, dressed in a light woollen robe, his thick, dark locks loose, dangling to his shoulders like his moustache. He twisted a silver goblet in his hand, near-full with a ruby-red wine. His gaze was intense as he studied the shatranj board set up on a timber stool before him. Nasir’s top lip curled at this. The pieces on the board had not been moved since the sultan had started a game with the Haga back in Caesarea. You treat him with too much respect – you could have had him in chains in Caesarea, then peeled the skin from his body and let the dogs feast on his flesh while he breathed his last.

‘Nasir,’ Alp Arslan spoke suddenly and without surprise, not looking up from the shatranj board.

Nasir started at this. Then he felt the breath of another on his shoulder. His skin prickled with unease as he realised Alp Arslan’s rugged bodyguard, Kilic, had slipped from the shadows behind him. Nasir glanced over his shoulder and down to the big bodyguard’s boots; the dagger that had ended so many lives on the sultan’s command would doubtless be tucked in there. He had been spared such a death twice already in recent times, he thought, his mind spinning back to his allegiance with Bey Afsin and then his failure to destroy the imperial column in Lykandos. The image of the staked man outside needled at his thoughts. This was surely his last chance.

‘Sit,’ Kilic grunted, gesturing to the other side of the shatranj board.

Nasir knelt before his sultan and bowed. Nizam and Kilic looked on.

Alp Arslan’s gaze remained on his shatranj board. He lifted one pawn piece and held it over a square that would block the opposing war elephant, then shook his head and replaced the piece. At last, he looked up. ‘I told you to return home, Nasir, to spend time with your family.’ The sultan’s brow knitted. ‘You have failed me once too often and I fear you need to rest. Yet now you come to me in my war camp?’

‘I rode from my home two nights ago and have not stopped since. I have swapped mounts all along our tracks to get here with the utmost haste,’ he stopped to nod to Nizam at this – the old vizier was responsible for the network of messenger ponies dotted around the Seljuk dominion. Then he locked his gaze back onto the sultan. He thought of the messenger who had come to him two nights ago. ‘I know where they are headed. The Byzantine army march for my home as we speak. Hierapolis is their first target.’

Alp Arslan’s brow furrowed, his gaze igniting.

‘The emperor and the Haga,’ Nasir nodded, a rapacious grin forming on his ruined face. ‘They are just over two days from Hierapolis’ walls.’

Alp Arslan shot his gaze back to the shatranj board before him. ‘Then the time is upon us . . .’

‘Sultan, your armies are still recovering from the Fatimid Wars and will not be ready to march for weeks yet,’ Nizam said.

Alp Arslan flexed his fingers then balled them into fists. ‘Aye, you are right.’ Then he looked up to Kilic. ‘But that does not render us incapable. My bodyguards are still fresh, and we have allies to call upon. Ready a messenger.’

Kilic nodded and left.

Then the sultan looked to the shatranj board. ‘We have much to plan. There will be little sleep tonight. The days ahead could well scribe the destiny of our people.’ He looked up to Nasir.

‘Be ready to ride at haste once more, loyal bey. For you will be part of that destiny.’

 

***

 

The sky overhead was dark blue, and the first band of starry blackness stained the eastern horizon. Five horsemen rode at a gentle trot from a rare dip in the land that wound up from the banks of the Euphrates. Then they stopped as they neared the top where the land levelled out onto the plain. Apion, Dederic, Sha, Blastares and Procopius slid from their mounts and then flitted up the rest of the sandy incline in silence. Their faces were smeared with earth and they wore only linen tunics and boots. Apion cast a glance back over his shoulder, downhill to the north. The marching camp was out of sight, well hidden in the sunken crescent of land near the banks of the Euphrates. Even the glow of firelight was masked.

When they reached the top of the slope, Apion stopped and the four stopped with him. They crouched as they looked to the south and the Syrian plain that stretched out before them. It was arid and featureless. Apart from one thing.

Hierapolis.

Apion tucked his hair behind his ears as he studied the place. An odd shiver danced across his skin. He blinked away the feeling and focused only on what he saw before him. Torches dotted the battlements of the broad, squat and sun-bleached outer walls. A handful of akhi were posted along the battlements and atop the towers. The city inside was built on a gentle hill. Immediately inside the main gate he could see a grand mosque, cornered by four vividly tiled minarets. Adjacent to this was what looked like a palm-studded and stall-lined market square, in its last throes of activity for the day. This was surrounded by a patchwork of villas, gardens and palaces. South of the square, towards the heart of the city, was the domed rooftop of an old Roman bathhouse. This, the bulky limestone cistern and the granary opposite had a few akhi posted upon the roofs. These buildings and a maze of alleys and lanes masked what looked like a barrack complex further up the hill – a dilapidated baked red-brick structure nodding to an earlier era when the city was under Byzantine control. The barrack complex backed onto the base of a steep – almost sheer – man-made hill that formed the city’s acropolis. The acropolis was topped with a sturdy, tall and round-cornered citadel built from immense limestone blocks and topped with a crenelated roof.

‘All looks normal?’ Dederic suggested. ‘There are few spears on that wall.’

‘Aye, as normal as normal can be,’ Blastares countered, the whites of his eyes stark against his dirt-smeared features, ‘but I’ve come close to being lanced through the heart by normal. There could be a fair few scimitar-wielding whoresons cooped up in the barracks or in that citadel . . . ’ his words trailed off and he nodded to Apion’s swordbelt. ‘No offence, sir.’

Apion looked to his men. ‘I agree with Blastares – apart from the scimitar comment. The emperor feels compelled to push ever onwards. I understand his position – he needs a victorious campaign to validate his reign.’ Then he bit his lower lip and shook his head. ‘But something feels wrong about this. It feels too easy.’ Then he hesitated, doubting his own doubts for a moment. The men had only found out they were headed for Hierapolis just over a day ago. There was no way the rogue in the column could have alerted Seljuk forces in that time. Equally, he had discussed his theory about Gregoras with the emperor. I cannot denounce one of my strategoi without solid evidence. I need his men, was all Romanus had said in reply. Then let me and my men ride between you and him, Basileus, Apion had replied. The emperor had agreed to this at least. ‘Or perhaps I am looking for trouble when there is none? Either way, we cannot charge ahead, blind. We must be certain of what forces lie within those walls.’

Dederic’s eyes darted, then locked onto Apion’s. ‘A spy could infiltrate the city, sir?’ he suggested.

Sha nodded at this, slapping a mosquito from his neck. ‘That could be the perfect balance. We need to be swift in our taking of this city and sure of the forces we will face.’

‘Aye, but it will still take some time to get a man in there and then back out again . . . ’ Procopius started.

‘Then we leave him inside,’ Dederic finished for him.

All looked to the little Norman.

‘We send someone in disguised as a trader. They ascertain the true strength of the garrison. If they look susceptible to a sudden, blunt attack, then our man could signal from the walls.’ He pointed to the battlements, and the tower on the left side of the main gate – larger than all the others. ‘By noon tomorrow we could be here with the whole army, waiting on the signal; three flashes for an advance, five flashes to hold back?’

Apion looked around his men.

Sha was the first to offer his opinion. ‘It’d take a brave man to wander in there alone, but it sounds like a plan, sir.’

Apion clicked his tongue and then nodded. ‘Then I will suggest this to the emperor.’ He looked up to the sky to see that it was almost overcome with blackness. ‘Now let us return to the camp – else the men will presume we have taken leave of our senses and tried to storm the place ourselves.’

 

***

 

Laskaris always knew he had been destined for greatness. When he joined the Chaldian Thema as a skutatos, he knew he was going to be led by a fine man. Indeed, the Haga and he shared certain traits; Laskaris had been brought up by a Seljuk mother and an Armenian father, thus he could speak the Greek tongue and the Seljuk tongue interchangeably just like the strategos. Yet, after four years in the tourma led by the Malian, Sha, it had become clear that perhaps he was not destined to excel as a warrior of the ranks. He was twenty four now, and had fought in many battles. Yet he hadn’t even been promoted to the front rank and provided with the iron klibanion and helmet that distinguished the brave warriors who fought in that most perilous position. Despite this, the strategos had regularly taken the time to encourage him, telling him that he was a valued soldier, and that his time would come.

And today, it seemed, was that time. For he was to ride forth to Hierapolis and infiltrate the city dressed as a lone Seljuk trader. He had inherited his mother’s swarthy complexion and bore the jet black hair and moustache that was the common style for the Seljuks.

He checked his things once more; a water skin, a bag of orchid root, a parcel of saffron and a purse of coins minted in the eastern Seljuk heartlands. He glanced around his kontoubernion tent at that which he was to leave behind; his felt jacket, cap, spear, spathion and shield, all piled up next to his bedding. It was ironic that his rise to recognition would come without his skutatoi equipment.

He sucked in a deep breath and pushed back the tent flap. The morning sunlight blinded him for a moment and the contrast in temperature was stark. He walked through the camp. A crowd of soldiers followed him, wishing him well. They all wore anxious but excited grins. All except the ghostly white skutatos from the ranks of the Thrakesion Thema. He realised he was staring at the albino and dropped his gaze. Then he approached the Haga, who held the reins of a small, thick-necked fawn steppe pony. He was flanked by Sha and the other three tourmarchai.

Laskaris saluted to each of them. His salute to Dederic was subconsciously diluted just a fraction. Dederic had proved to be a noble warrior in his time with the Chaldian Thema and the man had a pleasant and unassuming way about him. Despite this, Laskaris could not help but feel the tendrils of jealousy coil around his heart. This westerner had shot to prominence with such apparent ease while he had languished in the ranks, undistinguished.

Perhaps that was about to change with his efforts today, he reasoned, his mood brightening.

‘Sir,’ he looked to the strategos, taking the reins of the pony, ‘I am ready.’

The strategos nodded. ‘Take great care, Laskaris, for today, the fate of your comrades lies in your hands.’ Then he stepped forward and clasped a hand to Laskaris’ bicep. ‘These are weighty expectations to place upon a man’s shoulders, but I know you have it in you. That is why I have chosen you for this task.’

Laskaris felt a few inches taller at this reassurance. He sprung into the saddle and nodded to the gathering crowd of skutatoi. The albino had disappeared, it seemed. But the others called out to him as he trotted through the camp, and more came to offer salutes and pats on the back. Hubris coursed through his veins until he left the south gate of the camp. There, the bustle fell away as he wound his way up the rise in the land. Out here the patches of greenery and the merciful breeze of the riverside fell away sharply. Out here it was scorching hot and silent. Finally the land levelled out and he came onto the vast Syrian plain. Hierapolis beckoned him.

He made his way across the featureless plain towards the city’s north gate. The walls flickered in the heat haze ahead, and then he noticed the licks of silver atop the gatehouse; akhi and their sharpened spears. His mouth was suddenly as dry as the dust around him and his bowels took to turning over with a series of groans. The cicada song seemed to grow in intensity at this moment, as if the insects were screaming at him to reconsider.

Then a distant clopping of hooves caught his attention. He shot a glance to the east. There, ambling along the east-west track about a half-mile away was a small caravan of traders. They rode from the banks of the Euphrates to the city’s east gate, their wagons pulled by Arabian horses. A contingent of men stumbled along behind them, their wrists in chains. One of the Seljuks lifted and swung something. The sharp cracking of a whip rang out and one of the shackled men stumbled as if broken by the blow. Laskaris gulped at the sight; were they slaves, being taken to market – or perhaps Byzantine captives, being taken for execution? He dropped his gaze to the ground, trying to stay his fears. Then he noticed something odd there on the dust before him.

Hoofprints. Relatively fresh. They led all the way to the north gate as if mapping out a path for him. He frowned and twisted in his saddle to locate their origin; the hoofprints weaved around his own, all the way back to the dip in the land and the sunken crescent that hid the camp. He frowned at this.

Just then, a voice split the air.

‘Who goes there?’

Laskaris spun round to the ancient-looking gatehouse. The moustachioed sentry up there was wrapped in a white linen robe and wore a red felt cap. The man leant on his spear and peered at Laskaris, brow furrowed.

Laskaris licked his lips and realised just how much dust had lined his throat in this short ride. He coughed and held up the sacks of orchid root and saffron. ‘I bring spices for the market,’ he bellowed.

The sentry eyed him, then spoke to some unseen other within the gate tower. Laskaris’ heart thundered under the silent scrutiny that ensued. He was sure the sentry could see right through his ruse, and at that moment he was also convinced he had inadvertently kept some piece of giveaway Byzantine equipment on his person.

Then the sentry shrugged. ‘Be on about your business then.’

Laskaris’ terror turned to relief for a moment, then his blood iced over once more as he passed under the shadow of the gatehouse and into the sun-bleached interior of the ancient city. The noise was in stark contrast to the arid plain outside. The hubbub of bartering and gossip echoed down the broad street that led into the palm-lined market square. Here, the babble of man was mixed with a chorus of animal noises; lowing oxen, groaning camels, the clucking and screeching of distressed chickens and the bleating of goats. Men hauled sacks of grain. Traders pulled carts, yelling to their customers. Women carried babies and led children through this throng. They seemed to be in a hurry, many packing grain and clothing in carts.

Laskaris guided his mount through the swell, trying desperately to avoid making eye contact with anyone in the sea of sweating faces all around him. It felt as if, at any moment, his veil of disguise could fall away.

He slid from his mount and led the pony along the southern and western edges of the square. He took care to shade his eyes whenever he looked around, to disguise the subject of his gaze. The squat lower city walls were indeed thinly manned with akhi in little or no armour – militia rather than battle-hardened warriors. Still, it would be no simple task for the campaign army to take these walls, he thought, noticing the pair of ballistae mounted on each of the towers and the thick and well bolstered gates. And no doubt there would be a reserve garrison, he affirmed, a number of men who could rush to strengthen the wall guard at the first call of alarm. Ascertaining their number was his next task, he realised, turning his sights uphill towards the acropolis. The old red-bricked Byzantine barrack compound at the foot of the acropolis mount was just visible through the jumble of buildings.

He led his pony along the main street, thick with people cutting across his path, barging ahead of him or coming towards him. One, an aged man with a false eye, seemed to glare at him in the way a wolf would eye a wounded deer. His step grew erratic under this perceived scrutiny. Compose yourself, he chided himself.

The broad main street tapered off after a few hundred feet as it rose up the slope towards the acropolis. Then it disintegrated into a dozen or more spidering streets and tight alleys – this was the layout of the original town. He glanced up to see which path would take him closest to the barracks; one narrow, shaded alley lined with stained, whitewashed tenements looked like the best bet. This took him past a few craggy-faced beggars and a three legged, mangy dog – even it seemed to cast him a suspicious glare.

At last, he reached the end of the alley when it joined a less claustrophobic street. The crumbling barrack compound was on the other side of this street. He pretended to fasten his belt as he scanned the few patches of shade nearby. Then his eyes locked onto one spot; an unplanned, triangular gap between the barracks and the Seljuk granary that had been built adjacent to it. The space was thick with gathered dust and tapered off at the far end where the barrack and granary walls touched. There, a pile of tumbled red bricks presented a rough set of stepping stones leading up to the top of the crenelated barrack wall.

Perfect, he thought, leading his pony across the street and into the gap.

Then a hand slapped on his shoulder.

Laskaris spun to face the pair of akhi who glowered at him. All his fears surged into his heart at once, and he barely controlled his instinctive urge to grasp for his spathion – which was back in his tent anyway. He was sure he shook visibly from the thudding of his every heartbeat. The two were dark-eyed, sallow-skinned and moustachioed. One was tall with a razor-nose and the other shorter and flat-faced. Both were finely armoured and equipped, wearing felt caps and horn klibania over pristine white, long-sleeved linen tunics. Their fingers flexed on the freshly-hewn spear shafts they carried. Laskaris’ brow knitted momentarily at the condition of their garb.

‘What are you doing?’ the tallest of the two asked him abruptly, interrupting his flicker of thought.

‘Stopping for a little shade,’ he heard himself say, wiping his sweating brow.

‘Where are you headed?’ the shorter one continued, his tone a little less terse.

‘To the spice market by the south gate,’ Laskaris heard himself say. He held up the two sacks. ‘Though when I get there I may keep some of this orchid root for myself,’ he forced a grin. ‘A mouthful of warm salep on a day like this drains the heat from you.’

The two soldiers looked to one another and a painful silence ensued. Then the tall, razor-nosed soldier nodded. ‘You’ll do us a deal, yes?’ he muttered, rummaging in his purse.

Laskaris’ lips opened and closed wordlessly.

Then the big soldier’s face cracked into a grin and he produced a silver dirham. ‘For some orchid root?’

Laskaris suppressed a gulp and nodded, taking the coin. He loosened the orchid root sack and poured a generous measure of the root into the small pouch the shorter akhi held out.

‘We will raise a toast to you when we drink, trader!’ the taller one grinned once more and then the pair turned and marched away, downhill towards the northern market square.

Laskaris watched them go. Something about them stuck in his mind. Something wasn’t quite right, but he couldn’t place his finger on exactly what. He shook the doubt from his mind and glanced around to check that nobody else was watching him.

He tethered his pony to an iron ring jutting from the granary wall, before slinking back into the shadows of the dusty, dead-end gap by the barracks. He clutched at the collapsed pile of red bricks. Some crumbled in his grasp, throwing puffs of dust into his eyes and he had to stifle a curse when this happened. But he climbed swiftly and in a few moments he was almost level with the parapet. He waited there for a heartbeat, hearing the snorting of horses inside the compound. Then, he pushed up ever so carefully. The crenelated roof of the citadel stronghold overlooked the barracks. But, on snatching a glance up to the top of its lofty roof, he saw that just one sentry stood there, gazing lazily out to the south, back turned. Reassured by this, he pushed up just a little more, then looked down into the heart of the barrack compound.

His gaze fell upon the drill square and he gawped.

This wasn’t right. This wasn’t what he had expected.

He thought again of the fine garb of the two akhi who had stopped him. His heart thundered under his ribs. Then he realised what he had to do. He spun away from the sight and looked downhill, to the main tower at the north gate – he had to get there to give the signal.

The Byzantine assault had to be stopped.

He scrambled down the tumbled brickwork, then hobbled towards his pony, fumbling in his purse to check he had the finely polished disc of bronze in there. Instead, he pulled out the dirham he had earned moments ago. His eyes hung on the inscription.

In the name of Allah.

Then something scuffled, just behind him. Before he could spin around, a hand clasped over his mouth and he was yanked to the ground. He saw the face of the tall, razor-nosed akhi glowering down at him, twisted in malice. He kicked and thrashed, but the akhi knelt on his shoulders, pinning his arms to the ground. Then another face appeared over him. Ghostly white, silver-eyed and laced with sweat and dust from his breakneck ride, still panting. Confusion danced through Laskaris’ thoughts.

‘This is him?’ the akhi asked the albino.

‘Yes,’ Zenobius said flatly, stooping to rummage in Laskaris’ purse, pulling free the shard of polished signalling bronze. ‘All is in hand. Now tear out his throat.’

Laskaris’ eyes bulged as he writhed but his roar was stifled by the akhi’s palm. Then the akhi ripped something under his chin. He felt a sharp pain in his throat and a warm wetness spread across his chest.

This wasn’t right, Laskaris thought as his limbs stilled. His moment of greatness was not supposed to end like this.