The Tale of Krispos

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The Tale of Krispos Page 86

by Harry Turtledove


  Krispos bent down. He barked and neighed, too. He made the dog chase the horse, then made the horse jump into the wagon. Phostis laughed. He laughed louder when Krispos made loud wheel-squeaks and had the toy dog run off in pretended terror.

  He played with Phostis a bit longer, then held Evripos again until the baby started to fuss. Iliana took him back and gave him her breast. He fell asleep while he was nursing. She set him in the cradle. By then Krispos was playing with Phostis again.

  Dara said, “This must be your most domestic afternoon in a long time.”

  “This is my most domestic afternoon ever,” Krispos said. “It has to be. I never had two sons to play with before.” He thought for a few seconds. “I like it.”

  “I see that,” Dara said quietly.

  Barsymes came into the nursery. “Your Majesty, Phestos is ready for you and your lady.”

  “Is it that time already?” Krispos said, startled. He looked at where the sunlight stood on the nursery wall, considered his stomach. “By the good god, so it is. All right, esteemed sir, we’ll come with you.” Dara nodded.

  Phostis started to wail when Krispos and Dara walked to the door. “He’s tired, Your Majesties,” Longinos said apologetically. “He should have had a nap some time ago, but he was too excited playing with his father.”

  Dara’s eyes flickered to Krispos. All he said was, “I enjoyed it, too.” No matter who Phostis’ father was, he was a delightful little boy. Krispos realized he should have noticed that long ago. In the end, it was what counted.

  Barsymes took Krispos and Dara to the smallest of the several dining chambers in the imperial residence. Lamps already burned there against the coming of evening. A jar of wine stood in the center of the table, a silver goblet before each place. As he sat, Krispos glanced down into his. “White wine,” he observed.

  “Yes, Your Majesty,” Barsymes said. “As you’ve been so long inland, Phestos thought all the courses tonight should come from the sea, to welcome you back to the fare of Videssos the city.”

  When the vestiarios had gone, Krispos raised his goblet to Dara. “To our sons,” he said, and drank.

  “To our sons.” She also held the cup to her lips. She looked at Krispos over it. “Thank you for picking a toast I can drink to.”

  He nodded back. “I did try.” He was glad to have any truce between them, no matter how fragile.

  Barsymes brought in a crystal bowl. “A salad with small squid sliced into it,” he announced. “Phestos bids me tell you it is dressed with olive oil, vinegar, garlic, oregano, and some of the squids’ own ink: thus the dark color.” He served a portion to Krispos, another to Dara, and bowed his way out.

  Krispos picked up his fork and smiled, trying to remember the last time he’d used any utensil but spoon or belt knife. The last time he’d been in the city, he decided. He ate a forkful of salad. “That’s very good.”

  Dara tasted hers, too. “So it is.” As long as they talked about something safe like the food, they were all right together.

  At precisely the proper moment, Barsymes reappeared to clear away the salad. He came back with soup bowls and a gold tureen and ladle. A wonderful odor rose from the tureen. “Prawns, leeks, and mushrooms,” he said, ladling out the soup.

  “If this tastes as good as it smells, tell Phestos I’ve just raised his pay,” Krispos said. He dipped his spoon and brought it to his lips. “It does. I have. Tell him, Barsymes.”

  “I shall, Your Majesty,” the vestiarios promised.

  The sharp taste of leeks, though lessened by their being boiled, made a perfect contrast to the prawns’ delicate flavor. The mushrooms added the earthy savor of the woods where they’d been picked. Krispos used the ladle himself, until the tureen was empty. When Barsymes returned to take it away, Krispos held out his bowl to him. “Take this back to the kitchens and fill it up again first, if you please, esteemed sir.”

  “Of course, Your Majesty. If I may make so bold, though, do not linger with it overlong. The other courses advance apace.”

  Sure enough, as soon as that last bowl was done, Barsymes brought in a covered tray. “What now, esteemed sir?” Krispos asked him.

  “Roast lampreys stuffed with sea urchin paste, served on a bed of cracked wheat and pickled grape leaves.”

  “I expect I’ll grow fins by the time I’m done,” Krispos said with a laugh. “What’s that old saying? ‘When in Videssos the city, eat fish,’ that’s it. Well, no one could hope to eat better fish than I am tonight.” He raised his cup to salute Phestos. When he set it down, it was empty. He reached for the jar. That was empty, too.

  “I’ll fetch more directly, Your Majesty,” Barsymes said.

  “Can’t go through a feast like this without wine,” Krispos said to Dara.

  “Indeed not.” She drained her own cup, put it down, then stared across the table at Krispos. “As well I hadn’t had any to drink earlier this afternoon, though. I’d have tried to put a knife in you, I think.” Her eyes fell to the one with which she’d been cutting her lamprey.

  “You—didn’t do badly as it was,” he said cautiously. He looked at her knife, too. “You’re not trying to carve me now. Does that mean—I hope that means—you forgive me?”

  “No,” she said at once, so sharply that he grimaced. She went on, “It does mean I don’t want to kill you just this minute. Will that do?”

  “It will have to. If we had some wine, I’d drink to it. Ah, Barsymes!” The vestiarios brought in a new jar and used a knife to slice through the pitch that held the stopper in place. He poured the wine. Krispos said, “Here’s to letting knives cut up fish and not people.”

  He and Dara both drank. Barsymes said, “That, Your Majesty, is an excellent toast.”

  “Isn’t it?” Krispos said expansively. He touched the end of his nose. It was getting numb. He smiled. “I can feel that wine.” He took another sip.

  Barsymes cleared the table. “I shall return shortly with the main course,” he said. As usual, he was as good as his word. He set down the latest tray with a flourish. “Tuna, your majesties, poached in resinated wine with spices.”

  “I will grow fins,” Krispos declared. “I’ll enjoy every bit of it, too.” He let Barsymes serve him a large piece of flaky, pinkish-white fish. He tasted it. “Phestos has outdone himself this time.” Dara was busy chewing, but made a wordless noise of agreement.

  “He will be pleased to know he has pleased you, Your Majesties,” Barsymes said. “Now, would you care for some boiled chickpeas, or beets, or perhaps the parsnips in creamy onion sauce?”

  After the tuna, Barsymes brought in a bowl of red and white mulberries. Krispos was normally fond of them. Now he rolled his eyes and looked over at Dara. She was looking at him with a similarly overwhelmed expression. They both started to laugh. In an act of conscious—and conscientious—bravery, Krispos reached for the bowl. “Have to eat a few, to keep from hurting Phestos’ feelings.”

  “I suppose so. Here, let me have some, too.” Dara washed them down with another swallow of wine. She set down her cup harder than she might. “Strange you worry about the cook’s feelings more than mine.”

  Krispos grunted, looking down at the mulberries. “It wasn’t something I made a habit of.”

  “Bad enough once,” she said.

  Being without a good answer to that, Krispos kept quiet. Barsymes came in and took away the bowl of fruit. He seemed willing not to see that it had hardly been touched. “Would you care for anything else, your Majesties?” he asked.

  Dara shook her head. “No, thank you, esteemed sir,” Krispos said. The vestiarios bowed to him and Dara, then strode silently out of the dining chamber. Krispos hefted the wine jar. “Would you like some more?” he asked Dara.

  She pushed her cup toward him. He filled it, then poured what was left in the jar into his own. They drank together. Only the lamps lit the dining chamber; the sun was long down.

  “What now?” Krispos asked when the wine was gone. />
  Now Dara would not look at him. “I don’t know.”

  “Let’s go to bed,” he said. Seeing her scowl, he amended, “To sleep, I mean. I’m too full and too worn to think about anything else tonight anyway.”

  “All right.” She pushed her chair back from the table and got up. Krispos wondered if he ought to check the cutlery to make sure she hadn’t secreted a knife up her sleeve. You’re being foolish, he told himself as he, too, rose from the table. He hoped he was right.

  In the bedchamber, he pulled off the imperial boots, then let out a long sigh of relief as he clenched and unclenched his toes. He took off his robe and noticed he hadn’t spilled anything on it at dinner—Barsymes would be pleased. He lay down on the bed, sighing again as the mattress enfolded him in softness.

  Dara was also undressing, a little more slowly; she’d always had the habit of sleeping without clothes. Krispos remembered the first time he’d been her, the first time he’d come into this chamber as Anthimos’ vestiarios. Her body had been perfect then. It wasn’t quite perfect anymore. After two births, her waist was thicker than it had been. And with the second one so recently past, the skin on her belly hung a little loose, while her breasts drooped softly.

  Krispos shrugged. She was still Dara. He still found himself wanting her. As he’d told Tanilis, it was rather more than a marriage of convenience. If he wanted it to remain so, he suspected he ought to stop thinking about what he’d told Tanilis. That seemed dreadfully unfair, but he’d learned a good deal of life was unfair. He shrugged again. Unfair or not, you went on anyway.

  “Get up, please,” Dara said. When Krispos did, she pulled back the spread, leaving just the sheet and a light coverlet. “It’s a warm night.”

  “All right.” He slid under the sheet and blew out the lamp that stood on the night table. A moment later Dara got into bed with him. She blew out her lamp. The bedchamber plunged into darkness. “Good night,” Krispos said.

  “Good night,” she answered coolly.

  The bed was big enough to leave a good deal of space between them. Here I am, returned in triumph, and I might as well be sleeping alone, Krispos thought. He yawned enormously. His eyes slid shut. He slept.

  HE WOKE AT SUNRISE THE NEXT MORNING WITH A BLADDER full to bursting. He glanced over at Dara. She’d kicked off the covers some time during the night, but was still peacefully asleep. Carefully, so as not to wake her, he got out of bed and used the chamber pot. He lay down again. Dara did not wake.

  He slid toward her. Very, very gently, his tongue began to tease her right nipple. It crinkled erect. She smiled in her sleep. All at once her eyes opened. She stiffened, then twisted away from him. “What are you trying to do?” she snapped.

  “I thought that would be plain enough,” he said. “Your body answered mine, or started to, even if you’re angry with me.”

  “Bodies are fools,” Dara said scornfully.

  “Aye, they are,” Krispos said. “Mine was, too.”

  She’d opened her mouth to say something, and likely something harsh. That made her shut it. Even so, she shook her head. “You think that if I lie with you, we’ll be fools together and I’ll forget about what you did.”

  “I don’t think you’ll forget.” Krispos sighed. “I wish you could, but I know better. Not even the mages have a magic to make things as if they’d never happened. But if we do lie together, I hope you will remember I love you.” He nearly finished that sentence I love you, too. One hastily swallowed syllable stood between him and disaster, a nearer brush than in any fight against the Halogai.

  “If we are to live as man and wife, I suppose we’ll have to be man and wife,” Dara said, as much to herself as to Krispos. Her lip curled. “Otherwise, you’d surely take your nets and go trolling for other women. Very well, Krispos; as you will.” She lay back and stared up at the ceiling.

  He did not go to her. Sucking in a deep, irritated breath, he said, “I don’t want you just to be having you, curse it. That was Anthimos’ sport. I don’t care for it. If we can’t meet halfway, better not to bother when we’re angry at each other.”

  She lifted her head from the mattress to study him. “You mean that,” she said slowly.

  “Yes, by the good god, I do. Let’s just ring for the servants and start the new day.” He reached for the crimson bell pull by his side of the bed.

  “Wait,” Dara said. His hand stopped. He raised a questioning eyebrow. After a moment she went on, “Let it be a—a peace-offering between us, then. I can’t promise to enjoy it, Krispos. I will do more than endure it.”

  “Are you sure?” he asked.

  “I’m sure…Be gentle, if you can. I’m not that long out of childbed.”

  “I will,” he promised. Now he reached out to clasp her breast. Her hand closed on his.

  Their lovemaking was, perhaps, the strangest he’d known—certainly the most self-conscious. Both her physical frailty and knowing she remained just this side of furious at him constrained him until he was almost afraid to touch her. Despite her pledge, she lay still and unstirred under his caresses.

  Her jaw was clamped with apprehension when he entered her. “Is it all right?” he asked. She hesitated, considering. Finally she nodded. He went on, as carefully as he could. At last he gasped and jerked, even then cautiously. He realized he was lying with all his weight on her. He slid out of her, then away from her. “I’m sorry,” he said. “I’d hoped to please you better.”

  “Never mind—don’t worry about it,” she answered. He looked at her in some surprise, for she sounded serious. Then she nodded to show she was. She went on, “I told you I doubted I was happy enough with you to take full part in it now. But I noticed how you did what you did, how you were careful with me. Maybe I even noticed that more because I wasn’t swept away. You wouldn’t have been so…regardful if I were just so much convenient flesh to you.”

  “I’ve never thought of you like that,” Krispos protested.

  “A woman often wonders,” Dara said bleakly, “especially a woman who has known Anthimos, and most especially a woman who, when her husband goes away while she must stay behind, learns he’s found some other convenient flesh with which to dally for a while. Me, I mean.”

  Krispos started to say, “It wasn’t like that.” But knowing when to hold his tongue had served him well through the years. This was as good a time as any, and better than most. He knew he was right—what he and Tanilis had done together was far more than dallying with convenient flesh. At the moment, though, being right mattered little; if he pressed it, being right was indeed liable to be worse than being wrong. Peace with Dara was worth giving her the last word.

  What he did say, not even a beat late, was, “I’m no Anthimos. I hope you’ve noticed.”

  “I have,” she said. “I was quite sure of it till you went on campaign. Then—” She shook her head. “Then I doubted everything. But maybe, just maybe, we can go on after all.”

  “I want us to,” Krispos said. “I’ve packed a lifetime’s worth of upheavals into the last two years. I don’t need any more.”

  Suddenly Dara made a wry face. She quickly sat, then looked down between her legs. Krispos took a few seconds to be sure the snort she let out was laughter. She said, “The maidservant who changes the bed linen will be sure we’ve reconciled. I suppose we may as well.”

  “Good,” Krispos said. “I’m glad.”

  “I…think I am, too.”

  With that Krispos had to be content. Considering how Dara had greeted him the day before, it was as much as he could have hoped for. Now he did yank at the bellpull. Barsymes appeared as promptly and silently as if he’d been conjured up. “Good morning, Your Majesty. I trust you slept well?”

  “Yes, thank you, esteemed sir.”

  The vestiarios brought him a pair of drawers and pointed to a robe in the closet. Krispos nodded at his choice. Barsymes drew out the robe. Krispos let the eunuch dress him. Dara must have used her bellpull, too, for a serving ma
id came in while Barsymes was fussing over Krispos. She helped Dara into her clothes and combed out her shining black hair.

  “And how would you care to break your fast this morning, Your Majesty?” Barsymes asked.

  Krispos slapped his belly with the flat of his hand. “Seeing that I ate enough for three starving men last night, I hope Phestos won’t be put out if I just ask for a small bowl of porridge and half a stewed melon.”

  “I trust he will be able to restrain his chagrin, yes,” the vestiarios agreed blandly. Krispos gave him a sharp look—Barsymes’ wit was drought-dry. The chamberlain turned to Dara. “And you, Your Majesty?”

  “The same as for Krispos, I think,” she said.

  “I shall so inform Phestos. No doubt he will be pleased to find the two of you in accord.” With that oblique comment on yesterday’s fight, Barsymes strode out of the imperial bedchamber.

  When the vestiarios cleared away the few breakfast dishes, Krispos knew he ought to start in on all the scrolls and parchments that had piled up at the palaces while he was on campaign. The most pressing business had followed him even to Pliskavos, but much that was not pressing remained important—and would swiftly become urgent if he neglected it. But he could not make himself get up and attend to business, not on his first full day back in Videssos the city. Hadn’t he earned at least one day of rest?

  He was still arguing with himself when Longinos brought Phostis into the dining room. “Dada!” Phostis exclaimed, and ran to him. Krispos decided the parchments could wait. He scooped up Phostis and gave him a noisy kiss.

  Phostis scrubbed at his cheek with the palm of his hand. After a moment, Krispos realized the boy was not used to being kissed by anyone who wore a beard. He kissed him again. Phostis rubbed again.

  “You’re doing that on purpose, just to confuse him with your whiskers,” Dara said.

 

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