to sea resolutely. ‘I hope this – outburst will not – prejudice your loyalty. You and your men are all I have.’
‘Majesty,’ said Haraldr, ‘I swear by all that is sacred to me that as long as I remain in Rome, I will defend your life with my own.’
‘Thank you, Hetairarch.’ Michael’s eyes teared, and he looked down at his purple boots. Ulfr motioned to get Haraldr’s attention and pointed to the neck of the Bosporus, to the north. Haraldr left the Emperor and walked round the cupola to get a better look.
The masts were clearly visible on the horizon. ‘Joannes and his Senators,’ whispered Ulfr. ‘I think I can make out the Imperial Trireme--’ Ulfr stopped as both he and Haraldr saw the activity along the portico-lined avenue that ran between the Hall of Nineteen Couches and the Sigma, the principal north-south axis of the palace complex. Preceded by gold-armoured officers mounted on white horses, the units of the Imperial Taghmata were moving into position.
The next hour was excruciating. The Taghmatic units surrounded the Gynaeceum while Joannes’s flotilla moved steadily south. The Senators’ galleys steered into the Golden Horn to make their anchorage at Platea Harbour, while the Imperial Trireme bearing Joannes sailed conspicuously alone around the tip of Byzantium, heading well past the city so that the populace would have time to watch as the imposing, sea-going fortress turned back to the north and came head in to the Bucoleon Harbour. Somehow Michael was able to watch it all without another breakdown, and Haraldr was touched by his composure. It was no easy thing for a man to march with his head up into battle after he had already soiled his breeches in front of his comrades.
The Imperial Trireme trailed white wake and the three rows of oars dipped and rose inexorably; from a distance the armoured marines looked like granulated silver spilled on the deck. Haraldr watched as the swift- moving craft plunged like an elaborate spearhead directly towards the Bucoleon quays just below them to the south. Then something at the periphery of his vision distracted him. Another wake streaked the finely silvered water; a ship had emerged from the Harbour of Contoscali, a very small U-shaped bay about five bowshots west of the Bucoleon.
‘What is it?’ asked Ulfr.
‘A
‘A curious rendezvous for an escort vessel,’ said Ulfr, pointing to where the wakes would converge. Haraldr looked at Ulfr and shook his head. It was obviously a desperate rendezvous for a Nobilissimus intent on begging for his life.
Michael pointed at the racing
‘Signal him to return to his anchorage!’ shouted the Droungarios of the Imperial Fleet. He stood at the stern of the Imperial Trireme, high above the hissing sea, atop a cottage-size stern-castle that resembled a small palace in its ornate gold fittings. The Droungarios was a slight man; no doubt he had been tough and wiry in his youth, but now that he was well past seventy, shrivelled and stooped, his authority was in his rough, wine-pickled voice and insignia of rank rather than his physical presence. His command soon produced a sequence of flags along the yard-arm of the trireme’s central mast.
‘He’s not responding!’ shouted one of the Droungarios’s attendant komes, shortly after the flags had been raised.
The Orphanotrophus Joannes appeared at the Droungarios’s side and leaned against the gilded railing. ‘Let him come on,’ Joannes said, his face struggling with a grin. The Droungarios looked at him in surprise. ‘See that man,’ he said, pointing to a purple-clad figure at the bow of the
The ships slowed as they reached hailing distance, and the komes at the bow of the
‘Moschus, Droungarios. John Moschus. The hero of Taranto.’
‘Find out what he is about.’ The Droungarios shook his head. Hero . . . Taranto . . .
Moschus walked to the stern of his vessel and shouted up at the Droungarios. ‘I would like to come aboard, sir, and negotiate for the safe transfer of the Nobilissimus to your flagship. I believe it is in the interest of the Imperial Navy . . .’
‘You presume what is in the interest of the Imperial Navy, Komes!’ shouted the Droungarios angrily. This so-called hero would soon be pulling an oar on an
‘Let us play this out,’ countermanded Joannes. It amused him to think that Constantine was already concerned about his immediate safety. In Neorion he would wish that he had met with a quick death out here.
The Droungarios, followed by his aides, scuttled down the stairs to the deck to avoid having to deal with a potentially insubordinate officer in front of the all-conquering Orphanotrophus Joannes. It wouldn’t do to have a man like that perceive weakness in his commanders. ‘Komes Moschus!’ the Droungarios shouted, his face livid, ‘come aboard and explain your treason!’
Moschus scrambled up the rope ladder and climbed over the heavy, gilt-and-red railing of the Imperial Trireme’s main deck. He strode right up to the Droungarios and in a lightning-quick movement was behind him; one powerful arm pinned the old man’s neck, and the other pressed a knife to his nose. ‘One movement and this blade will be in his brain!’ shouted Moschus to the four stunned aides. ‘Order your marines to hold their places!’ At the same time two dozen marines clambered out of hatches on the deck of the
‘What did he offer you?’ the bulging-eyed Droungarios asked raspily.
‘I am to be the Droungarios of the Imperial Fleet,’ said Moschus.
‘I will give you my estates near Ancyra. Fifty villages,’ croaked the Droungarios.
‘I am a sailor,’ growled Moschus; suddenly he seemed truly enraged. ‘You might remember that. I saved your fleet and your command at Taranto. You gave me five pieces of gold. I am still waiting for the command of
Joannes’s voice exploded from the lofty stern-castle. ‘Droungarios, order your marines to kill him!’
The Droungarios’s throat gurgled as he quickly decided that the Orphanotrophus was not a man he was willing to die for; he had enlisted in this cause to aggrandise his land holdings, not sacrifice himself to some transient tyrant. ‘Will the Nobilissimus grant me a pardon?’ he said raspily, rolling his ancient eyes back at Moschus.
‘Nobilissimus!’ shouted Moschus. ‘Will you pardon the Droungarios if he yields up his passenger?’
‘Yes!’ shouted Constantine from the deck of the
‘Order your marines!’ screamed Joannes. He came down the ladder with his arms akimbo, like a huge vulture descending to earth. His face was so dark with anger that it seemed like something viewed in the shadows at night. He waved his black wings at the marines. ‘I order you!’
‘The Droungarios of the Imperial Fleet commands these men, not the Orphanotrophus!’ shouted Moschus. The marines remained motionless.
‘I will destroy every man on this deck.’ Joannes stood near the main mast, and his voice carried without any