of only a hundred or so ells. They were floating islands: three, perhaps four, times as long as Olaf’s dragon-ship, a vessel that had been the marvel of the north. The massive black hulls were as high as the walls of Yaroslav’s palace, and a gilt-and-red building as big as the average Norse farmer’s dwelling sat on each foredeck. The spout-snouted beasts at the bow and stern of each ship were more than twice as tall as a man, and there was a third such spout on the deck between the two masts. Some of the spouts had been turned at angles to face the Rus ships; apparently these man-made dragons could swivel their necks just like living creatures.
The
An apparition appeared on the horizon, a wavering ivory line flecked with bits of coral and silver. Haraldr shouted at Ulfr and Halldor and pointed. Gleb watched the three huge Norsemen standing there jabbering like excited boys and smiled knowingly. Haraldr scrambled for the mast, followed by Ulfr and Halldor.
‘Kristr the Pure!’ Haraldr gasped. From the top spar he could see the immense sprawl of miniature palaces on the starboard shoreline. Though still diminished by distance, the buildings would have to be as large as those they were passing now, but the sparkling little domes and cubes now densely blanketed an area that stretched as far as the eye could see. Haraldr’s knees weakened. Men could not build this! Gods, perhaps, but not men.
Ulfr shouted and pointed to larboard. No! It was simply not possible, even for the gods. Another Great City on the opposite shore of the Bosporus! Had the Griks built a twin of Miklagardr? Impossible. Kristr’s Mother! This Miklagardr was no less sprawling and lavish and brightly twinkling than the other.
The ship pitched on a wave and metal glinted on the water directly between the twin cities of Miklagardr. Haraldr’s bowels knotted with alarm: another fleet, even greater than that which already surrounded them. And the purpose of this second armada was obvious; there was already sufficient escort. Haraldr whipped his head around to observe the
‘Look.’ Halldor spoke with his insistent reserve. He pointed towards the deadly scintillae of the second great fleet.
A heavy, cresting swell tossed the bow high again. Haraldr’s feet slipped and his fingers clawed the mast. He looked at the frothing wake below and his heart raced. When he looked up again, Halldor was still pointing. Only his eyes spoke. Haraldr sighted down Halldor’s trembling finger.
Gold and silver bubbled up from the sea, shimmered and froze, a froth of enormous bubbles that rose and fell over hills of solid ivory. It was an enormous island of gold and silver and ivory. No, it was perhaps a huge finger of land jutting into the sea; one could not see where it ended.
Wind rattled the rigging and the ship sped towards the vision. The shimmering bubbles were domes, like the ones they had seen earlier, but hundreds and hundreds and hundreds, climbing up and down gleaming hills, domes built upon domes to rise like globular mountains. Forests of enormous pillars stood in polychrome rows, and window glass, almost unknown in the north, sparkled like diamond dewdrops. Constantinople, the Queen of Cities, rose from the sea like a huge gem-encrusted reliquary.
On they sped, the vision steadily rising from the water, becoming more intricate in its fantastic, multicoloured details; awnings winked into view and tiny figures appeared on scrolled balconies. The vast seawall, a towering, elaborately crenellated structure of brilliant ochre brick, girdled the entire visible stretch of waterfront like a huge golden belt.
‘Asgard,’ said Ulfr numbly. The city of the gods. On the deck below, the Rus traders and oarsmen crowded the railing, exclaiming in wonder. ‘A miracle wrought by the angelic host . . .’
‘Father Almighty . . .’
‘Christ the Pure has brought us to his heavenly mansions. . . .’
The Byzantine warships slowed and veered hard starboard, towards an arm of the sea that embraced the city on the north. The entrance to this prodigious harbour was marked by a soaring turret of mournful, ashen stone set at the edge of the water. The grim tower was a sinister contrast to the vivid colour of the buildings behind it; for some reason Haraldr shuddered as if he had seen a vision of his own grave. Gleb had already shouted the order to stop when Haraldr saw what the old Slav pilot was pointing at. The mouth of the harbour was blocked by a colossal boom of skiff-size metal chain links alternating with wooden floats the size of tree trunks. The daunting waterborne barrier extended from the brooding grey tower to the teeming docks on the opposite shore, a span of about fifteen hundred ells.
A tender towed the boom towards the tower, and the two fleets resumed their procession. In the distance, perhaps half a rowing-spell off, chequered dun-and-green hills sprinkled with chalk-white dwellings rose above what Haraldr assumed to be the western terminus of the harbour. The harbour was crowded with perhaps a thousand ships:
As the Rus fleet sailed on into the harbour Haraldr turned and again studied the harbour chain. No hull could challenge the cyclopean links and floats. When the boom was drawn back behind them, they would leave only with the permission of the Griks.
‘Emmanuel counted them. He says there are only one hundred and fifty or so. The Prefect had anticipated four or five hundred ships. Now he will start gouging the butchers and the silk merchants to make up the shortfall. I wouldn’t be surprised if we find he has set the prices higher tomorrow.’ The Augusta Theodora stood on the third-storey balcony of her ancient country palace; her home was sufficiently far from the city to be considered a place of exile. She had a view across the olive-green hills, occasionally speckled with white-marble porticoes and red-tile roofs, that sloped to the distant, slablike surface of the Golden Horn, the enormous natural harbour flanking Constantinople on the north. The sails of the usual merchant traffic surrounded the wharves like swarms of white-and-beige butterflies. In the middle of the harbour the Rus ships, lashed together in a long single file, looked like a wooden causeway set between two rows of giant, metal-beaked
‘I am told they have brought some very fine sable skins,’ said Maria. ‘I intend to get enough to line three coats, even if I have to auction a vineyard to pay for them. Of course, the price will go down next year when the Rus return in greater numbers, but whatever I might save on next year’s sables won’t keep me warm this winter.’
The Rus may never return, at least to trade. Emmanuel says’ – Emmanuel was Theodora’s chamberlain; although he had accompanied her into exile, he still maintained a priceless network of informants among the eunuchs of the Imperial Palace – ‘that both the Grand Domestic and the Droungarios of the Imperial Fleet favoured attacking the Rus fleet in the Bosporus this morning. Apparently the Manglavite was murdered by one of the Varangians he had recruited, and now the murderer commands the entire Rus fleet. It is claimed that this Varangian is a dangerous privateer and an “enemy of Christendom”.’
Maria snorted with disgust. ‘I would consider the murderer of a Manglavite a friend of Rome.’
‘Perhaps so. But the military clique and their Dhynatoi sponsors are still looking for an incident to spark a confrontation.’