was holy, from the hands of the Emperor. Well, this entire scenario could have perhaps been even more devastating to civilised sensibilities; at least the Orphanotrophus Joannes hadn’t insisted that the Imperial Diadem be placed directly on his own monstrous head! Standards. Today the word was meaningless.
The central dome of the great church rose like a mountain peak above the sheer massif of the Hagia Sophia’s west facade. Haraldr concentrated on the relentless cadence of his steps and ignored the other rhythms, the chants of the crowd, the pounding of the kettledrums. The last hour had been perhaps the most powerful experience of his life, except for Stiklestad. Today, on the streets, he had understood the fundamental awe that overwhelmed this crowd, their sense that a god walked among them. It did not matter to them who this new deity was or where he had come from; the simple fact that he walked in the purple boots of Imperial Rome was enough to evoke an inexpressible, virtually paralysing wonder. And beneath this wonder was another current of emotion that swept through the crowd, a current so powerful that Haraldr had felt it swirl treacherously about him on every step of the procession: fear.
The Patriarch Alexius waited on the porch of the Hagia Sophia, flanked by the hundreds of priests and deacons who attended the great church. Wrapped in layers of tunics, stoles, robes and scarfs of embroidered, bejewelled and enamelled silk, the assembled clerics seemed like nothing less than a many-headed treasure trove. Unlike his priests, who were bareheaded, Alexius wore a towering crown of pearls, gems and granulated gold; beneath this miniature cathedral dome his black, tiny eyes were so fierce that they actually seemed to disturb the air in front of his face, creating a vortex that no man could enter without trembling. Michael shuddered visibly as he bent to kiss the jewelled reliquary suspended from a gold-and-ruby chain around the Patriarch’s neck.
Alexius led the entire procession into the Mother Church.
Alexius walked towards the eastern terminus of the nave, where an oval-shaped, colonnaded tower, a small cathedral in itself, rose beneath the great dome like a peak surmounted by a golden sky; from the vault within the tower, a white-robed boys’ choir filled the great church with high, sonorous melodies. Alexius ascended the purple-tinted marble steps to the platform atop the tower; this lofty pulpit, called an ambo, was encircled with a balustrade of solid silver embossed with twining ivy and flowers set with sapphire stamens. In the middle of the platform was a golden table upon which had been placed several folded, gold-embroidered, scarlet silk garments. Alexius, his voluminous sleeves billowing like clouds of powdered gems, blessed the clothing in a deep, chanting polyphony. The Parakoimomenos escorted Michael to the golden table and assisted the Caesar-designate into the garments: first the eagle-medallioned robe, then a mantle, and finally a long scarf-like pallium, stiff with jewelled and cloisonne plaques. During the ritual Michael recited the prescribed prayers in a noticeably quavering voice.
The choir lifted a final, soaring note that seemed to ascend directly to golden light above, then fell silent. There was a brief rustling as the ranks of assembled dignitaries composed themselves. Then the vast space became completely, supernaturally silent, as if all sound had been banished from the entire universe. The sound of eternity, Haraldr told himself.
Alexius moved as slowly as a dream, his swathing of silk and gold coruscating like liquid light as he moved. He lifted his own immense crown, revealing thin matted silver hair; placed the miniature jewelled dome on the altar table; and took up a diamond-and-pearl diadem. He stepped forward with the same unearthly deliberation and held the diadem high for all to see. He glared over the massed courtiers, almost as if he taunted them with his power over this symbol. ‘By the authority vested in me by Christ crowned in heaven,’ he chanted in extended, harmonic syllables, ‘I bestow this crown on earth.’ The ringing tones echoed and vanished in the light.
Michael stepped forward, his head bowed and his hands clasped in front of his breast. Alexius looked down upon Michael’s bare, humbled head with a gaze so furious that Haraldr wondered if he was about to strike the young man. Alexius held the diadem high above over Michael’s head, motionless, hovering, a cluster of light waiting to raise the head beneath it to heaven above or throw him down into the fiery depths. Michael’s shoulders began to tremble, and the crowd’s tension became audible, the cumulative sigh of hundreds of anxious inhalations.
The diadem plunged like an executioner’s blade, almost miraculously halting a scant thumb’s width above Michael’s unsteady head. The Patriarch gently placed the jewelled cap over Michael’s dark curls. Before Michael had even raised his head, organ music rolled through the vaults as if the dome of heaven had split open and unleashed the music of creation. The audience thundered in response. ‘Holy, Holy, Holy! Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace to all men! May the Caesar live long!’
Haraldr looked at Michael Kalaphates, remembering the young man he had jested with at Argyrus’s. That man was dead, resurrected as Caesar of Imperial Rome. Already his face had been transfigured by the light perched above it; it was as if the bones had somehow been realigned to give his face a sharpness, a more powerful sense of structure. His neck erect, his entire body seeming to swell and rise with the deafening acclamations, Michael Kalaphates, Caesar of the Romans, made the sign of the cross over Rome’s glittering elite, most of whom, only a month ago, had not even known his name.
Alexius allowed the acclamations to fade and die before commencing the final ritual. The silence was not so absolute as before, the tension eased, and somehow the Patriarch seemed reduced in stature and vehemence. Almost wearily, Alexius returned to the altar table and with tentative fingers picked up a small sack fashioned from plain white silk. He returned to Michael’s side and displayed the insignificant parcel to the court. ‘The Lord marshals the armies of high heaven!’ he chanted. ‘But all men are dust and ashes!’ The silk sack was filled, as mandated by custom passed down through the centuries of Rome’s greatness, with the ashes of a nameless pauper.
Michael accepted this token of his mortality with steady hands. He turned to descend and receive the homage of his court, and as Haraldr moved towards the new Caesar to lead him down the steps, their eyes met. For a moment too long, too piercing to be chance, the Caesar and the Manglavite remained locked in some ineffable communication that their terrified souls would not permit them to understand.
‘It is a humiliation,’ said Mar angrily.
The men are looking forward to it.’ Haraldr shrugged. ‘It gives them an opportunity to go out into the city and make contact with the people. I am certain they will have enough young, winsome customers to make the effort worth their while, even if they don’t want the money.’
‘Look at them,’ said Mar, pointing to the Varangians who roamed the Augustaion, collecting the sanctified boughs, branches, and twigs that had ornamented the Imperial coronation procession. They alone had the franchise to sell these remarkably valuable relics in the city, a custom established by the Bulgar-Slayer. ‘First they are janitors, then pedlars. Is this worthy for warriors?’
‘It is simply a custom the men enjoy. There are many ceremonial duties performed by the Varangian Guard that are not really warriors’ work. I don’t hear you object about those.’
Mar’s handsome mouth distorted and his nostrils flared. ‘Perhaps it is time we do object. When Rome wishes to flaunt it’s might, who marches ahead of all? We do. But when the Senators and Magisters and Sacrum Consistorum are dividing the proceeds of that power we in great part provide, where are we? We are picking up firewood like peasant women!’
Haraldr sighed inwardly, steeling himself for another argument. He and Mar had for weeks now disagreed, increasingly strenuously, about how to deal with Joannes. In Haraldr’s opinion their alliance should be strictly defensive until the Emperor’s true condition had been ascertained; even Mar hadn’t seen the Emperor for more than a month. In spite of the rumours, or perhaps because of them, Haraldr was certain that the powerful-looking man he had met could best any illness, unless it was some sort of plague that would have long ago carried him