this had been put up on orders of the first Ptolemy. It was centred on a niche containing statues of the King together with the Great Alexander, one of whose leading generals he had been and whose successor, by speed and cunning, he’d made himself in Egypt. He stood, just half a head shorter, his eyes turned in adoration to the Great Conqueror.

‘I could arrange five hundred labourers,’ I said, looking back to Hermogenes. ‘The Viceroy has decided to employ people during the flood season in digging out the old canal between the Red Sea and the Mediterranean. I could easily borrow a contingent of these for a month.

‘But we still need to assure ourselves that Soteropolis is the right place. And we still need to know at least roughly where outside the town the reserve might have been. There is also the matter of content.’

‘You reassure me, My Lord,’ Hermogenes interrupted, ‘that all the literary and philosophical works listed in the catalogue are still extant in Constantinople?’

I nodded. In Rome, I’d been shocked by the perhaps irreparable losses a century of chaos had made in the Latin classics. But the much larger Greek corpus had survived intact in the great City on the waters between Asia and Europe.

‘If the reserve stock is just from those works,’ I said, ‘it’s a waste of time to go looking for it. What interests me is whether it contains any of the scientific and technical works. From the accounts I’ve read of the University here, certain advances were made that may be of use to the Empire. There are, for example, reports of a powder that, when ignited-’

With a sudden whoosh of air and then crash of timber on stone, the door flew open. Puffing mightily from a brisk two-mile walk along those streets, Martin leaned unsteadily against one of the book racks. His face had turned a still deeper shade of purple. I poured him a cup of water and hurried over to him.

‘Aelric,’ he gasped after a long pause. He looked at the old Librarian and pulled himself together. ‘My Lord Alaric, you are needed urgently. The Caesar Priscus has arrived without warning. He says he needs to see you.’

Chapter 5

As I’d expected, I caught up with Priscus in the nursery attached to my own quarters. I walked in on the beginnings of chaos. The moment he saw me, Maximin broke loose from where Priscus had cornered him, and, wailing with fear, ran towards me. Over against the far wall, the nursery maids huddled quietly in each other’s arms.

‘My dear Alaric,’ said Priscus, with a flash of his riddled teeth, ‘how delightful to see you again.’ He dropped the puppy – so far as I could tell, unharmed – on to the floor. It scuttled straight under a low table and stayed there.

I took Maximin into my arms and held him tight. I controlled my voice.

‘Priscus,’ I said, speaking slowly and deliberately in Latin, ‘if you ever come near this child again, I’ll kill you.’

‘And what will Our Lord Augustus say when he has to find another Commander of the East?’ he replied very smoothly, still in Greek.

‘If he replaced you with a committee of his softer palace eunuchs,’ I said, ‘I doubt things could go worse than they have under you. I seem to remember you promised a shattering victory over the Persians in Cappadocia. The latest newsletters report a loss of the whole province.’ I glanced at the low table. I could just hear the whimpering. ‘But I see you can be brave enough when it comes to small animals.’

Priscus scowled, but put his knife away. ‘My son is a Roman,’ he said. ‘He must learn to be strong.’

With an extreme effort, I remained calm, though I continued now in Greek; the nursery maids could hear what they heard and make of it what they would.

‘Priscus,’ I said, ‘you stopped being this child’s father when you had him dumped as a newborn outside that church. By law and by the teachings of every faith, I am now his father. If I see you so much as near him again, I swear I’ll kill you, and I’ll take my chances with Heraclius.’

I handed Maximin, his arms no longer locked about my neck, to one of the nursery maids. ‘Put him to bed,’ I told her. ‘Try to get the dog to lie with him.’

In silence, I led Priscus along the endless and stuffy plush corridors of the Palace. Finding my bearings in the seven floors of the place, each one covering about an acre, had taken me days. Why the Ptolemies had built and put up with this gigantic oven was obvious: they were the richest men in the world, and they had to show this off to their fellow Greeks and to the Egyptians they and their Fellow Greeks lorded it over. The Imperial governors had no such need. They could easily have built something more convenient to the climate and to the needs of administration. For much of the time, there’d been no shortage of money. But it was too late now.

Martin was dictating some letters as we walked in to the outer office. He jumped up at the sight of Priscus and made a polite bow. The secretaries fawned low on the floor.

‘Ah – Martin!’ Priscus opened with smooth courtesy. ‘How delightful to see another friend so far from home. You will surely let me compliment you on how well you are looking on all that Alexandrian food. But for the red hair, I’d barely have recognised you. Such a glorious thing, I’ve always thought, to have red hair. A shame it goes so quickly – don’t you think?’

Martin’s face reddened, and I noticed the little movement as he stopped his hand from its instinctive move upward. I glared at Priscus. He stepped forward and took Martin’s hand.

‘But we have no need to stand on outmoded ceremony, have we, Martin? In our new Empire of Love and Justice, we are all equal servants of the common good and of the Great Augustus!’

Martin swallowed and managed the appropriate form of words. But Priscus was moving again.

He crossed the floor and pulled open the door to my own office. Martin had ordered the blinds to be sprayed with rose water. This, plus the very light breeze coming off the sea, made my office almost endurable. I looked at Priscus as I sipped at my date wine and he fussed, as ever, with his pouch of drugs. I’d last seen him at Christmas in Constantinople. Then he’d been pressing every ounce of glory from his successes against the Persians, and predicting final victory once he’d finished tying them up in Cappadocia.

Just eight months later, and he was looking a decade older. The bounce had gone out of him. Oh, there was the same slimy gloss on his manners. Everything about him still screamed Powerful and Nasty Piece of Work. The cosmetics kept his face unlined and the same colour it had always been of fresh papyrus. But, while I hadn’t bothered once to look back as I led him from the nursery, I’d almost felt the shuffling gait of an old man as he hurried to keep up with me.

I waited for the seizure from whatever he’d shoved up his nose to clear. One day, I’d often hoped, he’d find some mood-altering substance that would kill him instead of just slowly rotting his mind. As his shoulders sagged from the release of tension, and he reached for his own cup, I stared back into the tiny dots of his eyes, and passed from outraged father to senior official of the Empire.

‘So, My Lord Priscus,’ I said, ‘what brings you to Alexandria, and with so little notice?’

He reached into his bag – had the man no slaves with him? – and pulled out a letter. He passed it across the little table that separated our chairs.

‘I need you to provide me urgently with these,’ he said.

I unrolled the document and scanned it. I rolled it up again and replaced the leather band before pushing it back across the table.

‘You’ll need to speak to Nicetas about this,’ I said. ‘He’s the man with authority over Egypt.’

Priscus smiled weakly. He left the roll beside the wine jug. ‘My information was that you were the effective power in Egypt,’ he said.

‘Your informants are misinformed,’ I said curtly. ‘However, if I did have any authority here, I’d have you put on the road straight back to Pelusium, and then pushed across the border into Syria, which I think is within your area of command.

‘We haven’t money at the moment to pay our own frontier guards. As for the corn, we already have riots brewing over a shortage here. If you can force an interview with His Imperial Highness the Viceroy, good luck. But you’ll only get a longer and more formal version of the answer I’ve just given.’

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