vainly tried to shift the massive lid. Clearly, nothing short of a team of workmen armed with crowbars and lifting- gear was going to move that heavy slab. ‘Try to stay calm — you’ll soon be out of there.’
Dismissing his charges with a strict injunction not to breathe a word to anyone, the choirmaster hurried to the palace.
‘The poor man!’ exclaimed Anastasius in horror. The Master of Offices had repeated the choirmaster’s news to him and his bride-to-be, Ariadne — not, after all, Zeno’s widow, but, it transpired, still his wife. Aged sixty-one, an undistinguished if conscientious palace official, Anastasius had, for want of a more suitable candidate, been chosen to succeed Zeno, who had expired (it had been thought) suddenly, following a massive stroke. ‘We must get him out at once.’ He turned to the Master of Offices. ‘Summon the palace masons.’
‘Wait,’ said Ariadne. A woman of overweening ambition and iron will, she had agreed to marry Anastasius in the event of Zeno’s death, expected since the emperor’s being taken gravely ill, some weeks before. Such a wedding between May and December was acceptable to both, allowing, as it did, Ariadne to maintain her imperial status and Anastasius to inherit royal lineage through marriage to the emperor’s widow. The arrangement was not without precedent. Zeno himself, an Isaurian outsider, by marrying Ariadne, daughter of the emperor Leo, had thereby acquired membership of the royal line, as had Marcian, forty years ago, by marrying the Augusta Pulcheria, sister of Theodosius II.
‘Think carefully,’ continued Ariadne. ‘What would be the consequences were my husband to be resurrected? You, Anastasius, would of course relinquish any claim to the purple. Worse, you would be marked for death — or blinding, at best.* The throne can prove a
‘Your silence implies consent that we take no steps to liberate my unfortunate husband,’ Ariadne pronounced when, after a lacuna lasting many seconds, no one had spoken. ‘Good. This, then, is what we do. In case he should start circulating awkward rumours, that choirmaster must be told that Zeno was rescued, but unfortunately succumbed to shock. The cathedral must be locked immediately, for, let us say, a week. Long enough for. .’ She paused, and shrugged. ‘Even though it means postponing the coronation, it will be easy enough to fabricate a convincing reason — urgent repairs to a weak wall, say.’
‘It’s done, Serenities.’ Via a
‘It’s monstrous —
‘Dreadful,’ concurred the Master of Offices. ‘But have we any choice? Of course, we may not be able to keep a lid on things. There’s no way of guaranteeing that those choirboys will keep quiet.’
‘Isn’t there?’ murmured Ariadne. ‘We
‘Enough!’ roared Anastasius, suddenly red with uncharacteristic fury. ‘Good God! This is Constantinople, not Ravenna — let us behave like Romans, not barbarians. With the utmost reluctance, Augusta, and to my eternal shame, I am prepared to go along with your proposal as to Zeno. But I draw the line at anything more. If I hear that one hair of those boys’ heads has been harmed. .’ He glared at the empress.
‘Oh, very well,’ conceded Ariadne. ‘Even if the story gets out, it probably won’t matter much.’
‘How so?’ objected Anastasius. ‘Zeno’s been a most effective emperor. The way he’s played off the Goths against each other has been masterly. And at last, by persuading Theoderic to go to Italy, he’s finally got rid of the barbarians. He’s succeeded, where every other emperor since Adrianople has failed.’
‘True, no doubt. But there’s one thing you’re forgetting: Zeno’s an Isaurian.’
Ariadne had a point, Anastasius admitted. The inhabitants of Isauria — wild mountain tribesmen, always ready to raid their neighbours or rebel against the government — were deeply unpopular with almost all East Romans. Sadly, the reaction of those same Romans, should they learn of Zeno’s fate, would more likely be indifference than consternation.
When he heard the distant, muffled clang of the church’s great bronze doors closing, Zeno knew no help was going to come. Alone, in the blackness of the tomb, despite having abandoned hope, the emperor began to scream. .
* Serious disfigurement was held to debar accession to the purple. Hence blinding, or amputation of the nose, was sometimes inflicted, as an alternative to execution, on those deemed unacceptable as Eastern Emperor.
TWENTY-TWO
Where is God?
‘We who are Rome pledge our lives for her peace, our strength for her own, and our honour for her citizens.’ With the other standing senators, dignified in their archaic togas, Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus chanted the words of the oath — old, old words which had echoed here down the long centuries of the republic, then the empire, and now, even when the empire was no more, in these strange new days of the
Recently enough elected to the august assembly to be awed by the atmosphere of Rome’s Senate House, Aurelius, young for a senator, resumed his seat. This building was charged with the weight of history: it had witnessed speeches which had changed the course of world events. Here, in Rome’s darkest hour, the Senate had resolved to carry on the fight against Hannibal even when the flower of her manhood had perished on the field of Cannae. Here had been voted the funds enabling Rome’s legions to build an empire extending from Hispania in the west to Persia in the east, from Caledonia in the north to Aethiopia in the south. In this spot, Christianity had been confirmed as the official creed of Rome. In the days of chaos and uncertainty following the murder of the great Aetius, who had held the crumbling fabric of the West together, the Senate alone had kept the machinery of state functioning. And now, with the fate of Italy being decided by rival barbarians in far-off Ravenna, this same assembly must decide which of the two to support.
The
First to speak was Anicius Acilius Aginantius Faustus