askew turban to tumble off his head into her lap. It didn't.
'Did you mark the exact moment of this child's birth in the skies, Chaldean?'
'I did, my lord Zabaai. At the very moment your daughter slipped from her mother's womb, the heavenly bodies of Venus and Mars met in conjunction. Never have I seen the signs so propitious. It portends great things for her.'
'What great things, Chaldean?'
'The full natal chart will reveal all, my lord, but I can tell you now that your daughter will be successful in both love and war, for she is already, I can see, beloved of the gods.'
Zabaai nodded, satisfied. The Chaldean was the most respected astrologer in the East, noted not only for his accuracy, but his honesty as well.
As the old man backed out of the room Zabaai looked upon his young wife with great affection. 'How shall I reward you, my little love, for this marvelous child?' he said.
'Let me name her, my lord,' Iris replied.
'Very well,' he agreed, pleased. Another woman would have asked him for jewels.
Tamar could not contain her curiosity. 'What will you call her?'
'Zenobia,' came the answer. 'She who was given life by Jupiter.'
'Zenobia,' Zabaai mused. 'It is a good name!'
'You must rest now,' Tamar said, taking the infant from Iris. 'Let your Bab look after Zenobia while you sleep.'
Iris nodded, beginning to feel sleepy, now that the immediate excitement of the birth was over. Zabaai arose, bending a moment to kiss his young wife, and then he and Tamar left the room.
Alone, Iris sighed and stretched herself gingerly to find a more comfortable position. How beautiful the baby was! Tomorrow she would have a lamb sacrificed in the Temple of Jupiter to give thanks for her daughter. She wondered about the Chaldean's predictions, not completely understanding them. Then as sleep began to overtake her, her anxieties faded. What did it all really matter as long as Zenobia was blessed and protected? 'May you be favored by the gods all your life, my daughter,' Iris murmured softly, and then she fell asleep.
Part One
1
'Happy birthday, Zenobia!'
Zenobia bat Zabaai, now six, smiled happily back at her family. She was a lovely child, tall for her age, with long unruly dark hair that her mother had coaxed into ringlets for this auspicious occasion, and shining silver-gray eyes. Her simply draped white tunic with its pale blue silk rope belt set off her light golden skin.
Zabaai ben Selim swept his only daughter up into his arms, and gave her a resounding kiss. 'Don't you want to know what your presents are, my precious one?'
Zenobia giggled and looked mischievously at her adored father. 'Of course I do, Papa, but Mama said I must not ask until they were offered.'
Zabaai ben Selim was unable to contain himself any longer. 'Ali,' he roared, 'bring in my daughter's birthday gift!'
Into the open courtyard of the house came her father's favorite slave leading a dainty, prancing storm-gray mare, bridled in red leather with tinkling brass bells, and wearing a small matching saddle.
Zenobia was speechless with surprise and delight. More than anything, she had wanted a fine Arab horse for her very own. She had spent the last six months hinting at it none too gently to her father. 'Oh, Papa!' she finally whispered.
'Then you like her?' Zabaai ben Selim teased his beloved only daughter.
'Oh, yes! Yes, Papa! Yes!'
'Zabaai, you did not tell me!' Iris looked worried. 'A horse? She is far too little.'
'Do not worry, my love. The mare has been bred for docility, I promise you.'
Tamar put a gentle hand on Iris's shoulder, and said in a low voice, 'Don't overprotect her, Iris. You will do her no favor if you do. Bedawi women are bred to be independent.'
'I want to ride her now!' Zenobia cried, and Zabaai lifted his daughter up onto the mare's back. She sat proudly, as if she had been born to sit there. 'Come on, Akbar! I'll race you!' Zenobia challenged her father's heir.
'I must get to my horse,' he protested, amused.
'Well hurry!' she fussed at him, and was quickly off through the courtyard door.
In the year in which she was eleven Zenobia decided she would not go on the winter trek with her family. Palmyra had suddenly become a fascinating place to her. How she loved the city with its beautiful covered and colonnaded streets, great temples and broad marble avenues, its wonderful shops and open-air markets, each with a different and distinct smell. Leather tanning. Perfumes being blended. Wet wool being readied for weaving and dyeing. The silk-dyeing vats. The livestock. The spices. Exotic foods of all kinds. She simply couldn't bear to leave it again!
With stubborn resolve she had secreted herself when no one was looking, and now she hugged herself gleefully, convinced she would not be found.
'Zenobia!' Tamar's voice echoed sharply through the virtually empty house. 'Zen-o-bia! Where are you, child? Come now, you cannot hide from us any longer! The trek has already begun.'
'Zenobia, you are being foolish!' Iris's voice was becoming tinged with annoyance. 'Come to us at once!'
Under the great bed in her father's bedchamber the child crouched, chuckling softly. She would not spend the winter in the damned desert again this year. The gods only knew she hated it! Miles and miles and miles of endless sand. Long, boring days of blue skies, cloudless and as placid as pap. She sniffed with distaste.
Then there were the goats. While her very best friend, Julia Tuilio, got to spend the whole delicious winter season in Palmyra going to the theater and to the games, she, Zenobia bat Zabaai, spent her winters herding a flock of dumb, smelly goats! It was embarrassing! The Bedawi measured a man's wealth in the livestock he owned, which made Zenobia's father an extremely wealthy man; but how she hated chasing those silly, temperamental goats all winter!
Only nights in the desert were interesting. She loved it when the skies grew dark, and filled with crystalline stars, some so bright and so large that they seemed almost touchable. Her father had taught her to read the stars, and she believed that as long as she could see them she would be able to find her way back to Palmyra from Hades itself.
'Ha, Zenobia! There you are!' Tamar reached beneath the bed and pulled her out with strong fingers.
'No!' Zenobia shouted furiously, struggling. '/ will not go! I hate the months away from Palmyra! I hate the desert!'
'Don't be foolish,' Tamar replied patiently. 'You are Bedawi, and the desert is our way. Come along now, Zenobia. There's my good girl.' Tamar raised her up.
The child pulled defiantly away from the older woman, her strangely adult eyes flashing. 'I am only half Bedawi, and even that half does not like the desert!'
Tamar had to laugh, for it was the truth and she could not really blame Zenobia. She was young, and the city was exciting. As Iris joined them, Zenobia flung herself at her pretty parent. 'I don't want to go, Mama! Why can