a route different from the one he'd used to go out to the harbor of Kontoskalion, not wanting to meet again the priest who had spurned him.
But it was difficult to travel more than a couple of blocks in Videssos the city without passing a temple, whether a magnificent one like the High Temple or the one dedicated to the memory of the holy Phravitas where Avtokrators and their close kin were entombed or a little building distinguishable from a house only by the spire topped by a gilded globe springing from its roof.
And so, passing by one of those temples, Maniakes found himself watched and measured by another priest, watched and measured and rejected. For a copper or two, he would have set his Haloga guards on the blue-robe this time. But, however tempting he found the notion of taking a bloody revenge, he set it aside once more. It would embroil him with the ecumenical patriarch, and he could not afford that. Being at odds with the temples would put a crimp, maybe a fatal crimp, into the war against Makuran.
And so Maniakes endured the insult. It sometimes looked as if, even if he captured Mashiz, the capital of Makuran, and brought back the head of Sharbaraz King of Kings to hang on the Milestone in the plaza of Palamas like that of a common criminal or a rebel, a good many clerics would keep on thinking him a sinner shielded from Phos' light.
He sighed. No matter what they thought of him while he was winning wars, they'd think ten times worse if he lost—to say nothing of what would happen to the Empire if he lost. He had to go on winning, then, to give the clergy the chance to go on despising him.
Kameas the vestiarios said, «Your Majesty, supper is ready.» The eunuch's voice lay in that nameless range between tenor and contralto. His plump cheeks were smooth; they gleamed in the lamplight. When he turned to lead Maniakes and Lysia to the dining room, he glided along like a ship running before the wind, the little quick mincing steps he took invisible under his robes.
Maniakes looked forward to meals with his kin, who were, inevitably, Lysia's kin, as well. They didn't condemn him for what he'd done. The only one of his close kin who had condemned him, his younger brother Parsmanios, had joined with the traitorous general Tzikas to try to slay him by magic. Parsmanios, these days, was exiled to a monastery in distant Prista, the Videssian outpost on the edge of the Pardrayan steppe that ran north from the northern shore of the Videssian Sea.
Tzikas, these days, was in Makuran. As far as Maniakes was concerned, the Makuraners were welcome to him. Maniakes presumed Tzikas was doing his best to betray Abivard, the Makuraner commander. Wherever Tzikas was, he would try to betray someone. Treason seemed in his blood.
Kameas said, «Your family will be pleased to see you, your Majesty.»
«Of course, they will,» Lysia said. «He's the Avtokrator. They can't start eating till he gets there.»
The vestiarios gave her a sidelong look. «You are, of course, correct, Empress, but that was not the subject of my allusion.»
«I know,» Lysia said cheerfully. «So what? A little irrelevance never hurt anyone, now did it?»
Kameas coughed and didn't answer. His life was altogether regular—without the distraction of desire, how could it be otherwise?—and his duties required him to impose regular functioning on the Avtokrator. To him, irrelevance was a distraction at best, a nuisance at worst.
Maniakes suppressed a snort, so as not to annoy the vestiarios. He was by nature a methodical sort himself. He used to have a habit of charging ahead without fully examining consequences. Defeats at the hands of the Kubratoi and Makuraners had taught him to be more cautious. Now he relied on Lysia to keep him from getting too stodgy.
Kameas strode out ahead of him and Lysia, to announce their arrival to their relatives. Somebody in the dining room loudy clapped his hands. Maniakes turned to Lysia and said, «I'm going to give your brother a good, swift kick in the fundament, in the hope that he keeps his brains there.»
«With Rhegorios?» Lysia shook her head. «You'd probably just stir up another prank.» Maniakes sighed and nodded. Even more than Lysia—or perhaps just more openly—her brother delighted in raising ruckuses.
Rhegorios flung a roll at Maniakes as the Avtokrator walked through the doorway. Maniakes snatched it out of the air; his cousin had played such games before. «Lese majesty,» he said, and threw it back, hitting Rhegorios on the shoulder. «Send for the headsman.» Some Avtokrators, not least among them Maniakes' predecessor, the late, unlamented Genesios, would have meant that literally. Maniakes was joking, and obviously joking at that. Rhegorios had no hesitation in shooting back, with words this time rather than bread: «Anyone who keeps us waiting and hungry deserves whatever happens to him.»
«He's right,» the elder Maniakes declared, glaring at his son and namesake with a scowl too ferocious to be convincing. «I'm about to waste away to a shadow.»
«A noisy, grumbling shadow,» the Avtokrator replied. His father chuckled. He was twice Maniakes Avtokrator's age, shorter, heavier, grayer, more wrinkled: when Maniakes looked at his father; he saw himself as he would look if he managed to stay on the throne and stay alive till he was seventy or so. The eider Maniakes, a veteran cavalry commander, also carried a mind well stocked in treacheries and deviousness of all sorts.
«It could be worse,» said Symvatios, Lysia's father and the elder Maniakes' younger brother. «We could all be in the Hall of the Nineteen Couches, lying on those silly things propped up on one elbow while from the elbow up our arms go numb.» He chuckled; he was both handsomer and jollier than the elder Maniakes, just as his son Rhegorios was handsomer and jollier than Maniakes Avtokrator.
«Eating reclining is a dying ceremony,» Maniakes said. «The sooner they wrap it in a shroud and bury it, the happier I'll be.»
Kameas' beardless face was eloquent with distress. Reproachfully, he said, «Your Majesty, you promised early in your reign to suffer long-standing usages to continue, even if they were not in all ways to your taste.»
«Suffer is just what we do when we eat in the Hall of the Nineteen Couches,» Rhegorios said. He was not shy about laughing at his own wit.
«Your Majesty, will you be gracious enough to tell your brother-in-law the Sevastos that his jests are in questionable taste?»
Using the word taste in a context that included dining was asking for trouble. The gleam in Rhegorios' eye said he was casting about for the way to cause the most trouble he could. Before he could cause any, Maniakes forestalled him, saying to Kameas, «Esteemed sir—» Eunuchs had special honorifics reserved for them alone. «—I did indeed say that. You will—occasionally—be able to get my family and me to eat in the antique style. Whether you'll be able to get us to enjoy it is probably another matter.»
Kameas shrugged. As far as he was concerned, that old customs were old was reason aplenty to continue them. That made some sense to Maniakes—how could you keep track of who you were if you didn't know who your grandparents had been?—but not enough. Ritual for ritual's sake was to him as blind in everyday life as it was in the temples.
«This evening,» Kameas said, «we have a thoroughly modern supper for you, never fear.»
He bustled out of the dining room, returning shortly with a soup full of crabmeat and octopus tentacles. The elder Maniakes lifted one of the tentacles in his spoon, examined the rows of suckers on it, and said, «I wonder what my great-grandparents, who never set foot outside Vaspurakan their whole lives long, would have said if they saw me eating a chunk of sea monster like this. Something you'd remember a long time, I'll wager.»
«Probably so,» his brother Symvatios agreed. He devoured a length of octopus with every sign of enjoyment. «But then, I wouldn't want to feast on some of the bits of goat innards they'd call delicacies. I could, mind you, but I wouldn't want to.»
Rhegorios leaned toward Maniakes and whispered, «When our ancestors first left Makuran and came to Videssos the city, they probably thought you got crab soup at a whorehouse.» Maniakes snorted and kicked him under the table.
Kameas carried away the soup bowls and returned with a boiled mullet doused with fat and chopped garlic and served on a bed of leeks, parsnips, and golden carrots. When he sliced the mullet open, his cuts revealed roasted songbirds, themselves stuffed with figs, hidden in its body cavity.
A salad of lettuces and radishes followed, made piquant with crumbly white cheese, lemon juice, and olive oil. «Eat hearty, to revive your appetites,» Kameas advised.
Maniakes glanced over at Lysia. «It's a good thing you're not feeling any morning sickness yet.»
She gave him a dark look. «Don't mention it. My stomach may be listening.» Actually, she'd gone through her first two pregnancies with remarkable equanimity, which, considering that she'd been on campaign through a