his sword. There was a curse and the boot disappeared from his throat. Khadames cut blindly with the sword again, but the edge caught only air. He tried to breathe, failed, and felt a gray tide wash over him. Wheezing, his head rattled back on the stones.
Battle swirled across him, the Persian knights counterattacking as the phalanx lost cohesion. One of the
—|—
One hand wrapped in Bucephalas' reins, Alexandros strode along the harborside. A broad Roman street lined the water, faced on one side by single-story warehouses—some now burning, others with doors hanging on broken hinges where the legionaries had broken them down to root out Persian stragglers—the other by the choppy, dark waters of the Golden Horn. To the east, where the sun—slanting through dark gray clouds—glittered on the waters of the Propontis, he could see the triangular shapes of tan-colored sails.
'Chlothar, how many escaped?' The Macedonian pointed with his chin at the distant ships. At least two merchantmen were burning in the harbor, cordage and sail billowing smoke, hulls settling lower in the water with each passing grain.
'Our watchers on the Galatan hill,' the big Frank replied, 'counted sixty ships of various sizes. Maybe six, seven thousand men in all—packed on the decks like herring. They must have left their mounts, wagons and supplies behind.'
'Good. We can use all those things.' Alexandros grinned, teeth white in a face dark with sweat, soot and spattered, dried blood. The Macedonian felt light, invigorated. He still held a
The Frank nodded, long pigtails bouncing on armored shoulders. Like Alexandros, Chlothar was stained and battered, with long creases bent in his armored breastplate and links missing from the mail covering his arms and legs. His face was grim and set. 'I wonder,
'They do.' Alexandros licked his lips—he felt thirst, which was rare in his current state—and looked up at the hills rising over the harbor. The sight of so many buildings, so closely packed together, filled him with amazement. This city rivaled Rome for the sheer mass of humanity once dwelling behind the gaping windows and blackened doors. 'Even the windrows of dead we saw in the outer city cannot account for so many souls. More will be hiding, fearful, in cellars and hidden rooms or in the cisterns.' He paused, remembering his father's men dragging prisoners in golden cloaks from secret chambers beneath the floors of a mighty palace.
The harbor district was battered, but the buildings still had roofs and walls and the courtyards were free of corpses and scattered bones. The outer wards of the city, between the great walls and the lesser, crumbling, ill- repaired old wall of Constantinople, were a different matter. The sights greeting his army once they entered the city proper had shaken even Alexandros, insulated as he was by the quirk of fate setting him beyond mortality. Entire districts along the Northern Road had been leveled, not a stone standing on stone, and the wizened corpses of the dead filled every space along the streets and byways. At one point, they had crossed a square where some colossal fire had raged out of control, shattering the paving stones, burning the lime from the buildings, leaving nothing but huge drifts of whitened bone and countless skulls.
Alexandros had never seen such devastation.
'Where is the Khazar lord Dahvos?' The Macedonian turned back to Chlothar, wrenching his thoughts away from such a distressing conclusion. Unbidden, his eyes turned again to the east, squinting into the bright glare from the water at the distant shore of Chalcedon. 'We must discuss our next campaign.'
'Aye,
Alexandros climbed onto a low stone wall at the edge of the quay. Bucephalas bumped his leg with a heavy head, nose snuffling at the Macedonian's hand. 'You'll eat soon, my friend,' Alexandros laughed, rubbing the stallion's white forehead blaze. 'Oats and apples, or a bit of carrot.'
The eastern shoreline was obscured—the clouds over the strait were spilling dark wavering veils of rain— but he was sure he could pick out the glint of light reflecting from metal, from armor.
'Not long,' he promised himself, unable to repress a grin, 'not long before I march on Persia again.'
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
In the Bruchion, Alexandria, Roman Egypt
'Is this how things usually turn out for you?' Thyatis hitched both thumbs into her girdle. She and Nicholas stood in a small, low-ceilinged office in the vast, confusing sprawl of the Bruchion—the consolidated governor's office, public park, royal palace and military headquarters of Rome in lower Egypt. The ancient complex filled nearly a quarter of the original city. This particular room was littered with scraps of papyrus and parchment, ratty- looking wooden desks and the faint, pervasive odor of scented balm. A shutter on the single high narrow window was jammed shut with old scroll cases and a scattering of lemon peels in one corner showed an impressive array of mold. Fruiting bodies sprouted from white fuzz, dark purple tips rising in tiny crenellated towers. The condition of the room indicated no one had actually worked in the chamber for weeks, perhaps months.
Nicholas' eyelid twitched at Thyatis' question and his scowl deepened. 'Last year, when I was here, the tribune in charge of the Egyptian Office worked here.' Angrily, he kicked a pile of discolored parchment aside with his foot.
'Just as well,' Thyatis said, turning slowly in a circle. The humidity in the room was stifling. She squinted out into the hallway. There was another cubicle opposite—indeed, there were dozens of equally small, cramped offices packed into the warren of the old Ptolemaic palace—and Thyatis realized she could see the air in the passage as a faint haze. 'We really don't have time to chase down the local authorities.'
Nicholas grimaced, automatically smoothing the sleek points of his mustache. 'You don't believe these rumors running wild in the streets? This is
'Hmm.' Thyatis turned over some of the papers on the desk. The tan-colored parchment was covered with blackish-gray spots the size of her thumbnail. 'Every official we've seen in this maze is either petrified with fear or smug as a cat thinking he'll move up when the Persians arrive. The soldiers in the port were the same way—the Romans grim and all-too-efficient, the Egyptians taking it easy, thinking they'll all have a body slave each and hands filled with the King of King's gold.'
'They're fools.' Nicholas shrugged. His confidence in the Empire was unshaken. 'The authorities will remember who was loyal and who was not, afterward.' He grinned at the prospect. 'Some of the Eastern network must still be intact—I'll root around and see if I can find anyone to help us.'
'A good idea,' Thyatis said, stepping into the corridor. Two clerks hurried past, avoiding her eyes. When they were out of earshot, she said: 'Come. It's dangerous to remain here. The Persians will have their own spies busy in the city. I'll get the others from the ship and find someplace quiet to stay on the edge of town. Meet me by sunset at the Nile Canal gate.'
'Huh!' Nicholas perked up. Thyatis hid a smile—her