The Halogai shouted again, the threat in their voices plain as the snarl of a wolf. Another troop of northerners, axes at the ready, tramped out onto the track from under the Amphitheater.
'There are enough people here to swamp them,' Krispos said nervously.
'I know.' Mavros seemed to be enjoying himself. 'But are there enough people here willing to get maimed doing it?'
There weren't. Insults continued to rain down on Skombros, but the missiles more tangible than insults stopped. Finally someone yelled, 'Get the soldiers off the track! We want the mimes!' Soon everyone took up the cry: 'We want the mimes! We want the mimes!'
This time Anthimos spoke to the Haloga commander. The warrior bowed. At his command, the northerners lowered their weapons. The newly emerged band of imperial guards marched back through the gate from which they had come. A moment later, a fresh troupe of mimes replaced them. Cheers filled the Amphitheater.
'Fickle buggers,' Mavros said with a contemptuous jerk of his head. 'Half an hour from now, half of them won't remember what they were screaming about.'
'Maybe not,' Krispos said, 'but Skombros will, and so will Anthimos.'
'That is the point, isn't it?' Mavros leaned back in his chair.
'Let's see what antics this new bunch has in 'em, shall we?'
The throne in the Grand Courtroom belonged to Anthimos. Sitting in a raised chair in his own suite, dressed in his full Sevastokrator's regalia, Petronas looked quite imperial enough, Krispos thought from his place at his master's left.
He looked around. 'This room is different somehow,' he said.
'I've screened off that part of it.' Petronas pointed. Sure enough, a wooden screen like the one that gave privacy to the imperial niche at the High Temple was in place.
The openings in the woodwork were so small that Krispos could not see what, if anything, lay behind it. He asked, 'Why did you put the screen up?'
'Let's just say you're not the only one who ever comes up with bright ideas,' the Sevastokrator said. Krispos shrugged. If Petronas didn't feel like explaining, he could hardly force him to.
Eroulos came in and bowed to Petronas. 'His Majesty and the vestiarios are here, Highness.'
'Show them in, by all means,' the Sevastokrator said.
Petronas' efficient steward had already supplied Anthimos and Skombros with goblets. The Emperor lowered his to grin at Krispos as he and Petronas rose in greeting. Skombros' face was somber. Had he been less practiced at schooling his features, Krispos judged, he would have looked nervously from one of his foes to the other. As it was, his eyes flicked back and forth between them.
Petronas welcomed him affably enough, waved him to a seat beside Anthimos', which was even more splendid than the one in which Petronas sat—the Sevastokrator did not believe in giving unintentional offense. After Eroulos refilled Anthimos' wine cup, Petronas said, 'And what can I do for you today, nephew and Majesty?'
Anthimos sipped, glanced from Petronas to Skombros, licked his lips, and took a hefty swig of wine. Thus fortified, he said, 'My vestiarios here would like to, ah, try to repair any ill-feeling that may exist between the two of you. May he speak?'
'You are my Avtokrator,' Petronas declared. 'If it be your will that he speak to me, of course I shall hear him with all the attention he merits.' He turned his head toward Skombros and waited expectantly.
'I thank you, your Imperial Highness. You are gracious to me,' Skombros said, his sexless voice soft and persuasive. 'As
I seem somehow to have offended your Imperial Highness—and that was never my intent, for my concern, as yours, is solely for the comfort and especially for the glory of his Imperial Majesty whom we both serve—I thought it best at this time to offer my deepest and most sincere apologies for whatever I have done to disturb your Imperial Highness' tranquility and to tender my assurances that any such disturbance was purely inadvertent on my part and shall not be repeated.'
He paused to take a deep breath. Krispos did not blame him; he could not have brought out such a long sentence to save his life. He doubted whether he could have written one so complex.
Petronas was more used to the grandiloquence of formal Videssian speech. Nodding to the vestiarios, he began, 'Esteemed sir—'
From behind that newly installed screen, a soft chorus of female voices chanted, 'You have five chins, and a lard belly below them.' Krispos happened to be taking a sip of wine; he all but choked on it. But for the content of what that hidden chorus sang, its response was much like that of a temple choir to the prayers of a priest.
Skombros sat perfectly still, but could not help the flush that rose from his neck to the roots of his hair. Anthimos looked about in surprise, as if unsure where the chorus was or whether he'd truly heard it. And Petronas seemed to shake himself. 'I'm sorry,' he told Skombros. 'I must have been woolgathering. What was it you wanted?'
The vestiarios tried again. 'Your Imperial Highness, I ah, wanted to apologize for, ah, anything I may have done to, ah, offend you, and I certainly want to assure you I, ah, meant no harm.' This time, Krispos noted, his delivery was less polished than before.
Petronas nodded. 'Esteemed sir—'
'You have five chins, and a lard belly below them.' The voices of the chorus rang out once more.
This time Krispos was ready for them and kept his face straight. Anthimos stared again, then giggled. Hearing that, Skombros seemed to wilt. Petronas prompted him, 'You were saying?'
'Does it matter?' Skombros asked bleakly.
'Why, esteemed sir—'