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Glen Coe, Scotland
New Year's Day, 1997
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Cold winter wind whipped the hair across Cassandra's
face as she followed the old track through the glen. Ice rimmed the pool
at the base of the chattering waterfall, and more ice crunched under her
boots. She stopped at the pile of jumbled stones at the top of the small
hill.
Ramirez was buried here.
Cassandra crouched by one of the larger stones
and took a candle from her coat pocket, then set it on the ground and lit
it. "For you," she said, cupping her hands around the flame as she started
on the litany of his names, "Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez, Lucius Gartoni,
Xanthos, Tak-Ne."
He had had many other names, but those were
the ones she remembered him by. Of course, when she had first met him twenty-five
centuries ago, she had not called him by any of those names.
She had called him Kyrios--Master.
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Cassia and Xanthos |
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Lechaion, on the Isthmus of Corinth
Festival of Demeter
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"I want my ship to sail tomorrow morning," Xanthos
said to Zarex the harbor-master. "The pottery is expected in Syracuse
soon."
"Business is good for you, eh?" Zarex asked.
"Very good," Xanthos said. "The best I've seen
in years." Xanthos had seen a lot of years. He had been born in Egypt over
four centuries ago.
"It's the new fashion that does it," Zarex
commented. "The red figures on black, instead of black on red. Good for
you, I know, but to me, a pot's a pot." He grinned, revealing a few brown
teeth. "And it's only worth something if it has wine in it."
Xanthos laughed and nodded. "True enough."
Zarex waved to the slave-driver to begin, and
the two men watched as the ship was readied for the trip.
"Hoya!" the slave-driver called, and with creaks
from the ship and groans from the long lines of harnessed slaves, the
ship moved slowly from the water and onto the log rollers on the stone-paved
road. The slaves started walking, dragging the ship behind them on the
half-day journey across the isthmus to Corinth's second port of Kenchrea.
"It's too bad Periander's idea for a canal didn't
work," Xanthos said. "It would be faster to just pull the boat through
water." It was his turn to grin at the harbor-master. "And cheaper."
Zarex shook his head and waggled his finger.
"Then business wouldn't be so good for me. You know you could have your
ship sail around the Peloponnesian peninsula instead."
"And add ten days to the trip?" Xanthos shook
his head. "No, the fee is worth it. I'll make it up in profits in Syracuse.
Good day to you!" he called, then walked through the narrow cobble-stoned
streets of the small port of Lechaion, heading for his home in the city
of Corinth. The streets were nearly deserted now in the heat of the day;
most people were inside eating their midday meal. Not a bad idea, he was
hungry himself.
He slowed as he passed the Dancing Goat tavern
at the edge of town, but not for food. He knew by the tightness in his
gut that another Immortal was nearby. Today was the festival of Demeter,
the goddess of grain, as well as a regular market-day. Several slave-merchants
had set up their tents in the field in anticipation of the increased activity.
Xanthos strolled over, and the sense of an Immortal grew stronger as he
neared the second set of pens.
The slave-merchant hurried over and bowed low.
"My name is Chremes, sir. I have a fine selection today. Two boys, young
and biddable. Two strong men."
"Are the men potters?" Xanthos asked. He had
thirty-two men in his workshops now, some his own slaves, some rented slaves,
a few freedmen, but he could use more.
"No, I am sorry, sir, they are unskilled. Good
for field work, or the quarries." Chremes hurried on, anxious not to lose
a sale. "But the women are skilled. The tall one is a weaver, and the
other three are musicians, suitable for an evening's entertainment at
a symposium or party."
Xanthos nodded to him absently and continued
to scrutinize the slaves. They all stood silently, naked and dusty, heads
down, but one of them was an Immortal, and Xanthos was going to find out
which one. "I will be in the tent," Xanthos told the merchant. "Bring
the slaves to me there, one by one."
Chremes blinked. "One by one? All of them?"
"Yes," Xanthos said impatiently, wondering if
the man were deaf.
"But ... do you have no preference? I mean
..." At Xanthos's glare, Chremes bowed again. "Of course, sir. Would you
prefer one of the boys first? Or a woman?"
Xanthos's irritation turned to amusement, and
he laughed and clapped Chremes on the back. "I'm not going to use them all,
merchant! I'm just tired and hot, and I want to sit in the shade while
I examine them."
Chremes laughed in nervous relief and bowed
again, then escorted him to the tent and saw him seated comfortably on a
folding stool. Xanthos laid his katana across his lap. His father-in-law
Masamune-sama had given him the sword over seventy years ago, when he had
lived in Ni-Hon, the island-nation far to the east, a land of shimmering
rice paddies and towering mountains.
Chremes brought the boys and the men first,
but Xanthos waved them all away. Then the tall woman came into the tent,
and Xanthos sat up straighter on the stool, resting his hand near the
hilt of his katana. He had found the Immortal.
Xanthos caught one flashing glance from her
before she dropped her gaze and came to stand in front of him. Her skin
was clean, probably scrubbed this morning to make her presentable for the
customers, but he caught whiffs of sweat and onion from her, and the definite
odor of sex. She had been in this tent earlier today, then, used by a prospective
buyer and found wanting. She stood passively, her hands at her sides,
staring at the floor, to all appearances well-trained and docile. Xanthos
knew better.
"Leave," he ordered Chremes, and the slave-merchant
backed away, then shut the tent flap behind him.
Xanthos took his time and looked her over,
evaluating her as a possible opponent. Or as a possible bedpartner. Her
auburn hair had been cropped close around her head, the tell-tale sign
of a female slave, and her pubic area shaved. The woman was thin, but with
a long leanness and strength to her that reminded him of a racing horse.
She was too healthy and muscular to have been in the slave-pens very long.
The curves of her haunches were well-defined, but padded in a pleasing,
feminine way. Her breasts were definitely feminine, too, full and nicely
rounded, large nipples. Her skin gleamed in the dim light of the tent.
Xanthos didn't want to have to use his weapon on this one. Not his katana,
that is.
"What is your name?" he asked.
"Cassia."
A Hellenistic name, but probably not her real
one. She didn't look like a Hellene anyway; she was too tall. She looked
more like a Thracian or a Kelta, but then all Immortals were foundlings.
She could have been raised anywhere. Her voice was low and a little throaty,
and Xanthos wanted to hear it again. "How long have you been a slave?"
"One month. Phoenicians captured the ship I
was on."
He nodded; Phoenicians were known for that sort
of thing. "You were traveling by yourself?" he inquired.
"I had no brother, or father, or husband, or
son to protect me," she answered evenly. "As you know."
Of course he knew. Immortals could not have
children, and they outlived their families. "No servants?"
Her gaze started at his gilded leather sandals,
went to the embroidery on the hem of his tunic, flicked over the rings
on his hands, and ended at his carefully arranged and pomaded hair. "Not
all Immortals are rich."
Xanthos knew that, too. He had become wealthy
again only recently; a war had destroyed his holdings in Babylon one hundred
seventy-five years ago. He had been left with nothing, and he had been left
alone. En-thalat, his second wife, had been killed in that war, after she
had been captured and raped. Probably much like this woman.
"Look at me," he commanded, and she raised
her head a trifle and glanced at him briefly. "Look at me," he said more
softly, and this time she lifted her head and stared. Her green eyes were
cool and assessing, watchful and mocking over high cheekbones. Xanthos
stared back, reminded of his boyhood in Egypt, when a sacred cat at the
Temple of Maat had stared at him in just this way. He blinked and laid
his hand on the hilt of his sword. Her eyes went to the weapon, then back
to his face.
"How much do you cost?" Xanthos asked.
"He's asking five minae, but he'll go down to
four. Three and three-quarters if you push him. He paid two and a half
for me."
Xanthos studied her again. She had obviously
been a slave before, to be so calm about it. She looked to be about thirty,
but that meant nothing. He had been forty-eight when a cart had run him
down and killed him, and he would always look forty-eight. "Do you want
me to buy you?" he asked. Cassia shrugged. "I could be buying you for
your head," Xanthos said, probing for some reaction. "Or for your body."
She actually smiled at him. "If you wanted
my head, you would have bought me by now. As for my body ..." She tilted
her head to one side and considered him. "You are a man who prefers willing
and enthusiastic bedpartners."
She was right about that. He had never forced
a woman. He did not need to. "And you would not be willing," he observed.
"Or enthusiastic."
The mocking eyes went cold. "No."
Xanthos hid his smile from her. There were ways
to entice a woman into bed, and he knew them all. And he had time. She
would come to him eventually.
Cassia added, "Besides, you already have a
willing and enthusiastic bedpartner in your home. Or two." She smiled
again, a knowing smile. "Or even three."
His inner smile disappeared. He kept two slave-girls
for that, and he had been thinking of buying a third. No, Cassia definitely
wasn't a young one. She knew too much. "How old are you?" he demanded.
"Old enough not to answer that question."
A good answer, but he knew other ways to find
out. "Chremes said you were a skilled weaver. What else are you skilled
at?"
Another small shrug, and a small smile. "Many
things."
"Spinning? Cooking?"
She nodded.
"Healing? Gardening?"
Another nod.
"Painting? Singing? Dancing?"
She nodded yes to them all.
Xanthos leaned back slightly on the stool. Almost
all women could cook, garden, spin, and weave, to some extent. Many learned
either painting, or music and dance, and quite a few women were healers.
But to be skilled in all those areas, she must be at least two centuries
old. If she were telling the truth, that is, and he could determine that
easily enough. There was still one area he had not yet mentioned. "Fighting?"
Cassia glanced once at the katana, still on
his lap, then looked him in the eyes. "I'm still alive," she said simply.
"But you are weaponless," he pointed out, then
allowed his gaze to linger on her naked body. "And a slave."
She did not seem to care. "Have you never been
a slave?"
"Once," Xanthos said. The army he had been
in had been defeated, and Xanthos had spent ten years on a farm, chained
to a log he had to drag or carry with him everywhere. He had not enjoyed
the experience.
"Only once," she murmured, then looked him
up and down in the same way he had just done to her. "You are either very
young, or very lucky."
Xanthos increased his estimate of her age by
another century and decided she wasn't a Hellene, even with a Hellenistic
name and no accent. No Hellene woman would be so bold, except maybe a
Spartan. He stood abruptly, his katana in his hand, and she backed away,
not hastily or in fear, but in simple precaution.
"I ask you again, do you want me to buy you?"
he said. He had met very few female Immortals, and he didn't want her killed
by the next Immortal who happened on her when she was weaponless. That
would be a waste. "You could work in my house."
"Doing what?" she asked.
"Why, all the things you are skilled at," Xanthos
said, smiling. "Except fighting, of course."
"You're not worried that I'll take your head?"
This time, Xanthos tilted his head and considered
her. "You are a woman who prefers not to take heads," he stated. He was
almost positive that was true, and he wasn't afraid of her. The longest
blade she would be able to get was the sheep-shearing knife, and nothing
could withstand his katana. And she was only a woman.
Cassia had one more question. "Do you have a
wife?"
"No." He would never marry again.
"Then yes, I want you to buy me." She bowed
her head once more, becoming the perfect image of the submissive slave,
then murmured, "Kyrios."
Xanthos suddenly realized she had never even
asked him his name.
Cassandra kept her head down as she walked behind
her new master up the hill to the city of Corinth. She was pleased with
the arrangement. She could live and work in this man's household, hidden
from other Immortals. If she were wounded somehow, she would not have to
explain to her new master why she healed, and he would not force her to
his bed. This man had too much pride in his own abilities to resort to that.
But she knew he would eventually suggest she join him. They always did.
She would deal with that when it happened.
She might even be able to use the Voice, the hypnotic power of persuasion
she had learned when she had been a priestess at the Temple of Artemis
seven centuries ago. Cassandra almost never used the Voice; it was too
dangerous. She could not use it in public; people asked questions. It
was not much use in escaping slavery, either, for too many people noticed
missing slaves, and even if she did get away from her master, no one would
help an escaped slave, and her recently-cropped hair made her status obvious.
If she were caught, the punishment for escape almost always involved beatings-or
branding or crucifixion or worse-and healing in public was bound to bring
charges of sorcery or demonic possession.
And if she were not a slave, what could she
be? She was a woman with no money, a foreigner with no kin or tribe. She
had lived among the Hellenes before; their women did not even go to the
markets to buy food. A woman needed to have a male employee or relative
to conduct business for her. Or a pimp. Cassandra did not want to do that.
Not again. Thankfully, the whore-master who had tried her out earlier today
at the slave-market had decided she was too expensive to be one of his pornai,
the whores who walked the streets and catered to sailors.
At least this master was not physically repulsive.
As they climbed the hill to the city of Corinth, she looked him over more
carefully, seeing the broadness of shoulders, the outlines of firm muscles
in his calves. He was strong and healthy, even though he looked to be
nearly fifty, with gray streaks in his dark hair and clipped beard, and
fine crinkling lines about his brown eyes. His frame was tall and solid,
even with the extra flesh around his middle. She suspected he enjoyed the
pleasures of the table as much as he enjoyed the pleasures of the bed.
A lusty man, this one, who laughed easily and often, and probably angered
easily, too. She would be careful.
Dust from the road floated about them, coating
their legs and feet. At least she wasn't naked anymore. He had bought her
sandals and a peplos, a simple brown tunic that came halfway down her thighs.
Nudity was a casual thing among these people, and slaves often went naked
in the homes, but men didn't like others to look at their property.
Finally, they reached his home, a two-story
dwelling of white stone. The porter, an elderly man with a short gray beard,
came out from a small cubicle when they reached the entrance. "Greetings,
Lord Xanthos." The old man looked at her, but said nothing more.
Cassandra stared at the brightly colored tiles
on the floor of the stoa, the outside porch of the house. Women did not
look at men.
"Theron," Xanthos said in return. "Any business
today?"
"The ship-builder Prolox came by this morning,
to discuss your new ship, and the painters' Guild Master would like to
see you tomorrow," Theron said, and at his master's nod, the old man returned
to the cubicle.
In the central courtyard, three slaves waited
for their master underneath the shade of a fig tree: a short older woman
dressed in a long gray wool chiton, obviously the housekeeper, and a pair
of younger dark-haired women in revealing gauze peplos, just as obviously
the two willing bedpartners. All three slaves were staring at her-the housekeeper
evaluating, the bedpartners suspicious.
"Kyrios," the older woman said, bowing low.
"Welcome to your home."
"Doria," Xanthos acknowledged with a smile,
then said, "This one is called Cassia. She is a weaver. See that she is
cleaned and fed, then bring her to me in the hall."
"Yes, lord," Doria said, bowing again as Xanthos
went through the columned porch and into the hall. Doria spoke briskly
to the bedpartners. "Iola, Clesthes, the master is hungry and thirsty.
Attend him."
Iola, the shorter plumper one, flashed a small
smile of vindictive triumph at Cassandra, then picked up a jar of wine
and sauntered after her master, her hips swinging. Clesthes followed more
sedately, carrying a plate of figs, goatmilk cheese, and bread.
Cassandra kept her head down, already planning.
She might have to get rid of Iola. For now, she followed Doria into the
kitchen, eager to clean herself, and to eat.
One month later, Cassandra made her move. Xanthos
called her into the hall after his evening meal, as he sometimes did when
no guests were present, and he wished for conversation or music. He lay
on his side on the dining couch, while Cassandra sat on a small stool and
played for him on the seven-stringed lyre.
She was retuning the lyre when she casually
remarked, "The women in the household are excited about the festival of
Hera, but saddened, too."
"How so?" asked Xanthos, leaning on one elbow
as he set his goblet of wine on the three-legged table in front of him.
"Hera is the goddess of marriage, and children."
Cassandra plucked a string, then bent industriously to her task. "Doria
was speaking of how quiet this household is, with no children in it. Iola
has said she will make a special sacrifice to Hera, asking the goddess
to make her fruitful." She strummed again, a discordant note among a minor
chord, then looked at Xanthos. "She wishes to bear a child." Cassandra spoke
with a completely clear conscience; this was all true.
Xanthos smiled slightly. "You do not like Iola."
He did not sound surprised.
"She is not content here," Cassandra replied.
Iola would probably not be content anywhere. "Her unhappiness disturbs the
household." Iola flirted with Buphelis the kennel-keeper, tormented the
three younger slave-girls, and constantly quarreled with Clesthes. Cassandra
spoke the truth again. "Iola has often mentioned her longing to hold a baby
in her arms."
Cassandra felt that longing, too, but she knew
better than to care about a child when she was a slave. Or even when she
was free. No woman--rich or poor, slave or free--had any right to her
children. Children could be taken from you at any time: exposed as infants,
left to starve or to provide food for the dogs; sold as five-year-old slaves
and dragged screaming from your arms, while you could do nothing.
Cassandra strummed another chord on the lyre,
a harsher sound this time. "Iola has been here nine years," she reminded
Xanthos. "She is twenty-five."
He said nothing, merely sipped at his wine.
Arrogant selfish man! Even Iola deserved a
chance to have a life of her own, and at least one child. Cassandra asked
pointedly, "Will you keep her for your own pleasure until she is too old
to have children?"
Xanthos's dark eyebrows drew together at that,
and he frowned.
Cassandra immediately slipped off the stool
and knelt on the floor, her head bowed. Masters had the power of life and
death over slaves, and this master was an Immortal. She should never make
him angry. "Your pardon, Kyrios," she said softly. "It is not my place to
speak."
"No," he agreed coldly. "It is not."
Cassandra placed her hands on the floor and
crouched there, submitting to him, the back of her bare neck tingling, cursing
her lack of control. What was the matter with her? She knew she had no
right to be angry.
"Leave," he commanded.
Cassandra bowed once more, touching her head
to the floor, then hung the lyre from its hook on the wall and left the
room.
~~~~~
In the early days of summer, Simonides the cobbler
paid Xanthos three minae for Iola, while Xanthos generously paid the fee
due the State for her manumission. Simonides made the customary gift of
fifty drachmae to the temple for her freedom, and he and his new bride
were married during the festival of Hera. It was an auspicious time for
a wedding, and Iola was soon expecting her first child. A tanner bought
Clesthes a few months later, and Xanthos also freed her.
He had forgotten how quickly the years went
by.
He told Cassia to pick out his new slaves,
and she found him two young woman: a fair one called Amesthestes, and
a dark one from the south called Zidar. They were biddable and pretty,
both enthusiastic bedpartners. They had no great intelligence, but they
were good at spinning and weaving. The household ran more quietly and
smoothly, and Xanthos was satisfied.
Cassia had not been lying about her skills.
She nursed Doria back to health when the older woman took ill that winter,
and took over the management of the household until the housekeeper was
better. She wove excellent cloth, sewed and embroidered clothes, painted
the vases he brought home for her, and knew how to cook his favorite Egyptian
dishes. In the spring, Cassia asked for permission to teach music to girls,
both slave and free. Xanthos consented, and graciously allowed her to
keep a third of the tuition the girls' families or owners paid.
She was worth a great deal more than the four
minae he had paid for her.
He decided to see if she were skilled at fighting
as well. "Would you like to spar?" he asked her in the courtyard one morning,
as he came back from the gymnasium, his practice sword at his side. He
did not use his katana for sparring; it shattered the other blades, and
he did not like others to know of it.
She balanced the basket of bread against her
hip and spoke quietly. "It is ... unseemly, Kyrios."
"We can practice here in the courtyard." Women
were not permitted in the gymnasium, of course. "No one will see."
She glanced at the three girls spinning in
the shade of the porch and at Theron in the cubicle near the entrance,
then looked toward the kitchen, where muffled voices could be heard. "No
one?"
He shrugged. "They are just slaves."
"As am I," she reminded him. But she didn't
say it as a slave. She was looking straight at him with a challenge in
her eyes, direct and unafraid.
Xanthos had always liked a challenge. "Do you
want me to free you?"
"I would rather free myself," she answered,
lowering her eyes once more. "I do not have the full price of manumission
saved."
"Yet." He had no doubt she soon would; she
had asked him to invest her money in various ventures and businesses.
She heard the gossip in the kitchens of the other households, and with
her information added to his own knowledge, the two of them made a good
team. They were both making excellent profits.
She inclined her head gracefully. "Yet. If
you will permit it, I would like to buy my freedom."
He bowed back to her in the same way. "I will
permit it." Then he grinned at her. "Will you spar with me then?"
"It would still not be seemly, for a woman to
use a sword. There would be talk."
"You should practice," he said, wondering if
she even knew how to fight at all.
She stared at the paving stones of the courtyard.
"I do not like to draw attention to myself; we are different enough."
"And just how long do you think you will survive
that way?"
Her lips curved in a smile, but she did not
look at him. "I am older than you, Kyrios." She looked up at him, that quick
flashing glance he had seen in the slave-merchant's tent, cool and mocking
as before. "And I am still alive."
"How old do you think I am?" he asked. He had
not told her.
"Between four and five centuries." At his quick
blink of surprise, she explained, "It is in your speaking, Kyrios. Your
Hellene is flawless, but when you speak your birth-language Egyptian, you
use old words, old phrases."
"I could be older," he pointed out, nettled
that she had determined his age and origin, while he still had no idea
of hers.
"But you are not." She gave him another cool
smile, another flashing glance. "And I am." She bowed her head again and
waited, seemingly submissive once again.
He nodded a dismissal and watched her walk
to the kitchen, graceful and unhurried, back straight, head high, confident
yet demure. What had she been, this woman, besides a slave?
When she had been in his house for a year, Xanthos
decided to ask her to share his bed. He had been biding his time, building
trust between them, encouraging friendship. It was a delicate business
between a master and a slave, and an especially delicate business between
Immortals. But he had succeeded, and he knew she would be worth the wait.
He could tell she was a passionate woman; he
had seen the way her hand lingered in the softness of the finely woven cloth
she made, and the pleasure she took in gardening, crumbling the earth between
her fingers. Once, very early in the morning, he had watched her from his
window as she had danced joyously in the rain in the courtyard, thinking
herself unobserved. No woman could dance that way and not like sex.
Their friendship had laid the groundwork; now
he could build on that. He started smiling at her more, listening, giving
her his full attention, letting her know that he found her intriguing.
And he did. She was usually reserved and solemn, but this morning he had
seen her playing with one of the puppies from the latest litter. He had
knelt down beside her to let the puppy chew on his fingers, and Cassia
had laughed at the faces he had made. Then she had smiled at him, the first
real smile he had ever seen from her.
Xanthos had been struck by that smile, the
brilliance of her eyes, the open and eager happiness in her face. He wanted
to see her smile that way again.
That night after dinner, Cassia played the
lyre for him. When she rose to leave, he stood with her. "You do not need
to go upstairs," he said, then added an obvious invitation to his bed.
"You could stay with me." She stood there, hesitating, and Xanthos deliberately
deepened and softened his voice. "It would be most enjoyable," he said.
"For both of us."
Cassia did not respond to him at all. Her hair
had grown long enough to fall forward and hide her face from him, as she
stood there with her head down.
Xanthos understood her reluctance. "It is an
invitation, Cassia, not a command. You will be a freedwoman soon enough,
and we are friends now." He looked her over in appreciation, his gaze traveling
the long graceful lines of her, tantalizingly hinted at under the soft
folds of her sea-green chiton. He ended at her face and waited until she
looked at him. "We could be more than friends."
"Kyrios ...," she began, standing more rigidly
now, the grace gone to stiffness.
Xanthos waved his hand in impatience. "You
do not need to call me that."
"Lord Xanthos," she amended, then dropped her
gaze. "You do me honor, but it is not an honor to which I aspire." She looked
at him again, straight-forward and earnest, then added, "With any man."
Xanthos nodded slowly and sat back down, remembering
now the way she had laughed with the other women in the weaving room,
the kindness she showed the young slave-girls. "Sit," he said gently,
and she did so. Xanthos knew Cassia had been forced by men, probably many
men, and women lovers were safer, less threatening. Perhaps, long ago,
she had liked men, but no more. He shrugged at the waste of it, then poured
them each a goblet of wine.
She murmured surprised thanks when he offered
a goblet to her, then sipped at it carefully.
"You have my permission to find a partner among
the household, if you wish," he said.
"They are more to your taste than to mine,
Lord Xanthos."
Xanthos nodded again. The chattering young
women who shared his bed were pleasant diversions, nothing more, and Cassia
was a woman of deep passions. He had hoped to learn how deep, for he was
lonely, too. A pity. Well, they could remain friends. "Perhaps you might
find someone in the slave market," he suggested.
"Affection such as that is not something to
be bought," she answered, her voice tight.
"No," he agreed quietly, then swirled the wine
in his cup. "It is not." He leaned back on the couch and studied her.
"It is just that you seem ... so alone. I thought you might want a companion."
Cassia met his eyes for an instant, and he
was not surprised at the vulnerability and loneliness he saw in her, or
by the gleam of tears she tried to hide by staring once more at the floor.
Xanthos sighed and drained his cup, knowing that loneliness very well.
"If you and one of your students form an attachment for each other, let
me know. If she is in another household, I might be able to buy her from
her master, and then you and she could be together." He decided to permit
her to leave, even though he would miss her. "Or you could go to be with
her."
"Thank you, Lord Xanthos," she said softly,
then she stood and left the room. Her walk was not confident now.
~~~~~
Cassandra fled to her tiny bed-chamber at the
top of the stairs, desperate to escape from his sympathetic and all-too-perceptive
eyes. He had believed her lies for now, but she knew she could not have
pretended much longer. Xanthos had always been kind, talking with her,
allowing her to buy her freedom, permitting her to have this small private
room, but the compassion and understanding he had shown tonight had almost
undone her.
She needed the privacy of her room now, as she
sat on her bed with her arms wrapped around her knees, for she could not
escape from the memory of his voice. "It would be most enjoyable," he had
said, the dark strands of his voice warm and inviting, compelling. His words
had curled around her and in her, waves on the shore, urging her to go
deeper, to plunge into the comfort and pleasure he offered. "Enjoyable for
both of us."
Cassandra knew that. She had heard seen the
satisfied smiles on the faces of the slave-women in the morning, listened
to their happy chatter and giggled confidences as they discussed their master's
prowess in bed. And she had known this was coming; Xanthos had been very
attentive of late.
She had responded to that attention. Cassandra
respected Xanthos and enjoyed his company, and she desired him. It had
been decades since she had willingly given herself to a man, and she ached
to feel his arms about her, to make love to him, and to have him make love
to her. Xanthos was a man of strength and gentleness; she knew she could
grow to love him. It would be wonderful.
It was unthinkable. Xanthos was an Immortal,
and he was her master. Even when she had bought her freedom, he would
still have power over her. He would be her patron instead of her master,
and she would owe him obedience and a portion of her earnings. Besides,
she was just another bedpartner to him, just another romp among the cushions.
She meant nothing to him. No. She would never let a master have that kind
of power over her. Never again.
Cassandra undressed and placed her chiton in
the small chest against the wall, then lay down in her bed, staring out
the small high window at the stars. It was best this way. She could not
take such a risk.
A short time later, she could not help but
hear the sounds of love-making coming from his room on the ground floor,
soft laughter, whispered indistinguishable words, urgent and hurried and
strong. Finally, there was silence, then some time later quiet footsteps
as the slave-woman Zidar came up the stairs and went to the chamber she
shared with the other women.
Cassandra rolled over and pulled her blanket
close about her. There was no reason for her to be unhappy. She had a
place to live and food to eat, and no one beat her or used her. She was
teaching again and even making money. Xanthos permitted her to leave the
house to teach and to visit the temple or to attend the festivals. He was
a kind master, and a good friend. Soon she would be free. She should expect
nothing more. She should want nothing more.
Cassandra went to sleep alone, her face wet
with tears.
Six years passed, and Cassandra and Xanthos remained
friends. Xanthos left from time to time to visit his new pottery workshop
in the young colony of Potidaea, and the slave-girls came and went, married
off after a year or two. When Cassandra had been his slave for two years,
she paid him back the four minae for her purchase price and the one mina
for the taxes and licensing fees. She paid the manumission fee to the
State and gave the expected gifts to the temples. Xanthos registered her
freedom with the priests.
She stayed in his household, for her new status
changed little in her life. Part of her income was paid in taxes to the
State, while some still went to Xanthos. Even so, her investments and her
weaving business were flourishing, and she had to turn away music students.
In ten years she might have enough money to open her own school. For now,
she was busy and satisfied. She did not look for a companion.
They were good years. She almost forgot about
the Game, and about ancient enemies.
"Let us in!" a man's harsh voice called over
the pounding on the gate. "The Watch of Corinth demands entrance!"
In the weaving room, Bithyra dropped her spindle.
The thread trailed along behind on the floor as the spindle rolled, and
the other four women stopped their work and stared at each other. "The
Watch?" young Chraxes asked, her voice thin with worry. "They come for
criminals and escaped slaves."
"Stay here," Cassandra ordered, and she left
her loom and headed for the courtyard. Before she got there, the latest
bedpartner Zitra started keening, her high wail rising over the deeper
voices of the men.
Cassandra reached the doorway, but in no great
hurry now. She knew why they had come. The four guardsmen carried a burden
between them, a dead body wrapped in a blood-stained cloak--Xanthos's
favorite blue cloak. She had watched him put it on only a few hours before,
for the air clung dank and chill on this winter day.
"He is dead!" Zitra wailed, falling to her
knees and clutching at her veil. "Our master is dead!"
And, of course, the women in the weaving room
came out when they heard that, and they started to wail, too. Chraxes and
Bithyra were clinging to each other and weeping. Then Dion, Xanthos's favorite
dog, started to bark. The porter Theron was just standing there, tears running
down his cheeks, and the men of the Watch waited in the courtyard with
the body between them.
"He's dead!" Zitra wailed again, and the other
women took up the cry, their shrill voices echoing off the stones.
He was dead, but he wouldn't be for long. Cassandra
had to get the body out of the courtyard and away from prying eyes. "Hush
now!" she said to the women, using the Voice to keep them quiet for a
minute, and they were mercifully silent. Dion was still barking. "Follow
me," she told the guardsmen, and they carried the body through the portico
into the hall, then laid him gently on the dining couch.
Theron followed close behind, with tall, gangly
Buphelis at his side. The women started wailing again from their place
on the porch, and Cassandra moved to the corner of the room, keeping an
eye on the body. There was a lot of blood; with luck the wound had been
severe, and Xanthos would stay dead for at least another hour.
"How did it happen?" Theron asked the Watch.
He was pale, but composed enough to ask questions.
"We were patrolling the fields just outside
the walls," said the captain of the guardsmen, a stocky man with a scar
across his cheek. "Lord Xanthos was fighting a huge man, very tall, with
swords. We called out to them to stop, but the other man ran him through."
"And the tall man?" Theron said.
"That one's dead!" piped up the youngest of
the four, pushing brown hair back from his eyes, still excited by the novelty
of the situation. "Lord Xanthos gutted the barbarian, he did, just as
the other fellow stabbed, pulled out all his insides!"
The stocky man shot him a stern glance, and
the young one subsided, shuffling his feet. The captain turned back to Theron.
"The murderer was taken to the quarry pit and dumped there, buried under
stones." He gestured to the body. "Unfortunately, Lord Xanthos died on
the field." He reached inside his cloak and pulled out the katana. "This
was in his hand."
Theron bowed and accepted his master's blade,
then laid it next to the body. The women of the household started to enter
the hall, their veils thrown over their faces, their sobs mercifully muffled.
They stood about the walls of the chamber and watched while Theron unwrapped
the cloak from Xanthos's face with trembling hands.
The women burst into renewed wailing at the
sight, and Dion crept over to the body and started to howl. Cassandra considered
Xanthos's death grimace. She had seen worse. At least his eyes were shut.
Cassandra and Doria exchanged glances. There
was much to be done.
A short time later, the body had been dressed
and properly laid out. Cassandra had volunteered to wash the body, not
wanting anyone else to see the already-healing wounds. Theron took an obol
from his pouch and placed the small coin on Xanthos's tongue, payment for
the ferry ride across the River Styx to the land of the dead. Doria set
the honey cakes and flask of oil at his head, and told Bithyra to set the
jar of spring water at the door so that guests might purify their hands.
The guardsmen left, and some of the women began preparing food for the expected
visitors. The rest kept up the steady weeping and wailing that was customary
on such occasions. Buphelis had been sent to hire professional mourners
to come to the house and keen.
Cassandra used the Voice to order everyone to
leave the hall, saying she wanted a chance to mourn in private. She was
just in time. Xanthos revived with a great shuddering gasp which immediately
set him to gagging, for he had all but swallowed the coin. "I forgot about
that," Cassandra said briskly, smacking him on the back to help him cough
it up.
Xanthos spit the obol out into his palm. "Thank
you," he said dryly. "I can breathe now." He swung his legs over the side
of the couch and stood, then looked down at his new clean clothes in satisfaction
and slapped himself on the belly with both hands. "Even with the coin,
this is better than waking up stripped naked on a battlefield. Or buried
underground."
"Yes," Cassandra agreed, her own voice dry,
remembering much worse ways to revive. Much worse. "But you need to leave
now." She handed him a heavy veil and a long chiton. "Put these on. We can
get you up the stairs to my room if you're quick about it, and you can hide
there until dark." Cassandra locked the doors to the hall, then they made
their way to her room without incident. Dion followed, his tail wagging.
"Well, this life is over," he commented, taking
off the veil, then pulling the chiton over his head.
"Dying in public does tend to have that effect,"
Cassandra agreed. Men's voices sounded in the courtyard, and Cassandra
sighed. "I'll try to get rid of them. There's food under the bed for you."
As she shut the door behind her, she caught a glimpse of Xanthos lying
at his ease on her bed, tossing a grape in the air and catching it in his
mouth, while his dog lay on the floor close by.
Cassandra pulled her veil over her face and
went down the stairs. Five of Xanthos's business associates were standing
in the courtyard, eating the food which two slave-women were offering on
trays. Theron was anxiously waving his hands about, standing in front
of the locked doors of the hall.
"But why can't we go into the hall?" Protox
demanded. "We came to pay our respects." The other four men nodded and murmured
in anxious agreement. "Why can't we go in?" he demanded again, his voice
going strident.
Theron tried to answer, but his quavering voice
did not persuade them. Cassandra stepped forward, pitching her Voice to
soothe and convince. "Please, lords. This is a house of mourning."
The men were silent at that, and keening wails
of the women in the kitchen echoed in the courtyard.
Cassandra spread her hands in a plea for help
and understanding, then said softly and hesitantly, as befitted a woman
in the company of strangers, "My Lord Xanthos was enamored of the ways of
the Egyptians, as you know."
There were more nods. All of these men had come
to some of the "Egyptian banquets" Xanthos had held from time to time,
complete with pickled sparrow and haq, the Egyptian beer.
Cassandra continued with the excuses. "It is
their custom not to display the body before the cremation."
"Seems an odd custom, if you ask me," grumbled
an overweight man with gray hair. "How are you to know a man is dead if
you haven't seen his body?"
"The Watch saw the murder done, and carried
the body here," Cassandra replied, letting her voice grow strong with conviction,
slipping into the cadences of prophecy. "His heart's blood stains the
blade of the sword that lies in the hall." The wailing of the women grew
louder, and Cassandra cried with them, "He is dead, he is dead! Our lord
and master is dead!" She burst out weeping and covered her face with her
hands.
The men shuffled uneasily at this display of
unrestrained feminine emotion, then headed for the door. Cassandra sank
to her knees, wailing and crying until the last of them were gone. She
stopped her weeping when the door shut, then rose, wondering where she
was going to find a body to cremate tomorrow.
Dying in public was really most exasperating.
~~~~~
Xanthos awoke from his nap late in the evening,
then sighed and put his hands behind his head. He had been planning to
leave Corinth this summer, but he hadn't been quite ready to go. Certainly
not this way. Dying in public was annoying.
Cassia came upstairs a short time later, carrying
a large bundle and looking very tired. He got up and went to sit on the
clothes-chest, absently fondling Dion's ears. She nodded to him and sank
onto her bed, laying the bundle on the floor beside her feet.
Xanthos decided a joke was in order. "Well,
I finally got to sleep in your bed."
Her reply was sharp, yet amused. "Was it worth
dying for?"
He pretended to consider it. "No." He could
not resist adding, "Not without you there."
Cassia shook her head in exasperation, but
a faint smile touched her lips as she slowly took off her veil.
"What did you tell them about the missing body?"
he asked.
"I told your business associates that it is
an Egyptian custom that the body not be displayed before cremation. Tomorrow
... well, tomorrow there will be great commotion when they discover the
body and the sword have been stolen. And the shutters to your chamber broken,
and your money and clothes taken." She glanced at Dion, who was panting
happily, and said, "You should take the dog with you, so they won't wonder
why he didn't wake the household."
Xanthos nodded. It was a good plan.
She gestured to the bundle on the floor. "Your
sword is in there, and money and some of your clothes." She sighed and stretched
her arms before asking, "Who were you fighting?"
"We have never introduced ourselves," Xanthos
replied, "but he is a Kurgan."
Cassia nodded, and a flicker of distaste twisted
her mouth.
Xanthos knew she needed no further explanation.
Everyone had heard of the Kurgans, the bloodthirsty tribe that lived far
to the north, beyond the Black Sea. The Kurgans were said to throw children
and hungry dogs into pits and watch them fight over scraps of food.
"So you've met him before," she observed, bending
to unlace the straps of her sandals.
"I killed his horse about two hundred years
ago," he said.
"And he is still angry at you?"
Xanthos shrugged. "Perhaps. It was a very large
horse, very rare."
She paused, one lace in her hand, and looked
at him more closely. "You are angry at him."
He was not surprised that it showed. "He killed
my wife," he said shortly. The Kurgan had raped her first, then left her
to burn to death inside their house while Xanthos lay dead with the other
defenders of Babylon. A servant had told him the tale when he had made
his way home.
Cassia sighed, then said simply, "I'm sorry."
He nodded, then stood and walked over to the
tiny space at the end of her bed. There were no stars out tonight; the sky
was dark with clouds. The sky had been dark that day in Babylon, too, but
with smoke, black billows that reeked of burning flesh. King Sennacherib's
troops had left nothing alive, then they had diverted the river to flood
into the city. The mud brick buildings had collapsed, and Babylon had drowned
in water and blood, while the skins of its inhabitants adorned the broken
walls.
Xanthos would look for the Kurgan tonight, and
tomorrow, and the next day. And maybe the next. He wasn't going to spend
his entire life hunting that slime, but as long as he knew the butcher was
nearby, he would hunt.
"I should be going," he said to Cassia, turning
from the window. "I've freed all my household slaves in my will, given
them money." She nodded, for they had spoken of this, but he knew this
next part would surprise her. "And I've given you both of my factories here,
and the factory in Potidaea."
"Lord Xanthos...," she protested.
"Xanthos is dead," he answered. "And your master
is dead." He sat down on the edge of the bed, close to her, but not touching.
"I would like it if you called me by my birth name: Tak-Ne."
"Tak-Ne," she repeated, and she smiled at him,
that brilliant smile he had seen only rarely on her face.
"And your name?" he asked, wondering how far
he dared push her.
"Cassandra," she answered, with another smile.
"Are you a Trojan?" he asked, curious to know
where she came from. Troy had fallen three centuries before he had been
born, but everyone in the Hellenic lands had heard the stories of the ill-fated
prophetess named Cassandra who had lived in that city.
"No," she said. "I do not know the name of the
place of my birth. I was raised in a desert, somewhere south of Babylon,
I think. But Cassandra is my name, given to me by my first teacher, the
Lady of the Temple of Artemis on Lesbos. She was of the Minoan culture, as
was Troy."
Tak-Ne shook his head. "I know of no such temple
there."
"It was burned," she answered shortly, "right
before the Hellenes laid siege to Troy." Her gaze went inward, dark and
haunted. "The Hellenes burned Troy, too. The streets ran with our blood; our
screams echoed in the courtyards. And then, nothing. Only silence, save the
flapping of birds' wings, and the wind."
The sounds of death. He knew them well. "Like
Babylon."
She blinked, banishing the memories, and turned
to him again. "Yes," she said, shrugging a little. "We've seen it before.
We'll see it again."
Probably. "Did you know the other Cassandra?"
he asked.
"Yes." Her eyes darkened again. "Her mother
Hecuba and I were friends, and she named her daughter after me. An unlucky
choice, I think."
Tak-Ne decided to change the subject. "So you
are ... eight hundred?"
"Nine, I think," she answered.
He nodded in satisfaction, for he had guessed
her age to be close to one thousand. "And you already know how old I am,
and where I am from."
"Yes," she agreed, with a smile deep enough
to give her dimples. "But Xanthos--Tak-Ne--I cannot take your factories."
"I'm giving them to you," he said, with an
impatient wave of his hand. "We both knew it was time to leave Corinth,
and I've already made arrangements for myself in the city of Sybaris. I
have factories there and investments in many places. Besides," he said
enticingly, "now you can start your school."
"Yes," she murmured, then said again more strongly,
"Yes."
"Good!" Now to say farewell. "I've enjoyed our
time together, Cassandra. I'll miss you."
"And I will miss you." Her gaze wandered to
the small flame of the oil lamp hanging on the wall, then back to him. "But
we will see each other again."
"Will we?" he asked, wondering why she sounded
so sure.
Her eyes were dark and wide in the flickering
light, the shadows outlining the curve of her cheek. "Yes."
He took her hands in his, and gently kissed
her lips. "I'll look for you, then."
She kissed him on the forehead, a light warm
touch. "And I will look for you."
|
Callista and Lucius |
=====================
Masallia, Gaul
Vestalia, the Ides of June
The seventeenth year of the reign of the Emperor Diocletian
=====================
Cassandra was looking for her lawyer Justinius.
She walked gracefully and sedately through the crowds at the governor's
mansion, followed by her retinue of two slave-girls and an impressively
muscled Nubian who wore only a loincloth and a turban. Rich widows had to
keep up appearances.
They were passing through the gardens when her
head began to ache with the presence of an Immortal, and Senator Tullo's
peevish voice came from a small high window in the guest quarters. "You
are like an ass at the lyre, fool! Do you know nothing of how to arrange
the toga?"
Cassandra was still walking calmly, hoping to
leave before being discovered, when a softer, deeper voice replied. "Your
pardon, Most Illustrious. I am entirely clumsy."
She recognized that voice immediately, even
though she had not heard it for almost eight centuries. The goddess Fortuna
had turned the wheel; Tak-Ne was the slave this time, and Cassandra was
in a position to buy him, if the senator were agreeable to the sale. Cassandra
smiled to herself and kept walking. He would be. She would see to that.
A short time later at the banquet, she asked
the governor to introduce her to the senator.
"Most Illustrious, this is Callista Macedo,
one of the largest landowners in the area," the governor said as he bowed
to Senator Tullo, a tall man with thinning gray hair. The senator bowed
back minutely, and the governor left them alone.
"Is this your first time to the province of
Gaul?" she asked, smiling at the senator.
Senator Tullo sniffed and refolded a pleat
in his toga. "Our Divine Emperor Diocletian has decreed that Gaul is not
a province, but a diocese, under the rule of Caesar Constantius."
"Of course," she murmured, bowing her head.
"Thank you for correcting me. I am unaccustomed to thinking of such matters,
unlike an important man such as yourself."
He sniffed again. "You are a woman. You have
no need to know of such things."
"As you say, Senator," she agreed. "I am a widow,
with no husband to guide me." She put on her most innocent, helpless expression.
"I am in need of advice, and I had hoped that I might ask you?" She glanced
around the crowded banquet hall, then said, "But perhaps, in private?
It is ... a personal matter." She laid her hand appealingly on his arm.
"Of course," said the senator, with a wintry
smile and a lustful appraisal. "I would be glad to help you, in a personal
matter." The gongs were struck to call the diners to the tables, and he
said, "I will look for you, after the banquet."
Cassandra smiled and bowed her head again.
The next morning, Cassandra left the governor's
mansion with a signed bill of sale in her hand, granting her ownership
of one Lucius--a male slave, age fifty years, no scars, fluent in Greek,
Latin, and Egyptian, able to read and write. Tak-Ne was hers.
But not for long. "Should I free you now,"
she asked after they had gone through the city's gate, and headed on the
North Road to her estate, "or do you want to work it off?"
"Before I decide that, I want to know much
I cost," he said, walking beside her litter. A male slave could not ride
with his mistress, not without arousing indignation and gossip, and the
roads were crowded with people on their way to and from the city.
"Not very much," she said, then laughed at his
affronted expression. "It's no matter. I want to repay you for those factories
you gave me back in Corinth. You'll be free in a few days. My lawyer is
already drawing up the papers."
"Thank you," he said, with a slight bow. "I
didn't enjoy catering to that pompous idiot."
"No," she murmured. "I didn't think you did."
She didn't enjoy catering to masters, either. "How did you come to be
a slave?"
"Taxes," he said in disgust. "I had a comfortable
little farm in Sardinia, then one day it was confiscated by the tax officials,
and me along with it. The other farmers and I were sold to pay off the
tax bill." He shook his head. "These taxes are going to destroy the empire.
There won't be anybody left to pay them if they enslave everyone."
"It is getting bad," Cassandra agreed. "And
the new edict against raising prices has confused things even more. People
are hoarding food, bartering for goods, hiding what little money they do
have."
"At least we're done with those interminable
wars of succession. Four emperors in one year, armies tramping everywhere--bah!"
He glanced at the richly appointed litter and the escort of slaves and
bodyguards walking alongside. "You're doing well for yourself," he commented.
She smiled thinly. "I am a rich landowner. I
am exempt from paying taxes." That was the tax policy which would destroy
the Empire. She had seen it happen before. But this culture wasn't ready
to collapse completely, not yet. She would stay for a few more decades.
It was nice to be rich, for a change.
His gaze had come to rest on her, starting
at her high-heeled sandals, up the silken folds of her turquoise gown,
to the jeweled belt around her waist, then more slowly along the curves
of her bodice until he met her eyes. "You look ... exquisite," he said,
his brown eyes glinting in the sunshine, his voice as she remembered: warm,
deep, and inviting.
"Thank you," she said, then leaned over and
opened the curtain wider to let in a cooling breeze. It was much too hot
inside the litter. "So, what of your sword?" she asked briskly.
"I hid it, right before they came for me." His
mouth twisted, firm lips thinning behind the short-clipped beard. "I hope
it's still there."
"I'll give you a travel pass to go get it,
after you're freed."
"Good." He picked at the rough weave of his
simple brown tunic disdainfully. "I'll need new clothes, too, before I travel."
Tak-Ne grinned at her. "Can I borrow some money from you?"
"Yes," she said, amused by his audacity.
"Did you start a school with the money from
the factories?" he asked.
She nodded. "In Potidaea. I lived there off
and on, for about seventy years, until Athens lay siege to the city." She
had been captured during that war and sold into slavery. Again. It got tedious.
"And since then?"
"Teaching, of course. I started four other schools,
and I was at the library in Alexandria most of the last century. I've
traveled quite a bit." Sometimes she had hidden, sometimes she had run,
occasionally she had fought, but she had survived. "And you?"
"Traveling, as you say. Seeing what the world
has to offer." He smiled at her, offering a great deal.
Cassandra nodded pleasantly, then leaned back
on the cushions and covered a yawn with her hand. "We'll talk more later.
I'm going to take a nap now."
Tak-Ne bowed his head in a show of obedience,
then moved back to walk with the other slaves.
She dozed off easily, lulled by the swaying
motion as her bearers walked along the straight stone-paved Roman road.
She had not gotten much sleep last night.
They stopped for the mid-day meal near a bend
in the river. Tak-Ne stood next to her while she ate under the shade of
the trees. Appearances must be maintained. The other slaves sat a short
distance away, eating their food, save for young Marcia, Cassandra's personal
servant.
"How much longer until we reach your estate?"
Tak-Ne asked.
"We're on it," Cassandra answered, then motioned
to the fields of grape vines, and the cattle pastures in the hills. "This
is all mine."
"Really?" Tak-Ne shot her a look, more appraising
than appreciative, more respectful than familiar. "You are doing well
for yourself."
Marcia poured a cup of wine, then offered it
to her mistress. Cassandra sipped at it, smiling up at Tak-Ne. The wheel
of fortune had indeed turned.
~~~~~
Tak-Ne left six days later to retrieve his sword,
then he came back to her estate to work for her. Cassandra had mentioned
that she needed a farm manager, and Tak-Ne was more than qualified for
the job. Besides, he enjoyed her company, and it was good to be able to
talk freely with another Immortal. And to practice with their swords.
"A rich widow can be more eccentric than a slave,"
she told him, facing him with her sword in her hand.
She was no match for him in strength, of course,
but she was very fast, and she knew some tricks he had never seen before.
He had tricks of his own. Over the next three years, they learned a great
deal from each other.
Tak-Ne was whistling as he walked past the pool
in the atrium and headed toward Cassandra's office. She was expecting
him, of course; they had sensed each other before he had come through
the entry hall. She stood facing the doorway, relaxed yet ready, her hands
partially hidden in the pleats of her green-striped gown. Her sword was
concealed in her desk, but Tak-Ne knew it was there. His katana, as always,
was by his side.
"Salve, Mistress Callista," he greeted her
formally, mindful of the slave-woman Marcia standing against the wall,
and the three farmers who stood ill-at-ease in the center of the room.
"Salve, Lucius," she answered, motioning him
toward the wooden stool in the corner, while she seated herself on the wicker
chair behind the desk. Cassandra turned her attention back to the farmers,
speaking to the shortest. "So, Garix, you wish me to collect on your loans
by buying your farms from you. Then you will continue to work on them,
and pay me rent?"
"Yes, Mistress," Garix said. "We're already
in debt to you, and we cannot pay our taxes." He motioned to his black-bearded
companion, who ducked his head in embarrassment. "Rinton here has already
sold his oxen and his plow. He's kept his barley seed, but he won't be able
to get it planted next season anyway."
The third farmer, a burly fellow with graying
wisps of hair on a bald scalp, spoke up. "My neighbor just sold two of his
daughters to the brothels. The younger one was eight." He planted his feet
firmly apart and hooked his thumbs into his plain leather belt. "I'll not
sell my daughter to the brothels. Not now, not next year, nor the year
after that. I'd rather see her dead."
Cassandra nodded, her face expressionless,
then looked at each of them intently. "You realize that if you sell me
your land, you will be tenant farmers. The law of origo forbids you--or
your sons, or their sons--to leave the farms. You will be bound here, not
slaves who can be sold at auction, but serfs nonetheless."
Garix shrugged. "We'll be slaves soon enough
anyway, if we don't pay our taxes. And I'd rather be a serf here--on land
I've lived all my life and with my family about me--than sold to some
far-off land, and see my wife and children sold away."
Tak-Ne stretched and eased out his legs, remembering
the day the slavers had come for him. Hard times, hard choices. The Celts
of Gaul had been such a proud tribe once, greeting each other as "free
people." Now they were reduced to serfs, begging for the chance to farm
the land their ancestors had owned, while the rich landowners of the region
became like little kings. And queens, he acknowledged, glancing at Cassandra.
Rinton spoke now, his voice squeaky with uneasiness.
"We'd rather be bound to you, Mistress, than to Publius Breticio."
Tak-Ne couldn't blame him. Breticio was the
other local magnate, and the man was a lamprey--all sharp teeth and slimy
skin, with cold water in his veins instead of blood, and a voracious appetite
in his soul.
"I will not always be mistress here," Cassandra
said.
The farmers shuffled their feet and looked
at each other, then Garix spoke for them all. "We can't worry about that,
Mistress. The tax-collectors are coming in three days."
She sighed and nodded. "I'll have my lawyer
draw up the deeds of sale. You may sign the papers when he is done." She
turned to her slave-woman. "Marcia, show them to the kitchen and see that
they are fed."
When they had left the room, she shoved the
scrolls on the desk away from her and stared at the polished wood. "I
don't like owning people."
"You're a good mistress," he said, coming to
stand near the desk.
She snorted. "That's because I know what it's
like to be on the other side."
So did he. "Cassandra...," he began, touching
her on the shoulder.
She froze under his hand, and he pulled it
away immediately. She did not look at him as she went to stare out the
latticed window into the garden. Her auburn hair was coiled in a crown
of intricate braids on top of her head, and loose tendrils curled on the
nape of her neck. His fingers itched to replace those wayward curls.
He stayed where he was, knowing she would flee
if he pursued. "Why do you always pull away?"
She crossed her arms in front of her, and her
back went stiff. "So I can be the first to leave."
A common pattern for Immortals, always leaving,
always moving. Always alone. "Cassandra, I know it shatters us to watch
them die, but you and I are Immortal. It doesn't have to be that way with
us."
Her hands tightened on her arms, the fingers
digging into the flesh, and she shook her head in bitter denial. "Dying
isn't the only way to leave, and mortals aren't the only ones to go."
Ah. He had stopped giving his heart to mortals
after Shakiko had died, but there were other ways to be left alone. "What
happened?" he asked, very gently, very softly.
Her lips twisted in a pathetic attempt at a
smile. "My first master, the first man who ever..."
The first? Nearly two thousand years ago? This
hurt went deep in her. "He sold you?"
"No." The word came out soft and strangled.
"Not even that. He gave me away. I thought I had pleased him well, kept
him happy, and he just ... handed me over one day, gave me to another man.
When the other man started to..." She stopped and took a slow breath,
then continued, "I called for my master, begged him to help me, but he
never came." She shrugged. "I was nothing to him."
Cassandra turned from the window, and her voice
was coldly determined. "I was very young then, very foolish. I'm not anymore."
Neither of them were, but there was still a
time for happiness in their lives. There was always time for that. "You
lied to me in Corinth, didn't you?" he asked, seeing now why she had refused
him. "You don't prefer women."
"I prefer love," she answered. "And I need
trust. Finding both together is hard."
He walked over to her and gently wiped away
the tear on her cheek with his thumb. "Not so hard," he said. "Not for us."
"Tak-Ne...," she whispered, shaking her head,
but she did not move away from him this time.
"I am not your master now, Cassandra. And,"
he said with a grin, "you are no longer mine. We have no power over each
other, except the power we choose to give." She was still hesitating,
still poised to flee, and he added, very softly, "The power of faith,
and the power of love."
The darks of her eyes grew larger, and she
trembled, but with a mixture of desire and fear.
He grinned again and repeated what he had said
to her long ago, breaking some of that tension. "It would be most enjoyable.
For both of us."
An answering smile flitted across her face,
then disappeared. "I can't ..."
"You can, if you want to. Do you want to, Cassandra?"
He knew she did, and he also knew she was terrified of that want, that
need. "I can't promise never to leave you, but I will never betray you."
"I know," she said softly.
"We can be more than friends," he offered, taking
her hands in his, not grasping, just holding them on his palms, so she
could pull away if she chose. He had offered her reassurance, now he appealed
to her strength and her pride. "Don't let what he did to you then control
you now, Cassandra. We can trust each other, and maybe together we can
find love."
She nodded slowly, and the determination came
back, but it was not cold this time. "Yes," she said, and held tight to
his hands. "Yes," she said again, then stepped forward and kissed him
with a deep hungry longing that seared them both with its ache of loneliness.
Tak-Ne finally broke from the kiss, then chuckled
and kissed her on the forehead as he held her comfortably within his arms.
"I was right about you, all those years ago," he said. "You are a woman
of deep passions."
"And I was right about you," she said, smiling
back up at him with that joyous smile he had seen only a few times, but
still remembered. "You prefer willing--" She slid her hands up to his shoulders
and urged him closer.
"Very willing," Tak-Ne agreed, finally allowing
his fingers to wander to those tempting curls at the back of her neck.
"--and enthusiastic--," she murmured against
his lips, her hands moving lower down his back.
"Very enthusiastic." He kissed her this time,
the passion overcoming the loneliness, but still searing both of them
with need.
"--bedpartners!" she concluded triumphantly,
her eyes sparkling, her face flushed.
"Yes, you were right about me," he said, smiling.
"So, where's the bed?"
~~~~~
The next day, they went to a small village near
the sea, away from gossip and prying eyes. Mistresses and their former
slaves were not supposed to consort with one another. But they consorted,
frequently--on the beach, in the water, at night when the sky was black
silk scattered with stars, in the morning when the fresh breeze came from
the sea, in the heat of the day in their hut.
"It's good that I'm Immortal," he said, lying
on his back, holding her close while she twined her fingers in his chest
hair. "I could never keep up with you otherwise."
Cassandra laughed and kissed him. "I have a
lot of catching up to do." She kissed him again, then kissed the tip of
his nose. "And you're the perfect man to do it with."
He smiled at that and ran his hand down to
her backside, casually following the curves there. "How long has it been
for you?"
"Some years," she answered, not answering at
all. She had been sold to the brothels in Rome during Nero's reign over
two centuries ago, and she hadn't wanted any man to touch her since then,
until now. But Tak-Ne didn't need to know that, and she didn't want to
think about that. "Let's go swimming," she said suddenly, and he laughed
and came with her to the beach.
They swam in the blue-green waves, then made
love again under the shade of the trees. "Have you ever married a mortal?"
he asked, holding her close again.
"Three times," she answered, then decided she
could trust him with more. "My first husband was Taleer, before I was
a century old. He was a musician in the Temple where I was a priestess.
We were together nearly forty years, raised three children." She closed
her eyes, but the memory of his face was blurred. She could still see
his hands, though--beautiful hands the color of mahogany; long, elegant
fingers; calluses on the sides of his fingertips from the strings of the
lyre.
"A good man for you," Tak-Ne observed.
"Yes," she agreed, remembering clearly Taleer's
gentleness, his patience, and his love. "A good man." She smiled at the
man she was with now. "As are you." Tak-Ne was not prone to jealousy, but
talking about old lovers was still awkward, and some reassurance was called
for.
"Your other husbands?" he asked, still curious.
"Mal-tek died of a fever after we had been
together about ten years. Garon was my third husband, when I about five
hundred. He and our children were killed in a raid on our village." The
leader of that raid had been an Immortal named Roland. He was immune to
the Voice, and he had his own way of playing the Game. He had tortured
her family to death in front of her, made her watch from a cage while her
husband and her children screamed for her to help them. She didn't want
to talk about that, either.
"After that ..." She shrugged. After that,
she had avoided becoming involved with mortals. She had had friends and
taken lovers from time to time, been fond of them, cared about them, but
she had never dared to love them. Mortals you loved were valuable--and
unwitting--pawns in the Game. "And you?" she asked, turning the conversation
to him.
"My first wife was Nipik, in Egypt before I
became Immortal, then En-thalat in Babylon." He paused, and Cassandra
squeezed his hand lightly, remembering what he told her about the Kurgan.
He returned the pressure, then continued. "My third wife was Shakiko,
a princess in Ni-Hon. She died nearly eight centuries ago. And after that
..." He smiled at her and shook his head. "It's not an easy life, sometimes."
"No."
"But it is life," he said, stretching luxuriously
and happily. "And there's so much to see, so much to do."
She knew that, and being with Tak-Ne made it
easier to keep believing it.
"I think that's why the Fates made me Immortal,"
Tak-Ne continued. "They knew I wouldn't be happy until I had experienced
all that life has to offer."
"Oh?" she asked. "And what haven't you experienced
yet?"
"I don't know," he answered grinning. "Why
don't you show me things, and then I'll tell you if I've done them before
or not."
"This could be most enjoyable," she said, her
fingertips trailing a delicate path down from his chest.
"For both of us," he agreed, his own hands
wandering here and there.
Cassandra sold her estate after another ten years,
knowing it was time to move on. People were beginning to talk about the
widow who did not age. She gave final gifts of lands and funds to the two
schools she had established in the region, then she and Tak-Ne moved to
Africa, then Egypt, then Greece once again. They stayed together for another
seventy years, parting from time to time, meeting again after a year or
two. When Theodosius was Emperor, Cassandra went to Hispania to meet Tak-Ne,
as they had agreed.
He was not alone. "This is Roderigo Rubio, my
student," Tak-Ne said, performing the introductions in the courtyard, under
the shade of the flowering lemon tree. "Rubio, this is Callista, a friend
of mine."
The tall thin Immortal stood stiffly at attention.
"Salve, Callista," he said, locks of his graying blond hair falling over
his eyes as he bowed his head. He tossed them back and looked her over
thoroughly, then stared directly at her with pale-blue eyes.
She stared back and smiled, just a little.
A challenge from such a young one was more amusing than annoying. "Salve,
Rubio," she said in return. "You are a native of this land?" she asked,
though it was obvious enough from his accent, and from his appearance.
The tribes in Hispania were part of the Celtic people, and Celts were known
for their height and their manes of light-colored hair. She had lived
among them several times, since they matched her own physical appearance,
but their tradition of taking heads made her uncomfortable, and she never
stayed long.
"Yes," he said. "From the mountains in the
north."
"Rubio and I have been together since last
summer," Tak-Ne said. "He's learning very fast."
He needed to. Immortals might live forever,
but they had no time to waste in learning to play the Game. She nodded
again and smiled at Rubio pleasantly.
He nodded back, then turned to his teacher.
"We were going to spar after the mid-day meal."
"Tomorrow," Tak-Ne said, with casual wave of
his hand. "Callista has just arrived." He bowed slightly, then offered his
arm to her.
Cassandra smiled and took it, then they walked
together into the dining room. Rubio did not follow.
~~~~~
That night in bed, after Tak-Ne and Cassandra
had gotten reacquainted, Cassandra asked him about his new student.
"I bought him from another Immortal, a Roman
named Tarcinus." Tak-Ne shook his head in disgust. "He kept Rubio as a slave,
and crucified him whenever Rubio tried to escape. Tarcinus pretended he
was a god, bringing Rubio back to life. He never even told Rubio what he
was."
"Hardly uncommon," Cassandra said, her voice
calm and remote as she adjusted the wool blanket over her shoulders. "My
first master killed me many times, and he never told me anything about immortality.
It's easier to control people when they're ignorant, when they think you're
a god."
She had spoken of her first master only that
one time before, and Tak-Ne sensed the pain behind her enforced control
now and her long silence over the past eighty years. Her master had been
the first man ever to touch her, and he had probably been the first to kill
her as well. Tak-Ne pulled Cassandra closer to him and held her, and she
nestled against him, accepting the comfort he offered. Tak-Ne had been
a slave many times, and he had kept slaves of his own. He knew how slaves
were broken, how they were controlled.
Brutality at the beginning broke a slave's
spirit, and most masters stopped there, relying on pain and fear to keep
control. But pleasure and affection were much more effective; bonds of
love were stronger than any chains. The master need only offer comfort,
present himself as a safe haven in an ugly life, pretend to care. It might
take a few months or a few years, but eventually the slave would respond,
becoming obedient and compliant, even eager to please.
Cassandra had responded thus to her first master,
Tak-Ne knew, tried to "please him well." That man should have been her
teacher, her guide. Instead, he had kept her ignorant of immortality, broken
her spirit by raping and killing her repeatedly, then offered her pretended
affection. She had been young and inexperienced, and she had believed him.
She had loved and trusted her master, even worshipped him as a god. Then
he had abandoned her.
Tak-Ne kissed the top of her head and tightened
his arms around her. No wonder Cassandra found it difficult to trust.
If he ever found the cold-blooded murdering swine who had brutalized her
so, he would do more than just take his head. "What's his name?"
"It doesn't matter," she said. "He's dead."
"Did you take his head?"
"No," she answered. "One of his students did.
He hadn't told that one the truth about immortality, either."
"Good," Tak-Ne said with grim satisfaction.
"Then neither he nor Tarcinus will be keeping any more Immortals ignorant."
He had taken the Roman's head while Rubio had watched. It had been a good
first lesson for the lad.
Cassandra lifted her head from the curve of
his shoulder to look at him. "I know you are an excellent teacher for Rubio."
She smiled, a mischievous, teasing grin that made her eyes dance in the
flickers of light from the small oil lamp on the table. "I know you can
be an excellent teacher for me, too."
"Can I?" he asked, grinning in return, ready
to stop this talk of students and former masters.
"It is important to practice everyday," she
said seriously. "And I fear that you and I have woefully neglected our
duties."
"Duty calls," he agreed, then applied himself
eagerly to the task. Tak-Ne had always been a conscientious man.
~~~~~
A few days later, as the petals of the lemon
blossoms floated down slowly in the hot still air, Cassandra watched while
student and teacher sparred in the courtyard. Tak-Ne was better, of course,
but Rubio knew the basics and was eager to learn more. Too eager.
The two men joined her in the shade of the
colonnade, for the sun was fierce. "You are doing well, Rubio," Tak-Ne
said to his student, and the young Immortal beamed. They discussed the
finer points of the lesson while Cassandra listened and embroidered a new
gown, then Tak-Ne suggested, "You should spar with Callista soon."
"Her?" Rubio exclaimed, not even glancing at
her. "But, she's--"
"A woman," Cassandra finished for him acidly,
then fixed Tak-Ne with a steady gaze. He had no right to suggest such
a thing without asking her first.
"It would be good practice," Tak-Ne said, as
he reached for one of the small pastries stuffed with raisins and almond
paste. Then he leaned back in his chair and added, "For both of you."
Her gaze became a glare, but Tak-Ne ignored
it--and her--for Rubio was talking again.
"Are there many female Immortals?"
"A few," Tak-Ne said. "They usually don't last
long."
Cassandra took another stitch in her sewing
and said nothing. Most Immortals didn't last long, male or female. Rubio
probably wouldn't, either. He was too ready to fight, especially for a man
of his physical age.
Tak-Ne added, "Callista is one of the oldest
female Immortals I've met."
Rubio looked at her now, curious--even avid.
Cassandra gave him her most bland meaningless smile, then turned to Tak-Ne,
still smiling, even though she was seething inside. Tak-Ne had no right
to tell his student how old she was! But she should not correct him in front
of his student, or show her anger. Cassandra suggested smoothly, "Lucius,
I was hoping we could go riding today?" He glanced at his student, so Cassandra
quickly changed her smile to a more seductive one and added, "To the river."
Tak-Ne grinned, for they had spent a pleasant
afternoon by the river the day before. "Indeed. I think that's enough swordwork
for today, don't you, Rubio?"
Rubio stood, bowed stiffly, and left. Cassandra
watched him walk away.
At the river, she waited until she and Tak-Ne
had gone swimming and enjoyed themselves on the river bank before she
spoke of her concerns.
Tak-Ne did not share them. "Rubio is my student,
Cassandra, and he's a good man."
"Have you never had a student turn on you?"
"No," he said, rolling onto his side and propping
his head up on his hand to look at her intently. "But it sounds as if
you have."
Cassandra did not respond to that. "You've
told him of the Game and the Prize. Do you think he doesn't want to win
it? At any cost?"
"Rubio wouldn't come after me."
"Maybe not now," she admitted, though she knew
Rubio would come after her easily enough, if he thought he could win.
"Maybe not a hundred years from now. But there can be Only One."
"Eventually, yes," he agreed, sitting up and
folding his arms around his knees. "But the Gathering may be centuries away.
We can't live our entire lives distrusting everyone."
Cassandra had lived almost her entire life
that way, and with good reason.
During the evening meal, Rubio and Tak-Ne discussed
siege weapons and the defense of cities. Cassandra had lived in many besieged
cities-she had died in them, too--but the men did not ask her for her
opinion, did not even speak to her.
Tak-Ne was most attentive in bed that night,
but he did not want to talk to her then, either. When she woke the next
morning, she was not surprised to see that he had already left to go spar
with Rubio. Cassandra knew the demands of teaching a new Immortal. The
bond between teacher and student was much like the bond between brothers,
and she had no place in it. Cassandra packed her things.
When Tak-Ne returned, he asked in surprise,
"You're leaving?"
Had he thought she would stay simply to service
him in bed while he spent the rest of his time with his student? But she
should not be jealous, and she should not be angry. "Your student needs
all of your attention now," she told him. "Rubio should not have to share
you."
Tak-Ne nodded slowly. "It is best." He smiled
at her and suggested, "I will be done in a decade or two. Should we plan
to meet?"
Cassandra put aside her irritation with him,
remembering the happy times they had had. "Yes, we should. Aqua Sulis in
twenty years?"
"I haven't been to Britain in some time," he
said. "That would be good."
"Travel may not be easy, Tak-Ne. The world
is changing again."
"The edges of the Empire are crumbling," he
agreed, sitting down near the table and leaning back in his chair. "The
legions are pulling back. In a century, maybe less, the tribes will take
over again." He shrugged. "Well, it was their land to begin with."
"Yes," she said, remembering the way it used
to be, the way it would never be again. She joined him at the table. "How
many cultures have you seen fall?"
"Egypt, once or twice. Babylon, of course.
The Greeks had their time, then the Persians, then Alexander. Rome has
lasted longer than I thought she would." He swatted away a passing fly.
"And you?"
"Those you mentioned, and earlier ones: Troy,
Phoenicia, Carthage, the Hebrews. Others that don't even have names anymore."
Her own people were gone forever, vanished beneath the shifting sands. She
couldn't even remember the language anymore, only snatches of a lullaby,
fleeting glimpses of her father's face. It was all gone.
Time to start again, to build again. Time to
go somewhere new. "We should say farewell, Tak-Ne, though we will meet
again--someday."
"You said that last time, and you were right."
He looked at her curiously. "Do you tell the future, Cassandra? Are a
prophetess, like your namesake in Troy?"
"I see things," she admitted reluctantly, "in
dreams. In the fire, sometimes. But I can change nothing, and sometimes,
what I think I see is not what happens."
"That's always the way of prophecies, is it
not?" he asked, seemingly unconcerned. Then his eyes darkened, serious
and intent, and he leaned forward to take her hands in his. "I'm glad
we've had this time together, Cassandra."
"Yes," she said fiercely, holding tight to
his hands. "So am I. You've been ... very good for me, in many ways."
She kissed him gently on the lips, a ceremonial farewell. "I'll miss you,
Tak-Ne, but we will see each other again."
"I'll look for you," he said, and pressed his
lips to her forehead in a benediction, and a promise.
|
Cassandra and Ramirez |
=====================
Venice, the Italian Peninsula
Carnevale, 1501
=====================
Tak-Ne dodged his way through the costumed throngs
in the streets and bridges of Venice, as the people danced and fornicated
their way through this last night of festival before the solemnity of
Lent began. In Roman times, the festival at this time of year had been
called Lupercalia, and priests of the god Pan had run through the streets,
striking half-naked women with goatskin thongs to help make them fertile.
The Catholic Church had changed the name and some of the customs, but
the Christians still knew how to celebrate it.
A plump woodland nymph gave him an eager kiss
that tasted of wine, but he pulled away from the wench as the sense of
another Immortal roiled in his stomach. He moved cautiously to a narrow
dark street, then turned toward a flutter of cloth. "Stand forth!" he
demanded.
The Immortal stepped from the shadows of a doorway
with sword in hand, but the blade was merely held at the ready, not raised
to attack.
"Cassia?" he asked in delighted surprise, taking
a step back, lowering his own sword. A thousand years earlier, he had
missed the rendezvous with her in Britain, a small matter of a rebellion.
He had gone anyway, five years later, but she had not waited for him.
"Xanthos," she replied, smiling a little. "Or
should I say, Lucius?"
He swept off his hat and bowed, being careful
not to take his eyes from her. He didn't think she would attack him, but
best to be careful. "Actually, of late I have been known as Luciano Antonio
Calaveri." He clapped his hat back on his head. "However, that name no longer
appeals to me, and I am thinking of choosing another. And you are called
...?"
"Isadora Caboto," she answered, smiling more
now. Her cloak hung open, and her long Grecian-style gown revealed the
curve of her thighs as she took a step closer to him.
"The name suits you," he said, then looked about
him at the filthy alley. "Shall we find a more congenial spot to talk?"
"Yes, I think we should," Cassandra replied.
They both sheathed their swords, then he bowed
again and offered her his arm. They made their way through the crowds and
finally arrived at a small tavern, marked by a sign of a howling wolf over
the door.
They chatted of the festival, of the fashions
of the time. He was in modern dress--knee-high boots, woolen hose and puffed
out breeches, a red velvet doublet slashed through with cream silk. She
had been to a costume ball and wore the ancient Greek chiton. It looked
as good on her now as it had two thousand years ago. Better.
He poured her a glass of wine and cut her a
slice of bread, then leaned back in his chair and simply enjoyed looking
at her. But he was also watching--wondering what had changed, wondering
if there could still be trust between them. And maybe something more.
They talked of countries, of places to go,
and he chose the new name Juan Sanchez Ramirez. Cassandra suggested he
add Villa-Lobos to it, in honor of the sign of the wolf over the door.
Some more conversation, a bit of flirtation, and soon they agreed to travel
together to Spain and live there as husband and wife, in deference to the
local laws about cohabitation. It was good to know the trust--and more--was
still between them.
But upstairs, in the private room he had rented
for the night, he soon realized otherwise. She smiled at him and came
into his arms eagerly enough, but her kisses lacked the depth of passion
he knew her capable of. When he stood behind her and lifted the silken
strands of her hair from her neck, she froze. Only for an instant, but
he knew what he had seen. Another man would not have noticed, but he had
lived with this woman for nearly a century, and he knew her.
He removed his hands from her and sat down
on the edge of the canopied bed. "Have you forgotten, Cassandra?" he asked
gently. "I am a man who prefers willing and enthusiastic bedpartners."
"I am willing, Tak-Ne," she said, coming to
stand before him, but her smile was forced.
"But you are not enthusiastic." Something flickered
in her eyes, but in the light of the single candle from the sconce on
the wall, he could not tell what it was. Fear? Despair? Hope? "Cassandra,"
he said softly, "you don't have to pretend with me."
She looked away at that then whispered, "I'm
sorry. I just need ... a little time."
"We're Immortal," he said. "We have time."
"I didn't mean to mislead you, Tak-Ne," she
said, sitting beside him, but not touching him. Her hands lay loosely clasped
in her lap, not moving at all. "I truly did not think it would be this
difficult."
"A thousand years is a long time to be apart."
She stared at the pleats in her gown. "I can
still ... do things for you, give you--"
"Cassandra," he broke in, "stop. You don't owe
me anything."
"You've fed me and given me a place to sleep,
and I don't owe you?" Her eyes were dark and knowing, cynical. Bitter.
"No," he said, disturbed that she would continue
to offer herself to him this way, wondering how many times over the last
three thousand years she had sold her body for food and protection. "Not
that."
The bitterness in her eyes wavered and cracked,
revealing the vulnerability and loneliness he remembered. "You are a good
man," she said, with a wisp of a smile. "I've forgotten what that's like."
A very long thousand years. He offered her his
hand palm up, and waited until she had laid her hand within his. "We have
time," he said again, then coaxed a smile from her as he added, "and I know
you're worth the wait."
They left Venice the next morning and went to
Genoa, then four weeks later they sailed to Barcelona on the ship Persephone.
The ship's master married them two days into the voyage, and Cassandra
came to him then. It was a wedding night worth waiting for.
Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez and his wife,
the Senora Maria Caterina Rohas y Ramirez, settled on an estate near the
small seaside town of Mataro. He kept busy with the farm and his business
ventures in textiles, while Cassandra taught music and healing to the
sisters at the convent, and started a hospice in town for the poor. But
after sixteen years, it was time to move on, as Immortals always moved
on.
They traveled north to Ireland and spent a
year there, then sailed for the west coast of Scotland, to the Highlands,
at Cassandra's suggestion. She befriended a local healer near the shores
of Loch Sheil, and when the old woman died that summer, Cassandra and Tak-Ne
moved into her small cottage near an ancient hot spring, a place sacred
to the spirits of the forest, holy ground. The cottage was small and lacked
windows and a fireplace, so they hauled rocks from the nearby river and
rebuilt it into a more comfortable home.
Cassandra seemed content to stay in the forest,
handing out healing remedies to the clansfolk, but within a year the restlessness
came on him again.
"You should go," she said, kneeling back on
her heels in the garden, her hands stained green with plant juice and
brown with dirt. "You don't belong here."
He leaned on his shovel, taking a well-earned
rest from digging. "And you do?"
She looked about her at the stone cottage, the
small shed they had built for the sheep and the chickens, the garden. Then
she stared upward into the canopy of green leaves from the ancient oaks
and beeches, and the bright blue of the sky beyond. "Yes," she said. "I do."
She rose smoothly to her feet and wiped her hands off on her apron as she
came to him. "I need a time of peace, I think. Of quietness."
He nodded, for he had seen the change in her
since they had come to the forest, the contentment, as though she had
finally found something she had sought long and far.
"Go," she said again, as they took each other's
hands. "But come back to me."
"You'll be here?"
"Oh, yes," she said. "I'll be here in Donan
Woods for quite some time."
"Then I'll know where to find you," he said,
and he kissed her lightly in farewell.
~~~~~
Cassandra set down the wool she had been carding
and reached for her sword. An Immortal was approaching. She peered out
the crack between the shutters on the window, then left her sword on the
table and went running out the door.
"Tak-Ne!" she called, as he swung himself down
from his horse.
He laughed and twirled her around in his arms,
then slowed as they kissed. "This is certainly an enthusiastic greeting,"
he said, holding tight to her with one arm, while he settled his white-plumed
hat more firmly on his head with the other hand.
"Enthusiastic--and willing," Cassandra agreed.
He smelled of sweat and horse, and his green velvet doublet was covered
with dust. He looked and felt and tasted wonderful, and her hands roved up
and down his back as she relished the solid strength of him. "It's been fifteen
years."
They kissed again, enthusiastically, until he
finally pulled back and said, "I need at least to unsaddle my horse. It
was a long ride."
"I hope that ride hasn't tired you out for
another," she said, as she reluctantly let go of him.
He grinned at her as he took off the saddlebags.
"Immortals don't stay saddlesore for long."
She grinned back. "No matter what kind of riding
they're doing." He laughed at that, and she took his bags into the cottage
while he unsaddled his horse. Cassandra undressed quickly, then donned
sandals and the blue silk robe he had bought for her when they had lived
in Spain. She left the garment unfastened, then went back outside, a cup
of wine in her hand.
He stopped in his tracks when he saw her, then
came to take the wine from her hand, the darks of his eyes very wide,
very warm.
"Would you care to bathe?" she asked, and at
his nod, she led him to the pool, down the short path between the pair
of enormous oak trees, the guardians of the spring. She slipped out of
her own gown first, then helped him to disrobe, and saw him seated comfortably
on the rock under the surface of the water. She rinsed away the dust of
his journey, the warm water pouring from her cupped hands, then she washed
him, his skin smooth under her fingertips, under her lips and her tongue.
He still tasted wonderful.
"I think you washed that part of me already,"
he said, half-floating in the water with his eyes closed.
"So I did," she agreed, pausing in her ministrations.
"Should I stop?"
"No."
Over the evening meal of barley and chicken stew,
he told her of his adventures. "I've been traveling with King Charles.
He made me his Chief Metallurgist, advisor on weapons of war."
"That's wonderful," she congratulated him.
"Is that Charles I of Spain, Ferdinand and Isabella's grandson?" she asked,
knowing how quickly crowns could change, how easily countries could disappear.
"Yes, that's the one," he said, pouring them
both more wine. "Though he's also held the title of Charles V of the Holy
Roman Empire for nearly fourteen years now. He's been fighting the Turks,
the French, and even the Pope. His armies sacked Rome about seven years
ago."
"That's nothing new," she commented dryly.
Rome was always being sacked.
"True," he agreed. "But it wasn't as bad as
other times, and it wasn't as bad as it could have been. Martin Luther wanted
Charles to string the Pope and the cardinals up from the gallows, skin them
alive, and then burn them. Of course, that's what the Pope will do to Luther
if he catches him."
"Who's Martin Luther?" Cassandra asked, as she
finished the last bite of her stew.
"A German fellow, used to be a monk. He started
out trying to reform the Church, now he's trying to replace it with his
own. The Pope declared him a heretic, and he turned around and declared
the Pope a wretched, accursed monster." Tak-Ne sipped at his wine. "There's
been a lot of fighting about religion lately."
"That's nothing new, either," she said, disgusted
with the entire mess of it. Crusades, inquisitions, persecutions, religious
wars--it never stopped. Jesus of Nazareth would not recognize his own
words anymore. Cassandra shrugged and stacked the bowls. There was nothing
she could do about it.
Tak-Ne shook his head. "This is different.
Entire countries are involved now, not just small groups of people here
and there. I don't think the next century or so is going to be pleasant
for Christians, no matter which church they belong to."
Cassandra couldn't do anything about that,
either. "So, should we play chess, or should we go to bed?"
Tak-Ne stayed with her for almost a month, then
went back to King Charles. Seven years later, in the spring of 1541, he
returned, hunting for the Kurgan.
"I heard he was in the Highlands," Tak-Ne said,
as he huddled in front of the fire, trying to get warm after his long
ride in the rain. "He might have been looking for me."
"Maybe he was," she said, bringing him a mug
of steaming tea, "but I think he found someone else." At his sharp look,
she sat beside him on the narrow wooden bench and explained. "One of the
village girls told me the story last month. Five years ago, a young warrior
of the clan MacLeod was killed in battle by a very tall knight, but the
warrior did not stay dead."
"I've heard the Kurgan likes to hunt pre-Immortals,"
Tak-Ne said grimly.
"Has he been searching for you through the
years?" she asked, knowing what it was to be hunted.
He sipped at his tea, then shook his head.
"I don't think so, and I don't hunt him, unless I hear he's nearby. I have
better things to do with my life."
Cassandra stood and went to the fire, wishing
Roland felt the same way, wishing she could live the same way. She tried
to--tried to keep teaching, keep learning, keep living--but Roland was always
waiting for her, somewhere.
Tak-Ne stretched out his feet to the fire, wiggling
his toes. "It's been a long time since I had a student. Maybe I'll take
on this fellow."
Roland had been her student once. She had taught
him too much, and she was still paying for that mistake. She had helped
him become the Voice of Death, and he loved to kill. He had killed her,
many times, and the people she loved, but she could not kill him. A Prophecy
had been made in the Temple of Artemis, almost three thousand years ago,
a prophecy of a child, a Highland Foundling, born on the Winter Solstice,
who would travel through darkness into light, and defeat the Voice of Death.
Cassandra wanted the Voice of Death dead, but
she had to wait for the Highland Foundling to kill him. She had waited
for three thousand years, and she was still waiting.
She hated waiting.
"What happened to your other student?" Cassandra
asked, turning to Tak-Ne with a show of cheerful interest, trying to wipe
all thoughts of Roland from her mind, not wanting Tak-Ne to know about
her failure as a teacher. "The one from Hispania?"
"Ah, Rubio. We fought together against the Moors
in Spain, and I saw him a few years ago at the royal court. He's doing
well."
Cassandra nodded, not wishing to hear it. "How
often have you met the Kurgan?" she asked, changing the subject again and
joining him on the bench.
"We've met only three times: Babylon and Corinth,
then some centuries ago, in China." He grimaced, a quick lift of eyebrows,
a tightening of lips. "That last time I was lucky to get away with my
head." He took another drink of tea, then asked, "What happened to the
clansman who revived?"
"Just what you would expect," Cassandra said.
"His tribe banished him as a witch. He was lucky he wasn't burnt at the
stake."
Tak-Ne nodded. "Do you know his name?"
"Connor MacLeod."
Cassandra bought a horse for herself, and she
and Tak-Ne hunted for the young Immortal all that spring, visiting the
villages, traveling around the lochs and up the glens.
"You go along the north side of this loch,"
Tak-Ne suggested, one fine summer day, "and I'll go along the south. We'll
meet at the other end."
They parted company with a kiss and a wave,
and Cassandra rode to the village. The new Immortal was not there, and
Cassandra went on. She was tired of looking, but the time of the Prophecy
was near. She spurred her horse and rode on to the next village. The new
Immortal was not there, either.
She traveled along the loch, with many detours
to visit every small hamlet and every remote croft. Harvest-time was just
beginning when she finally found him, on the south side of Loch Leven,
in the glen of the River Coe. It was an open place, cleared of trees, and
a tower of darkened stones stood stark and lonely at the top of a small
rise. Tak-Ne was sitting in the shadow of the tower, sharpening his sword.
Cassandra sat and watched him for several moments,
then finally rode down the hill. Tak-Ne came over to greet her, resplendent
as always, dressed now in red velvet with a cape of peacock feathers about
his shoulders. The clansman joined them, a young man with shoulder-length
brown hair, braided away from his face. He was dressed in the sark and
breacan common to the Highlands, the garb which reminded her of the Roman
tunic and toga, though more brightly colored. His breacan was blues and
greens, faded mostly to gray, with a pink stripe in the weave that might
once have been red, and his sword was at his side.
A young woman in a blue gown came down the
tower stairs, balancing a basket on her hip. Her head was bare, and the
slight breeze tossed her blonde curls in front of her face. She stopped
at the sight of Cassandra, and looked to the clansman for guidance.
"Cassandra," Tak-Ne called in greeting, and
Cassandra carefully did not show her annoyance at his use of her true name.
He turned to the Highland couple and made a low sweeping bow, his plumed
hat held off to one side. "May I present the Witch of Donan Woods?"
That name was not much better. The young woman
gaped, and the new Immortal stepped back, his eyes flicking nervously from
her to Tak-Ne.
Tak-Ne straightened and replaced his hat, then
finished the introductions. "This is Connor MacLeod, of the clan MacLeod."
Connor MacLeod nodded, his gray eyes still
wary, and Cassandra nodded in return, scrutinizing him closely. A Highland
Foundling, an Immortal. He could be the one. She controlled her impatience
and turned to the woman, whom Tak-Ne was introducing as "Connor's wife,
Heather."
Cassandra smiled warmly at the young woman,
then took a pair of rabbits from her saddle horn and held them out to
her. "I went hunting this morning, Dame MacLeod, and had good fortune.
Shall I prepare them for us to eat?"
Heather nodded, reassured by the normality
of the gesture, and the two women went to cook the evening meal, while
the men headed off to spar. Cassandra used the persuasive power of the Voice
to put Heather at her ease, and soon the two women were chatting like old
friends.
"Ramirez is rather odd, but very charming,"
Heather confided as she kneaded the bread dough. "He's been here near
a week now. He says he's going to teach Connor how to fight." She sighed
and brushed her hair from her eyes, leaving a smear of flour across her
forehead. "I hope it does not take too long. Connor's not been keeping
up with the orders from the forge, he's been so busy swordfighting."
Cassandra merely nodded as she took the skin
off a rabbit with her knife. The Game interfered with life in many ways.
She chatted for a bit, then turned the discussion to birthdays.
"Connor's birthday?" Heather asked, as she
shaped the dough into a round loaf. "Why, 'tis the day after Hogmanay,
the first of January. He always says he can be assured of getting a drink
somewhere on that day. My birthday is in the spring, soon after Lady's
Day."
Cassandra kept the smile on her face as she
whacked off the head of the second rabbit. Connor was not the one. She
would have to wait. Again. She took off the feet with more sharp blows,
then set about skinning the carcass.
The bread was rising near the fire and the
rabbit stew was simmering in the pot when Cassandra and Heather went back
outside. Connor and Tak-Ne turned at their approach and nodded, then resumed
their conversation.
With a grin and a whispered, "Hush," in Cassandra's
direction, Heather picked up a bucket of water, took a few steps closer
to the men, then tossed the contents at her husband's back.
Tak-Ne stepped back with a curse, for some
of the water had splashed on him, and Cassandra and Heather both laughed
aloud.
Connor's reaction was silent, but much more
vigorous. He whirled and charged at his wife, and she fled shrieking and
laughing, trying--not very hard--to escape. Connor grabbed the bucket and
filled it from the rain barrel, then cornered Heather at the bottom of the
stairs. She made to dart past him, and he blocked her path and upended the
entire bucket of water over her head. They were both laughing as he pulled
her into his arms and kissed her, then the two of them started up the stairs.
"We're going to go get dry," Heather called
over her shoulder with a triumphant grin, then squealed as Connor clapped
his hand to her backside and hurried her inside.
"I don't think they'll be out for a while,"
Tak-Ne commented.
"No," Cassandra agreed, and then she smiled
at him. "There's a waterfall just down the hill," she said. "Should we go
get wet?
"As long as I can take my clothes off first,"
he said, flicking at the water spots on his velvet sleeve.
"I think that is an excellent idea."
They lay naked in the grass, late summer sunshine
warm on their skin. "What do you think of your new student?" she asked
him.
Tak-Ne snorted, then rolled over on his back
and closed his eyes against the brightness of the sun. "He's arrogant and
impatient. He has the manners of a goat, and he's stupendously ignorant."
"A typical savage Highland barbarian," she said,
propping her head up on one hand so she could look at him more easily.
She liked looking at him, the strength in him, the powerful muscles in
thighs and arms, the thick curling mat of gray hairs on his chest that
felt so good to touch.
"Exactly," he agreed. "And he's stubborn and
thick-headed, as well."
She smiled. "You like him."
Tak-Ne laughed. "That I do. He'll learn. He's
brave and determined, and he's a good man."
She leaned over and kissed him on the mouth.
"And so are you." He laughed again, a contented chuckle, and his arm pulled
her closer. She relaxed against him, her head pillowed on his shoulder,
her leg between his, their hands clasped together. Butterflies veered about
them, and the scent of the wildflowers floated heavy and sweet in the air.
Cassandra lay quietly, just enjoying the sunshine and being with Tak-Ne.
For now.
"I'm glad we've had this time together, Tak-Ne,"
she told him. "This time of trust between us." He opened his eyes and
smiled at her, and she dared to continue, very softly, "This time of love."
He rolled over, taking her with him, then kissed
her gently as she lay beneath him. "I told you we could find love, if
we looked for it together."
"And you were right," she said, then drew him
to her once again.
Cassandra stayed with Tak-Ne and the MacLeods
for four days; then she said good-bye. "I'll leave you to your student,"
she said, as she and Tak-Ne stood outside in the rain, holding hands.
"You know where to find me," he said, kissing
her forehead in farewell.
"Yes," she said, forcing herself to smile,
hoping the visions were wrong. "I'll look for you here."
It was a few days ride back to Donan Woods,
but Cassandra sold her horse and walked most of the way. She settled in
her cottage and began waiting again, waiting for the Highland Foundling
to be born.
She was not waiting for Tak-Ne to come back
to her this time.
Night had fallen, and the air was cold. The
tall figure of a man stood dark against the sky, blocking out the stars,
while another man knelt at his feet. A sword swung down, and there was
lightning and blood. Great black rocks tumbled, falling to earth, and flames
soared high.
Silence and darkness came again.
Cassandra's eyes flew open, but she stayed where
she was, curled on her side in bed. The fire had burned low. She stared
at the flames and saw only death.
She let the tears come then, endless silent
tears, alone in her bed, alone throughout the coming years, alone without
her friend.
Tak-Ne was dead.
|
Glen Coe, Scotland New Year's Day, 1997 ===================== |
Four and half centuries had passed since that
night, and Cassandra still remembered that dream. A few months later,
Connor had come to her in Donan Woods, and he had told her that the Kurgan
had taken Tak-Ne's head. The tower had been destroyed by the Quickening,
and Tak-Ne had been buried under the stones.
Cassandra lay her hand on one of those stones
and watched as the flame flickered in the wind. The candle was almost gone.
"The Kurgan is dead now, Tak-Ne," Cassandra said. "Your student avenged
you; Connor took the Kurgan's head ten years ago. You were right about
Connor; he is stubborn and arrogant." Very stubborn. "But he's a good man."
The tears came, and she welcomed them, tears
of grief, tears of tribute, tears of love. "As were you. You were a man
worthy of trust, and I wish I had let myself trust in you more.
"I miss you, Tak-Ne." She waited until the flame
died, then stood and placed a rock on the cairn over his grave.
"I miss you still."
|
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|
Heart, Faith, and Steel intersects two of my other stories: Hope Forgotten
II: Witch and Hope Remembered
V: Priestess.
|
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Many thanks to Bridget Mintz Testa, Vi Moreau, Selena, Cathy Butterfield, and Robin Tennenbaum-excellent beta readers and very good friends. Special thanks to Liz Silver for proofreading.
About Ramirez
Ramirez was played by Sean Connery in the first
two Highlander movies. He was born in 896 BCE in Egypt, with the name
Tak-Ne, and was killed for the first time by being crushed by a runaway
cart. He had three wives, the last being Shakiko, a Japanese princess,
daughter of Masamune the sword-master. Masamune gave him the dragon-headed
katana in 593 BCE. Ramirez met the Kurgan in Babylon, Greece, and China.
(This line was filmed but cut from the movie.) Ramirez was chief metallurgist
to King Charles of Spain (somewhere between 1520-1540), and he was beheaded
by the Kurgan in the winter of 1542 at Connor and Heather's home in Glen
Coe, Scotland.
Nowhere is it stated that the Kurgan raped and
killed Ramirez's second wife, however, Ramirez and the Kurgan obviously
didn't like each other, and I thought I would make it personal.
About Methos
Methos is Cassandra's unnamed first master,
and he is, of course, not dead. However, for many years Cassandra believed
that all of the Horsemen had been killed.
Historical Notes
- The canal across the Corinthian Isthmus was finally completed in the
1890s.
- Unwanted children were often abandoned, in many cultures and in many
times. The midwife mentioned in the HL:TS episode Family Tree suggested
the infant Duncan be "cast out for the dogs."
- King Sennacherib's Assyrian troops destroyed Babylon in 689 BCE.
- There really was a Temple of Artemis on Lesbos that was burned c.
1200 BCE.
- The Roman town of Massalia was first founded as a Greek colony, and
eventually became Marseilles.
- The manorial system of feudalism (lords of the manor, serfs being
bound to the land) got its start at the end of the Roman Empire.
References:
* Bradley, K. R., Slave and Masters in the Roman Empire, Oxford
University Press, 1987.
* Garlon, Yvon, Slavery in Ancient Greece, Cornell University
Press, 1988.
* Lacey, W. K., The Family in Classical Greece, Cornell University
Press, 1968.
* Pomeroy, Sarah B., Goddesses, Whores, Wives, and Slaves - Women
in Classical Antiquity, Shocken Books, 1975.
* Wiedemann, Thomas, Greek and Roman Slavery, Croom Helm Ltd.,
1981.