In the Heart of Darkness by Eric Flint & David Drake

She took a breath, then looked her friend straight in the eyes. Irene winced.

“I don’t think I want to hear what’s coming next.”

“You asked, woman. Theodora never took pleasure in her whoring, and she never had a choice. Her pig of a father raped her when she was nine, and kept doing it until he sold her to a pimp at the age of twelve. And her pimp was even worse. That stinking—”

She stopped abruptly, made a short chopping motion with her hand. “Never mind. There’s nothing in it but nausea.” She took another deep breath, let it out. “The point is, Irene, that Narses was the closest thing to a real father that woman has ever had. When she first met him, she was just a poor ambitious young woman helping her poor ambitious young lover to claw his way to the top. Narses took her under his wing, and helped her along. With money, sometimes; other times, with privy information; other times, with introductions to the right people. But, mostly, he helped her the way a father helps his daughter. The way a good father helps his daughter. He simply—taught her.”

She paused for a moment. Irene interjected:

“I’m sure he was just—”

Antonina shook her head. “No. No. Well, that’s too bald. A man like Narses always has an eye out for the main chance. But that wasn’t it, Irene. Believe me, it wasn’t. Narses is brilliant, but he’s not God Almighty. And only the Lord Himself, in those days, could have known that Theodora would someday be Empress of the Roman Empire. She and Justinian didn’t know it, then. Didn’t even think of it.”

She took Irene by the arm and began slowly leading her out of the courtyard.

“No, I think— I think, in his own way, Narses saw Theodora as the child he never had. Could never have. So, what childlike trust remained in a girl who distrusted all men, was given to an elderly eunuch. And what paternal care existed in a man who could have no children, was given to a young whore.”

She halted, fighting tears. Stared blindly at the sky.

“Dear God in heaven,” she whispered, “I so hoped Narses wouldn’t be at that meeting. I so hoped you’d be wrong, even though I knew you weren’t.” Now the tears flowed. “Theodora will never recover from this.”

“You can’t say that,” protested Irene. “She still has Justinian.”

Antonina shook her head. “No, Irene. It’s not the same. Theodora loves Justinian, but she has never trusted him. Not the way she trusted Narses.” She wiped her eyes. Again, Antonina took Irene’s arm and led her out of the courtyard. Her steps, now, were quick.

Ten feet from the door, she said: “Theodora’s harder than steel, and she prides herself on not making the same mistake twice. She’ll never give her trust to ­another man again. No matter who he is. Never.”

Five feet from the door, Irene said sadly: “God, that poor woman.”

At the door itself, Antonina stopped. Turned to her friend, and looked her squarely in the face. There was no trace of sorrow, now, in those beautiful green eyes. Just emptiness.

“Poor woman?” she demanded. “Don’t ever think it, Irene. Give Theodora your love, if you can. But never think to give her your pity.” Her eyes were like the green gaze of an asp. “If you thought the story of her father and her pimp was nauseating, someday I’ll tell you what happened to them. After Theodora mounted the throne.”

Irene felt her throat tighten.

“Whatever you do in this world, Irene, don’t ever cross that poor woman. Go down to Hell, instead, and spit in the face of Satan.”

She started through the door. Over her shoulder, like a serpent’s hiss:

“Poor woman.”

Two hours—and many bottles of wine—later, Antonina lowered her head onto the arm of her couch and asked:

“I’m curious about something myself, Irene.” Her words were spoken in that slow, careful, precise manner which indicates that a moment of solemnity has—briefly, briefly—interrupted the serious business of getting blind drunk.

“Ask anything!” commanded the spymaster from her own couch, waving her arm grandly. The just-emptied bottle in her hand detracted, a bit, from the majesty of the gesture. The hiccup which followed detracted quite a bit more.

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