Kay, Guy Gavriel – Sarantine Mosaic 01 – Sailing to Sarantium

Cleander glared at him as the others laughed.

The volume of sound in The Spina was considerable. It was midday and the morning’s races were done, with the afternoon chariots slated to begin after the break. The most ambitious of the drinking places near the Hippodrome was bursting with a sweating, raucous, bipartisan crowd.

The more fervent followers of Blue and Green had made their way to less expensive taverns and cauponae dedicated to their own factions, but the shrewd managers of The Spina had offered free drinks to retired and current charioteers of all colours from the day they’d opened their doors, and the lure of hoisting a beer or a cup of wine with the drivers had made The Spina a dramatic success from that first day.

It had to be … they’d put a fortune into it. The long axis of the tav­ern had been designed to simulate the real spina-the central island of the Hippodrome, around which the chariots wheeled in their furious careen. Instead of thundering horses, this spina was ringed by a marble counter, and drinkers stood or leaned on both sides, eyeing scaled repro­ductions of the statues and monuments that decorated the real thing in the Hippodrome. Against one long wall ran the bar itself, also marbled, with patrons packed close. And for those prudent-and solvent-enough to have made arrangements ahead of time, there were booths along the opposite wall, stretching to the shadows at the back of the tavern.

Eutychus was always prudent, and Cleander and Dorus were notably solvent, or rather, their fathers were. The five young men-all Greens, of course-had a standing arrangement to prominently occupy the highly visible second booth on race days. The first booth was always reserved for charioteers or the occasional patrons from the Imperial Precinct amusing themselves among the crowds of the city.

‘No man ever truly possesses a woman, anyhow,’ said Gidas moodily. ‘He has her body for a time if he’s lucky, but only the most fleeting glimpse into her soul.’ Gidas was a poet, or wanted to be.

‘If they have souls,’ said Eutychus wryly, drinking his carefully watered wine. ‘It is, after all, a liturgical issue.’

‘Not any more,’ Pollon protested. ‘A Patriarchal Council settled that a hundred years ago, or something.’

‘By a single vote,’ Eutychus said, smiling. Eutychus knew a lot; he didn’t hide the fact. ‘Had one of the august clerics had an unfortunate experience with a whore the night before, the Council would likely have decided women have no souls.’

‘That’s probably sacrilege,’ Gidas murmured.

‘Heladikos defend me!’ Eutychus laughed.

‘That is sacrilege,’ Gidas said, with a rare, quick smile.

‘They don’t,’ Cleander muttered, ignoring this last exchange. ‘ don’t have souls. Or she doesn’t, to be permitting that grey-faced toad to court her. She sent back my gift, you know.’

‘We know, Cleander. You’ve told us. A dozen times.’ Pollen’s tone was kindly. He ruffled Cleander’s hair. ‘Forget her. She’s beyond you. Pertennius has a place in the Imperial Precinct and in the military. Toad or not, he’s the sort of man who sleeps with a woman like that.. . unless some­one of even higher rank pushes him out of her bed.’

‘A place in the military?’ Cleander’s voice swirled upwards in indig­nation. ‘Jad’s cock, that’s a bad joke! Pertennius of Eubulus is a blood­less, ass-licking secretary to a pompous strategos whose courage is long behind him since he married above himself and decided he liked soft beds and gold.’

‘Lower your voice, idiot!’ Pollon gripped Cleander’s arm. ‘Eutychus, water his fucking wine before he gets us into a fight with half the army.’

‘Too late,’ Eutychus said sorrowfully. The others followed his glance towards the marble spina running down the middle of the room. A broad-shouldered man in an officer’s uniform had turned from contemplating a replica of the Greens’ second statue to the charioteer Scortius and was razing across at them, his expression stony. The men on either side of him-neither one a soldier-had also glanced over, but then returned to their drinks at the counter.

With Pollen’s firm hand on his arm, Cleander kept silent, though he gazed truculently back at the soldier until the man at the spina bar turned away. Cleander sniffed. ‘Told you,’ he said, though quietly. ‘An army of useless fakers, boasting of imaginary battlefields.’

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