him as much pleasure as he had given me.’
‘Little daughter! You know I worry when you are so ... vehement.’ The Empress spoke gaily, but her eyes winced, showing fine wrinkles at the corners.
‘My next lover will be entirely Western in concept. Golden skin and hair. There are some Athenian types in the Scholae who so closely resemble the ancient statues that one wonders if they were hewn from stone.’ The Scholae was the elite Imperial household cavalry.
Zoe’s eyes had forgotten the moment of melancholy; her vividly red lips curled salaciously. ‘Darling, I can only assume that you have already been . . . reconnoitring. Can I also assume that my use of military terminology is rather apt? I have heard that you were a spectator at the pentathlon last week. I was intrigued at your sudden interest in athletic contests, until I learned that this was an intramural event for officers of the Scholae. All those oiled young gallants, and all of them lodged here in the palace precincts.’
‘I have found the perfect pair. Hermes and Apollo, I call them. They are beautiful, as vain as Narcissus, and insufferably arrogant. They are also inseparable, though whether it is a friendship in the style of the ancient Greeks whom they so closely resemble, I am as yet uncertain. Of course, I intend to separate them. I am dining with them both tonight.’
‘Little daughter! You are scandalous. But so deliciously . . . inventive. How I envy your freedom. Not from convention; may the Holy Theotokos forgive me, I have never been constrained by that. But to be able to make love and yet be untrammelled by love. How I envy you that.’
‘Aeifor!’ yelled Gleb. ‘The pelican roost. The fourthcataract. The most deadly.’ But the noise of Aeifor was not that of any water. It was that of a living thing, a monstrous, baleful groan, as if some titanic beast had been stirred from sleep. As the sound rose, the Rus oarsmen looked anxiously at one another. In one morning they had already passed through a lifetime of terror. The walls of giant-set stones across the river; the sucking, dizzying, mortally cold eddies; ships disappearing behind the foaming veils; and timbers showering up over the great rocks as ships exploded. The hideous flotsam, shattered strakes, cargo pods, and the limp, seemingly boneless pulp that even now chased them down the death-strewn Dnieper like shrieking ghosts. Perhaps a hundred ships and their crews had been lost already. What lay ahead?
Aeifor first appeared as a white haze over the river. A few herons and pelicans emerged like snowflakes from the mist and flew overhead in greeting. Within minutes the current began a rapid acceleration, and then huge, jagged rocks loomed towards the starboard. The pelicans swarmed. Clouds of spray boiled into the air. Between two massive, cathedral-like rock upthrusts was a vast, swirling maw.
The ship seemed to hit something solid. The steering oar at the stern jerked like a giant arm and swatted the steersman into the river; the hapless Rus shot past with both arms raised, almost as if he were waving goodbye, then surrendered to the Dnieper. Haraldr dashed for the wildly swiping steering oar as the ship spun and then heeled, almost capsizing. With Gleb virtually clinging to his back, he put all his weight against the bucking shaft. The oar settled and the ship fought the current, heading hard larboard.
Over his shoulder Haraldr saw a ship disappear into Aeifor’s white shroud. The deadly mist parted for an instant, and a prow, then the entire ship, shot high above the lip of the great whirlpool, men leaping overboard, the abandoned oars flailing like the legs of a desperate centipede. Then the prow lurched down and the ship simply vanished, swallowed whole by the beast Aeifor.
The beach that ran along the larboard bank was sandy with periodic eruptions of jutting rocks. The oarsmen rowed for their lives; the iron grip of Aeifor never slackened, as it had near the
Alexis Abbott, Alex Abbott