Rome 2: The Coming of the King

Rome 2: The Coming of the King by M. C. Scott Page A

Book: Rome 2: The Coming of the King by M. C. Scott Read Free Book Online
Authors: M. C. Scott
Tags: Fiction, Historical
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what might be; the skill is in the reading. But I had vivid dreams and they felt real to me, which was what mattered. And I acted on them, which mattered too. If you honour your dreams, they will honour you.’
    ‘My dreams frighten me.’
    A wind blew, there in the garden, shifting the scents of wild and tame flowers. A high, fine note sounded in Hypatia’s ear, the warning whistle of the gods. ‘Do you act on them?’ she asked.
    Abruptly, the girl stood, brushing her hands on her tunic. ‘Why are you here?’
    ‘I brought two hounds as a gift to Queen Berenice from the empress of Rome. I came to see they were being well cared for.’
    ‘The empress of Rome is dead.’
    ‘I know. But her majesty ordered me to bring them while she was still alive.’
    ‘From Rome?’
    ‘Yes.’
    ‘Is it true the emperor has taken a boy to wife in place of the empress, and made him a woman?’
    ‘It wasn’t when I left.’
    Strictly speaking, she spoke the truth: the boy in question had been gelded and was being groomed as Nero’s wife, but had not actually been married at the time the Krateis sailed. Hypatia was an Oracle and Oracles never lied. Never.
    To avert another silence, she said, ‘I should go to the beastgarden. I want to take the hounds out for a run along the shoreline. They were on board ship for a month; even now, after three days on land, they crave sea air and flat ground.’
    Not only the hounds sought freedom and clean air. Hypatia thought perhaps her own craving was there to be read, had the child the necessary literacy. She made no particular effort to hide it.
    Kleopatra’s smile was sharply fierce. ‘Can you ride a horse? A good horse?’
    ‘Yes.’
    ‘Then you can come riding with me and bring your hounds for exercise!’ She smacked the stone step in triumph. ‘Nobody will see us leave if we go before the mist rises.’
    Hypatia said, ‘The mist’s rising now. If you look down to the sea, it’s blue again.’
    Kleopatra’s hair sank straight to her shoulders. When, as now, she shook her head, the morning’s faint sun spun around her. ‘We have an hour at least. The king doesn’t rise early any more. Not since Saulos came.’
    She was a fountain of facts. ‘Are we going to look for Iksahra and her falcons?’ Hypatia asked.
    ‘What do you think?’
    They were already walking through the iron gates. Beyond was the king’s beast garden, stocked with hound kennels and stables and mews for the hunting birds. To one side, in an iron cage bigger than the perfectly serviceable, well-fitted room in which Hypatia had spent the night, Iksahra’s cheetah lay on an elevated tree branch, left behind that the beastwoman might give the young prince, Hyrcanus, her full attention. It yawned as they approached, showing perfect, pearline teeth, long as eating knives. They walked close past it, to show they were not afraid.
    At the stables, Kleopatra didn’t have to give orders. As she rounded the corner, stable hands ran to make her horse ready, and then did the same for Hypatia. Both mounts were red mares, both kindly, clean-limbed, built for speed but not stupidly so.
    The kennel-men loosed the two hounds Hypatia had brought and they came joyous to heel, tails beating the air, muzzles wet with the need to hunt. Long-legged, rough-coated, their heads were high as her waist, and when they stood on their hind limbs in greeting their front feet reached her shoulders. She had named them Night and Day; the bitch dark as winter wood, the dog the gold-fawn of desert sand.
    Hypatia fed them the meat she had brought from the palace kitchens, not much, just a handful, to remind them that they loved her, not the Berber woman who was beastmaster.
    Kleopatra had mounted lightly. On horseback, she grew in stature and fire, became a hunting cat in her own right with polished jewels for eyes. With a hound at either hand, Hypatia looked up at her.
    ‘We need to be clear. Is this an offer from a friend, a request for the

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