Read The Saint's Mistress Online
Authors: Kathryn Bashaar
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Romance, #Historical Fiction, #Historical Romance
He followed my finger. “How can you tell?”
“I remember the sun carving at the peak of the roof.”
“Come on,” he said. “I’m sorry. Let’s go home and get you to bed.” He tried to put an arm
around my waist but I shrugged him off and walked a little ahead of him the rest of the way
home through the salt-smelling Carthaginian night.
42
Everything felt different after a night’s sleep. A breeze tickled us awake in the early morning,
and Aurelius went out and bought us breakfast: bread, dates and a fruit I’d never had before
which he told me was an apple from Gaul. It had a thin, tough, rosy skin and a crunchy white
inside which was tart at first and then released sweet juices upon chewing. It pleased me so
much, and I felt so rested, that when he fitted his hand around my swelling breast and teased at
my ear with his tongue, I didn’t resist and we made love in Carthage for the first time, lying
afterwards skimmed with sweat and filled with the sweetness. The previous night’s quarrel and
the miserable trip from Thagaste were forgotten. We decided to go and look for the seashore.
The sun-faded houses and shops along our street looked like steps descending the Byrsa hill
as it wound its way down to the shore. We walked hand in hand in the morning sun, looking
around us as Carthage wakened and began its bustle.
Aurelius pointed. “Look, there’s the aqueduct.”
From our vantage point near the top of the hill, we could see the aqueduct snaking through the
city to provide water to the baths and public fountains. It looked like a high wall pierced with
multiple arches.
“It’s 23 miles long,” Aurelius boasted, as if he’d built it himself. “It brings water all the way
from the Atlas mountains.”
Slaves in short tunics hurried past us, bearing burdens: baskets of fruit, bolts of cloth, a brace
of complaining live chickens. Carts clattered by carrying clay amphorae of wine and oil. Here
and there, fishwives set up their stalls along the crowded street and called gossip to each other,
while their barefoot children chased each other around their skirts.
I couldn’t help staring at the matrons starting their morning shopping, slaves walking behind
to carry their purchases. Nearly all of them wore red lip paste and elaborately twisted and coiled
hairstyles. Their faces were so coated heavily with white paste that to me they looked like
corpses. On the older women, the paste melted and sank into the folds of their skin. I nudged
Aurelius and nodded to one of them. “What’s wrong with them?” I whispered.
“Oh, that’s the Roman fashion. All of the Roman women paint their faces so their skin looks
younger and smoother.”
We turned a corner and suddenly we saw the harbor with its jutting piers of stone and graying
wood, the ships rocking in their moorings, men of all colors swarming over the ships and docks,
loading and unloading treasures from every port in the Mediterranean. And beyond the bustle
rolled the Middle Sea itself, dark blue, alive with rows of foam ruffling to shore one after another
like a relentless army. We stood and stared for several minutes, both of us speechless. Sea met
horizon in a crisp line dividing sapphire blue from the softer, cloud-strewn blue of the autumn
sky. Gulls and pelicans soared and wheeled above the waves, warning each other in harsh tones.
“Let’s see if we can get closer to it,” Aurelius said. We zigzagged through more narrow
streets and down a flight of stone steps and found a narrow beach, away from the harbor, strewn
with gray boulders and the cracked and ground shells of sea creatures.
“The Middle Sea,” Aurelius announced with a dramatic hand gesture.
I laughed. I thought I had never seen anything so magnificent. The waves roared softly when
they approached the shore, and then hissed on retreat, leaving behind a sparkling mist that
smelled of salt and fish and clean autumn air. Yellow shards of sunlight skipped on the dark blue
surface.
43
I took off my sandals and ventured into the sea a little way, liking how the waves lapped and
pulled at my ankles. I wished I knew how to swim, so I could throw myself into the waves and
glide through them like a fish. Instead, I just raised my arms to the sky and laughed again. To
entertain and outdo me, Aurelius ran into the sea up to his waist, and was instantly knocked
down by a wave. When I laughed, he dragged me in, and we both emerged soaked and coated
with salt. He drew me to him and we kissed with salt water running down our faces.
We played like this for almost an hour, running in and out of the water, chasing the waves and
letting them chase us back, getting bolder and learning to let the breakers lift us, liking the
weightless, bobbing feeling.
Finally, exhausted, we emerged and collapsed on the sand. I lay on my back, looking up at the
sky, thinking I had never been so happy in my life.
Aurelius raised himself on one elbow to look down at me. “So, how do you like Carthage so
far?” he asked, smiling.
“I love it!”
He laid back down and spread his arms. “This is the start of our real lives, Leona. I just feel
that this is the right place for me.” He stood again and raised his arms. “I love this!” he shouted.
I was content to be still. Aurelius started pacing in front of me. “I feel already like I belong
here,” he said. “This is the place where I will find truth; I feel it. Like, what makes these waves
in the sea?”
“The wind, of course.”
“But what makes the wind, see?”
“The gods, I guess.” A prickle of annoyance disturbed my contentment. Why did he have to
wonder about things that nobody could understand?
“The gods are superstitions,” he said, waving a hand. “I want to know the real reason.” He sat
beside me again and sighed. “I feel today like it will all really happen. I’ll discover things and be
a great teacher who shares them with my students.” He looked down at me. “And then come
home to the prettiest girl in Carthage.”
“Always?”
“Always,” he agreed, and I believed that it might happen.
“And our baby.”
He blinked. “And our baby, of course.”
He bent to kiss me. His lips tasted of salt. I ran my hands through his wet curls and over his
warm, drying shoulders. He took my face in his hands and I felt his long fingers press gently into
my scalp. Then he picked me up and carried me behind a boulder, where we made love by the
sea on our first day in Carthage.
44
Two days later, Aurelius began his classes. I was restless and lonely in our apartment all day,
and as the afternoon advanced I started looking out the window every five minutes, watching for
him. I went out to a stall and bought some peaches and roasted goat meat and a bread-and-
cucumber salad for our supper, and still he didn’t arrive. I was scrolling through one of his books
when he finally came up the stairs and into our apartment. I leapt to my feet. “Well? How was
it?”
“Everything I could have dreamed,” he enthused. “I have so much to tell you, I hardly know
where to begin.”
I uncovered our supper, and he dove into both his meal and his story, talking with his mouth
full as the words tumbled out. “This is the kind of place I’ve always wanted to be,” he
expounded, “with people who
think
. There’s one fellow in my recitation who comes all the way
from Hibernia, if you can imagine that, and yet speaks perfect Latin and orates like Cicero. I
found Amicus.”
Aurelius’ friend Amicus, the same one who had spoken up for Numa and me that day in the
pear orchard, had preceded us to Carthage by three weeks. He, too, was studying rhetoric and
philosophy.
“Oh!” Aurelius added. “And I met up with our friends again!”
“What friends?” I didn’t know we had any other friends in Carthage. I closed my eyes as I bit
into my second peach, letting the juice run down my chin and between my fingers.
“You know. Nebridius and Quintus.”
I could feel the blood rising to my face at the mention of their names. “Our friends? When did
they become our friends?”
He waved his hand, then swallowed and wiped his mouth. “It was all in good fun.”
“Did you get our money back?”
“No. Don’t worry about it.”
“They cheated us!”
“It’s just something they do. You might not understand. I’ve already learned so much, just
this first day. See, Cicero only talks about how people should interact with each other in the
political arena, but real philosophers talk about why people are the way they are. Did you ever
wonder about that?”
“The only thing I wonder is when we’re getting our money back.” I stood and started clearing
the table.
“Think about God, Leona. See, if God is completely good he couldn’t make anything evil,
right?”
I was still thinking about this, but he went on. “Okay, so, where do our wrong actions come
from then? They come from something separate, a separate substance if you will, which lives
inside us, and over which we have no control. So, it isn’t really Nebridius or Quintus – or
Aurelius or Leona, for that matter – who cheats or fornicates or steals; it’s the badness within.”
“Then anybody can do anything and it’s not their fault.” I tossed the cheap clay takeout
containers out the back window into the midden pile, and started stacking our own dishes for
washing.
“I knew you wouldn’t understand at first,” he said. “I’ll be able to explain it as I learn more
about it. We’re all going to a hearing tonight.”
45
I shook my head. “A hearing?”
“See, the Christians have it wrong. The real Trinity isn’t Father, Son and Holy Spirit, the way
my mother would have it. The Manichees have the Trinity as Father, Son and Mani, and Mani
speaks through their Elect and you can go and hear him.”
“Uh-huh. And it costs how much to hear him?” I thought I was beginning to understand all
too well.
“It isn’t like that,” he argued. “Hearers give what they can.”
“Uh-huh,” I repeated.
“Women can be hearers. It’s very democratic. You can come if you want.”
I didn’t want to at all, but I was lonely, so if he was going, I was going.
“I have known my soul and the body that lies upon it.
That they have been enemies since the creation of the worlds.”
The gaunt priest chanted a psalm as we entered the darkened room.
I had firmly avoided any conversation or eye contact with those devils, Quintus and
Nebridius, on our way here, speaking only to Aurelius and Amicus.
The chamber we entered was a back room of someone’s home, the shutters drawn closed so
the room was veiled in shadow. Although seldom prosecuted, Manicheism was an illegal
religion, and had no temples. Well-to-do adherents offered their homes for worship. Already,
several other hearers were seated in front of the priest, swathed in swirls of smoke from the
incense burners to either side of him. Bread, cheese and fruit lay in front of him, and we added
our own offerings to the pile before sitting on the floor with the others.
“I call the spirit of light out of the darkness of matter. I call the spirit of the Christ out of the
darkness of matter. I call the soul out of the darkness of matter,” the priest intoned.
“Tell us a story,” one of the hearers urged.
The priest slowly opened his eyes and gazed around the room. “A parable,” he began. “Once a
shepherd saw a lion stalking his flock. What should he do?” He gazed around the room, but he
clearly expected no answer, so he went on, holding up three fingers. “The shepherd worried
about this for three days, and on the third day he made a plan. He dug a pit and placed in it a new
young lamb to tempt the lion. But he tied a rope around the lamb and left the long end in his own
hand. Having already secreted the rest of his flock on the hill behind, he waited for the lion. And
the lion came and leapt into the pit to devour the lamb. But the shepherd quickly drew the kid up
by the rope before it could be eaten. So the lamb was safe, but the lion was trapped in the pit and
perished.” He paused. “Who can tell me what this means?”
Quintus ventured, “The shepherd is the spirit and the lion is matter. The lamb is a human soul.
The story tells how good and evil battle for the fate of our souls.”
“Just so,” the priest agreed. I glanced at Aurelius, knowing he was accustomed to being the
brightest student in every class, and wondering how he reacted to being out-thought for once. I
saw a little twitch in his cheek, and it amused me in a mean way. For myself, I wondered: what if
the shepherd hadn’t been quick enough? What if the lamb had been devoured before the
shepherd could manage to put it out of the pit? What if the rope had broken? What if the lion had
attacked the flock on the hillside instead, while the shepherd was digging the pit? But, not being