the close friend of the Empress Theodora. (No surprise, that, for all men know
that like seeks like. And if the Empress Theodora's past held no trace of
witchcraft, she had made good the loss by a harlotry so wanton as to put even
that of Antonina to shame.)
So who knew what lecheries and deviltry Antonina could conceal?
About the general himself, setting aside his scandalous marriage, the
gentility had little ill to say.
A bit, of course, a bit. Though ranked in the nobility, Belisarius was
Thracian by birth. And the Thracians were known to be a boorish folk, rustic
and uncouth. This flaw in his person, however, was passed over lightly. It was
not that the righteous feared the wrath of Belisarius. The general, after all,
was known himself to make the occasional jest regarding Thracian crudity.
(Crude jests, of course; he was a Thracian.)
No, the tongues of the better stock were stilled on this subject because the
Emperor Justinian was also Thracian (and not even from the ranks of the
Thracian nobility, such as it was, but from the peasantry). And if Belisarius
was known for his even and good-humored temperament, the Emperor was not. Most
certainly not. An ill-humored and suspicious man, was Justinian, frightfully
quick to take offense. And frightful when he did.
Then, there was the general's youth. As all people of quality are aware, youth
is by nature a parlous state. An extremely perilous condition, youth, from an
ethical standpoint. Reckless, besides -- daring, and impetuous. Not the sort
of thing which notability likes to see in its generals. Yet the Emperor
Justinian had placed him in the ranks of his personal bodyguard, the elite
body from which he selected his generals. And then, piling folly upon
unwisdom, had immediately selected Belisarius to command an army facing the
ancient Medean foe.
True, there were those who defended the Emperor's choice, pointing out that
despite his youth Belisarius possessed an acute judgment and a keen intellect.
Yet this defense failed of its purpose. For, in the end, leaving aside his
marriage, it was this final quality of Belisarius that set right-thinking
teeth on edge.
Intelligence, of course, is an admirable property in a man. Even, in
moderation, in a woman. So long as it is a respectable sort of intelligence --
straight, so to speak. A thing of clear corners and precise angles, or, at the
very least, spherical curves. Moderate, in its means; forthright, in its ends;
direct, in its approach.
But the mind of Belisarius -- ah, the mystery of it. To look at the man, he
was naught but a Thracian. Taller than most, well built as Thracians tend to
be, and handsome (as Thracians tend not to be). But all who knew the general
came to understand that, within his upstanding occidental shape, there lurked
a most exotic intellect. Something from the subtle east, perhaps, or the
ancient south. A thing not from the stark hills but the primeval forest; a
gnarled mind in a youthful body, crooked as a root and as sinuous as a
serpent.
Such did many good folk think, especially after making his acquaintance. None
could fault the general, after taking his leave, for the courtesy of his
manner or the propriety of his conduct. A good-humored man, none could deny;
though many, after taking his leave, wondered if the humor was at their
expense. But they kept their suspicions muted, if not silent. For there always
remained this thought, that whatever the state of his mind, there was no
mistaking the state of his body.
Deadly with a blade, was Belisarius. And even the cataphracts, in their cups,
spoke of his lance and his bow.
It was to the house of this man, then, and his Jezebel wife, that Michael of
Macedonia and his friend the bishop brought their message, and the thing which