Thebes, 1129
There had been no blood spilled in the Senate, and that was the remarkable part. A war had been declared, a war that Vissarionas ek Lesvou had, in his heart, been truly delighted to see begin at last... but the Caesar had recanted and sworn peace. He would now become a weak Emperor, with his power openly challenged and reduced by the Senate. Likely he would be all the more vicious for it when he came to power, but that was for the future.
For now, Vissa faced a very simple problem, he was cut off from the Empire. Stranded in the south by the abrupt rebellion of 'his' city, Cairo, of which he had not yet informed his soldiers. No supply lines, not even any reliable lines of communication, and he with only his bodyguards. Their tour of the Orthodox holy sites was long complete, but Vissa had not yet found what he was actually seeking in the desert. There was no peace of mind for him, not even in his sleep, and though he had, perforce, attended the emergency Senate session to see the Caesar humiliated even that had not improved his grip on himself. Something inside Vissa had just spun out of control and nothing he could do seemed to make it stop spinning. Thinking itself was difficult, and those befuddled thoughts sometimes simply seemed to erupt into words without any reason to them. His guardsmen were distraught, and Rafi was beside himself, but their efforts never actually penetrated the mental haze surrounding Vissa.
And now they were 'laying siege' to Thebes, all twenty one of them. In essence this meant camping east of the castle, where there was a well, and placing scouts along the north and south roads so that supply trains could be headed off. There was no way Vissa's men could forcibly enter the castle if the men inside chose to hold out and hope for reinforcements, but given the arrogance the Egyptian armies had shown so far it seemed quite likely that there would be a sally, and soon.
The northern scout reported a supply mission on the road. Without needing orders the men assembled and walked their horses north to block the road, but this time Vissa positioned them to intercept the supplies in clear view of the castle walls. Let the hungry men within see their food taken, and perhaps, just perhaps...
A horn sounded within Thebes, and the gates were drawn open. The garrison, which Vissa had been unable to judge from without, now revealed itself to be two companies of hardy javelin men and a solid company of Nubian spearmen. Those javelins were the real danger, they could drag a man down off his horse even if they didn't penetrate his armor. Vissa's guardsmen destroyed and fouled whatever could not be carried off of the supplies and sent the Bedouin dressed cart driver running towards the castle with his camels while the Egyptian companies assembled. Then, as soon as they sent the driver inside and began to march forward, Vissa rode away.
He had Rafi hurling stones at their pursuers with his sling, and he deliberately slit one of the bags of grain to slowly spill it's contents across the desert as they rode off with the enemy infantry in pursuit. The captain of the Thebes garrison was visibly in a fury, screaming at his men and whipping them up to chase the Greeks. Vissa's men rode just ahead of the Egyptians all the way to an outlying farm where the fields had recently been heavily irrigated and were thick with clinging, sandy mud. Placing the field in the direct line of march between the enemy foot and his men, Vissa sat back and waited. The two companies of javelineers marched around the field, but the Nubian spearmen and the garrison captain waded out into it.
At which point Vissa and his men galloped back to the castle at Thebes and in through the open gates. The cart driver, in truth Vissa's guardsmen Stephen, removed his Bedouin head wrappings and pulled himself up onto his mount behind Rafi before locking the gate behind him. Thebes was taken without even a battle. At the castle square Vissa dismounted to discuss matters with some irate representatives of the local government in rough Arabic.
The local spoke first, obviously angry, 'Captain Rashid will be back you know! He'll lay a true siege and recapture Thebes, slaughtering all your men!'
Vissa erupts in a hollow, unpleasant laugh, 'No, I dare say Rashid will not be back. His men are just discovering that the well out there is fouled and there are no supplies left in our camp to sustain his three hundred men. Indeed, if Rashid is very lucky he may still be alive at this moment, but I would not care to bet on the matter, and after they deal with him his men will return to their homes and regular meals just as quickly as possible. No one is coming to save you.'
The local man was obviously taken aback, but he looked around and drew courage from the swelling number of citizens in the square before replying, 'There's a lot of us here, Greek. What makes you think we'll live under you? We'll no more welcome you than Cairo did.'
Rafi, whose Arabic is better than Vissa's, looks anxious at these words, and watches Vissarionas carefully. A grim look falls over Vissa, but his speech is still emotionless, 'There will be no riots here. Do you hear me? No riots! Rioters will be put to the sword.'
The local sneers. There are now close to three hundred men, with a smattering of women as well, in the square and more can be seen coming down nearby streets. He retorts, 'What swords? There are twenty of us for every sword you carry. I'm the governor you know, I'll call up the militia and we'll put your men out ourselves you fool!'
At that, the governor of Thebes turns his back on Vissa and opens his mouth to shout at the crowd,
'Give these Christians their due! As the Caliph commanded at Cairo, make it so here and leave none alive!'
In a flash Vissa has ridden up behind him and split open his head. His guardsmen are momentarily shocked to see their general kill an unarmed man, but the mood of the crowd immediately turns ugly as stones and rotten produce begin to plink off Vissa's armor. Rafi looks on in horror, trying to shout to Vissa above the noise, but only one clear, empty voice can be heard.
'Clear the square men! Give them the fear of God and Byzantium! No riots in Thebes!'
It is Vissa. He swings his sword wildly through the crowd as they press close, and blood flies in the air. Instantly his guardsmen in their heavy armor press forward and an unimaginable slaughter begins. At first the people seem to be holding their own, but this is an illusion of sheer numbers. They carry no weapons to injure the guardsmen, and are not trained to tear men down from horses which kick, scream, and bite in their own right. It takes less than a minute to clear the space around Vissa, and costs the lives of dozens of broken civilians. There is a momentary pause for breath, into which Vissa says,
'This is the battle for Thebes men. Go out and win it.'
Their commander's black mental haze takes hold of the well trained men, and even as the crowd at last shrinks back of it's own accord, realizing their mistake, the Byzantine guardsmen advance. The crowd continues to struggle for a moment, but when one of the war horses bodily hurls a screaming woman through the air with it's mouth the mob breaks and tries to flee, a thousand or more terrified Egyptians scattering and trampling one another in the streets.
Rafi, having leapt from Stephen's saddle during the discussion, rushes up and clings to Vissa's sword arm as his master attempts to join the fray,
'Stop them Vissa! You cannot do this! Remember Antioch!'
There is a glimpse, the briefest glimpse, of shock and pain on Vissa's face before the blank void descends over his visage again, 'Remember Cairo Rafi. Word arrived this morning. The city rebelled, but before it did so estimates are six thousand citizens and two hundred soldiers died in the riots.'
'Does their blood count less because I did not stain my hands with it? How many more will die when we must lay siege and take the city again? There will be no rebellion here, no riots. Now, leave me to my work!'
So saying, Vissarionas ek Lesvou rode off among the screaming civilians of Thebes, killing all he could reach.
...
Hours later Thebes is quiet. Vissa's exhausted guardsmen are resting, but Vissa himself still sits in the governor's office examining papers and trying to organize a detail of locals to clear the streets and count the dead. The number will likely approach seven hundred. In the midst of sorting through these piles of documents in a foreign language a squinting Vissa realizes that Rafi has come into the room. The young man looks... scared.
'I'm leaving Vissa. What you did today... who you've become since Cairo... I can't stay Vissa.'
There is again an instant of pain visible on Vissa's face before the mask overcomes it, but his voice is perfectly controlled,
'Where will you go Rafi? Cairo is gone, and the roads north are held by rebels. We're alone here. We need every hand here. I need you.'
'Tell me then, Vissarionas ek Lesvou, in whose service I have honorably counted myself for decades, why? Why were the people here killed? Why was Thebes taken?'
Vissa shakes his head before answering, 'Why? I have set aside the question of why Rafi, because I have decided it has no answer. Why were the Christians of Cairo butchered? Why was the Crusade called? Why did God let Cairo rebel? Why did Cairo reject me? Why did Al-'
Vissa's voice rises on the last words, and then breaks off before resuming in a flat, dead tone, 'I have given up on why Rafi, and so now I stick to what. What could I do to help Byzantium and the Order when I was unfit to govern Cairo? Secure the Holy Sites and capture Thebes. What could I do to prevent riots at Thebes? Sack the castle. So, tell me, what can I do to keep you here?'
Despair and tears fill Rafi's eyes. In a small voice he repies, 'Nothing.'
Vissa nods once, 'Then go and God preserve you. Do you remember the last time I asked you why Rafi? Why, if God is great, must we live this way? It has occurred to me, here in the deserts, that perhaps God is not great. Perhaps he is cruel, and vicious, as the ancient Greeks thought of their gods, and maybe he selects his favored servents for just such qualities, and rewards them where they work his will. Perhaps I have pleased God here, now Rafi, when all that I have done before did not.'
'Consider this, my friend, at Cairo I spared the people the sack of the city and preserved my own innocence. Yet, despite this, blood ran in the streets every day for three years until the rebels threw Methodios out. I was blameless, my hands were clean! But the price of my innocence, of my immaculate hands, was six thousand dead civilians and three years of misery for twenty two thousand more. If I had sacked the city five thousand might have died and my soul would have been stained once more, but order would have held and riots would not have blackened the lives of so many for those years.'
'The total cost of my innocence, then, was exceptional misery for nearly thirty thousand human beings, and death for over six thousand. Look at my hands now, Rafi. I carry the blood of many today, at least dozens, more likely hundreds, but tomorrow those who remain will awaken and be content under my rule. There will be no riots, no misery, and no more death. I cannot help but think that this is what God wants, and I must put what He wants ahead of what I want, ahead of my innocence and bloodless hands.'
'Have you ever wondered, Raphael, what happened to the God of the old days, who would destroy a people so that he could give their lands to his chosen tribe? I think that God still works among us, and my question now is simple; What can I do to please him? I will give why unto his hands and trouble myself with it no more.
'Go with God Rafi. You might want to leave your ek Lesvou garmets in case the rebels are checking people on the road. I will pray that God guides you safely out of here and back to the Empire.'
Vissa's blank eyes then fall back to the documents he was examining. He has trouble enough reading Greek, and puzzling through badly written Arabic sometimes mixed with loan words from the local dialect is giving him a terrible headache. When next he looks up, Rafi is gone.
No reliable word reaches the Empire of the fate of distant Thebes other than the brute fact of it's capture.
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