Saturnalia

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by Lindsey Davis


  XLIV

  Positions were reversed. For once I was the one waiting among the oil-lamp shadows, when Helena crawled in at last, barely able to move from exhaustion. It was a shock to see her still in the strange brown gown she wore to the Temple of Saturn, though at some point since she disappeared in Anacrites’ litter, she had plaited her loose hair into an old-fashioned bun like some severe matriarch from the Republic.

  I had been sitting on a chest in a daze until I heard the litter-bearers calling good-night to her. I felt stiff myself, but managed to get to the door to open it for Helena like a uniquely efficient hall porter. ‘Dirty stop-out. What time do you call this?’ I took her in my arms, very gently. ‘Should I check you over for bruises? Or just check how drunk you are?’

  She shook her head in reassurance, as she collapsed against me. ‘All we were offered was a small tray of three-day-old date fancies and some foul grape juice. Hospitality from the Chief Spy is not based on the Good Steward’s Household Manual… I hope you picked up those cloaks, Marcus.’

  So she was all right. I helped her upstairs, where we fell into bed wearing most of our clothes. I squirmed out of myouter tunic, hoping she had not seen the bloodstains I had acquired from Lentullus.

  Helena fell asleep after me, I think, but she was up first. By the time I sauntered trom our room, she had been to the baths, dressed like herself in a smart red dress and pendant garnet earrings, and had begun calming our household—scared slaves; disconcerted soldiers; subdued children; Nux slinking along skirting boards as if she was in trouble; Albia, equally dog-like, defiantly letting us know she was furious at us for staying out all night.

  I had washed my face and put on slippers. I had decided not to shave or change my undertunic. I was master of my house. I had my own style. I wasn’t a jumped-up, hidebound, establishment lackey who couldn’t yawn if it was a black day on the calendar. People knew what to expect from me. I refused to create anxiety by looking too formal.

  Once everyone had settled down, Helena and I were free to take a late breakfast byourselves. After we ate, we carried warm honey drinks right up on to our roof terrace, where there was a chance we could remain undisturbed. I checked the supports on the wind-blown climbing roses while I reported on Lentullus andJustinus. ‘I told your brother to remain with the vigiles. I hope he does. But I haven’t the resources—or the will any longer—to hold him to it.’

  ‘Can I go and see him?’

  ‘I can’t stop you.’

  ‘Marcus!’

  ‘Oh I just don’t want you seeing the mess the Guards have made of Lentullus.’ As Helena stared, I admitted, ‘Yes, the lad could die. He may be dead by now.’

  Helena slowly sipped at her beaker. ‘Is Scythax a good doctor? Should we find a better man?’

  ‘Maybe I’ll ask around, see if there is a specialist for sword wounds—some old army surgeon, maybe. I don’t want to appear ungrateful to the vigiles. Lentullus would have gone under last night, if I hadn’t thought of Scythax.’

  I told her about the incident with the dead vagrant. Helena pursed her lips. I could see her filing it away in her library of curiosities. At some point, if a link occurred, she would pull down a mental scroll case and bring out this story, making new sense of it. Meanwhile we were silent, absorbing the oddities.

  ‘So tell me what happened, sweetheart; how did you get on with Anacrites?’

  I watched Helena sorting her thoughts quietly. ‘Well, to begin at the end, Ganna has been placed in the House of the Vestals.’

  ‘Whose idea?’

  Helena smiled. ‘It is secure, and the Virgins will look after her. Ganna understands that nothing can be decided about her own fate until Veleda has been found.’

  ‘And how painful was it, reaching this resolution?’

  Helena said briefly, ‘The man is a pig.’ Seeing my look of horror, she took my hand quickly. ‘Oh Anacrites didn’t assault us. Nothing so direct. He deals in mental indignities. I dare say he would have tried physical mistreatment of the girl, had I not been there—’

  ‘It’s standard,’ I confirmed. Without allowing the Spy any credit, I too would have done the same, faced with a tricky enemy and driven by urgency: ‘In tough interrogations, even before you start beating them up, you deprive your subject of food, drink, hygiene facilities, warmth, consolation—hope.’

  ‘Well, Anacrites certainly deprived Ganna of hope.’ ‘That’s not fatal. Nor does it have to be permanent.’

  ‘Are you as hard as him? No, Marcus. You have better tactics. More practical. First, you would point out the risks of her situation and the possibilities for retrieving something if she cooperates…’ Helena was looking morose. ‘I did try to persuade Anacrites that he should adopt your methods. I played on the fact that you and he are both working on this problem—working together—’ I made vomiting noises. She ignored it. ‘Working together now, just as you had done so successfully during the Great Census. I said, you both owe your current prosperity and your high social profile to that experience. Neither of you should forget it.’

  I took the sophisticated route this time; I merely banged down my beaker hard on a garden table. ‘So?’ I asked coldly.

  Helena chuckled. ‘Oh, it worked, Marcus. Anacrites did exacdy what you would do.’

  ‘Which is?’

  ‘He snapped, well maybe I would like to ask the questions then.’

  We both had a chortle, then Helena admitted, ‘Of course he was being sarcastic, but I jumped in and thanked him, and took him at his word.’

  I allowed myself to guffaw. I was enjoying the story now. I wished I could have been a gecko yesterday in a corner of the interrogation room.

  ‘First I suggested that I should like to get comfortable; I asked to use the facilities. Ganna had the sense to come too. A slave was supervising us, but we managed to have a few words together and I impressed on her that the more she said, the better it would look, so the easier things would go for her. And…’ Helena paused, reconsidering.

  ‘That “and” sounds significant.’

  ‘No, it’s nothing. So when we went back, I asked the questions and Ganna confessed pretty well everything.’ I noted Helena’s ‘pretty well’, but let her carry on with her version.

  Some we already knew: how at the Quadrumatus house the two women had plotted to escape in the laundry cart, then how Veleda managed it, but went alone. How Veleda sought out Zosime, then afterwards made her way to the Temple of Diana, where a priestess gave her shelter out of sisterly fellow-feeling, while Ganna—by then staying at my mother’s apartment—was able to visit the temple and leave messages of support. She was never allowed to see Veleda face to face. But temple attendants always reassured her—until yesterday, when Ganna ran there after my sisters had scared her, and they claimed Veleda was no longer with them. ‘Ganna ran away because she found your sisters very frightening!’ I found them frightening myself

  ‘So where is Veleda now?’ I asked, giving Helena a narrow look.

  Helena accepted my scrutiny in her serene way. ‘Ganna insists that she does not know. Anacrites is all set to make pompous demands of the chief priest. A bad mistake.’

  ‘Does he not have jurisdiction over temples?’ I wondered.

  ‘Tell that to the temples’ priests! It does not do to underestimate the power of such institutions. Even the Emperor would approach cautiously. I think Anacrites will be roundly rebuffed—if only because of the outrages committed last night by the Praetorians in his name.’

  ‘That was stupid.’ He should have cleared the operation with the temple first.

  Helena nodded. ‘He has no diplomacy. But anyway, it may be that the priests really cannot help with Veleda’s current whereabouts. If she sensed that pursuit was closing in on her, she may have left in a hurry and without revealing her plans.’

  I was not convinced. She was sick, foreign, and probably short of funds. The Temple of Diana Aventinensis may not have liked being stuck with a fleeing barba
rian, but once they took her in, they would see it through. ‘So where could she go, my darling? She must be running out of options now. Where next?’

  Helena Justina gave me a straight look. ‘It seems nobody knows.’

  I bet! I knew Helena, so I was convinced Ganna told her something in confidence when they tried the ‘two shy girls have to go to the lavatory together’ trick. You could tell Anacrites had no real knowledge of women, or he would never have fallen for that one.

  I gave Helena a glance that told her I believed that she was holding back—and in return she gave me a smile that said she saw what I thought, and wouldn’t give… Fine.

  ‘So was Anacrites impressed by your help, my darling?’ Helena Justina let out an uncharacteristic snort. ‘He thinks he’s very clever—but the man is a fool!’

  Excellent. Anacrites had failed to notice that my wife secretly possessed a clue.

  Helena mentioned that she was going over to the Capena Gate later, to tell her parents and Claudia that Justinus was now free and well. She spoke idly, like any efficient wicked woman. Either she had taken a lover—which I always feared was possible—or she was up to something she thought she could bring off better than me. She might be right, but if she went out on the loose, I was a heavy-handed Roman husband: I intended to play the chaperon. During the day, I watched for indications. She spent a lot of time giving instructions about Julia and Favonia; normally she would have taken them with her to see their doting grandparents. She collected a few things, as if she might be travelling.

  I gave her a couple of hours’ start, using the time to shave and to pack necessities myself I put Clemens in charge of everything at home, and I asked for a volunteer who could ride. The legionaries were still too upset by what had happened to Lentullus. Only Jacinthus whispered please could he come? Typical. I was better off when I worked alone. Still, he was a dead loss in the kitchen, he took no interest at all in cutlets or calamari, and I might well need a companion. So gritting my teeth at my usual filthy handout from fortune, I set off accompanied by my cook. Jacinthus seemed thrilled to be taken on an unknown mission. He could have been a soldier; all he wanted was to be on the move, never mind why or where.

  We tailed Helena from the senator’s house to the stables where I knew her father kept his carriage. Two female companions were with her, closely cloaked and followed by a slave carrying small hand luggage. They left the slave behind when they departed in the carriage like the three Graces taking their dancing sandals to a summer picnic. It was a slow vehicle, giving me time to acquire horses for Jacinthus and me.

  Whether Ganna had whispered it to her, or whether Helena simply worked it out for herself, as soon as I saw that she was taking a route along the Via Appia and out towards the Alban Hills, it struck me where we were probably going. In winter it would be a long haul: we were heading for another shrine of Diana. We were going to Lake Nemi.

  XLV

  The carriage stopped for a comfort break after about six miles. I rode up. ‘Surprise!’

  ‘I thought we’d let you catch up,’ said Helena pleasantly. Her eyes lingered on Jacinthus. The cook had no idea his presence was making me feel unprofessional.

  To my surprise Helena not only had Albia with her, which I might have expected, but also Claudia Rufina, the hard-done-by wife of

  Justinus. Claudia was exhibiting the bright eyes and firm mouth of a wronged woman who now had her rival pinned down in catapult range. If Veleda really was skulking at Nemi, she was liable to end up buried there in a shallow grave.

  When I grumbled about being excluded, Helena retorted that men were superfluous. The shrine of Diana Nemorensis had become a wildly fashionable complex for wealthy wives who needed assistance in conception. Helena and Claudia were going to Nemi under guise of seeking fertility advice.

  I said a fertility shrine seemed an odd place to hide a virgin priestess. Claudia sniffed. Albia spluttered with laughter. Helena just grinned and told me that if I had to tag along, I must keep right out of their way at the shrine. That suited me.

  Since Nemi lies between fifteen and twenty miles from Rome, our late start was ludicrous. We only reached the area by the feeble light of lanterns. We were forced to stay overnight at Aricia. Aricia had been a stronghold of Augustus’ horrible family, so it was full of people who took a snide view of anyone who lacked gods in their ancestry. There were inns. Any town on the edge of a famous sanctuary extends hospitality to those it can exploit. In theory Aricia was a pleasant spot, famous for its wine, its cuts of pork, its woodland strawberries. The whole place was half dead in December, however. Dinner was foul, the beds were damp, and the only consolation was that there were few Saturnalia revellers creating a din on its sour streets. At least we slept. Helena and I slept together, and since we were so close to a fertility shrine, I made sure we demonstrated that we did not need any divine assistance in our matrimonial rites. No votive statue sellers tomorrow would be selling me little models of sick wombs or wobbly penises. In the morning I had barely enough energy to beat up the landlord for overcharging—but that was nothing to do with my exertions, just seasonal depression clamping down.

  We did not linger over breakfast, since the inn did not offer any. We found a solitary bakery that condescended to sell a bag of old rolls and some mustcake. Eating as we went, in a manner that would not be approved of by snobs, we set off soon after dawn to find the sacred grove and the lake.

  SATURNALIA, DAY THREE

  Fourteen days before the Kalends of January (19 December)

  XLVI

  The Alban Hills enclose two inland lakes known as the mirrors of Diana—the Lakes of Nemi and Albanus. Of these, Lake Nemi is famously the more isolated, beautiful and mysterious. When the country road brought us three miles from Aricia along the upper ridges, nothing prepared us for what would lie below. That frosty December morning, mist writhed like abandoned laundry on the silent forest trees and hung over the lake basin in a suspended white canopy. The shrine of Diana was set apart from the world, within a perfect circle of volcanic peaks. The enclosed lake gave the impression it might be as deep again as the surrounding hills are high. Tangles of age-old vegetation clothed the steep interior slopes, ancient holm oaks and ash, thriving amidst head-high brambles and ferns; yet somehow a road had been hacked out down inside the ancient crater. Even the presence of Julius Caesar’s enormous villa, sprawled in ugly splendour at the southern end of the lake, could not spoil the remote perfection of the scene.

  The narrow road led us fairly gently through the deserted woods via overgrown hairpin bends. As we descended, we passed little fields and market gardens, clearly benefiting from fertile soil, though most looked abandoned and some gave the impression they had been frozen in time since our primitive rural ancestors. There were occasional tiny dwellings, more like cowsheds than homes, with no sign of occupants. We lost our way a couple of times, but then a man in a cart came racketing around a corner and nearly ran into us. He had the haunted gaze of a husband who thought his wife was cheating on him, an obsessed cuckold who was gallivanting up the hill in the hope of catching the culprits at a tender tryst in Aricia. I bet they knew he was coming. I bet it happened every week, and they always eluded him.

  Despite looking unreliable, he gave us accurate directions. We took a side road we had already passed twice, that had looked as if it led nowhere, and soon came out in a flat area close to the water, just below the levelled terraces upon which the sanctuary was built.

  We were in a deep basin the eye could only take in if you turned on the spot. Ahead of us stretched the limpid waters of the lake, unmarred by fishing boats. All around, striking hills rose steeply to a sky that seemed so far away we felt like moonstruck rabbits at the bottom of their burrow.

  ‘This place would make poets wet themselves.’

  ‘Ever one for the fluent phrase, Falco.’

  ‘I’m not happy. It’s too sure of its own magnificence.’

  ‘You just hate seeing that a loc
al landowner has selfishly scarred the vista with an ostentatious holiday home!’ Helena was glaring angrily down the lake to the abomination that disfigured the southern shore. She was no supporter of Julius Caesar or his great-nephew Augustus, with their boasts and empire-building machinations, let alone their crackpot, incestuous, empire-destroying descendants, Caligula and Nero.

  ‘You said it. Filthy-rich monsters with brazen ambitions… Also, fruit, I am sneering at this so-called isolated shrine, which has cynically attracted shoals of elite—and loaded—so useful in gynaecology women, whose real reason for failure to conceive is that they are all inbred to buggery—’

  ‘I don’t believe buggery would help,’ Claudia Rufina murmured sweetly, as if I might not know its definition. The tall young woman (provincial, but substantially loaded herself) rearranged a stole over one shoulder, gazing around as if she feared to meet her destiny in this near-perfect place. They were all subdued. Entranced by the wild beauty of the setting, young Albia turned on me an expression she saved for when she knew indelicate issues were being discussed by adults who preferred her not to listen. Then she lost interest in being precocious and went back to admiring the grove-covered hills and the lake.

  Any religious nymph from the endless forests of Germanyought to feel at home close to these graceful trees and the water. I finally began to believe that Veleda might be here.

  Helena had a vague recollection of some story about horses being banned within the temple precincts. ‘Wasn’t Diana’s hunting consort, Virbius, a manifestation of Theseus’ son Hippolytus, who was torn apart by horses for rejecting the adulterous advances of his stepmother, Phaedra?’

  ‘Sounds like a load of old myth to me…’ I grinned. ‘Families do have their troubles.’

  I listened to Helena. Our purpose today would hardly be welcomed. We could not march in and demand that a priestess who had been granted sanctuary be handed over to us. So rather than offend even more, we left our carriage and horses, and continued unobtrusively on foot. The shrine lay above us. Its main rites were in August, the birthday of the huntress goddess, when crowds of women came from Rome to celebrate the compassionate patroness of midwives, lighting up the whole area with torches and lamps. Today, we passed nobody as we walked.

 

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