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Two For The Lions

Page 35

by Lindsey Davis


  Suddenly Saturninus reeled back. His sword fell to the sand. He had recoiled from Anacrites and was bent forwards, clutching his stomach. Blood welled between his fingers. I could not see the weapon, but I recognized his action--familiar to anyone who has seen a tavern brawl. He had been stabbed in the bowels with a knife.

  Anacrites was the Chief Spy. No one should have expected a clean fight.

  Saturninus made a desperate effort. He stumbled forwards, caught up his sword again, then fell onto Anacrites. The sword seemed to go in somewhere, but the knife found another target too. They both lay still.

  There was uproar again, but even the crowd had seen enough by now. Justinus and I walked out to the corpses as steadily as we could. We pulled them apart. There was no sign of life. I found the knife Anacrites had used and managed to slide it up my sleeve unseen. We made a show of performing a formal inspection, then I tapped both bodies briskly with the mallet and signaled for bearers. Saturninus was afforded the honor of a stretcher. "Romanus," as a stranger, was towed from the ring face-up and feet-first, with the back of his helmet dragging on the bloody sand. The only way he could have left was as a corpse. Had he survived the fight, the outraged crowd would have torn him apart.

  LXIV

  AFTER THE NECESSARY salutes to the president, I set off for the great doorway, with Justinus close behind me. The hubbub continued in the arena as we walked outside.

  We surveyed the grim row of bloody bodies. I pushed up the beaked mask I wore, feeling as if my legs would give way.

  Justinus looked at me somberly. "Your partnerships seem to get wound up rather roughly."

  "He brought it on himself. Always consult your colleague--who will dissuade you from sheer stupidity."

  I forced myself to walk over to the line of carcasses. Groaning at the effort, I knelt down. More gently than he would have expected, I released the helmet from Anacrites and laid it to one side. His face was as white as the time I found him with a smashed head, as close to dying as anybody could have been and yet survive.

  "I shall have to tell my mother about this. We'd better make sure he's really gone this time. Hermes--" Justinus stepped forwards with the snaky staff. "Right: give him a quick shove somewhere with your hot caduceus."

  A pair of pale gray eyes opened, very wide. As Justinus knelt down to touch the "corpse," a resounding yell of terror rose to the Tripolitanian skies.

  I smiled to myself resignedly. Anacrites was still alive.

  Table of Contents

  Part One

  Part Two

  Part Three

 

 

 


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