Marc Antony grinned. “What a time you had getting here, eh? Well, come ashore and let us show you how Rome treats its guests.”
Lydia gathered up the sack that had been her constant companion since leaving Alexandria and filed behind David and the others to disembark. She wore the pendant at all times, now strung on a leather cord beneath her tunic, and the box of scrolls weighted the bottom of the sack, pulling the fabric taut in her hands.
Three months since she left Alexandria. Five months remaining to reach Jerusalem, still held by Herod’s enemy Antigonus, before Yom HaKippurim, the Day of Atonement.
The feeling that Rome would devour her followed her from the barge, along the planking, to the waiting crowd, like a needling prick at her thoughts.
“I hope you like it here.” Riva’s voice at her shoulder was unfriendly. She pushed past Lydia, narrow hips swaying as she caught up with Herod.
How long would it take Herod to convince Mark Antony to lend troops for the war against Antigonus? Lydia needed to get out of Rome before Riva’s unfounded jealousy did more damage.
The procession climbed from the murky River Tiberis toward the tree-lined summit of one of Rome’s seven hills, the Palatine. Marc Antony, as expansive and outgoing as Lydia remembered from his time in Egypt, ordered a wide litter for himself and Herod to be transported up the cobbled road. Lydia and the others followed, trailing between lofty umbrella pines that sharpened the air with their spicy scent, welcome after the stench of sea travel.
Lydia took in every detail of the city as they climbed. The immense Roman Forum stretched at the base of the hill on their left, its lofty temple columns and administrative buildings peeking white from between the pines, visible even from this distance. In the valley to their right, an elongated oval stadium matched the length of the Palatine. Would they see chariot races even tonight, be able to witness the action from this height?
But it was the hill itself that demanded attention, with its magnificent white-stoned estates spread under the cloudless blue sky, housing the elite of Roman society. The breeze on the hill contained no whiff of city odors. Lydia lifted her head to the dark wings of a bird, wheeling lazily over a two-storied estate, and despite all, she smiled.
Laughter rang out from the litter ahead, and the eight straightbacked litter bearers slowed as one. The curtains were thrust aside and Herod’s head appeared.
“Riva!” He scanned the cluster of those following the litter until he found the girl, already hurrying forward. “Come.”
Riva bumped a shoulder against Lydia’s arm as she passed, then tossed a superior smile over her shoulder. The dark-skinned men who bore the litter lowered it nearly to the ground, and Riva climbed onto the cushioned bench, disappearing from view. Now heavier with three occupants, the men grunted and heaved as one as they lifted the litter to their shoulders and continued.
The procession wound past several estates and stopped at a midsized house with two stories and a peristyled garden in front, its portico columns circled with glossy vines.
Inside, the staff was taken to separate men’s and women’s quarters, given jugs of water with which to wash, loaves of hard bread, and mats where they might rest. When the room was empty, Lydia took care to hide the scrolls in an unused urn in the corner.
They were all to be included in the reception Marc Antony had planned for his younger friend that evening. Where Herod was all quiet, Eastern intensity and studied charm, Antony was the hard-drinking reprobate who loved to spend money on a party.
The reception proved to rival any Cleopatra had given, if not in scale at least in quality. Lydia hovered with a few other servants near the frescoed wall of the large dining hall. Others of the party—Herod’s advisers, plus Riva and a few other women—reclined on three couches set around a massive square table.
The reds and yellows of the fresco at Lydia’s back were warm and inviting, and the spread of food magnificent. Plump green olives and creamy white cheeses, jeweled cups of wine and steaming platters of roasted pheasant. Her mouth watered at the delectable scent of the meat. There had been no cooked foods aboard the ship from Rhodes. She must be content to wait, though Riva’s hard smile as she tore apart of bit of seasoned meat made the delay grueling.
Herod reclined on the couch opposite Antony and stuffed his mouth with a large grape, chewing while speaking. “So when am I to meet the young man who so captured Julius Caesar’s affections that it gained him a fortune, a claim to power, and an enemy as formidable as you?”
Antony’s face darkened briefly. “Octavian and I have come to an agreement. There is no enmity here.”
“Ha!” Herod spit the grape seed to the mosaic floor. “You have, what, twenty years on the boy? And yet all I hear in Judea is Octavian, Octavian.” His voice was mocking. “Octavian adopted by Caesar and named heir in his will. Octavian forces Marc Antony to flee to Gaul. Octavian made senator, given imperium, given a consularship—”
“Enough!” Antony slapped the table.
Lydia jumped and her shoulder struck the wall.
His usual good humor seemed spent. “Our alliance with Lepidus has made the Second Triumvirate official—something Caesar never had. There are plenty of Roman holdings for the three of us. Lepidus has Africa, the East is mine. I am content to leave Italia and its neighbors to Octavian.”
“Hmm.” Herod’s gaze grew hard and calculating, as she had seen in his sparring with Cleopatra. “It is that very East I have come to speak with you about.”
Antony raised a hand and shook his head. “Later. Tonight is for enjoyment only.” He waved in a group from the doorway, where they had apparently been waiting for a signal.
Musicians with drums, lyres, double-reed mouth pipes, and a large cithara filed in with solemnity, set up quickly in the front of the room, and began to play a slow and steady drumbeat accompanying a minor-keyed tune.
But it was the man who entered at the start of the music who captured Lydia’s attention. Tall and narrowly built, with a straight Roman nose and full lips. Expressive eyes that roamed the room grazed her quickly, then returned for a second look. She swallowed against the sudden dryness in her throat and looked away.
A slave paused in front of Lydia with a platter of fruits, but she shook her head at the offer and returned her attention to the new arrival. Without looking, she could feel that Riva’s gaze turned that way as well.
“Ah, here he is.” Antony grinned and nodded toward Herod. “Our premier poet, Lucius Varius Rufus.”
Lucius Varius Rufus. Lydia repeated the name in her mind and it echoed against her heart.
“You will love this, Herod. Nothing like it in your dusty Galilee, I am quite certain. My wife adores him.”
Herod frowned. “Your wife? I didn’t want to mention her. I was told that Fulvia—”
“Fulvia is dead. Yes.” Antony’s casual attention on the poet seemed strained. “I have remarried. Octavia.”
“Ho!” Herod’s sharp laugh overmatched the music. “Octavian has given you his sister! And where is the lovely Octavia tonight if her favorite poet is here?”
“She is unwell, I fear. And her favorite handmaid has recently run off, leaving her with no one to dress her. You will meet her tomorrow. When you meet her brother.”
Herod smiled appreciatively and raised his cup to Antony. “I have underestimated you, my old friend. Alliance, indeed!”
Antony said nothing, and the poet began his recitation.
The words poured from him, lovely and heart-wrenching and lyrical. The lines seemed torn from an epic poem praising the hardwon battles of Rome in a far-off land—couplets that transformed bloodshed and war into something both tragic and beautiful.
Lydia leaned into the recitation, heart racing and lips parted. She had been in Cleopatra’s palace all her life, and yet this night, with its sensual food and smoking torches and the plaintive cry of the cithara’s strings, all as a backdrop to the enrapturing voice of Lucius Varius Rufus, was like nothing she
had experienced.
When it ended, Lydia breathed again.
Others in the room snapped fingers and thumbs in approval, and Antony called out, “When are you going to write such a poem about my victories, boy?”
The poet lifted his chin and returned Antony’s casual look with one far more intense. “When you achieve a victory worth immortalizing, my lord.”
A nervous laughter circled the room, but Antony apparently chose to ignore the slight and dismissed the man with an incline of his head.
But instead of departing, the poet circled the perimeter of the room toward the back.
Lydia watched him come, palms flat against her thighs. Where was he going?
And then he was there at her side. She kept her gaze trained on the nobility on the couches but could feel him studying her.
When he spoke, his voice was low in her ear, as if they were the only two in the room. “I believe of all those present, you were the only one truly listening.”
She took a shallow breath. “It . . . it was so beautiful.”
“You are very beautiful.”
She looked up at him, and his gaze was traveling over her as it had done when he first entered the room, not a crude leer as she had seen on the faces of many men in Cleopatra’s palace. More like the appreciative touch she would give an especially fine piece of pottery. Like the cool water poured over her after their long journey.
She laughed, a clipped, nervous sound, then lowered her head. The room had grown warm with torches and food and bodies, and her tunic felt damp against her back.
A moment later they were no longer alone.
Riva clutched his arm. “Your poetry has everyone inspired. What was your name again?”
He dipped his head. “I would be pleased to have you call me Varius.”
He did not owe Riva any courtesy—an artist of his standing speaking with a foreign servant. He did himself credit to treat her thus.
Riva’s gaze shot to Lydia and soured. “But why do you hover at the wall with the slaves? You must join us on the couches.”
Varius glanced at Lydia, his expression surprised at Riva’s false identification of her as a slave.
Riva leaned in before Lydia could correct the insult. “I have just been speaking to Herod about you.”
Lydia’s stomach twisted.
“Antony’s new wife, Octavia, is in need of a handmaid, as her last one has gotten herself with child.” Riva laughed, including Varius in the joke. “She must have pleased Antony more than she pleased his wife.” Her cunning look returned to Lydia. “Herod seems to agree that the gift of a new handmaid would garner much of Antony’s favor.” She smiled, a false smile of friendship. “Since you are so highly regarded as a lady’s maid, that is.”
She took Varius’s arm and pulled him toward the couch she had shared with Herod. “Just be certain you focus on pleasing Octavia.” Her laughter trailed behind, and Varius followed her to the couch like an obedient pet.
Once seated, however, his gaze strayed more than once to where Lydia braced herself against the back wall.
Rome had its attractions, to be sure.
Would Samuel understand if she were to find herself needed, wanted, here in the majestic city of the seven hills?
Nine
May I brush out your hair, mistress?” Lydia fiddled with ivory combs scattered across a black-veined marble table beside Octavia’s gridded window.
True to her word, Riva convinced Herod that Marc Antony would be pleased if his new wife was attended by Lydia, at least while the entourage stayed in Rome. She must make certain it was no longer. The woman seemed very difficult to please.
Octavia sighed and did not stir from where she reclined on a cushioned couch. Her black hair, thick with curls and unbound, tangled about her head like a thicket. “Perhaps I should make a sacrifice.”
Lydia crossed to the couch, knelt beside it, and attempted to unravel her knotted hair. Octavia didn’t resist.
“Yes, mistress, a temple visit might be just the thing to cheer you.”
How many times had Lydia seen Cleopatra carried in her litter to the Temple of Isis when she was distraught over some matter of state? Although Octavia’s sadness seemed born of something far more personal.
“Cheer me?” Octavia turned her head from Lydia. “What purpose is there in being cheered?”
“For your children, mistress, if not for yourself. Would not Marc Antony be pleased to see his children—?”
Octavia snorted and swung her legs over the side of the couch. “Marc Antony? Foolish girl. They are not his children.”
Lydia rocked back on her heels, comb suspended. The rumors here in Rome of Antony’s wanton behavior with women had been more than rumors in Alexandria—Lydia had witnessed his meeting with Cleopatra two years ago, and the precious twins who were the result, even while he was known to be married to Fulvia. But to hear that Octavia had also been unfaithful—it was not proper, even for a Roman woman.
Octavia crossed to the marble table and retrieved a small comb to secure her hair.
Lydia scrambled to join her, took the comb, and expertly twisted half of Octavia’s hair atop her head in the Roman style, then secured it with the comb.
“Antony is my second husband. We have been married less than a year. My brother gave me to him after his third wife, Fulvia, died. I bore the three children to Marcellus.”
Second husband, fourth wife. Roman marriage alliances worked much as Ptolemaic, then. Octavia did not look older than thirty years, and yet there was an air of resignation about her, the knowledge that her life had been chosen for her without her consent.
“Not that I believe he is truly my husband.” Octavia fluttered her hand with a practiced nonchalance. “While in Rome he attends my handmaidens, and while in Egypt—” She turned on Lydia and clutched her arm. “Tell me of the queen Cleopatra. Is she so much more beautiful than I?”
Lydia clasped her hand over Octavia’s. “Shall we go to a temple?”
Octavia allowed herself to be led but did not forget her question. “She is powerful. Perhaps that is what he sees in her—all that power. It is said she would kill any person who stood against her for the throne, her own family, even. Is this true?”
They passed from Octavia’s private chamber into the wide peristyle that surrounded Marc Antony’s leafy courtyard.
“She is very determined to lead Egypt well.”
Octavia gave her a half smile. “You are loyal to your former mistress. I admire that. And already I can see why she chose you to serve her personally. You are like clean air in this stale place.”
“I would see you happy, my lady.”
Octavia’s gaze drifted to the courtyard, torch lit in the darkness but deserted. “You are good to wish it.”
The commendation warmed her. For the long months in Rhodes and aboard ship, Lydia had not been needed by anyone. Feeling worthless these months had worn her spirit raw, and she welcomed Octavia’s appreciation of her skills.
“But my happiness matters little. Perhaps soon it will be of no consequence at all.”
Lydia glanced sideways at the woman. What did such hopeless words mean?
A thick-necked slave stood at the entrance to the home, head lowered and hands clasped. He had an Egyptian look about him and the connection made her smile, but he did not smile in return. Lydia whispered to him of his mistress’s desire to visit the nearest temple, and he disappeared without a word into the darkness beyond the front door.
“Is it far, my lady? Will they bring a chariot or a litter, or will you walk?”
“The Temple of Cybele is here on the Palatine, but he will bring a litter all the same. Antony would not appreciate his wife walking the streets at night.”
Octavia insisted that Lydia remain with her, and so she followed the litter away from the house, as she had followed Herod’s entrance that afternoon. It was strange, this feeling of having been passed from Cleopatra’s children, to Herod’s future w
ife, to Marc Antony’s second. But it would not be permanent. How long must they remain in Rome before Herod would have the promises he needed and they could sail again? In the meantime, she would do her best to make herself useful here in Rome.
Perhaps learn some poetry.
The Temple of Cybele sat high on the western slope of the Palatine Hill, overlooking the Circus Maximus and opposite the Temple of Ceres on the Aventine Hill beyond. They took a long flight of steps upward to her altar, at the foot of the statue of Cybele, with her crown and two chained lions. The temple was as lofty as Egyptian temples, if not as beautiful.
Where Egyptian architecture was voluptuous curves, Roman was straight lines. The lotus-flowered capitals atop fat-bellied columns in Egypt, carved in deep relief with the wondrous colors of the hieroglyphic language, were replaced with fluted white marble, capped with austere scrolls that seemed to frown down upon Lydia as they wandered into the first court.
But any temple at night, with its shadows weaving between columns and reaching out from hidden recesses, had a beauty that was, at best, sinister. Lydia followed in Octavia’s wake toward an open-air altar already glowing with embers. From the warm shadows of the portico, a priestly whispered chant seemed to reach out and surround them. The smell of burning flesh and smoke and incense burned her eyes.
“Do you feel it, Lydia? The darkness? Always darkness. This shall perhaps be my final sacrifice.”
“You will disavow the goddess, my lady?”
“She has disavowed me.” Octavia’s face was like stone. “I can only pray that other gods will accept my soul.”
Lydia sucked in a breath. The woman’s sadness ran dangerously deep, a heaviness of the heart that transferred to Lydia. Could she somehow help this woman at the end of herself?
Lydia stood unmoving through the rites, through the water poured over Octavia’s outstretched hands, through the slit throat of the glassy-eyed, unsuspecting bird and its blood dripping into a golden bowl. Cybele was “Great Mother,” conscripted from the Greeks, and her worship was more restrained and refined than that of Isis. The way she leashed the lions showed a control over nature that contrasted with the Egyptians’ more rapturous oneness with it.
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