Shadows in Bronze

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Shadows in Bronze Page 10

by Lindsey Davis


  It was stony-hard work, but I extracted details of a visitor who sounded possible. This man had insisted his sacrifice be conducted by Gordianus himself. The staff at the house had turned him away, saying the pontiff would not officiate until today.

  ‘And was he here again this morning?’ Milo thought so. ‘What makes you sure? Gordianus himself rapped out.

  ‘The horses,’ mumbled Milo. I looked up rapidly. ‘Horses? Not a skewbald effort and a twitchy-eared roan?’

  Grudgingly, Milo agreed.

  ‘Do you know this villain, Falco?’ Gordianus cried indignantly, as if he thought I must be in league with the man.

  ‘He followed me down here, at least from Salernum; possibly from Rome -‘ Our eyes met. We both thought the same.

  Barnabas!

  I gripped the priest by the elbow and wheeled him indoors where, rightly or wrongly, he might feel more safe.

  To me, there could be no doubt that the attacker was long gone, but we sent out Milo and various household minions to scour the countryside. We saw a ship close to shore, which fuelled our suspicion that the attacker may have had accomplices who fetched him off by boat, horses and all.

  Gordianus groaned, his head in his hands. He was letting himself imagine how his deputy, anonymously veiled, had been bludgeoned as he stood in prayer with his hands on the main altar…

  ‘I left my family in Rome, Falco - are they safe?’

  ‘From Barnabas? I’m not an oracle, sir. I don’t sit in a cave chewing bay leaves; I simply can’t put myself in a trance and prophesy his next move -‘ He bit at his lower lip desperately. ‘He murdered your brother,’ I reminded him patiently. ‘Vespasian insists he answers for it. Now he has tried to attack you; when he learns his mistake he may try again.’ He stared at me. ‘Sir, this proves what I suspected - somehow your brother Longinus posed a threat. So do you, apparently. Whatever it was your brother knew, he could have sent you a message between meeting the freedman at the priest’s house and going to the Temple of Hercules that night; Barnabas must be afraid he did so. If anything does arrive from Longinus, it will be in your interests to tell me-‘

  ‘Of course,’ he promised, unconvincingly.

  Forgetting myself, I grasped his shoulders and shook him. ‘Gordianus, the only way to be safe is if I reach Barnabas first! The freedman will be dealt with, but he must be found. Can you tell me anything that may help?’

  ‘Are you chasing him, Falco?’

  ‘Yes,’ I said, because although Anacrites had been assigned this doubtful privilege, I was determined to beat him if I could.

  Still shocked by today’s graphic proof of his own danger, Gordianus continued to look vague. ‘You and Pertinax were on close terms,’ I insisted. ‘Do you know his freedman? Was he always so dangerous?’

  ‘Oh, I never dealt with his staff… Does he frighten you?’

  ‘Not much - but I do take him seriously!’ I eased my tone. ‘Not many freedmen would consider that their duty to their patrons included murder. Why this exaggerated loyalty?’

  ‘Barnabas believed his master had a golden destiny. So, for that matter, did Pertinax! His adoptive father filled him with a stupendous notion of his personal worth. In fact if Pertinax had remained alive, he would have been the dangerous one.’

  ‘Ambition?’ I scoffed quietly. Dead or not, anything about this Pertinax niggled me, because of his marriage to Helena. ‘Did Pertinax covet power for himself?’

  ‘Pertinax was an inadequate boor!’ Gordianus grated with a sudden bellow of impatience. I agreed. ‘Did you know him?’ he asked in surprise.

  ‘No need,’ I answered glumly. ‘I knew his wife.’

  Having allocated Helena Justina’s ex-husband a place on the chain of humanity that was less than a stag beetle in a cowpat, I could hardly believe the man had held Imperial ideas. But after Nero some odd candidates had emerged: Vespasian for one. If the freedman believed the death of Pertinax had robbed himself of the chance to be the Empire’s Chief Minister, his vindictiveness became understandable.

  Curtius Gordianus stood in silence, then he said, ‘Take care, Falco. Atius Pertinax had a destructive personality. He may be dead, but I don’t believe we have seen the end of the man’s malign influence!’

  ‘What does that mean, sir?’ If the Chief Priest wanted to be mysterious, I could not be bothered to take him seriously. Suddenly he smiled. It wrinkled his face unpleasantly, and his teeth were the type to keep for strictly private use - badly chipped and stained.

  ‘Perhaps I chew bay leaves in the afternoon!’ – Well, that explained the teeth.

  I had to leave the subject there, because the searchers had returned - needless to say, without our man. But they had found one thing that might be useful. Kicked to the back of the sanctum in the Temple was a pocketbook that seemed more likely to belong to the assailant than the deputy priest: it contained a few notes which appeared to be sums checking tavern bills (hay: one sr; wise: ace aster; food: ace .).

  That calculations seemed to belong to some careful type who was suspicious of innkeepers - well, that gave me a wide choice! What caught my eye in particular was a list on the front page which seemed to be dates (mainly in April, but a few in May), with names alongside them (Galatea, Lusitania, Yens of Paphos, Concordia…). Not horses, who would be all ‘Fury’ and ‘Thunder’. Works of art, perhaps - a dealer’s auction list? If those were statues or paintings which had all changed hands in the space of six weeks, it must have been a famous collection which had been broken up; Geminus would know.

  Another alternative, and the one I eventually favoured, was that it sounded like a sailing list, and the stately symbolic names represented ships. - There was nothing else for me to do at Cape Colonna. I was anxious to leave. Before I left, Gordianus said sombrely, ‘This freedman is too dangerous to tackle alone. Falco, you need help. As soon as Milo has installed me safely at Paestum, I shall send him to join forces with you-‘

  I thanked him politely, promising myself to avoid this stroke of fortune if I could.

  When I arrived back in Croton I bumped into Laesus, though I had not expected to see him again and he looked pretty surprised at seeing me. But I discovered that while I had been paddling on the beach at Cape Colonna this excellent spark Laesus had sailed to Tarentum. My honest new friend told me he had made enquiries about Barnabas at the old Pertinax farm (now part of the Imperial estate).

  ‘Who did you ask?’

  ‘Who was bound to know? His mother, ghastly witch. Zeus, Falco!’ Laesus complained. ‘The wicked old baggage chased me out of her home with a pan of smoking fat!’

  I tutted gently. ‘Laesus, you have to charm them before they reach the hearth. Throw a purse in over the threshold but remember, your average granny can tell at twenty yards if a purse is only stuffed with mountain rocks!’

  Laesus dashed on heedlessly: ‘She didn’t want money, only my blood. The revolting crone started life as a slave but she’s free now and people look after her - I suppose Barnabas took care of it.’

  ‘Her loving boy! What was she like?’

  ‘She smelt frosty as a tiger’s armpit and had no sense of time. But if the barmy old basket knows anything at all, you can hang onto the freedman’s cash yourself. As far as I could gather, his mother thinks he’s dead.’

  I laughed.

  ‘Laesus, I’ll bet mine thinks the same; but it only means I haven’t written home for a week!’

  Events at Cape Colonna had shown Barnabas was very much alive.

  I ought to have gone to see this angry old Calabrian bat myself, to sort out the real story. But life’s too short; you can’t do everything.

  I showed Laesus the notebook we found in the Temple of Hera.

  ‘Look at this list: Hones of April, Galatea and Venus of Paphos; four days before the Ides, Flora; two days before May, Lusitania, Concordia, Parthenope, and The Graces… Mean anything? I think these are ships. I think it’s either a docking list, or, more likely
at that time of year, a record’

  Larius looked at me with those bright black robin’s eyes of his. ‘Nothing I recognize.’

  ‘You said you used to sail to Alexandria yourself!’

  ‘This doesn’t mention Alexandria!’ Laesus argued, with a pinched appearance at being caught out in his own professional sphere. ‘It was a long time ago,’ he admitted, understandably shamefaced.

  I grinned at him remorselessly. ‘A long time, and a lot of wine jugs if you ask me! Alexandria was a hunch.’

  ‘Well, leave me the list and I’ll ask around-‘

  I shook my head, tucking the notebook away in my tunic. ‘Thanks; I’ll keep it. It may be nothing important anyway.’

  It says much for his lopsided charm that although I feel queasy just peering into rock-pools I almost agreed to travel in his ship with Laesus round to Rhegium. But you can die of being seasick; I preferred to stick on land.

  I made Laesus a present of my goat. I guessed she might end up barbecued on the shore. I felt bad about it afterwards. But there are two things a private informer is better not lumbered with: women and pets.

  I never mentioned she was sacred. Killing a sacred beast brings horrible misfortune but only, in my experience, if you know what you have done. When you don’t know you don’t worry, so you stand more chance.

  The goat went with Laesus quietly: a fair-weather creature - like most of my friends. I told her if she had to be eaten by a sailor, I could not entrust her to a nicer man.

  XXI

  So; back to tell the Emperor how well I had done in Bruttium.

  That week I spent in Rome was disastrous. My mother despised me for failing to fetch her liquorice. Lenia bullied me out of three weeks’ rent. Helena Justina had left no messages. At the Camillus house I learned that she had left Rome to spend high summer in some country retreat; I was too proud to ask the door porter where. Her father, who was a pleasant man, must have heard I had come calling; he sent a house slave after me inviting me to dine, but I was too miserable to go.

  Against this depressing background it was with some trepidation that I entered the Palace to report. Before I encountered Vespasian I tracked down Anacrites to compare notes.

  I found him in a poky office, studying invoices. I managed to extract a confession that he failed in his mission to find Aufidius Crispus, the conspirator who had fled to Neapolis. It also emerged that he had done nothing about Barnabas either; even my news that the freedman had made another attack on a senator failed to rouse him. Anacrites was now auditing the contractors who had organized the Emperor’s Judaean Triumph, so his mind was on tenders and daywork rates; be seemed to have lost all interest in plots.

  Cursing him for a short-tempered, introverted scarab, I slouched off to see the Emperor, feeling very much alone.

  After I finished my story Vespasian pondered for some time. ‘Caesar, I hope I have not overstepped the mark?’

  ‘No,’ he answered eventually. ‘No, that’s all right.’

  ‘Will you install Gordianus at Paestum?’

  ‘Oh, yes! Decent of him to be satisfied with that…’ Opposing the Emperor was a highly productive racket! Gordianus had enjoyed all the excitement of plotting with his cronies, then afterwards he had just settled back munching pan-fried sweetbreads off the altar at Colonna while he waited for his reward. I said nothing, though what I thought may have shown in my face.

  We had a short, inconclusive discussion about money, then Vespasian continued to stare at me in a way I found odd. The feeling of being excluded from secret court protocol started to grate again but just when my indignation made me want to run off to herd sheep on Mount Etna for six months, he mentioned wryly, ‘I should have sent you after the yachtsman too!’

  I took a moment to realize this could be an offer of work.

  ‘Oh?’ I asked (casually).

  ‘Hmm!’ he said (with a grim smile). ‘Anacrites did his best, he tells me, but had to bring back my letter to Crispus marked “address unknown”.’

  ‘Oh what bad luck!’ I exclaimed…

  The feeling I was getting now was one which I much preferred. The Emperor may have been aware of that.

  ‘I imagine,’ suggested Vespasian cheerily, ‘you will not be too keen on leaving Rome so soon after your return?’

  I shook my head, looking grave. ‘I ‘have an elderly mother, sir, who likes to keep me here! Besides,’ I added, lowering my voice because this point was serious, ‘I hate jobs where some other mucker has already swanned in and spoiled all the trails.’

  ‘I appreciate that. But Aufidius Crispus owns half Latium,’ Vespasian told me, not without a tinge of jealousy. ‘So I feel obliged to worry when he fails to communicate.’

  Latium was long-established fanning country, rich in olive oil and wine. A new Emperor who was jostling his opponents into order would pay careful attention to anyone who was big in Latian wine.

  I grinned at the Emperor. Neither of us mentioned the sacred word ‘diplomacy’.

  ‘Well, sir, lots of people would dart away if they were saluted by a Palace spy!’

  ‘He may find himself saluted by someone worse than that. As a gesture from me, I want you to warn Crispus. Find him, Falco; and find him before Barnabas does!’

  ‘Oh, I’ll find him. I expect what it needs,’ I offered, helpfully, ‘is a new face, someone who looks completely unlike a public official-‘

  ‘Exactly!’ said Vespasian. ‘The letter’s with my secretary. It’s first-quality papyrus, so when you do encounter Crispus, try not to drop it in the drink.’

  I pointed out that prices on the Bay of Neapolis were notoriously expensive, yet I failed to persuade him to upgrade my daily fee.

  ‘But you can travel at public expense,’ was the best he would come up with. ‘There is a ship called the Circe I want to return to Pertinax’s father; I gather she used to be based at Pompeii, so you can sail her back there for the old man.’

  I reckoned I would arrange transport overland for myself. Yet having access to a merchant vessel did offer possibilities; I remembered a certain abandoned commodity which might enhance my livelihood while providing a handy disguise… I would turn up in Campania as a traveller in lead.

  On my way out, I popped my head into Anacrites’ closet where he was still scowling over a pile of boring bills. I made sure I gave him a big happy grin and a wave to cheer him up.

  Anacrites shot me a look in return which implied that I had made myself a lifelong enemy.

  Despite Anacrites, I was starting to feel more cheerful as I prepared for my trip to Neapolis. I had tracked down one ex-conspirator without too much difficulty. This second one appeared no worse. Finding men, like chasing women, was my way of life. I had learned to approach both in a relaxed mood.

  If I had known about the other man I would be hunting in Campania, my mood might have been different.

  And if I had known about the woman I would find there, I might not have gone at all.

  Part Three

  A QUIET FAMILY HOLIDAY

  THE BAY OF NEAPOLIS

  The end of June

  . . orgies, love affairs, adultery, trips to Baiae, beach parties, dinner parties, musical entertainments, boating parties…

  Cicero, In Defence of Deans

  XXII

  Crossing the Plain of Capua we had one of our emergencies.

  By then my friend Petronius Longus the watch captain had remembered that the last time we went on holiday he had said never again. I was working, using Petro’s brood for cover. One of my numerous nephews, Larius, who was just turned fourteen, had been sent with us because his mother said he was going through a difficult phase. My sister thought he needed supervision. He was unlikely to get it. My view was that the seaside existed to let me act irresponsibly.

  I had made that quip in front of Arria Silvia, Petro’s wife; one of several mistakes already, and we were still ten miles from the sea…

  The atmosphere was becoming
more coastal. Both Petronius and Silvia assumed we were headed for Baiae, the best resort on the Bay, but Baiae was further north than I needed to be. I was wondering when I could safely mention this.

  We had already skirted Capua. The white-scarred crags of the Apennines continued on our left, but the rain-soaked hills on the right had petered out. Up ahead, the flat-based valley merged into a low grey oceanic horizon. We were watching for Mount Vesuvius to separate from the main range near Neapolis.

  Petronius had the reins. I did my whack, but he enjoys driving and since it was his family swarming in the back it seemed natural for him to be in charge. We had come in an ox cart: three adults, three little girls, hampers, plenty of amphorae, enough clothing for a six months’ tour, several kittens at the springy, exploratory stage, my dismal lad Larius, and a fifteen-year-old neighbour Silvia had brought to help. This teenager was a lumpen creature, given to wild sobbing moods. Her name was Ollia. She was a maid with a dream, but she could not decide what it was.

  I had warned Silvia that Ollia was bound to be seduced on a beach by some wily fisherboy. Silvia only shrugged. She was tiny and tough. Petronius endured her with his easy good temper, but she terrified me.

  Petronius Longus had acquired his wife five years before. She was a copper-beater’s daughter. As soon as we came home from Britain I had watched Silvia and her father settle on Petro like two old women in a market selecting a flesh sprat for their festival treat. I said nothing. There was no point upsetting him. He had always been attracted to dainty girls with flat chests and scornful voices who ordered him about.

  So far the marriage was a peculiar success. Silvia’s father had set them up in a way that showed how grateful he was to be rid of her. (Petronius, who was a scoundrel in his quiet way, had all along been eyeing up the copper-beater’s cash.) The two of them must have quarrelled, but they kept it to themselves. When they produced Petronilla, Silvana and Tadia in rather short order there was no evidence that Petro had only done it to gain the honours of a three-times father to improve his civic rights. He adored his children; I had a hunch he even felt romantic towards his wife. But although Silvia thought the world of him in some ways, to her he was always just a sprat.

 

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