Arms of Nemesis - Roman Sub Rosa 02

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Arms of Nemesis - Roman Sub Rosa 02 Page 13

by Steven Saylor


  ‘But on that night you saw no one going in or out of this room? Heard nothing from the stables or the atrium?’

  ‘I sleep in a little room with some of the others,’ he said slowly, ‘over in the east wing of the house, behind the stables. Usually I’m the last one in bed. Alex laughs and says he’s never seen a boy who needed less sleep. On any other night I might have been up and about. I might have seen whatever it is you want to know. But that night I was so tired from running so many errands and carrying so many messages all day …’ His voice began to quaver. ‘I’m sorry.’

  I put my hands on his thin shoulders. ‘You have nothing to be sorry for, Meto. But answer one more question. Last night, were you up late wandering about the house?’

  He looked thoughtful. ‘Yesterday was so busy, with you and Mummius arriving on the Fury, and the extra work for the dinner last night …’

  ‘So you went to sleep early?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Then you saw nothing unusual, heard no one wandering in the hallways or going down the hillside to the boathouse?’

  He shrugged helplessly and bit his Hp, sad to disappoint me. I looked at him gravely and nodded. ‘It’s all right, I only thought you might know something I don’t. But here, before you go, I want you to see something.’

  I guided him with a hand on his shoulder until we stood beside the centaur statue. ‘Look at it all you want. Touch it, if you’d like.’ He looked at me for reassurance, then reached out with trembling fingers and a glow in his eyes, then abruptly pulled back and bit his Hp.

  ‘No, no, it’s all right,’ I said. ‘I won’t let anyone punish you.’

  And I will not let Marcus Crassus destroy you, I thought, though I dared not speak aloud so rash a pledge. Fortune herself might hear, and smite me for making promises even a god could not be sure of keeping.

  X

  ‘When I was a girl, I would never have stooped to painting a fresco. One painted in encaustic on panels of canvas or wood, using an easel, and never, never in fresco on a wall; so my mentor taught me. “Wall painters are mere workmen,” he would say, “while an easel painter, ah, an easel painter is treated like the very hand of Apollo! Easel painters receive all the glory, and the gold. Make your reputation on the easel and they will flock to you like pigeons to the Forum.” My, that’s a nasty bump on your forehead.’

  Iaia’s appearance was very different from that of the night before at dinner. Gone were the jewellery and the elegant gown; instead she was dressed in a shapeless long-sleeved garment that reached to the floor. It was made of coarse linen and spattered all over with dabs of colour. Her young assistant was similarly dressed, and even more remarkably beautiful by the light of day. Together they looked like priestesses of some strange cult of women who wore their paints upon their clothing rather than their faces.

  The skylight above filled the little circular anteroom with a cone of yellow light, around which swirled a vortex of underwater blues and greens populated by silvery wisps of fish and weird monsters of the deep. The figures were remarkably fluid and superbly shaded, and the rendering of the water itself produced illusions of impossible depth; Eco and I together with arms outstretched could have reached from wall to wall, but in

  places the murky depths appeared to recede forever. Had it not been for the jumble of scaffolding and drop cloths, the scene might have been almost frighteningly real, like a dream of death by drowning.

  ‘Of course, these days, I’m long past scrambling for commissions,’ Iaia continued. ‘I made my fortune back in the good old days. Did you know that in my prime I was better paid than even Sopolis? It’s true. Every rich matron in Rome wanted her portrait painted by the strange young lady from Cyzicus. Now I paint what I want and when I want. This project is just a favour for Gelina. One day we were leaving the baths, feeling all fresh and relaxed, and she complained about how plain this room was. Suddenly I had a vision offish, fish, fish everywhere! Fish flying above our heads and octopi coiling at our feet. And dolphins, darting through the seaweed. What do you think?’

  ‘Astounding,’ I said. Eco gazed about the room and shook out his hands as if he were sopping wet.

  Iaia laughed. ‘It’s almost finished now. There’s no real painting left to be done. We’re at the stage of sealing the watercolours with an encaustic varnish, which is why these slaves are helping. There’s no real skill to the job, just smoothing on the varnish with a brush, but I have to watch them to be sure nothing’s damaged. Olympias, nudge that one over there, on the top scaffold. He’s putting it on too thick - the colours will never show through.’

  Olympias looked down from above our heads and smiled. I secretly pinched Eco, whose slack-jawed stare was not in response to the artwork around us.

  ‘Ah, yes, in the good old days I could never have taken on a project like this one,’ Iaia went on. ‘My mentor wouldn’t have allowed it. I can just imagine his reaction. “Too vulgar,” he’d have said, “too merely decorative. Painting histories or fables with a moral point is one thing, but painting fish? Portraits are your strong point, Iaia, and portraits of women, at that; no man can paint a woman half so well as you can. But one look at these staring fish heads and no Roman matron will ever allow you to paint her! She’d be looking for traces of satire in every brush-stroke!” Well, that’s what my old mentor would have said. But now, if I wish to paint fish, by Neptune, I’ll paint fish. I think they’re lovely.’

  She seemed quite enraptured by her own skill, an immodesty perhaps forgivable in an artist in the final stages of an almost-done creation. ‘I can see why you became renowned for your portraits,’ I said. ‘I saw your picture of Gelina in the library.’

  Her smile wavered. ‘Yes, I did that only a year ago. Gelina wanted it for a birthday present, for Lucius. We spent weeks working on it, out on her private terrace at the north end of the house, in her room where Lucius never went, so it would be a surprise.’

  ‘Didn’t he like it?’

  ‘Frankly, no. It was done especially to fit the wall above his table in the library. Well, he made it quite plain that he didn’t want it there. If you’ve seen the room, you’ve seen his taste ��� those awful statues of Hercules and Chiron. The painting above his table was even worse, a horrible thing that purported to show the Argonauts attacked by harpies, such a hideous embarrassment I can’t imagine how he dared to allow visitors in the room. A really terrible painting done by some unknown hack in Neapolis, a mishmash of naked breasts and nailing claws and stiffly painted warriors brandishing swords. Words cannot exaggerate how awful it was. Am I not right, Olympias?’

  The girl looked down from her work and laughed. ‘It was a very bad painting, Iaia.’

  ‘In the end Lucius acquiesced and had the thing removed so that we could mount Gelina’s portrait into the wall, but he was most ungracious. Gelina had ordered a rug to match, and he complained endlessly about the expense. She was in tears more than once, thanks to that episode. Of course, misery about money was an old story in this house. What a failure Lucius was! What an impostor! What’s the point of living in a villa like this if you have to count every sesterce before you spend it?’

  There was a sudden tension in the room. Olympias no longer smiled. One of the slaves knocked over a pot of varnish and cursed. Even the fish seemed to quiver with unease. Iaia lowered her voice. ‘Let’s step into the baths. The rooms are all empty, and the light at this time of day is quite delightful. Let the boy stay here and watch Olympias work.’

  The plan of the women’s baths mirrored that of the men’s, except for the scale, which was considerably smaller. Across the open terrace the view was much the same; beneath the rising sun the bay shone with thousands of tiny points of silver light. We walked around the circular pool, which billowed with steam in the crisp morning air. Beneath the high dome our hushed voices echoed strangely.

  ‘I thought that Lucius and Gelina were a happy couple,’ I said.

  ‘Does she seem happy to you?�


  ‘Her husband died a horrible death only days ago. I hardly expect to find her smiling.’

  ‘Her mood now is little changed from before. She was miserable then, thanks to him, and she is miserable now, thanks again to him and his messy death.’

  ‘She doesn’t look miserable in the painting. Does the image lie?’

  “The image captures her just as she was. And why does she seem so happy and at peace in the portrait? Consider that it was posed for and painted in the one room in the house where Lucius never set foot.’

  ‘I was told they married for love.’

  ‘So they did, and you see what comes of that sort of match. I knew Gelina when she was a girl, before she married. Her mother and I were about the same age and great friends. When Gelina married Lucius it was hardly my place to criticize, but I knew that only sorrow would come of it.’

  ‘How could you be so sure? Was he such a wicked character?’

  She was silent for a long moment. ‘I don’t claim to be a great judge of character, Gordianus, at least not when it comes to men. Do you know what they called me in the good old days? Iaia Cyzicena, Always Virgin, they called me, and not without reason. When it comes to men, I have little experience and I claim no special insight. I’m sure my judgment of a man’s character is less reliable than most women’s. But judgment based on experience goes only so far. There are other, surer ways of foreseeing the future.’ She gazed into the swirling mists above the water.

  ‘Yes? And what does the future hold for this house and its inhabitants?’

  ‘Something dark and dreadful, no matter what.’ She shivered. ‘But to answer your question: no, Lucius was not wicked, only weak. A man of no vision, no energy, no ambition. Were it not for Crassus, he and Gelina would have starved long ago.’

  ‘A villa and a hundred slaves are far from starvation.’

  ‘But Lucius himself owned not a bit of it! From what I gather, his income was entirely consumed in running this palace and maintaining a facade of great wealth. Given his connection to Crassus, any other man would have made himself independently wealthy long before now. Not Lucius; he was content to amble along, taking what was given him and asking for no more, like a pampered dog begging for scraps from his master’s table. To be sure, the same hand that lifted him up held him down; Crassus seemed determined that Lucius should always be the cringing, ever-thankful kinsman, never an equal or a rival, and Crassus has ways of seeing that people stay in their places. Well, Gelina deserved better than that. Now she’s completely at the mercy of Crassus, not even able to say whether her own household slaves should live or die.’

  ‘And if that should come to pass?’

  Iaia stared deeply into the mist and did not answer. We circled the pool in silence.

  ‘No matter what their differences, I think that Gelina has suffered greatly from the death of her husband,’ I said quietly. ‘She will suffer even more if Crassus proceeds with this terrible scheme of his.’

  ‘Yes,’ said Iaia in a dull, faraway voice. ‘And she will not be alone in her suffering.’

  ‘Surely, if it was someone here in the house who murdered Lucius, that person cannot stand by and see so many people slaughtered in his stead.’

  ‘Not people,’ she corrected, ‘slaves.’

  ‘Still���’

  ‘And for slaves to die, even ninety-nine slaves, for the benefit of a great and wealthy man ��� is that not the Roman way?’

  To that, I had no answer. I left her standing by the pool, staring into its sulphurous depths.

  In the anteroom Eco stood on the scaffold holding a horsehair brush, while Olympias hovered behind him, her hand laid gendy atop his to guide his strokes. ‘A single sweeping motion,’ she was saying. ‘Lay it on in a thin, even coat.’

  ‘Really, Eco,’ I called up to him, ‘I had no idea you had a gift for painting.’

  He gave a start. Olympias looked over her shoulder with a cheerful smile. ‘He has a very steady hand,’ she said.

  ‘I’m sure he does. But I think we will take our leave. Come, Eco.’ He scrambled nimbly down, looking flushed and slightly disoriented and glancing awkwardly over his shoulder as we stepped into the portico outside.

  ‘Did you press your attentions on her, Eco, or was it Olympias who suggested that you join her on the scaffold?’ Eco indicated the latter. ‘Ah, it was she who stepped so close, putting her arm around you?’ He nodded dreamily, then frowned at the way I pursed my Lips. ‘I would not be entirely trusting of that young woman’s friendliness, Eco. No, don’t be silly; I’m not jealous of you. There’s something about the way she smiles that makes me uncomfortable.’

  A voice hailed us from behind, and I turned to see Metrobius and Sergius Orata, each attended by a slave. ‘Are you on your way to the baths, too?’ asked the businessman with a yawn that indicated he had just got out of bed.

  ‘Yes,’ I said. Why not?

  While Orata and Eco relaxed in the hot pool, I accepted an offer from Metrobius to share his masseur. We stripped and reclined side by side on pallets in the changing room. The slave went back and forth between us, kneading our shoulders and poking at our spines. The slave was a tall, wizened man with extraordinarily strong hands.

  ‘If I were rich,’ I grunted, ‘I think I would have this done to me every day.’

  ‘I am rich,’ said Metrobius, ‘and I do. How did you ever get that awful bump on your head?’

  ‘Oh, it’s nothing. A doorway was shorter than I expected. Oh! That’s good! Yes, there, that spot below my shoulder … These baths are quite wonderful, aren’t they? Eco and I came here yesterday, after we first arrived. Mummius wanted to show off the plumbing. He had a massage from the boy who sang last night, Apollonius I think he’s called. But I doubt that Apollonius could be half as skilful as your man.’

  ‘I wouldn’t know,’ said Metrobius cautiously, lying on his side with his head propped on one hand and looking at me with sudden suspicion.

  ‘No? You’re such a frequent house guest, I thought you might have taken the opportunity to use this Apollonius yourself’

  Metrobius hummed and raised an eyebrow. ‘Only Mollio here massages me. He was a gift from Sulla, yean ago. Knows every aching muscle and cracked bone in this tired old body. A callow youth like Apollonius would probably give me a sprain.’

  ‘Yes, I suppose Mummius can take that risk. He’s not exactly delicate. Tough as an ox, by the looks of him.’

  ‘And nearly as smart.’

  ‘Oh! Could you do that again, Mollio? For some reason, Metrobius, I don’t believe you like Marcus Mummius.’ ‘I’m indifferent to him.’ ‘You detest him.’

  ‘I confess. Here, Mollio, attend to me. Gordianus has had enough for the moment.’

  I lay in a state of bliss, as limp as pummelled dough. I closed my eyes and saw visions of starfish and octopi, attended by strange gasping noises. It was Metrobius’s turn to grunt and wheeze.

  ‘Why does the grudge run so deep?’ I asked.

  ‘I never liked Mummius, from the first moment I met him.’

  ‘But there must have been some incident, some offence.’

  ‘Oh, very well.’ He sighed. ‘This was ten years ago, just after Sulla was made dictator. You remember that Sulla set up the proscription lists and posted them in the Forum, offering rewards to whoever would bring him the heads of his enemies?’

  ‘I remember it well.’

  ‘It was an ugly process, but unavoidable. The Republic had to be purged. For Sulla to restore order and put an end to years of civil war, the opposition had to be eliminated. Otherwise the conflicts and vendettas would have gone on endlessly.’

  ‘And what does this have to do with your feud with Mummius?’

  ‘The estates of Sulla’s enemies were made property of the state and sold at public auction. I need not tell you that the first people in line at these so-called public auctions were usually Sulla’s close friends and associates. How else could a mere actor li
ke myself end up with a villa on the Cup? But there were others in line ahead of me.’

  ‘Including Mummius?’

  ‘Yes. Crassus was much in favour then, almost as important as Pompey. Eventually he overstepped himself and embarrassed Sulla; you may remember a certain scandal involving an innocent man added to Sulla’s lists just so Crassus could obtain the poor man’s property.’

  ‘There was more than one such scandal.’

  ‘Yes, but Crassus was a Roman of good birth, a general, the hero of the Colline Gate, thought to be above such grubbiness. Even so, Sulla only slapped his wrists for that offence. But before the scandal, Crassus came first in all things, just behind Pompey. And Crassus’s men were to be pampered and coddled, even above many of Sulla’s oldest friends and supporters.’

  ‘Like yourself.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘I take it Mummius got the best of you in something, and Sulla took his side.’

  ‘There was a certain property we both coveted.’ ‘Real estate, or a human?’ ‘A slave.’ ‘I see.’

  ‘No, you don’t. The boy had been the property of a certain senator in Rome. Once I heard him sing at a dinner party. He came from my own hometown in Etruria. He sang in the dialect I learned as a child. To hear him made me weep. When I learned that he was being sold in a lot with the rest of the household slaves, I rushed down to the Forum. The auctioneer happened to be a friend of Crassus’s. It turned out that Mummius desired the boy as well, and not for his singing. The auctioneer ignored my bids, and Marcus Mummius was awarded the entire lot of slaves for the price of a used tunic. How smug he was when he passed by me to collect his receipt. We exchanged threats. I drew a knife. The crowd was packed with Crassus’s men, and I had to flee for my life while they jeered after me. I went to Sulla, demanding justice, but he refused to intervene. Mummius was too close to Crassus, he said, and at that moment he could not afford to offend Crassus.’

  ‘So Mummius bested you over a boy.’

  ‘That wasn’t the end of it. It took him only two years to tire of the slave. Mummius decided to get rid of him, but he refused to sell him to me, purely out of spite. By then, Sulla was dead and I had no influence at Rome. I wrote a letter to Mummius and asked him as humbly as I could to let me buy the boy. Do you know what he did? He passed the letter around at a dinner party and made a joke of it. And then he passed the boy around. He made sure I heard all about it.’

 

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