A Body in the Bathhouse

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A Body in the Bathhouse Page 7

by Lindsey Davis


  “I suppose the respective financial benefits have been carefully worked out by generations of palace actuaries?” Justinus still sounded sharp.

  I grinned. “The dear tribes can decide for themselves whether they choose a javelin in the ribs and having their women raped, or cartloads of wine, some nice secondhand diadems, and a delegation of elderly prostitutes from Artemisia setting up shop at the tribal capital.”

  “All in the name of progress and culture!” Justinus groused dryly.

  “The Atrebates do see themselves as progressive, so they took the loot.”

  “Vespasian is not a sentimentalist,” Helena concluded, “but he must remember Togidubnus from the special time of his own youth. Now they are both elderly, and old men grow nostalgic. Just wait—all three of you. I hope I’m there to see you all talking about the good old days!”

  I hoped she would be. I nearly said that when one day I started dithering and dreaming, the last thing I would want was a dank, frescoed house in Britain. Still, you never know!

  Justinus had captured the plan of the King’s great new house. He was staring at it with all the envy of a newly married man who was lodged at home with his parents. Jealousy gave way to a more distant look in his dark eyes. Being a cynic, I did not believe our sentimental hero was nostalgic for his Baetican bride of barely a few months, Claudia Rufina.

  Claudia had not accompanied us on this trip. She was a game girl, but she had been led to believe Justinus would be returning to Rome. He must have persuaded her to wait behind. I watched him thoughtfully. In some ways I knew him better than his family or friends; I had traveled with Quintus Camillus Justinus on a dangerous mission among barbarian tribes before. I had a fair idea that when he grew nostalgic, there was an unreachable, idealized beauty filling his mind. We would find golden-haired women in Britain who looked like the woman in Germany who still featured in his dreams.

  Aelianus, being a bachelor, had the right to enjoy all the amenities of travel, including romantic ones. Instead, he had appointed himself the man of sense who ran our show. So now he was staring in amazement at the mansio landlord’s enormous bill.

  Helena went upstairs to feed the baby and settle Julia. We were a large enough group to commandeer ourselves a whole dormitory most nights. I preferred to keep my party together and to exclude mad-eyed thieving strangers. The women accepted shared accommodation calmly, though the boys had been shocked at first. Privacy is not a Roman necessity; our room only needed to be cheap and convenient. We all just fell on our hard narrow beds in our clothes and slept like logs. Hyspale snored. She would.

  I stayed behind with a wine flagon now, keeping an eye on Maia. She was talking to a man. I’m no Roman paternalist. She was free to converse. But a woman who distances herself from the party she travels with can be seen by strangers as up for anything. In fact, Maia was waiting in tense fury for her nightmare removal from Rome to be over; she seemed so introverted and hostile that people hardly ever bothered her. But she was attractive, seated slightly apart at the end of our bench, a well-rounded piece with dark curly hair in a braided crimson dress. She did have clothes and necessities with her; a packed trunk had been “discovered” on board ship and we kept up a pretense that her children had arranged it.

  This dress was obviously new—paid for by Pa, who had replenished her wardrobe after Anacrites destroyed everything. Anyone who judged on appearances might think Maia had money.

  If Maia acquired a follower, I would not intervene. I was not stupid. Mind you, I would find out exactly who he was before it went too far.

  My back was stiff. I had an old broken rib that played up after hard days in cramped transport. My head was spinning slightly, confused by hours of relentless motion on the road. Half my party had blocked bowels and headaches; the rest were stricken with diarrhea. Tonight, as I moved awkwardly trying to ease my back, I could not decided which stage my internal works were at. When you’re traveling, you need to know. You have to plan ahead.

  The conversation with my sister looked casual. The man was a lone traveler, dressed serviceably, in trade by the looks of it. He had half-eaten bread on the table in front of him and was working his way down a tall face pot, containing beer probably. He did not offer anything to Maia.

  While he made the running, Maia’s response was aloof. The fellow should be glad she was just about pleasant. He spoke diffidently, looking as if he was unsure what to make of her. Talking to him was a gesture of defiance on her part, I knew. I had told everyone to avoid chatting with fellow travelers, but Maia liked rejecting good advice. Flouting her head of household came naturally, and she was setting herself apart from those of us she viewed as kidnappers. On this trip, one wrong move by me and she would become uncontrollable.

  Eventually the man went out to brave the cold water in the bathhouse; Maia departed upstairs without a word. I sat quietly for a while, then followed her.

  Next day we saw the stranger, struggling to edge a cartload of large, well-wrapped items out through the mansio gates. Maia mentioned that he was some traveling salesman, with the same destination as us. She said his name was Sextius. I told the lads to help Sextius push his vehicle onto the road. Then I tipped them the nod that one of them had to make friends.

  “Aulus, you need some adventure in your life. …”

  When we finally arrived across the Gallic Strait in Noviomagus, I was down to one official assistant. Aelianus had become the rather grumpy sidekick of a man who hoped to interest the Great King in mechanical statues. One day, if he ever turned into a chubby landowner with villas at Lake Volusena and Surrentum, our dear Aulus could purchase his own curiosities in the safe knowledge that he knew how to oil a set of moving doves so they pecked up model corn from a golden dish. I told him to enjoy the disguise—and he told me which obnoxious fate he would like to impose on me.

  All I had to do now was fix up Justinus as an ornamental fishpond fanatic, and we should be able to creep up on Gloccus and Cotta from three sides. That is, assuming they were there.

  Britain: Noviomagus Regnensis

  High Summer(for what that’s worth!)

  X

  DESTINATION. Day one. An absolutely enormous building site, right on the southern coast.

  The clerk of works was busy. But as I waited, he had glanced at me, and I reckoned he would be polite. They usually are. Conciliation is their business; anyone who can stop the hotheaded plumbers tearing the damn fool architect to pieces when he makes them redirect an inlet pipe yet again (but refuses to pay for it) can deal with an unwanted site visitor.

  I had already witnessed a pomposity who must be the architect, sneering at a stonemason unpleasantly. That was no surprise.

  I had not been allowed anywhere near the plumbers. Still, that would change. Every trade on this site was on my list to be investigated. Not many trades were contributing yet. The “site” so far only seemed to consist of a vast leveling project.

  I had ridden out by mule from Noviomagus that morning. I still felt queasy from the sea crossing. After a mile on a wide shoreline road that obviously led somewhere, I fetched up in dismay at this vast muddy scene.

  It was not the kind of venue where a big-city informer likes to operate. The future palace was sited in a low-lying coastal nook between the marshes and the sea. To my left as I rode up lay the harbor approach—a lagoon of sorts where dredgers were languidly messing about in what I knew was intended to become a deep channel. Swans went about their business, unperturbed. On arrival, my road had crossed a bridge over a stream, newly canalized to control it, then petered out into a bald new service track that would run around the extended palace. To my right, just before the bridge, stood some old, military-style buildings. The new palace would stand on an enormous platform, which was in the process of being raised to create a firm, drained base. It rose almost as high as me, five feet above the wiry bog plants at the natural ground level.

  The torn-up landscape made a desolate scene. Peewits and frantic sky
larks vied with the sounds of stone chipping from a depot area. Up ahead there were some existing structures—primarily a stone-built complex on the near side, at present shrouded in scaffolding. Beyond this suite, which must be the Great King’s existing residence, the great platform was just a ghastly sea of mud.

  I had tethered the mule and made my way onto the site. Cart tracks meandered across haphazardly. I could see a crisscrossing of surveyor’s poles and strings, apparently where footings for the new works had already been made up. Unfilled areas between these foundations lay waiting for the unwary to break bones falling in. Mounds of fill stood everywhere. Astounding quantities of clay and rubble were being moved over from the far side and dumped at this end. Large numbers of structural piles were being incorporated in the areas that had not yet been backfilled. So many were being jammed in along wall lines that a whole oak forest must have been sacrificed to provide the heavy timber. Where there had been a little more progress, stacked drains and ashlar blocks were ready for incorporation—though like most building sites, this one had very few laborers incorporating anything.

  I had spent an hour wandering about, trying to get my bearings and make sense of the plan, before I was apprehended and asked to explain myself. So far, the site officials thought I was just a curious sightseer on a visit from Rome along with a lady of distinction who was staying in a house in town that belonged to the Procurator of Finance for Britain. They assumed I had brought the noble Helena Justina to see her uncle Gaius and aunt Aelia, pausing at their house in Noviomagus Regnensis to recover from our long journey before traveling on to Londinium.

  The clerk of works found a moment to speak to me. I held back, getting the measure of him. He tried putting me off, saying he had to go to a project team meeting; he said he would like to allow me to wander around, but building sites were dangerous, so a safety edict declared the works out of bounds to unescorted visitors. I was about to show him the governor’s introduction. Depending on his reaction to my docket from Frontinus, either I would make him squirm by producing my pass from the Emperor as well—or I’d merely let him know it existed.

  He was a lean, middleweight, furrowed man of obvious intelligence. Dark brown eyes darted everywhere. Every time he crossed from his site hut to collect a hot drink from the covered canteen, he was looking for loafers, for errors, for sneak thieves with their crafty eyes on equipment and materials—and if he had been forewarned to expect the proverbial man from Rome, then he was looking out for me. He oozed competence. And his restrained behavior meant that whether or not he knew I was being sent to investigate, he would cope well when I came clean. If he was as good as my secretariat briefing had said, he would welcome my presence. If he had been away from Italy too many years, and had grown complacent or actually corrupt, then I would have to watch my back. The reason clerks of works can afford politeness is that apart from the architect, they hold absolute power.

  He was called away again, to answer some question about setting out. He gave me a nod, a gentle hint to leave. Not me. While he got stuck in with the surveyor around the groma, I stood where he had left me (so he would not worry what I was up to), but I refused to go, like a crass lad who had no social graces. Someone else then engaged the clerk of works in conversation, as tends to happen, so I tried chatting to the surveyor while he waited to resume.

  “It’s a prestigious site.”

  “All right if you like it,” he returned. Surveyors are unhappy men. Intelligent, shrewd characters, they all believe that were it not for them, disaster would devastate any new construction. They feel their importance is not taken seriously. On both counts they are quite correct.

  “Big project?”

  “Five-year rolling program.”

  “Big enough to go adrift!” I made the mistake of grinning.

  “Thanks for the confidence,” he answered sourly. I should have known that a surveyor would take it as a personal slight. He seemed tense. Perhaps he just had an edgy nature. He gave me a terse “Excuse me—”

  Time to assert myself. I could have produced a note-tablet and written memos. That lacked subtlety. For official missions you need a certain air. I had it. I could cause anxiety just by strolling to the edge of a new wall’s foundations, then watching what was going on among the laborers. (They were hand-bedding flints in concrete between a double row of piles. Well, a man and a boy were doing that while four other men stood by and helped them by leaning thoughtfully on spades.)

  As I parked myself with my thumbs in my belt, simply looking in silence, the surveyor smelled audit immediately. I was expecting his half-hidden jerk of the head to warn his crony; the clerk of works reappeared at my side again, with narrowed eyes. “Anything else, sir?”

  I knew as well as he did that it pays to be courteous. But I started as I intended to continue—and it was tough. “The name is Didius Falco. I did some work for Flavius Hilaris a few years back. There were cock-ups in the organization of the silver mines. Now they’ve called me back again.”

  He remained noncommittal. “To my site?”

  “You hear me.”

  “I wasn’t told.”

  “But you are not surprised.”

  “So what’s your work here?”

  “Whatever is needed.” I made it clear there would be no messing. He knew better than to resist. “You have authorization?”

  “From the top.”

  “Londinium?”

  “Londinium and Rome.”

  That caused the right buzz of excitement. “We have a team meeting about to start—I’ll introduce you to our project manager.”

  The project manager was bound to be an idiot. The clerk of works clearly thought so; to have no faith in the project manager was the formal specification for his job. The surveyor was laughing behind his hand too, I reckoned.

  “Who leads your team?” It can vary between the disciplines, particularly on schemes like bridges or aqueducts, with a high engineering content.

  “The architect.” The fellow I had seen earlier, being rude. No doubt he would soon be rude to me.

  “Any hope that they issued you one who knows his stuff?”

  The clerk of works was formal: “Pomponius has had many years of training and has worked on major schemes.” He deliberately did not comment, And he buggered up the lot of them. The surveyor snickered openly, however. When this surveyor started his career, he would have undergone serious training of his own; some sessions would have been taught by grizzled old groma-geniuses who called their task: “Stopping the bloody architect from ruining the job.”

  I had gained a good impression of this pair. “You mean, Pomponius is the usual mixture of arrogance, sheer ignorance, and fanciful ideas?” The clerk of works allowed himself a faint smile.

  “He wears Egyptian faience shoulder brooches!” confirmed the surveyor dourly. He himself was the smartest professional on-site: crisp gray hair, immaculate white tunic, polished belt, and enviable boots. He carried instruments in a neatly buckled, well-oiled satchel; I would happily grab it off a secondhand stall, even though it had obviously seen a lot of wear.

  The clerk of works decided he should lighten the atmosphere. “Watch out if Pomponius offers you a presentation. It has been known to last three days. The last VIP was carried out unconscious on a stretcher—Pomponius had not even started to show him color charts and paint samples.”

  I smiled. “Then don’t introduce me formally. Just slide me in at the project meeting and I’ll make myself known to him at a later stage. I mean, after I’ve seen just how stupid he is.”

  They grinned.

  We set off towards some elderly wooden buildings, ancient military hutments that looked as if they dated back to the Claudian invasion. Now they were being used as site huts, but must be earmarked for demolition when the new scheme was complete.

  The project meeting would normally have started before this, but had been delayed. Somebody had had an accident.

  “Happens all the time,” the s
urveyor gushed dismissively. Although we had been acting like friends up to that point, he was glossing over an issue.

  “Who was it? Is he hurt?”

  “Done for, unfortunately.” I raised an eyebrow. The surveyor seemed tetchy and made no further comment.

  “Who was it?” I repeated.

  “Valla.”

  “What happened to him?”

  “He was a roofer. What do you think happened? He fell off a roof!”

  “Better get along to the meeting,” interrupted the clerk of works. “Do you have a clerk, Falco?”

  We were now entering the old military hutment they were using as the project manager’s office. I let the unspoken issue about the roofer fade away, at least temporarily. “No, I take my own notes. Issue of security.” In fact, I had never been able to afford secretarial help. “My assistants back me up when needed.”

  “Assistants!” The clerk of works looked startled. A man from Rome was bad enough. A man from Rome with reinforcements was really serious. “How many do you have?”

  “Just the two,” I said, and smiled. Adding for fun, “Well—until the rest arrive.”

  XI

  POMPONIUS SPOTTED me at once.

  It cannot have been easy. The site meeting was the largest collection of men with tool holsters and one-sleeved tunics that I had attended. Maybe this explained the problem. The palace project was too big. No one man could keep track of the personnel, the program, and the costs. But Pomponius thought he was in charge—the way men who are losing their grip on a situation usually do.

  I took against him immediately. The thick hair pomade gave him away; his vanity and studied vagueness clinched it. He was a distant man, too certain of his own importance, who behaved as if someone had waved a bowl of rotten shellfish under his nose. He had a deliberately old-fashioned way of looping up his toga, which made him seem an oddity. To wear a toga at all set him apart: we were in the provinces, and he was at work. One of his gaudy finger rings was so bulky it must interfere when he was at the drawing board.

 

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