Ovid (Marcus Corvinus Book 1)

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Ovid (Marcus Corvinus Book 1) Page 24

by David Wishart


  He could've been lying, but somehow I didn't think so. In any case like I said I admired his nerve.

  'Okay boys.' I held up my hand. 'Change of plan. Scram. Go play with your toys next door.' The knuckle-cracking and biceps-flexing trailed off and the grins disappeared. I've seen kids look like that when someone stops them torturing the cat. 'And tell Bathyllus to bring us a jug of wine.'

  'That's better.' Agron folded his arms and watched me as the last of the Gauls trooped out again and banged the door behind him. 'Now tell me what happened.'

  'Hold on. First you tell me how you knew the lady was missing.'

  'Not me. The mistress. And before you go jumping to any more half-baked conclusions, most of Rome knows. You can thank Daddy for that.'

  Yeah. That made sense. My father wouldn't've had any reason to keep the news quiet, quite the reverse. I'd asked for his help and the first thing any self-respecting purple-striper would do under the circumstances was put the call out on the grapevine. The old patron-client relationship might be shakier now than it had been in the past but when it came to getting results it still left official channels nowhere. I was surprised that he'd gone to so much trouble. Grateful, too.

  'Okay,' I said. 'For what it's worth, she went out visiting a couple of nights ago and didn't come home. The day we had our little chat about Varus.'

  If he noticed the tone of the last sentence he didn't show it.

  'Kidnapped?'

  'It looks that way.'

  'You had any ransom demands?'

  'Not yet. But I doubt if whoever took her is interested in money.'

  'What, then?'

  'What do you think? They want me to stop asking questions, same as you do.'

  'We didn't go beyond a pretty please, Corvinus. You think it's that important?'

  'Yeah,' I said. 'I'd say it was important. Or wouldn't you agree?'

  There was a knock on the door and Bathyllus came in with the tray. He gave the big guy his best disapproving stare, poured, and left.

  'So what brings you here?' I sipped at the wine. 'Apart from curiosity.'

  'Screw the curiosity. I told you, if you can't keep your women it's none of my business. The mistress sent me to ask if there's anything she can do.'

  'I can manage. Thank her anyway.'

  Agron frowned and set his cup down on the floor untasted. 'Look,’ he said. ‘This isn't my idea. Quinctilia feels responsible. She wants to help, right? Asprenas, too. Sure, they tried to shut you up, but they made a mistake. And don't blame the mistress for what happened that day in the Subura. That wasn't part of the orders.'

  'Using your personal initiative?'

  'Yeah, if you like. I was told to follow you, keep an eye on you, maybe scare you a little. But no violence. And I saved your life, remember.'

  The guy had a point. And what he was saying came as close to an apology as I could see him ever making.

  'Okay,' I said. 'So let's call it quits, then. For the moment.'

  'You still think the general was your fourth man?' The question came straight out of the blue, without any signalling; but then that seemed to be the way Agron operated.

  I hesitated. Just because the big guy had stopped threatening to belt the hell out of me didn't mean I had to confide in him. And if he was working for the opposition it'd be a real mistake.

  'Come on, Corvinus! This is important.'

  Sure it was. 'Who to?'

  'To me.'

  I nursed my wine while he waited in patient silence. If Asprenas was mixed up in this somehow then he could've sent his tame gorilla round to sound me out, maybe drop a few hints on how he wanted me to play things. All the same it didn't feel right. Agron might be a bastard, but I was willing to bet that he was an honest bastard.

  'Okay,' I said finally. 'I don't know. I honestly don't know. Sure, Varus was involved. He must've been, the letter proves that. But there's a good chance that he was set up. Or at least used.'

  He relaxed. 'That's what I hoped you'd say. Who by?'

  'If I knew that I'd know the whole thing. What's it to you, anyway?'

  'You know what I think of the general, Corvinus. He may've been greedy, he may've been taking bribes from the Germans, but like I told you when the time came he paid and paid hard. That bit of it's over. If Varus is your traitor I don't want to know about it and I sure as hell won't help you prove it. You get me?'

  I thought I could see what he was driving at. 'I get you. So let's have the but.'

  He nodded. 'Right. If it wasn't the general, if Varus was set up somehow, then I want the bastard who did it. I want him just as much as you do, maybe more. Not just for Varus but for fifteen thousand other poor sods and three golden eagles. So if that's the direction you're headed in then maybe – just maybe – we're on the same side after all.'

  As a peace offer I'd heard better, but it had a genuine feel to it. An honest bastard, right enough.

  'Everything so far points to Varus being guilty,' I said. 'You know that, don't you?'

  He nodded. 'Yeah. But I'm like the mistress. I can't believe the general was that kind of traitor, and I'm gambling that I'm right.'

  'And if you aren't?'

  'I don't make wild bets, Corvinus. Varus was set up. I know he was.'

  Maybe I was making one of the worst mistakes of my life, but my gut feeling told me the guy was on the level. I raised my winecup.

  'Fair enough. Truce?'

  Slowly he reached for his own cup. Then, his eyes on mine, he took the barest sip and put the cup back down.

  'Truce.'

  'Okay,' I said. 'So start helping. If Varus wasn't our man what about the other possibilities?'

  'Such as?'

  'Let's start with Numonius Vela.'

  His brow furrowed. 'You got reasons for that, or are you just dropping names?'

  'Reasons. If our traitor wasn't Varus he must've worked pretty closely with him and been pretty high in the hierarchy. Vela was the general's deputy, and you don't get better placed than a deputy to frame a boss.' I sipped my wine. 'So tell me about Vela. What sort of guy was he?'

  'Not the conspiring type.'

  Shit. That came out flat. Too flat. 'You sure?'

  'Not unless he was a good actor. Vela was straight as a die but he'd no spunk and no imagination. A brainless nobody who turned out a coward in the bargain. Count him out, Corvinus. You won't see me shed any tears for Vela, but he isn't the man you want.'

  'Hold on. You don't ditch the guy that easy. Vela was the one told Quinctilia her brother was a traitor. He gave her the letter that proved it. If Varus was set up I'd say that made his second a pretty strong candidate.'

  Agron's brows came down. 'Sure he gave the mistress the letter. That's the point. If he'd been the one who framed the general he would've hung onto it, but he didn't. He sent it straight to Asprenas by special courier.'

  Something cold touched the back of my neck.

  'Run that past me again, will you? Slowly this time.'

  He stared at me. 'What the hell's got into you, boy? You okay?'

  'You say Vela sent the letter to Asprenas?'

  'Yeah. To Mainz, where he was stationed.' Agron looked blank. 'What's this about?'

  'Asprenas was in Germany?'

  'Sure he was in Germany. I thought you knew that.'

  'No,' I said slowly. 'I didn't know that.' Gods! If Asprenas was in Germany then...

  'He had a couple of Eagles. Not ones involved in the massacre, further up the Rhine. If it hadn't been for Asprenas the whole frontier would've collapsed.'

  ‘Yeah?' Jupiter! 'Tell me.'

  He was still staring at me, which was pretty understandable. I must've looked as if I'd just seen the ghost of old Julius march in and do a slow strip on the table.

  'Asprenas was one of the general's staff,' he said. 'He was upriver on garrison duty at Mainz. When he got the news of the massacre he force-marched his two Eagles back to protect the south bank of the Rhine. Like I said, if it hadn't been
for him the Germans would've crossed over and chased us all the way to Gaul.' He paused, then said deliberately: 'Nonius Asprenas was the only hero we had in the whole fucking mess, Corvinus. So if you've got him in mind for your traitor you can stick it.'

  I sat back and tried to stay calm. I could see what the guy meant, but he'd got it wrong. Sure, if his job had been to wreck the Rhine frontier totally Asprenas would only have had to put off his march for a day or so and watch the whole thing fall apart. Safe, no risks, and completely effective. Only that wasn't the idea, not at all. Not even Livia would go that far. She'd only wanted to disgrace Augustus. If I was right, and the massacre had been a doublecross on Arminius's part, then her agent wouldn't have expected it any more than Varus had. Fat Face's prompt action was an argument for guilt just as much as for innocence

  Then I had another thought; and it wasn't a pleasant one. If Asprenas was the traitor then it explained why Perilla had been snatched so fast. I'd given the bastard his reasons myself. I'd shown him just how close to the truth I was. And how important it was to stop me before I made the final connections...

  Fool!

  Agron was still staring. The big guy didn't know, I was sure of that, unless he was the best actor I'd ever come across; nor did Quinctilia. And I couldn't tell them, because I didn't know which way they'd jump if they knew. Certainly not yet, not until I had proof...

  The door opened. Bathyllus came in holding a scrap of paper.

  'I'm sorry to disturb you, sir,' he said, 'but I feel you should see this.'

  Domestic hassles I could do without at the moment. 'Bathyllus, look, we're busy, right? Tell me tomorrow.'

  Then I saw the expression on the little guy's face, and I knew it was serious.

  'From the kidnappers?'

  He nodded. 'One of the slaves found it in the garden, sir.'

  I grabbed the paper and spread it out on the desk. I'd never actually seen Perilla's handwriting, but there wasn't any reason why this shouldn't be genuine. I felt, suddenly, very cold.

  'It was wrapped round a stone,' Bathyllus was saying. 'Someone must have thrown it over the wall.'

  'When?'

  'I don't know. It was lying beneath one of the rose bushes.'

  The message was short and to the point:

  Marcus: They say that if you haven't left Rome by the day after tomorrow they'll kill me.

  There was no signature. Just that.

  I'd seen the gardener weeding the rose garden myself, three days ago. Since then there'd been no reason for any of the slaves to have been outside, barring chance. This could've come at any time since Perilla had gone missing. And if it had been delivered before Scylax could set up his stake-out, then maybe I was too late already. Maybe Perilla was already dead...

  My hand clenched, crushing the paper into a tight ball.

  Fool!

  37.

  The gym wasn't open when I got there early next morning, but I hadn't been waiting long when I saw the big Spaniard who'd brought me Scylax's message a few days before coming up the street chewing on a hunk of barley bread. Seeing me standing there didn't seem to hurry the bastard any. He ambled over, glanced at me from beneath brows that could've doubled as an outcrop of the Capitol, then produced a key from inside his greasy tunic and unbarred the gate. All this without a word or even a spark of recognition. Conversation obviously wasn't his strong point. Or maybe his vocabulary just didn't extend to good morning.

  'Hey, Adonis.' I said.

  'Daphnis.'

  I'd been close, anyway. At least it wasn't Hyacinth.

  'Whatever. Scylax due in?'

  'Yeah.'

  That was all I was getting, seemingly. He stood aside to let me pass, then took a rake from behind the gate and began moving sand around the training ground grain by grain. I left the guy to his executive duties and wandered over to sit down on the bench beneath the portico.

  I was feeling pretty light-headed, not to mention depressed. I hadn't slept much the night before, and I'd come to a decision. Bathyllus was already busy packing. Given the choice between carrying the thing through and getting Perilla back, I had to choose Perilla, even though the very thought of doing a runner set my teeth on edge. Staying in the city was just too risky. A few months in Athens with Uncle Cotta wouldn't be so bad. If...when...Perilla got free she might join me. We might even settle there, because Jupiter knew there'd be nothing more for me in Rome. Nothing I'd have the stomach for, anyway. But first I had to tell Scylax to call off his dogs. He wouldn't like it, I knew – that was putting it mildly – but it had to be done.

  This whole business had turned sour as hell. If I was right and Asprenas had set his uncle up then unless I had hard and fast proof there wasn't a thing I could do about it. The guy was a war hero, a highly respected politician and a personal friend of the emperor. If I were stupid enough to confront him he'd laugh in my face; and if I decided to do something really stupid like go direct to Tiberius I wouldn't have a face left to laugh in.

  That was the clincher. Tiberius. With the Wart in on this I was way out of my league. Try to take the lid off this thing, accuse the emperor and Livia of multiple dynastic murder and high treason and I'd be floating down the Tiber with a knife in my back before you could say ‘liquidation’; and Perilla would be floating along beside me.

  Slice it whichever way you liked I was beaten, and I knew it. No proof, no clout, no nothing. All I could do now was wave the white flag and hope it wasn't too late.

  Shit. And I'd been so close! I leaned back against the wall and closed my eyes...

  I must've nodded off, because the next thing I remember was being shaken awake and Scylax's ugly mug grinning down at me.

  'Hard night?' he said. 'She must've been good.'

  I was still dopey. 'Yeah, she was. Who're we talking about?'

  'Never mind. You look like you've been rolled the length of the Sacred Way and pegged out for the crows.'

  I rubbed my eyes to squeeze out the sleep. 'They made contact. We have to talk.'

  He was still grinning.

  'I know that, Corvinus. Don't worry, we've got the bastard cold.'

  The words took a moment to get through to me. When they did it was as if someone had dunked me in the public cistern.

  'You've what? What did you say?'

  'I said we've got the guy cold. Daphnis saw him heave a brick over your wall last night and followed him home.'

  'Daphnis saw him? Daphnis?'

  'Sure. I told you, you were staked. Daphnis was stretched out under a builder's cart in the alleyway behind your house and I'd two more lads round the front.'

  I was wide awake now. 'Then why the hell didn't the bastard tell me as soon as I got here?'

  'Maybe he's shy.'

  'Maybe he's a sadistic sod.'

  'Yeah, that too. Anyway, he saw the whole thing. Tailed the guy all the way home, like I told you.'

  'You mean you know where Perilla is?' Gods!

  'Could be. We won't know until we've looked. But at least we've got an address. It's a start.'

  I was on my feet by this time. My depression was gone. If we'd found Perilla then I might be back in the game again. Once, that is, we got her back safely. That was the priority. The only priority.

  'So what're we waiting for?'

  'Hold on a minute.' Scylax's hand against my chest was like a brick wall. 'We've got to work out how to play this.'

  'Screw that. It's simple. I get the Sunshine Boys, you whistle up a few sympathetic greasers and we tear the bastard into inch-square pieces.'

  Scylax was shaking his head. 'Uh-uh. Daphnis only found the messenger, remember. We don't know that he's got the girl himself.'

  'Okay. So we walk on his balls until he tells us all he does know and then we tear him up.'

  The hand against my chest increased its pressure. I felt myself pushed backwards and down onto the bench.

  'Listen, Corvinus. I know how you feel, believe me. But if you think about it you'll reali
se that taking this guy out isn't going to solve anything.'

  I was beginning to calm down now. Scylax was right. Of course he was. We wanted the boss, not the errand boy. Charging in with hob-nail boots on would do more harm than good.

  'So who is he?'

  'Use your head, boy! We know where he is and what he looks like, that's enough. Daphnis didn't stop to ask questions, especially at that time of night. If the guy found out we were on to him he'd be off like a scalded cat.'

  I was beginning to suspect that Scylax's executive assistant wasn't the chicken-brain I'd thought he was. The guy obviously had hidden talents.

  'So what part of town are we talking about? You can tell me that, anyway.'

  'Sure. Launderers' Street. Third tenement along, second floor up.'

  Definitely no chicken-brain. As an investigator Daphnis must be red-hot. I wouldn't have fancied my chances following anyone up the stairs of a city tenement, especially at night. There's plenty of cover in the open street, but once you're inside one of these places you'd need to be a cockroach to pass notice. A resident cockroach, at that.

  'Good address.' The Subura again. And not one of its best parts, either.

  'It's not the Palatine. But then our friend is no purple-striper.'

  'So what's the plan?'

  'Another stake-out. We watch him, follow him when he leaves, mark where he goes, check up on any visitors. I doubt if we'll see the actual boss at the tenement – any purple-striper'd stand out like a sore thumb in that district – but our friend will lead us to him. If we're lucky, that is.'

  The boss could be Asprenas. I was pretty sure he was, but not sure enough to put Perilla's life on the line by going for him direct. I wanted hard proof first. 'What if we aren't lucky?' I said.

  'Then we walk on his balls and listen to him squeal. But we try this way first, right?

  'Okay.' I got to my feet. 'So let's go.'

  Scylax pushed me back. 'Hold on. When I said "we" I didn't mean we.'

  'Run that one past me again. Maybe I missed something.'

 

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