The Far Time Incident

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The Far Time Incident Page 24

by Neve Maslakovic


  “We should be getting back anyway,” Nate said. “I want to see if we can accidentally run into Nigidius by his front door so that we can ask him some questions.” He popped the sweet into his mouth.

  Abigail was looking at me with concern. “I thought you said you felt better, Julia.”

  “Let’s see your hand,” Nate said through a full mouth.

  “Well—all right.” I unwrapped Faustilla’s cloth. The yellow paste, dried and cracking, enveloped my index finger and hid whatever was underneath. But the underlying redness and swelling had spread to the neighboring fingers in thin reddish streaks, even up my hand a bit. “I guess Faustilla’s ointment didn’t work,” I said. Kamal had moved away and stopped eating the sweets, his face a little green. I noticed that Xavier was staring at my hand as if debating something, but he only bit his lip in thought.

  I rewrapped the hand and changed the subject. “What’s pumice anyway?”

  “Hmm? Pumice? Superhot, frothy lava that cools fast and solidifies into sponge-like chunks upon being ejected from a volcano,” Xavier explained.

  “Sponge,” I said slowly.

  “Exactly. A light rock with many air pockets.”

  “No,” I said. “Sponge. Not as a noun but as a verb. Faustilla—when we saw her with Sabina at the baths, she was scrubbing a darkish stain off the sleeve of her garment. I think it was garum. From the broken jars.”

  “You didn’t mention that before,” Nate said. It was his turn to sound irritated. “But most likely the stain got there as she was cleaning up the mess in the shop,” he suggested, as if to rule out that possibility before jumping to any conclusions.

  I visualized the scene again—Secundus sweeping, Faustilla wiping down the wall, Sabina being chastised for wasting time talking to the foreigners from Britannia. I shook my head. “She had on a sleeveless dress when we saw her in the shop. Any splatter would have gone on her arm. The dress at the baths—I’m pretty sure it was the one she had on yesterday morning, in the villa courtyard. She must have changed back into it—”

  “The stain could have been from making beet juice,” Xavier said. “She sells it to clients. It’s supposed to be an aphrodisiac.”

  Nate took charge. “If there’s a chance that Faustilla’s responsible, we had better hurry back. Professor, you saw how Secundus was looking at the town’s top garum maker. He may head over to spit at his feet. If Scaurus is blameless, that can only end badly.”

  21

  “Do you realize what it means if Faustilla did trash her son’s shop?” Nate asked as we hurried along. The others had been immediately behind us, but History had blocked them from taking the same street and they were forced to take a longer route back to Secundus’s shop.

  “What?”

  “I tasted garum for nothing.”

  “Ow,” I said as my right hand brushed against a building wall.

  “Your hand?”

  “I didn’t want to say it before, but it’s really starting to hurt.”

  We found Secundus outside his shop. His mother was behind the counter, and they seemed to be arguing about something. As we approached, we saw him give a dismissive wave to end their conversation, as if to say, Enough, I’ll do what I must. Then he turned and left.

  “Secundus, wait!” Nate and I called out at the same time and ground to a stop.

  The urgency of our tone halted the shopkeeper. He looked almost comical as he stood midstride on the pedestrian stepping-stones outside his shop, staring at us in puzzlement.

  I pointed to Faustilla and then the pile of refuse by the stepping-stones—the broken jars and dried-up pickled vegetables that he had swept into the street yesterday morning, now covered with flies. I didn’t say a word, but I didn’t need to. My meaning could not have been plainer.

  Secundus looked down at the fruits of his labor, mingled with grime that had been lodged against the stepping-stones by long-passed rain torrents and refuse newly discarded by the proprietor of the tavern across the street. I felt for him. It was through no fault of his own that he was not his mother’s favorite, but the mere accident of birth order. Those deep eyes of his rose to meet Faustilla’s and she didn’t look abashed, just angry that she had been found out. Proud and defiant, she met her son’s gaze for a long moment, then turned to Nate and me. For a second I thought she might follow Secundus’s plan and spit at our feet, but she merely turned and went into the back room. She had destroyed her son’s carefully nurtured garum and her own pickled vegetables, but had not been able to bring herself to do the same to the ointments and mixtures that she kept in the back.

  She returned a moment later with a cloth purse in her hands. She released it and it landed with a loud clink on the stone counter. The take from Secundus’s till. One of the coins, a chipped brass one, rolled out and I watched as it came to a stop and settled on the counter. I didn’t understand what Faustilla said to Nate and me, but I imagined it was something along the lines of everything being fair in love, war, and the battle for personal happiness. She had been willing to let her son confront Scaurus, something that was bound to end disastrously, rather than admit the truth.

  She went into the back room for a second time, came back with a shawl, and, draping it over her head and neck, hurried past Nate and me without looking at her son. I knew where she was headed.

  “She’s gone off to have a curse tablet made,” I murmured to Nate. “We are about to be one cursed married couple.”

  Secundus had wordlessly taken his mother’s place at the shop counter. His shoulders seemed squarer, his back straighter. He sent us a look of thanks—intermingled with something in the vicinity of Family, what can you do?—and picked up the change bag and threw it behind the counter, then began hawking his wares to passersby.

  “Well,” Nate said uneasily, “that went better than I expected.”

  “Now that Secundus has all the facts, he can make an informed decision whether to stay here or sell out and join his brother in Rome. I rather hope it’s the second, of course, what with the volcano and all,” I said as Nate and I headed to the theater-mask fountain. Xavier had asked us to fill a couple of jugs with water for our journey. Abigail and Kamal had gone down to the harbor with Sabina, and Helen had stayed behind to help Xavier ready everything. It was time to leave. The sun was just about at its highest point in the sky, meaning that we would face the full heat of the day, but none of us wanted to stay a minute longer under Faustilla’s hostile stare. We had buried the note addressed to Dr. May under the pear tree in the garden behind the shop. If it got to her in time, she would know to keep an eye out for us in the vicinity of the Roman Colosseum.

  “Whatever he decides, it will be the same decision he would have made anyway, whether we came here or not. Right, Julia? Otherwise we wouldn’t have been able to say anything. I have to believe Secundus would have changed his mind about confronting Scaurus even if we hadn’t stopped him.”

  That nicely deflated the pride I had felt about solving the case and helping out a fellow human being.

  “Justice is a complicated thing,” the chief said, noticing my crestfallen expression. “Sometimes all you get is knowledge, understanding—the who, the why, the how—and that has to be enough.”

  “And you? Would you be satisfied if we knew for sure it was Dr. Little”—for we all suspected him, though we kept bickering about his possible motives—“who marooned us here, even if we fail to hook up with Dr. May’s team in Rome? If all we were able to do is write down his name and bury another note and hope it’s found centuries from now?”

  He grunted an affirmative.

  I wasn’t sure I believed him. Knowing who did it was all well and good; getting a message to St. Sunniva to bring our attacker to justice—the prison kind—even better; but the best scenario of all was to get home, look our would-be killer in the eye, and then send him or her to prison.

  I wondered how many people Nate had sent to prison in his time. Watching as the thin trickle of water s
lowly filled the first of the two jugs, I asked, “What did you do at your previous job?” The future Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, which was near the border with Canada, probably didn’t look hugely different in this century than it did when I had visited during my college days. Lakes and forests, except with Sioux and Ojibwe settlements here and there instead of park visitor campsites.

  He stuck the first of the filled jugs in my good hand and set the other jug under the fountain faucet. “What did I do at the BWCAW? There’s an old saying that the park ranger’s job is to protect the park from visitors, the visitors from the park, and the visitors from each other.”

  A burly man with a hoe over one shoulder and his head down bumped my shoulder as Nate bent down to shift the jug so it captured more of the trickling water. A short line of Pompeians had formed behind us, the disappearing water clearly the main topic of conversation. As we left the fountain behind us, I felt myself getting a bit misty-eyed at the thought that these sturdy-stoned streets would be choked with debris in perhaps a soon as a month, the houses with their awnings and back gardens crushed under falling rocks. The life of this town was nearing its end, and its citizens would have to flee.

  I didn’t have much of a chance to stay misty-eyed as we turned the corner. The burly man with the hoe was blocking our path, standing with his sandals shoulder-distance apart in the middle of the narrow lane, which, I was suddenly aware, was otherwise deserted. High, windowless walls and a shuttered door or two stood to either side of us. The figure blocking our way swung the hoe over one bare, beefy shoulder. He said something in a low growl.

  “This guy seems to know us,” I said to Nate.

  “That’s Scaurus’s overseer, Thraex. We must have given the wrong impression this morning.”

  Thraex growled again at the mention of his master’s name.

  “The wrong impression? That we were suspicious that his master might have ordered the trashing of Secundus’s shop? That’s exactly what we were thinking. He’s bigger than I expected,” I added.

  “Julia, turn around and walk away. Find a different route to Secundus’s shop.”

  “I don’t think so. Besides, two is better than one when facing muscular Romans armed with large garden implements.”

  “I can handle him.”

  “I’m sure you can, but I’m not leaving. Should I scream for help?”

  “Julia—”

  “Or we can both make a run for it. Or—”

  “Or what?”

  “Or we can explain to Thraex here that our interest in his master was purely an investigative one and that his innocence has been proven beyond doubt.”

  “And you know how to translate that into Latin?”

  Thraex had been following our exchange like a tennis fan at a close match. He swung the hoe off his shoulder and wielded it up menacingly.

  “I think we could outrun him,” I said and winced. A sharp pain shot through my head as I tensed my muscles. My body was sore and aching, like I was coming down with the flu. “You try and pass him on the left, I’ll take the right—”

  The burly overseer took a step forward and thrust his face near mine. He had bad teeth and bad breath.

  I edged back.

  Nate tapped him on the shoulder, and Thraex turned and swung the hoe. The chief jumped out of the way, the water splashing from the jug he was holding onto the sun-warmed cobblestones.

  The overseer now stood between us, his muscular legs planted firmly on the ground.

  A loud pop, like a car backfiring, distracted Thraex for a moment. He looked around for its source.

  “That’s strange,” I said. “It sounded like a car backfiring, which is of course impossible, but I don’t know what else would—”

  Thraex glanced at me, making the rest of the sentence die in my throat. He smirked, then turned back toward the chief, who was holding the earthenware jug in front of him like a shield.

  I opened my mouth to scream and summon help.

  Not a sound came out.

  I tried again.

  Nothing.

  I threw my jug at the overseer’s back. It bounced off him and shattered into pieces on the cobblestones—not loudly enough to summon help—and made him growl but not turn.

  The overseer raised his hoe and took a step toward Nate, who was trapped with his back against the wall—

  “Julia! Chief Kirkland!”

  Xavier was hurrying toward us, his hair streaming behind him. He ground to a halt, trying to catch his breath. “It has begun.”

  “No,” I said, “quite the opposite. As you know, we’ve wrapped up the investigation quite nicely—we just need to explain that to Thraex here—” I tapped the big man on the shoulder and he turned toward me, looming over my head. “Your master has been cleared of the crime,” I said loudly, as if raising my voice would help him understand me, then went into some version of pidgin English. “Cleared. Yes, you understand?”

  Thraex simply stared at me, like I was as much of a threat as a buzzing mosquito.

  “The mountain, Julia—didn’t you hear—”

  “The popping noise?” Nate interrupted. “We heard it.”

  I looked over Thraex’s shoulder at the mountain. Everything was quiet. The wind had changed direction, I noticed, and was now coming from Vesuvius rather than the sea. It gently blew my hair back from my forehead—a pleasant feeling in the heat of the day. Maybe I wasn’t coming down with the flu. Maybe it was just the heat.

  “Cleared,” I repeated for good measure for Thraex, then said, “Are you sure, Xavier? I’m as ready to panic as the next person, but that wasn’t anything I’d call an explosion—”

  “According to geologists,” he said, punctuating the words with sharp intakes of breath, “a minor explosion of steam and ash on the eastern flank of the mountain preceded the eruption.

  “It has begun,” he repeated.

  22

  “How much time do we have?” I asked, giving in to the panic. Xavier had explained to Scaurus’s overseer that we were more than happy to leave his master alone and Thraex had ambled off (apparently he had only been trying to scare us out of town, and was mollified by Xavier’s pronouncement that we had every intention of leaving). At the end of their conversation, the professor had pointed to the mountain and said something insistently, but judging by the leisurely pace Thraex set for himself as he continued down to the harbor, it was clear that he had not understood.

  “How much time do we have?” I repeated.

  “Not much. Leave the jugs, let’s go.”

  “Are the others back yet?” Nate asked as we willed ourselves to walk at a normal pace. Town life was still going on around us as usual. The harbor was where Abigail and Kamal had taken Sabina to say good-bye and to help her gather seashells for one of Faustilla’s mixtures.

  “They’re not back yet. And Helen has gone to the Nigidii tomb to gather what’s left of your twenty-first-century belongings—she didn’t want to leave anything behind. I tried to reason with her, but you know Helen.” Xavier tugged at his hair. “We need to split up. You two go find Abigail and Kamal, I’ll see if I can catch up with Helen, then we’ll meet up at the Secundus’s shop.”

  Nate took charge. “No, that’ll take too much time. Julia—can you make it to the harbor?”

  “Certainly. My hand may hurt but I can still walk.” It suddenly struck me how convenient cell phones were. I desperately wished that we all had them—and a cell tower, too. I felt the breeze on my face again, gentle and warm, from the direction of Vesuvius.

  “You bring back Abigail and Kamal, and I’ll see if I can find Dr. Presnik. Dr. Mooney, you get the cart and the donkeys ready and whatever else we need,” Nate commanded. “We’ll all meet up by the Nola Gate. Is everyone clear on the plan?”

  Xavier went off without a word. Despite all he had read about the eruption and all of his preparations, it seemed like he couldn’t believe it was actually happening.

  “What should I do wi
th Sabina?” I asked quickly, impatient to get moving.

  “Drop her off at her father’s house. It’ll be on your way to the gate.”

  Kamal, Abigail, and Sabina looked young and carefree as they bounded up the steep road from the harbor, their sandals in their hands, their feet still wet from sea dipping. Celer followed a few steps behind, an air of indignation hanging about him, as if he disapproved of all the physical activity he had been subjected to.

  They had not heard the small pop.

  We all heard what came next.

  Thunder, the loudest I’d heard in my life, reverberated through the town, shaking house and garden walls and the very stones under our feet. All around us, the residents of houses and shops and temples, slaves and masters alike, spilled out into the street to see what was causing the blue-sky storm, probably expecting to see an angry Jupiter hovering above the town flinging thunderbolts. In the commotion, a merchant bumped into me—his large nose, toga, and heavy figure perfectly matched Xavier’s description of Scaurus—and I watched apprehension replace bafflement on his face as fingers started pointing in the direction of Vesuvius. A gray, billowing column was rising from the top of the mountain—a terrible, deadly cloud.

  The town doesn’t matter one bit, the people do, I thought. But they stood frozen in place, not knowing how to react, and there was no warning we could give.

  “Let’s go,” I croaked as Sabina and the grad students hurriedly put their sandals back on.

  We ran then. Or tried to. The path would not open for us, only for Sabina and her dog. She looked back at the three of us as we stood frozen in place. She wasn’t scared yet, only puzzled by our strange behavior and the even stranger behavior of the mountain that had lain dormant for her entire life. She skipped a few steps back to where we were and tugged on Abigail’s hand. Abigail looked stricken.

  Kamal shook his head. “We might have to let Sabina and Celer go back to the shop alone while we head for the Nola Gate.”

 

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