The market booths were already opening, and even the stalls on the temple steps were readying themselves for customers. One owner was hanging up the cages of small birds which he would later sell as offerings, while another hung a notice above his door, advertising the engraving of curse and prayer tablets. That must be the one the temple-slave had meant. Any moment now, I thought, the slave would come himself, and as I did not want him to find me standing here, I hastened off towards the southern gate.
My mule was at a manger stall when I arrived, looking contented and well fed, and after a little bartering, I secured agreement that I could bring her back tonight if I desired. A stable slave had meanwhile strapped the saddle on, and with the help of a handy mounting-stone I was hoisted up – though I had to take my rabbit mittens off to hold the reins.
For a moment I thought that Arlina was not going to move, since no amount of digging with my strangely booted feet had the least effect on her, but a well aimed stick across the rump (wielded by the stable owner) seemed to do the trick, and she ambled into motion willingly enough.
‘I should take this with you!’ The fellow tossed the stick to me, and thus equipped I managed well enough. There is no law, of course, against riding through the town by day – only horse-drawn vehicles are prohibited – and soon I was trotting through the streets again, urging Arlina forward every now and then. Then it was through the northern gate and out on to the road, following the way the cart had travelled earlier.
I had the impression I was moving fairly fast – certainly quicker than I could have walked the route – but after an hour or so I still had not caught the cart, and I began to wonder if I had missed my promised guide. However, just when I was beginning to despair, I turned a corner and caught sight of him.
He pushed his hood back and I saw that it was Pustulus! He was sitting on a wall beside the road, looking cold and even more unhappy than before. I ambled up and reined Arlina in.
‘This is where the cart went?’ It was a foolish thing to say. As the driver had predicted I could see the tracks, veering off the main road and down a narrow lane between a little cottage and a wood store opposite. In the distance I could see a tangle of high trees where the cleared land ended and the forest wilds began.
Pustulus said nothing, just gave a sullen nod. It was not mere discourtesy, I realized: his lips and hands were turning blue and he was genuinely chilled from waiting in the cold.
‘Get on the mule,’ I said. ‘And you can ride from here.’ The offer earned me a disbelieving look, but I shuffled backwards and showed him how he could sit in front of me, as Minimus had done the day before. Pustulus still seemed a little hesitant, but he’d been loaned to me and an order had to be obeyed.
He came and clambered on the wall, from where I could assist him up on to the animal, and as I took his hand I realized that his fingers were almost numb with cold. I pulled my rabbit mittens from inside my belt, where I had stowed them when I took the reins, and handed them to him. ‘And put these on! If your hands are frozen you will be no help at all.’
He gave me another startled look but did as he was told. I put one arm around his waist to steady him, since he seemed incapable of holding on himself, then reached around and with my spare hand flicked Arlina with the stick until she lumbered into motion once again.
It was not hard to follow where the cart had gone. This far from town the snow was fairly deep and undisturbed, except for a few footprints and the tracks of animals. The wagon had effectively cleared a rutted path for us and Arlina walked along it with confidence and surprising daintiness, and very shortly we were in the shelter of the trees. After a few minutes we saw the cart ahead, pulled up on a patch of frozen bracken by the road.
The driver, who was still sitting in his seat, swung himself down to the ground as we approached. ‘Ah, there you are, citizen! I see you found the slave. The search party has spread out on the forest paths around here, but I have left the nearest area for you.’ He made an expansive gesture with his hands, indicating the merest suggestion of a track which wound away between the hazel and ash trees and the massive oaks in front of us. ‘If you hear me whistle, come back here at once. It will be a signal either that something has been found or that it is time to break off for a rest. And you’ll be needing these! I told the slave to leave them in the cart.’
He reached into the back and produced the pair of poles, which Pustulus had brought into my workshop earlier. In order to take them I got down from my mount, followed – in an undignified slither – by my companion, who had taken off my mitts and thrust them at me surreptitiously.
‘Thank you, citizen!’ He flashed me a warm smile – the first time that I’d ever seen his face without a sulk. ‘Allow me to assist you, in my turn.’ He seized the mule and tied it to a tree, then took the poles and demonstrated how to use them to test the piles of snowy leaves beside the path. It was obvious I’d earned myself a friend.
‘If anything is in there, you will feel it with the rod,’ he told me earnestly. ‘We found a couple of dead dogs yesterday.’
I nodded. ‘Then I will come and try it for myself.’ I turned to the driver. ‘Is is safe to leave the mule?’
‘Certainly, citizen, I will not be far away – though I’m to search the borders of this lane myself, Bernadus and Alfredus Allius have contributed another wagon-load of slaves and they will work towards us from each side, and we’ll work out to them. That way they know the whole area has been scoured.’ And so saying he produced a pointed stick himself and began to prod amongst the frosted bracken by the road.
Pustulus was already making for the trees and I pottered after him, still making my peculiar boot tracks in the snow, and together we began the painstaking business of the search. It was bitterly cold and I sent up a mental thanks to Lucius for the protection on my hands and feet: his northern traders clearly knew a thing or two. But even my unconventional boots could not keep out all the chill and very soon my feet had turned to blocks of ice: so how the slaves were faring, with only rags around their legs, it was difficult to guess.
The snow was patchier underneath the trees, but it was still hard work and it seemed like hours before we took a break. The driver gave the whistle – an especially piercing one – and slaves appeared from different areas of the forest on either side. It was obviously too cold to sit down on the ground, so we climbed up on to the cart. He doled out two pieces of dry bread and a wizened apple each, after which there was a swig of watered wine from a communal jug and then it was time to get to work again.
I was thoughtful as I went back to wielding my probe – something else for which I owed Lucius my thanks! Obviously he’d provided enough sustenance for me. I wished I’d had the sense to bring some foodstuffs of my own, but I hadn’t thought of it. Even a slave meal like that was welcome in this cold.
My thoughts were interrupted by a cry from Pustulus. ‘There’s something here!’ he shouted and I turned to look. The driver must have heard as well, because he gave that whistling once again and the other slaves came crashing through the trees from every side.
Pustulus had moved aside the leaves and snow by now, revealing the sorry sight which lay below. It was a body, but it wasn’t Genialis, that was clear at once – just an aged crone who’d obviously been overcome by cold, still clutching the firewood she’d been out to fetch.
‘She must have been there quite a little time, to be so covered with the leaves,’ I said. ‘But she’s quite well preserved. At least …’
I tailed off as Pustulus turned her on her back. Her short patched tunic had been half-torn away, and telltale toothmarks in her side and thighs showed that we were not the first to find the corpse.
‘A wolf, by the look of it.’ Even the driver had left the lane by now and was taking an interest in what Pustulus has found. ‘Bring her to the cart and later I will drive her to the military road. We’ll leave her on the side and tell the army when we get back into town. They’ll come and pick her up.’
The army sent a death cart out from time to time to collect the unclaimed corpses and put them into the communal pit, along with paupers and criminals from town.
‘But she might have family!’ somebody exclaimed.
‘If so, they would have looked for her by now.’ The driver was dismissive. ‘And if she had younger relatives they would have fetched the wood for her – not sent her out to get it and let her freeze to death.’
There might be a sick old husband languishing at home, but I did not point that out. Without a fire it was probable by now that he’d be dead as well. So I simply watched as several of the slaves took up the body and bore it to the cart.
They were just in the act of slinging it up into the back, when the sight of a lone horseman coming down the forest track caused us all to stop and stare. Whoever it was, he was moving very fast and waving one hand agitatedly. As he drew closer, I realized who it was. It was Adonisius and he was out of breath.
He swung down from the saddle. ‘They have found him!’ he told us breathlessly. ‘Alfredus Allius’s men have found the body in a ditch. The search is over. You can bring in all the slaves.’ He turned to me. ‘Though it’s most peculiar. When I got there they had just begun to dig him out … and … well, you’re the expert at solving mysteries. Perhaps you’d better come and take a look yourself.’
But I was already heading for the mule.
TWENTY-ONE
We left the driver rounding up the slaves to get back in the cart and return to Glevum and their duties there, while Adonisius and I rode off in company. Or almost in company. It was not easy for him to travel at the same speed as the mule – his horse went so much faster that every few minutes he had to stop and wait – but we kept up a sporadic conversation when we could.
‘Silvia has been sent for, I suppose?’ I asked on one occasion as I caught him up again, where he’d been idling his horse near a slight curve in the road.
He nodded. ‘There is a messenger on his way to her. The slaves who found the body called at the nearest farm, and arranged for someone to ride out and let her know. They had already done that before I got to them, so there should be time for her to get to Glevum well before it’s dark.’
‘And no doubt my patron will accompany her,’ I said, privately thinking that this made things difficult. I would have to go and find him to tender my report.
‘They will go to his apartment, I presume,’ the Syrian agreed. ‘I’ll suggest to Lucius that he should call on them as soon as possible. There’ll have to be decisions about a funeral. They’ll put the body on the cart and take it to Bernadus, I suppose, since he volunteered to house it, if it was ever found. We’ve sent a rider from that nearby farm to let him know, as well.’
‘But doesn’t Genialis have a property in Glevum?’ I enquired. ‘The townhouse that his half-brother used to own? That would surely be the proper place to take him, since it is obviously too far to go to Dorn?’
Adonisius reined his horse in, so as not to draw ahead. ‘Except that the Glevum house is empty and there is no bed there to lay him on, no steward to oversee the funeral and no slaves to give him a lament. Apart from me, of course!’
‘And even you were given to Silvia, I hear.’
He gave a sideways grin. ‘I had no cause to love him, but I’ll gladly mourn his corpse. Ah, here is the turning – you can see the print of hooves. And there’s the group of slaves who found the corpse.’ He gestured down the lane. ‘I’ll see you down there.’ And he cantered off.
The forest here was nearer to the road, and between the trees I could make out the successful search party – a huddle of cloaked and hooded forms in a little clearing not far off the track. As I drew nearer I could see that they were slaves, accompanied by what was obviously a steward, dressed in the colours of Alfredus Allius. The cart that they’d all come in was drawn up further on.
Adonisius had already reached them and slipped from the saddle with his usual grace. From his gestures he was telling them that I was following, and the group all turned and stared at me until Arlina ambled up. The steward barked an order, and they shuffled into ranks and stood back politely while he showed me what they’d found.
The dead man was Genialis; I could see that at once. He was propped up in the hole, the head was turned towards me and his face was visible. His arms appeared to be clamped across his chest and his body seemed at first sight to be grotesquely standing upright in a frozen ditch. However, even before I’d got down from my mount, I could see that this was quite impossible – the ditch was far too shallow to admit his legs and indeed, where the slaves had partly scraped away the loosened snow and leaves, it was clear that the torso ended just below the waist.
‘It was almost buried when we found it, citizen,’ the steward said proudly. ‘We were lucky to spot it – it was half-submerged in leaves.’
‘You did well.’ I turned to Adonisius. ‘Is there more of him elsewhere?’
The handsome face looked startled. ‘Not that we have found. Finding half a body is peculiar, of course – but didn’t the same thing happen to some ancient priest you knew? I hear that only half that body was discovered in the ice.’
There was a little buzz of shocked surprise from the assembled slaves at this. ‘That’s true!’ I said, surprised.
Adonisius shook a baffled head. ‘So now it’s happened twice. There must be some connection, don’t you think? As Lucius says, it can’t be merely a coincidence.’
I stared from Adonisius to the corpse. ‘But with the priest it was the other way about. The head and chest were missing and only the lower part of him was found …’ I trailed off. It had suddenly occurred to me that I could not be altogether sure if that was true. ‘Or so I am informed – I did not actually see the corpse myself,’ I finished awkwardly.
But the Syrian wasn’t listening. ‘No head, citizen?’ He sounded mystified. ‘Then how could anyone be sure that it was him?’
I laughed. ‘That’s the same question that I have asked myself. Someone suggested that it was the sandals that he wore – but I privately suspect there might be other signs. In any case the temple has accepted him – they gave the remains a hurried cremation yesterday.’
The steward had been listening to all this and he stepped forward, doubtfully. ‘That couldn’t have been the bottom half of this one, I suppose? Pardon if I am speaking out of turn.’
‘I don’t think so, steward. That corpse was very fresh. The priest was seen alive and well the night before, but I’m fairly sure that this one has been dead some time – the flesh has got a faintly greenish tinge – though probably it didn’t happen here. I don’t believe this body has been here very long.’
‘What makes you say that, citizen?’ The steward was surprised. ‘We heard he had been missing for half a moon or so and that he’d probably fallen off his horse and killed himself. Surely no one would bother to move his corpse about.’
‘It might not have occurred to me,’ I said, ‘if our party hadn’t found the body of an ancient crone today, in the part of the forest we were searching in. Sad business – she’d obviously been dead some little time, though very well-preserved. But she was also several inches underneath the snow. Yet Genialis was only “almost buried” – by your own account – and “half-submerged in leaves”. That’s obviously true; I can see what you have moved from round the corpse.’ I stooped and ran a little through my fingers. ‘Loose leaves with softish snow mixed into it. Yet it has been snowing hard and freezing since the day he disappeared.’
‘But not the last three days or so,’ the steward pointed out. ‘There’s been quite a thaw – it might have melted round him, I suppose.’
‘In that case, he would partially have thawed as well and there would be much more putrefaction than there is. Let me take a closer look.’
Adonisius stood beside me as I knelt beside the corpse, obviously electing himself my second in command. ‘Then perhaps he hasn’t been dead for very long?’ he offered, thoughtfully.
‘I suppose it’s possible that he was set upon. Dragged from his horse, perhaps, and shut away somewhere. Maybe they were hoping for a ransom, but he died – leaving them with an inconvenient corpse, which they disposed of recently by bringing it out here?’
I shook my head. ‘And drew attention to themselves by cutting it in half? That does not sound plausible to me. Besides, as I say, it’s clear that he’s been dead some little time.’
‘So, do you think this is somehow connected to the priest?’
‘I suppose it must be, though I can’t see how. I suppose that also happened in unfrequented wood. And there’s another thing. It is quite clear what the crone was doing, off the beaten track – she was collecting wood. But what would bring Genialis so far from the road?’
‘Lost his direction in the snow, perhaps?’ the steward said. ‘Or perhaps he was dragged here by some animal – we know that there are hungry wolves about. We’ve heard them several times while we’ve been searching in the woods.’
I looked up at him. ‘Those are not gnaw marks – that looks like an axe.’ I brushed the few remaining leaves away and examined what remained of Genialis with more care.
It was not a pleasant task. He had been a well-fed and unlovely man in life; in death he was frankly horrible. The plump face was white and bloodless, though with that faint greenish suggestion of decay, and it was frozen in a look of agonized surprise. The eyes were closed but they were still disquieting, as if they might suddenly open in a terrible blank stare. His rigid arms were clamped across his chest as stiffly as two spears and his torso simply ended in a jagged cut as though a market butcher had been at work, although his toga, cloak and tunic appeared to be intact, and were drawn up in muddy, filthy folds around his waist. Strangely – apart from smudges on his clothes – there was not much blood on him.
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