Caveat Emptor

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by Ruth Downie


  In the silence that followed, he felt her reach for his hand. “What I expected,” she said as the mud squelched and grated between their fingers, “was this man who tries to do the right thing even when it is foolish.”

  For a few moments they were so still that a robin flew down and stabbed at the soil in front of them before darting off to safety.

  “Right.” Ruso got to his feet.

  “You could stay here and help.”

  “I’ll be back soon,” he promised. “You carry on saving lives. This foolish man needs to wash his hands and send out a big pile of letters.”

  CAVEAT EMPTOR

  A NOVEL

  IN WHICH our hero, Gaius Petreius Ruso, will be …

  Employed by

  The procurator, appointed by the emperor to run the finances of Britannia

  Firmus, the assistant procurator

  Caratius, a chief magistrate of Verulamium

  Gallonius, the other chief magistrate of Verulamium

  Metellus, the governor’s head of security

  Perplexed by

  Julius Asper, the tax collector for Verulamium

  Julius Bericus, brother and assistant of Asper

  Camma, mother of Asper’s baby

  Paula, a young lady whose name he cannot remember

  Lied to by

  Innkeeper, a resident of Londinium who does not deserve a name

  The Innkeeper’s wife, who does but is not given one

  A number of others not so easily identified

  Set straight by

  Tilla, his wife

  The doctor, Verulamium’s local medic

  Guarded by

  Dias, captain of Verulamium’s guard

  Gavo, one of Dias’s men

  Informed by

  Publius, manager of the mansio (official inn) in Verulamium

  Satto, Verulamium’s money changer

  Tetricus, a boatman on the River Tamesis

  Lund, a farmer

  Grata, housekeeper to Asper and Bericus

  Nico, the quaestor (finance officer) of Verulamium

  Rogatus, overseer of the official stables in Verulamium

  Assisted by

  Albanus, his former clerk, now a teacher

  Valens, his friend and former colleague

  Valens’s apprentices, the tall one

  the short one

  Attacked by

  A mysterious man wearing a hood

  Surprised by

  Caratius’s mother

  Serena, Valens’s wife

  Disapproved of by

  Pyramus, Firmus’s personal slave

  The clerks in the finance office

  Barked at by

  Cerberus, a dog with three legs (not to be confused with the Cerberus who has several heads, and who appears in other books but not this one)

  A landlady’s terrier

  Overlooked by

  The emperor Hadrian

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  Verulamium’s theater was finally built about twenty years after this story is set, and its remains can still be seen. The site of the Great Hall lies just across the road, but its foundations are buried deep beneath Saint Michael’s Church, and with them the putative location of the strong room. Sadly, no details of the town Council’s business—unruly or otherwise—survive. The more respectable of the proceedings here are based on bronze tablets recording the constitution of the Roman town of Irni in Seville.

  Anyone who shares my delight in obscure facts will be pleased to know that there really was a crackdown on abuses of the transport system in the early years of Hadrian’s reign, including a survey of British milestones, although the name of the procurator who would have been in charge of them is not known. Nor is the location of his office, but it seemed reasonable to place such an important man in one of the grandest buildings in town.

  A couple of good books for anyone wanting more detailed background are:

  Verulamium: The Roman City of St Albans by Rosalind Niblett

  The Coinage of Roman Britain by Richard Reece.

  Many readers will already have had the pleasure of visiting Verulamium Museum and park, the British Museum, and the Museum of London. For those who cannot make the trip, all have good Web sites, and at the time of writing, the Museum of London’s Online Collections include a fascinating microsite exploring Roman London at: http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk/English/Collections/OnlineResources/Londinium/.

  Finally, for anyone lucky enough to stumble across something our ancestors left behind, or who wants to see what others have found, www.finds.org.uk is the place to look.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Heartfelt thanks to a veritable army of agents and editors, especially Peta Nightingale, Araminta Whitley, George Lucas, Benjamin Adams, Mari Evans, Kate Burke, Stefanie Bierwerth, and Marlene Tungseth.

  For their generous advice and recommendation of sources on Roman coinage and Roman law, I am very grateful to Sam Moorhead, FSA British Museum, and Dr. Paul du Plessis. For help with the history of their respective towns, I am indebted to David Thorold, Keeper of Archaeology at Verulamium Museum, St. Albans Museum Service, and Jenny Hall, Senior Roman Curator, Museum of London.

  Fellow scribes Carol Barac, Caroline Davis, Chris Allen, Guy Russell, Jan Lovell, Kathy Barbour, and Maria Murphy all slogged through several drafts of the early chapters, and Andy and Stephen Downie nobly read the whole manuscript.

  Caro Ramsay kindly saved me from my own ignorance at one point, but all remaining errors, misinterpretations, inventions, and barefaced lies in the preceding pages are my own work.

  A NOTE ON THE AUTHOR

  Ruth Downie is the author of the New York Times best-selling Medicus, Terra Incognita, and most recently, Persona Non Grata. A part-time librarian, she is married with two sons and lives in Milton Keynes, England.

  BY THE SAME AUTHOR

  Persona Non Grata

  Terra Incognita

  Medicus

  Copyright © 2011 by Ruth Downie

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information address Bloomsbury USA, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

  Published by Bloomsbury USA, New York

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

  Downie, Ruth, 1955—

  Caveat emptor : a novel of the Roman Empire / Ruth Downie. — 1st U.S. ed.

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-1-59691-608-1 (hardback)

  1. Physicians—Rome—Fiction. 2. Romans—Great Britain—Fiction. 3. Treasure troves—Fiction. 4. Great Britain—History—Roman period, 55 B.C.-449 A.D.—Fiction. I. Title.

  PR6104.O94C38 2011

  823’.92—dc22

  2010034525

  First published by Bloomsbury USA in 2011

  This e-book edition published in 2011

  First published in Great Britain in 2011 by Penguin UK under the name Ruso and the River of Darkness.

  E-book ISBN: 978-1-60819-592-3

  www.bloomsburyusa.com

 

 

 


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