The Skystone

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by Jack Whyte


  Caius cleared his throat in disgust. “Probably very well. He is still a Seneca. But he will be under some restraint. Theodosius will watch him closely, as I said, but I have no doubt that Caesarius Claudius Seneca will contrive somehow to continue to enlarge his fortune.”

  He was to be proven prophetic within the month.

  Shortly after our conversation, Caius invited Andros’ two brothers to come live at the villa in return for their parchment-making services. They accepted his invitation and began making parchment specially for us, and Caius began to write. He did not find it easy at first. He had the discipline to marshal his time but not, as he soon discovered, his thoughts. There were too many things that he wanted to write about, and he quickly found that the greatest danger lay in writing too much about too little. Eventually, however, he fell into a way of writing about whatever caught his interest at that particular time. And eventually, too, it became a habit to discuss his ideas with me.

  He wrote down his thoughts and theories on life in general, and on the life and past times of Britain. We talked of the kings of Rome, and of how Rome had foresworn such men. We talked of the Republic that was born, and had lived in glory until the advent of the Caesars — Julius and his cousin Octavius, who became Caesar Augustus.

  From that moment on, for all intents and purposes, the kings had returned. They called themselves emperors, but they were kings, with all the powers of despots. And they had killed Rome.

  We talked also, at great length, of Britain and her future, for Caius honestly believed in God’s great plans for this green land. On most of these occasions, Luceiia was with us, and her contributions to our discussions were insightful and refreshing. During those long winter nights I learned fully to appreciate the keen intellect that underlay her beauty.

  She astonished me most particularly one night by proposing the thought that Rome had starved to death, and she went on to support her thesis. The mother country, she pointed out, is largely infertile. It could never produce enough food for its citizens, so they turned to conquer fertile lands. And, of course, the fertile lands they conquered were never rich enough to feed their own people and Rome, too, and so it went on, to embrace the whole world.

  Britain, my love believes, will never starve. The soil is rich and fruitful. As the people grow, she says, they will clear the forests and till the soil. I believe she is correct in this, for the people here are strong. The local Celts are a noble people — industrious for the most part, proud, certainly quick to anger but equally quick to forgive — and great lovers of music and the arts. The quality she finds most admirable among them, however, and I agree with her in this, is their mutual respect. The Celtic wife and mother is no chattel. She fights as well as her man, making the Celtic family a unit to be dealt with respectfully. No domestic decisions are made without her advice and concurrence. She has dignity and pride of place, as did the Republican women of Rome, and she is skilled, like the Roman matrons of old, in the arts of weaving, pottery and the rearing of children to respect all that a child should respect. When Luceiia talked of all of this the first time, I earned myself a savage clout on the head by remarking with a smile that four hundred years of Roman occupation had bred much Romanism into these Celts.

  Those were idyllic days, but they were soon to be marred by a development that seemed at first to contain no hint or threat of disruption.

  Caius received a missive from Antonius Cicero, welcoming him back to Britain and advising him of three things, the first of which was my own official death. I had been found in a ditch far to the south of Verulamium, my identity established only by a lozenge of silver with my name on it that was found in my scrip. The second piece of news was that my house had reverted to the State and would be occupied by the new Procurator, Claudius Seneca, who had been appointed to fill the post left vacant by the retirement of the incumbent. He was expected to arrive in Colchester at any time, contingent upon weather conditions in the seas between Britain and Gaul!

  That was an ironic twist that had its effect on all of us! But it was followed by another even stranger, at least to me. Equus, as my beneficiary, had taken all of my belongings into his own possession, and, apparently disheartened by my disappearance and death, he had closed down the smithy, loaded everything onto a couple of wagons and left Colchester to establish himself in some other town. I was mystified by this. Where would he have gone? He knew I was not dead. Could he be coming here? To return my belongings? If so, why wouldn’t Tonius have said so?

  Caius put my mind at rest on that one, chiding me for being too literal in my interpretations. Of course, he said, Equus would be headed this way. But the letter from Tonius was quasi-official, carried by a military courier and therefore subject to censorship. How could Tonius make any reference, no matter how oblique, to my continued survival if there was the slightest consideration of the letter being exposed to scrutiny? Tonius, he insisted, was intelligent enough and experienced enough to know that Caius would put his own interpretation on the letter and draw his own conclusions. In the meantime, he had apprised us that I was now considered dead and therefore no longer pursuable. Furthermore, he had informed us, in plainest and yet unimpeachable terms, that my enemy was back in Britain in a position of power, and my friend was on his way to join us with my worldly goods.

  Reassured, and suddenly relieved of a great mental weight, I realized just how great my debt was to Antonius Cicero. Caius agreed with me.

  “What was the name he gave you after he abducted you to save your worthless skin?” The expression on his face was inscrutable.

  I had to think for a few seconds before the name came back to me. “Gratens. Publius Gratens. Why do you ask?”

  “Oh, it just occurred to me that Tonius might want to take some time off — a furlough — to attend the nuptials of his old friend Publius Gratens, since he knows the bride, and he and I have been friends for a long time.”

  Luceiia leaped to her feet and kissed him. “Caius, my beloved brother, I know you are a great soldier but there are times when you show streaks of absolute brilliance. I would love to see Tonius again, wouldn’t you, Publius?”

  I was as enthusiastic as she was. “Aye, I would.” I grinned. “I still owe him a bad headache. It would be appropriate to cause it with bridal wine.” I had another idea. “Particularly if he had the abominably poor taste to bring Plautus with him as part of his escort.”

  But Caius was quick to throw water on that notion.

  “No! If he comes, he has to come alone. No escort. No one here will be calling you Publius Gratens, remember, and Publius Varrus is dead. No one who is not a good friend can even be allowed to suspect otherwise. Too dangerous. And Tonius will know that. I shall write to him tonight and send a man into Aquae Sulis to the garrison commander tomorrow, with a request to have it forwarded immediately.”

  Of course he was correct, as usual, but I felt a keen sense of disappointment that Plautus would not be able to celebrate my reconstituted virility and my good taste in choosing a wife.

  Tonius’ response took exactly ten days to arrive, causing Caius to wonder what the reason was for the obviously intensified stream of communications between garrisons. Messages sent through normal military channels would go from Aquae Sulis to Londinium and thence to the outlying garrisons. The speed of this return had to mean that priority messages were being sent directly between military district headquarters. Even before he opened the letter, he had decided to go himself to visit the garrison at Aquae Sulis, to find out personally what was in the wind.

  The letter from Tonius was longer and less formal than the previous one and anticipated, at least in part, our concerns. He would be delighted to visit us in May, partly to renew his delightful acquaintance with the bride-to-be, partly to see his two old friends, Caius Britannicus and Publius Gratens, but chiefly to share in the joining of two such fine and noble families, the progeny of which union could only be a benefit to the Empire. He was long overdue for an extended fu
rlough, he pointed out, since, being himself without family, he seldom had reason or desire to absent himself from his posting and his charges. This, however, would be a joyous celebration, and he would be happy to request a whole month of leave to be able to participate in it properly.

  He had taken the liberty to inform Caius’ good friend Bishop Alaric of Verulamium of the wedding, since Alaric had been in Colchester when Caius’ letter arrived, and Alaric had immediately decided to attend the wedding on his own invitation. The two hoped to be able to travel west together, but this would be entirely dependent on Tonius’ ability to find a suitable replacement for his primus pilus, one Pontius Aulus Plautus, who had been appointed, to the pride and despair of Tonius himself, primus pilus to the Household Troop officers’ training school in Londinium. A great honour for Plautus but a great inconvenience for Antonius Cicero. Plautus had already left Colchester to use up his accumulated furlough time of three months before taking up his new posting, and in the meantime, no one had been seconded to Colchester to replace him in what was a crucial and highly responsible position.

  In closing, Cicero mentioned that the new Procurator had arrived and was installed in poor Varrus’ erstwhile home. Tonius had met him officially, but had had no particular dealings with him prior to the time of writing. Tonius looked forward to seeing all of us again, and hoped that we would be able to find some time to talk together at length amid the press of the many dear friends who were bound to be descending on the Villa Britannicus for the nuptials.

  Less than two weeks later, on the Ides of March, while I was working in my smithy and having no success with my design for a smelting furnace, a long and bedraggled procession of wagons arrived at our door. They’d travelled through the foulest spell of weather in what had already been a particularly nasty winter. There were three large draft wagons and three slightly smaller ones, each pulled by a pair of horses, and the sight of their occupants delighted me and touched me.

  Equus was driving the lead wagon, and he had brought his whole family with him. Plautus held the reins of the second wagon, and at first I did not recognize him, out of uniform, muffled in a cloak and heavily bearded as he was. The third wagon was driven by the son of my own major-domo from Colchester, and his father and mother were in one of the other wagons. I was amazed and flattered and quite touched at this display of loyalty, even though they were, all of them, very quick to point out that they had come only for the wedding festivities and would be moving on afterwards. To where? None of them could say.

  It took only moments, when we finally got around to talking about their future plans, to convince them that all of them had a place and a future here on the Villa Britannicus, since Luceiia and I would be setting up a household of our own after we were married and would have need of servants. Also, I was sadly in need of Equus’ professional help in designing a smelting furnace for my skystones. They were not difficult to convince, and I knew that all of them had been hoping that we would be able to invite them to. stay. When they were assured of this, the reunion became a celebration.

  That night, after dinner, the others left Equus, Plautus and me alone to reminisce together. Equus was obviously bursting to tell me about his decision to close up shop and bring everything out to the west. For a time after my departure from Colchester, he had hoped that all the furore would die down and that I would return to run the smithy with him, but the report by Cicero of my “death” a month or so later had ended that hope, and then the announcement of Seneca’s appointment as Procurator had put finis to everything.

  Equus had then begun amassing all of the equipment and material that he suspected I could want or require, including my grandfather’s collection of treasures, which he had dismantled and packed. He had disposed of the smithy by trading it to a wagon-maker for the three big wagons, and he then bought the three smaller wagons and all the livestock with some of the gold I had given him. He had used Tonius Cicero and Plautus as intermediaries in this instance, not wishing to advertise the fact that he possessed gold. By the time he had loaded all of our belongings, including the amphora containing my grandfather’s gold, onto the wagons, he had also recruited his other companions on the journey.

  Plautus had left town separately and joined them on the road.

  I could only embrace Equus and thank him warmly for his foresight and his loyalty. He gripped my arm tightly in silence, tears gleaming in his eyes.

  I blinked my own tears away and turned to Plautus.

  “And you, my friend. Tonius Cicero informs us you are to be congratulated.”

  “On what? My posting?” He grunted. “Cicero pulled some strings. I’m to be the new primus pilus at the military officers’ training school there. An honorary position.”

  “I know,” I said with a smile. “Tonius told us. A signal honour for a worthy fellow. Felicitations, my friend.”

  He glowered. “For what? I’m a soldier, Varrus, not a courtier — not a wet-nurse to puking young officer whelps. Keep your congratulations for yourself, once you’re married.”

  I was taken aback. “You’re unhappy about it?”

  His look withered me. “Unhappy? Publius, you were always ugly but never stupid. Of course I’m unhappy. It’s an abomination of a posting!”

  “But…” I was at a loss for words. “But then why did you accept it? Tonius Cicero seemed proud that you had obtained the posting.”

  “Oh, he is, and I’m grateful to him.” His tone suggested otherwise. “I wouldn’t have got it if Tonius hadn’t pulled some strings. But I’d rather stay where I’ve been for the past ten years.”

  “Oh.” Belatedly, I realized the cause of his anger. “Seneca.”

  “Aye, Seneca, the son of a spavined whore! The new Procurator. Who or what else could make me give up the best billet I ever had?”

  “You really think he would still recognize you?” I could hear incredulity in the tone of my own voice. “I was the one who fought with him, remember — the one who marked him. I’m the man he’s looking for. You were merely a spectator. You had little to do with the affair. And anyway, he would never dream of seeing a bandit when he looks at a primus pilus.”

  Plautus grunted. “If you throw your mind back, my friend, you might recall it was me the swine took objection to in the first place. I have the kind of face he hates. As soon as Cicero heard of the appointment, who the Procurator was to be, he sent for me and told me. We decided that I would be better off in Londinium. I have leave due me. Enough to let me stay here to attend your wedding and then head straight to Londinium to my new posting.”

  “I see.” There was little I could add to that, but I felt I had to try. “Plautus, I’m really sorry. I know regrets can’t cure a thing, but I feel our friendship has cost you dearly.”

  He looked at me as though I had started talking to him in some strange tongue. “What in Hade’s is that supposed to mean?”

  “The truth. I’ve cost you your soft billet. If I hadn’t overreacted that day none of this would be happening.”

  “Horse turds! It was fated. If you hadn’t crossed the son of a whore, he’d have found some way to get me to spill his tripes. And I would have done it. I was close to it, as it was. I’d have killed him. Then we’d both have been in shit. They wouldn’t have let us get away so easily with a corpse on their hands. You left him alive; and that saved us. His friends were too busy looking after him to chase us, so let’s not have any more guilt from you. Understand?”

  I nodded. “I suppose so. Well, let’s have another cup of wine to your new posting, unwished though it might be. and to Seneca’s early recall to the Imperial Court.”

  “I’ll drink to the animal’s early and painful death, and may he fester in Hades until his bones melt into jelly.” He emptied his cup at one draught and belched loudly. “I think that was one cup too many, my friends. I am tired and my head will ring like a brazen gong come morning. Varrus, have your servants avoid my door until noon. After that, I may rise to face the day
.” His voice dropped a little and he stared into his cup. “You might not be far wrong, just the same. I had dinner with him, you know.”

  “With whom?”

  “What?”

  He blinked at me, and I realized that he really was quite drunk. I glanced at Equus, who was grinning at me, nodding affirmation. I rephrased my question.

  “You said you had dinner with him. Who are you talking about? Tonius?”

  “Damnation, no. Seneca!”

  “You had dinner with Seneca?” I was incredulous. “When? How?”

  He nodded ponderously. “Night before I left Colchester. Official dinner. Legate Cicero commanded me to be there, so I went. I went and watched the animal Seneca as he defecated on the decency of our military table. ’N he didn’t recognize me…” His voice drifted downward to the point where I was straining to hear him. “Mind you, you wouldn’t expect him to, as you said. I was in full regimentals, all burnished bronze and brass and polished leather. He looked at me and saw what I was, not who I was. But I couldn’t be in uniform all the time, and he would have known me sooner or later, and then I’d have— been dead.”

  I reached out and shook him by the shoulder. He tossed his head and strained his eyes open, trying to shake off the wine.

  “Plautus,” I said urgently. “Sober up! I want to hear about this.”

  He blew a fricative, sounding like a horse, but his eyes cleared and his voice became normal.

  “Then, Publius my friend, you must point me towards some cold night air. If I am to talk longer, I’ll have to clear my head. The heat from the brazier there is breaking me down.”

  I led him into the atrium, which, in the classical style, was open to the sky. It was cold, and I began to shiver immediately. Plautus, however, seemed impervious to the chill and merely stood breathing deeply, drawing the chill night air into his lungs and holding each breath for a long time before exhaling it in a plume of smoky vapour. Finally, just as I was thinking of retiring to the brazier and leaving him alone out there, he barked a short, stifled laugh, half-grunt and half-curse.

 

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