'What took you so bloody long? I sent for you ages ago.'
'I'm sorry, sir.'
'Well?'
'Sir?'
'Why were you late? Explain yourself.'
'I was in the latrines, sir, something I ate last night.'
'Well, take more care over what you eat in future,' Macro said impatiently. 'Now then, we've got work to do. The legate's detached our century from the Legion to perform escort duties. I was given the orders at the morning briefing. We're to advance ahead of the Legion to Durocortorum and meet up with some staff bigwig. Then we're to escort him to General Plautius's headquarters at Gesoriacum. That's all, and since we have to get moving ahead of the column we're going to have to rush. I've already given the orders for the wagon to be loaded and hitched up. I want you to requisition some wine and treats for our guest. The quartermaster's been notified. Piso, you go and get the men moving; I want tents struck and loaded and packs ready before the next watch call. Now get out of here, both of you.'
Outside Cato looked at Piso enquiringly.
'Bad morning,' Piso whispered. 'Some dodgy business up at headquarters last night.'
'Dodgy business?'
'Some thief tried to rob the legate. Managed to knife a guard and get away. Now Vespasian's blowing his stack at the officers for not having their men keep a good enough watch.'
'Oh. Did anyone say what was stolen?'
'Nothing of value, apparently. But the poor sod who discovered the thief won't live long.'
'That's too bad.' Cato tried to sound concerned while his heart lifted slightly at the news, and then, as his cursed imagination summoned up an image of the blameless sentry lying bandaged and scarcely alive, he felt ashamed and guilty.
'Don't take it too badly, son.' Piso laid a hand on his shoulder. 'It happens. Just your good fortune it wasn't you.'
– =OO=OOO=OO-=
The tribune rested his chin on the palms of his hand and stared across to where Pulcher sat on a folding stool nursing his leg. The upper thigh had been punctured to a finger's depth and had bled profusely until he had got far enough away from the tent to apply pressure on the wound. Pulcher had limped back to the tribune's quarters, where he now sat applying a fresh bandage to the area. Luckily, the wound was high enough that the bandage would be concealed under his breeches and no-one need know that he had been injured. But the day's march would be agony, the tribune reflected with a smile. That would encourage the man not to cock it up next time – if there was a next time. Vespasian had issued orders to double the guard from now on and access to the command tent would be almost impossible. The man opposite did not yet know that another attempt would be required.
'I expect you'll be looking forward to returning to Rome,' the tribune asked as he poured the man a cup of wine.
'Too right!' Pulcher grunted. 'I've had enough of this undercover nonsense. I want to get back to soldiering.'
'I hardly think the Praetorian Guard counts as soldiering,' said the tribune mildly.
'It's the kind of soldiering I like.'
'But you did volunteer for this.'
'True. But for the sum of money we arranged anyone would volunteer.'
'But not everyone has your unique talent for ensuring things happen, encouraging loquacity in the tongue-tied, making people disappear – that sort of thing. Speaking of which, are you sure you can't put a face to the man you saw in the tent, the one who managed to pigstick you so efficiently?'
'No.' The reply was laced with anger. 'But when I do find out who it was, they'll suffer before I let them die. That's something I'll take care of for no extra fee.'
'Well, be sure that you do find him. If he knows who you are, he might manage to make you implicate me.'
'There's no chance of that.'
'Don't ever underestimate the power of effectively applied torture to loosen tongues,' the tribune warned him. The other merely sniffed with derision before the tribune continued, 'Now, I'm afraid I've got some bad news for you.'
'Eh?'
'You've not done your job.'
'What do you mean?' Pulcher jabbed a finger at the scroll. 'That's what you wanted, and that's what you've fucking got.'
'Oh no,' replied the tribune. 'You don't really think I took the trouble of bringing you all the way up from Rome to get a piece of stationery.'
He flattened the scroll out for the other man to read. But there was nothing to read, it was completely blank.
'It seems someone is a step ahead of us. Looks like Vespasian was smart enough to use his safe-box as a decoy. Or, someone else here has beaten us to the scroll and left this in its place.'
Chapter Twenty-four
The departure of the Sixth century well ahead of the main column caused some little excitement to those who witnessed it, not least the men of the century itself. In the normal course of events no common soldier would dare march out of the camp before the senior officers and the colour party. Therefore it was clear to all that the Sixth century was being detached on a special duty. What that duty was remained known only to the centurion, his optio and secretary; the common soldiery could only wonder as the century's baggage wagon creaked out of the main gate and followed the line of men stepping out down the road towards Durocortorum. The curiosity of the onlookers soon disappeared as their officers drove them back to work, preparing to strike the tents for the day's march.
The Sixth century's excitement was palpable and the men noisily speculated about the task before them. At the head of the column Macro could hardly fail to overhear the conversation conducted behind him at a level calculated to attract his attention. He allowed himself a small smile at their all-too-obvious angling for information. Let them have their fun, they would know soon enough. In the meantime there was little to be gained from ordering them to quit babbling like small children and march in silence. While they were happy he was prepared to indulge them. The centurion was glad to be detached from the Legion; no more looking at the same backs he had followed for the best part of two hundred miles. No more frustrating delays for distant bottlenecks, and waiting patiently to be led to and from tent-area allotments by members of the colour party puffed up by their sense of self-importance.
Ahead was an empty road, stretching out in a more or less straight line towards the horizon. Above him the sky was clear and deep blue, while the air was filled with birdsong. In short, it was the kind of morning that filled Macro with an inner glow of delight at simply being alive.
Which made it all the more strange that the optio marching to one side and slightly behind him cast his eyes down to the road surface with a grim expression of concentration, quite oblivious to the general sense of well-being in the world.
Macro dropped back a step and clapped him on the shoulder.
'What on earth is the matter with you this morning, Cato?'
The boy was quite startled by this abrupt intrusion into his thoughts. 'Sir?'
'I asked you what the matter was.'
'Matter sir? Nothing's the matter.'
'Exactly!' Macro beamed. 'So, smile and enjoy life. It's not often you'll get an independent duty. Even if,' he lowered his voice, 'even if all we're told to do is nursemaid some staff officer to army headquarters.'
'If you say so, sir.'
'I do say so, lad. And believe me, I know what I'm talking about. Now be a good sort and try to enjoy things a bit more. You take life too seriously, young Cato.'
The optio fixed him with a bitter glare. 'That's because I find life rather too serious at the moment, sir.'
'Still mooning about over that slip of a girl?' Macro laughed, before giving him a sharp nudge in the side. 'So how did last night go then?'
Cato was startled into breaking his stride for a moment, until a low curse from the front rank of the column made him skip forward again to his position at the centurion's side.
'Well?' Macro winked. 'Did you score?'
'No, sir.'
'Why on earth not? Don't tell me you c
ame over all poetic and romantic. You didn't, did you? Please tell me you didn't.'
'No, sir.' Cato looked down, not trusting himself to mislead Macro effectively. 'We were interrupted before we could… get down to anything.'
'Oh that's too bad.' Macro nodded sympathetically. 'So what happened?'
'We had arranged to meet in the wagons behind the legate's tents. We were getting on rather well when all this shouting and commotion broke out. We would have ignored it and carried on with things but Lavinia heard her mistress calling for her.'
'Should have gone for a quickie,' Macro suggested.
'Not even enough time for that, sir,' Cato said regretfully. 'She had to rush off, without even arranging our next meeting. And now I'm sent off on escort duty and she's stuck back there.'
'Never mind, lad, I'm sure she'll keep it warm for you.'
'Yes, sir.'
'So you were there when that thief was discovered? Did you see anything?'
'Nothing, sir. Nothing at all. Just got out of there and went straight back to my bed.'
'Looks like you missed all the fun.'
'Yes, sir,' Cato replied, quietly enough that Macro mistook it for the boy's continued pining for his first love. A degree of sensitivity was called for to distract young Cato from his woes. Macro grasped at the first idea that crept into his head.
'Let's see how my words are coming on. You say a word and I'll spell it. All right?'
'Whatever you want, sir.'
As Macro stumbled through such tests of his newfound skill as 'rampart', 'sentry' and 'javelin', Cato was consumed by anxiety. If that sentry recovered from his head injury it would only be a matter of time before the investigation closed in around him. And then what? Torture, a confession extracted, and certain humiliating death. But if Lavinia was safe then she would be sure to back up his version of events. Unless – a rather nasty thought struck him – unless she feared that she might implicate herself. And what of Flavia? After all, she had arranged the meeting. She might deny Lavinia's statement for precisely the same reasons. While the century was detached from the Legion he would not know how the situation developed.
'Cato?' The centurion had quickly grown tired of spelling tests.
'Sir?'
'This man we're going to meet.'
'Narcissus?'
'Keep it down,' Macro hissed. 'That lot back there aren't supposed to know'
'Sorry, sir. What about him?'
'Did you ever run into him at the palace?'
'Yes, sir. He was a close friend of my father, or at least he was until he struck it rich.'
'What's he like?' Macro asked, then noticed the curious expression on his optio's face. 'I just need to know before we meet so we don't start off on the wrong foot, that's all. If we're to guard him for the next few days then I don't want to risk pissing him off, given that he's one of the Emperor's inner circle. Not that I'm afraid of him or anything, after all the man's only a bloody freedman. Just want to make sure he's happy while in our care. Won't harm our futures any if he gets to like us. So then, tell me about him.'
'Well sir-' Cato paused for thought. This wasn't going to be easy. What he knew of Narcissus was far from flattering, and he had been wise enough to keep what he knew to himself. The cold shoulder Narcissus had turned to Cato's father in the latter years of their friendship had left Cato in no doubt that he could expect few favours from the leading figure of Claudius's inner council. After Narcissus, only Messalina – the Emperor's carelessly ambitious wife – wielded more power under the Emperor.
'Well?'
'He's a good man – I mean a brilliant man – sir. Might seem a bit cold and distant at first, but that's probably because he has a lot on his shoulders. They used to say in the palace that he had more brains and worked harder than any other man in the Empire. We all respected him,' concluded Cato tactfully.
'Well, that's all very nice, but what I want to know is what he's like as a man. What should I do to get on with him?'
'Get on with him?' Cato raised his eyebrows.
'Yes. I mean, is he a man's man? That kind of thing. Does he like a good joke? There's plenty I could tell him.'
'No, sir. Please don't try to be funny,' Cato begged, visions swimming before his eyes of a cosmopolitan sophisticate being regaled with the boorish humour of the ranks. 'Just be yourself, sir. Be professional and keep out of his way as much as possible. And be careful what you say.'
Chapter Twenty-five
Just after dawn, Flavia was sitting at her portable writing desk going through some papers. From the next tent she could hear Titus squealing with laughter as his nurse struggled to feed him his morning meal. Flavia intended to catch up on some correspondence she had been meaning to write since the Legion had set out from the Rhine. She had already despatched a letter to a distant relative commanding a cavalry unit that was joining the invasion force, hoping to meet up with him when the Second Legion arrived in Gesoriacum. Then there were people in Rome she needed to inform of her return. And there were instructions to be issued to the majordomo of the house on the Quirinal, as well as to the steward of Vespasian's villa in Campania. Both establishments needed plenty of warning to ensure that they would be ready to receive Flavia and her retinue.
But the writing of those letters must wait until the present task was meticulously completed. She dipped the tip of her stylus in the inkwell and continued writing with deliberation, pausing occasionally to copy some detail or other from the map on a scroll lying open before her. A salute was shouted outside her tent and Flavia quickly pushed her paperwork into a roughly ordered pile as Vespasian entered. Flavia smiled and laid her stylus down as she rose to give him a kiss.
'I'm afraid you'll have to begin packing in a moment,' apologised Vespasian. 'Even the legate's wife is not permitted to delay the Legion.'
'Surely, after last night's rumpus, you'll allow us time to recover?'
'Recover from what? Lost sleep is a fact of life in the army.'
'I'm not in the army,' she protested.
'No, but you're married to it.'
'Brute!' Flavia scowled. 'I knew I should have married some fat old senator with a consuming interest in viniculture. Instead of roughing it out here in the barbaric wilderness with a man who thinks being a soldier matters.'
'I never forced you to,' Vespasian said quietly.
Flavia took his face between her hands and looked deep into his eyes. 'Just joking, you idiot. You know why I married you. For love – as unfashionable as that may be.'
'But you could have married better.'
'No, I couldn't.' Flavia kissed him. 'One day, you'll be powerful beyond your wildest dreams. I guarantee it.'
'That's reckless talk, Flavia. Please don't. It's too dangerous to even think such things these days.'
Flavia looked deeply into his eyes for a moment and then smiled. 'You're right, of course. I'll be careful what I say. But mark me, history won't remember you merely for commanding a legion. I'll see to that if no-one else will. You really should be more ambitious, or do you still cling to that deep-seated Republican modesty of yours?'
'Maybe.' Vespasian shrugged. 'But right now I think I'll be lucky if I retain command of the Second until the end of the month.'
'Why dear? What's the matter?'
'That incident last night-'
'The fire?'
'The person who caused the fire. The thief. He stole something quite precious – something that Narcissus had trusted me to keep secret. Once Narcissus finds out that it's been stolen I don't think he'll be in much of a mood for any excuses.'
'It's not your fault it was stolen,' Flavia protested. 'Whatever "it" was. He can't replace you just for that.'
'He can. He will. He has to.'
'Why? Whatever can be that important?'
Vespasian allowed himself a small smile. 'That I can't tell you. The orders were quite explicit on that point at least.'
'Were they?' asked Flavia, her face momentarily fl
ushed with anxiety. 'When we join the rest of the army, let me have a word with Narcissus. He was a good friend of mine back at the palace.'
'I'd rather you said nothing to him. Let me continue the investigation here in the Legion. We'll find the thief sooner or later.'
'How is the sentry?'
'Not good. The surgeon says he's lost a lot of blood. He's in no shape to travel and today's journey might just finish him off.'
'Well, why can't we leave him at Durocortorum until he's well enough to follow the Legion – if he lives?'
'We could, with a few men to carry a litter once he's up to it. I had thought of that. But he won't be under the care of the surgeon.'
'Good thing too – if half of what I've heard is true. Look here, why don't I leave Parthenas to care for him? He's a trained physician. I've seen him at work on the other slaves and he seems competent enough.'
'All right,' Vespasian nodded. 'The man would have a far better chance of survival lying still in a bed rather than bouncing along the road in a hospital wagon. Now, if it's not too much trouble, I'd be greatly obliged if you would arrange for your personal effects to be packed immediately.'
'Very well.'
'Oh! One other thing.'
'Yes?'
Vespasian reached inside his tunic and drew out a small silk ribbon. 'I wonder if you've ever seen this before?'
'Let me have a look.' Flavia examined the ribbon a moment before replying. 'This is Lavinia's. Where did you find it?'
'In my command tent, on my couch. Yet there's no reason for her to have been in there and I don't recall seeing it when I left the tent last night. Odd, don't you think?'
'What's odd?'
'Lavinia has no cause to be in my tent. Do you know anything about this?'
'Why should I? It's your tent.'
'She's your maid.' Vespasian looked up, a strange expression on his face – one that alarmed his wife.
'Whatever's the matter?'
'Probably nothing. But I think I might have a word with that girl. There's something funny going on.'
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