by Marilyn Todd
He had wanted a reason to abandon the Roll of Honour, hadn't he? Well, he'd certainly got one now! Wiping his mouth, he peered again into the cavity.
At the human skeleton walled up inside his plaster.
Chapter Seven
The old hag and her granddaughter pushed their way through the crowd. 'Alms,' the old woman croaked. 'Alms for a poor starving widow.'
'Sod off,' said the fishmonger.
'Get lost,' snapped the basket weaver.
'We don't want your sort round here,' growled the moneychangers, goldsmiths and bards.
Bent-backed and with her moth-eaten shawl low over her face, the old crone shuffled on down the street, her stick clacking over the cobblestones. 'Alms,' she cried. 'Alms for a blind, starving widow.'
'Piss off,' the shopkeepers jeered.
And so the poor old dame was bulldozed further and further down the hill, every man, woman and child repelled as much by the sewn-down eye socket as the rags which hung limp on her body.
'Get out of here, you old hag!'
'You're putting my customers off, move along!'
Finally there was nowhere else to go. No one left to turn to. Exhausted by the heat and the jostling, the constant hammering of wheelwrights and the whirr of carpenters' drills, the sorry pair turned into the wooded grove protected by the sprites of the spring.
'I don't see why you had to lug me along!'
'Want doesn't come into it,' Claudia snapped. 'You owe me some answers, and you can start by giving your name.' 'They call me Flea.'
Don't ask, Claudia. Just don't ask.
'Dunno why you had to throw me in the bloody bath first, either.' Flea sniffed. 'Scrubbed up, I look like a bleeding girl.'
'I hate to be the one who breaks the bad news,' Claudia replied, 'but Flea, you are a girl.' Already, the shackles keeping them together were beginning to chafe. And that damned eye patch was itching like hell!
'Yeah, well I live on the streets, remember? As long as they believe I'm another bloke, I'm safe.'
'Really?' The old woman jerked her granddaughter against a sycamore trunk. 'Next time you're nabbed, you imagine it'll be another woman who accidentally exposes your breasts down some dark, lonely lane?'
'I can handle trouble.'
Claudia thought of the knife, and wondered whether Flea was deluding herself or whether this was merely bluster. 'All right. This man, whose purse-strings you've just cut. You think he'll let you go with a stern word of caution once your bountiful secrets are in the open? Grow up, Flea! We're talking rape!' A foul, degrading, painful violation, which will leave you scarred inside and out - trust me, girl, I know. 'Or do you imagine boys have bouncy bits on their chests, too?'
'I bandage 'em flat,' Flea retorted. 'I ain't bloody stupid.'
'Anyone who steals for a living is stupid - and spare me the hard-done-by expression, please. Mine wasn't the first bangle you purloined.'
'Ain't nothing wrong with thieving. I don't take from those what can't afford it, and it beats whoring any day.'
'There are alternative professions.'
'Not where I come from.' Flea sneered. 'You see 'em every day - pimps, ponces - prowling round the gutters in search of fresh brothelmeat to hawk. Well, you won't catch me selling me body to some greasy Sarmatian or letting some filthy pervert use me as his experiment!'
'And pretty boys are of no interest to these pimps?'
Flea's eyes narrowed suspiciously. 'You been there, have yer?' Her jaw dropped. The ghetto leave traces for those
who know where to look. 'You have! You bloody have, an' all!'
'Me?' Claudia stuck out her tongue. 'My dear child, the imprint's still visible from the good old silver spoon.'
Flea's reply was nothing if not succinct.
The Camensis was quiet in the postprandial heat, only the odd sunbather, two slaves walking their masters' dogs, a blacksmith snatching a late lunch. Down by the spring, children watched by a laughing nursemaid squealed and splashed naked in the water margins, throwing bulrush javelins, while a middle-aged caulker, still in his pitch-covered apron, sobbed his heart out against the side wall of the shrine. A dearth, however, of young bucks cavorting with strumpets.
'You just leave me alone, will ya.' Flea wriggled and squirmed, but the manacles refused to slide past her wrist. 'Mind yer own bleeding business for a change.'
'Very well.' The old woman pointed a shaky stick to the shade of an oak. 'Let's sit there and talk about my business. One. You delivered the ransom note to Julia's house. Two—'
'I explained that, right? Some geezer slipped me twenty-five sesterces—'
'A chap you'd never seen before. Yes, you said. And when Junius ran you to ground, how strange you didn't have them on you, or stashed away in that rat-hole you call home.'
Flea side-stepped a pile of steaming horse manure. 'I told you that, as well. I'd spent 'em.'
'On what? Fancy clothes and fripperies? An alabaster lamp? A feather mattress?' The girl was lying through her pretty straight white teeth. 'Then, of course, you ran away.' Not just scampered down the street, either. This wretch flew off as though her heels were on fire!
'So? The bloke who paid me said, hand over that note and scarper. So I scarpered.'
'Olympic athletes rarely find that pace.'
'Hey,' Flea whined. 'I'd have told you if I knew the geezer - honest. Same as I don't know nothing about no kidnap, either.'
Ah, but you do, my parasitic friend. You know much more than you're letting on. What remains to be established, however, is just how much you're aware of, because it's possible someone is using you without you realising it. Unfortunately, the trouble with streetwise kids like Flea is that their trust can't be hurried. Like hunting tigers in the jungle, it requires patience, bait and cunning before you can to lure them into an admission. Interrogating Flea would not be simple. Or quick!
'Suppose the bloke what paid me comes to collect the ransom and sees me sitting here?' Flea tipped her head on one side. 'He'll think I'm a nark, my life won't be worth shit.'
Sorry, love. You haven't got the hang of manipulating people, have you? Keep trying, though. You're learning every day.
'Since you didn't recognise your own reflection after the bath,' Claudia said pointedly, 'it's doubtful your benefactor would.'
Amazing what a drop or two of water can achieve. Matted straw had been converted into burnished tawny tresses, ingrained grime had given way to clear, soft skin - although Flea's reaction had been blunt to say the least. She'd hurled a marble bust into the mirror!
Dammit, what was Junius playing at? Bent over her walking stick and dragging an unwilling Flea alongside, Claudia began to criss-cross the Camensis in a systematic sweep. That old man snoring open-mouthed under a poplar. Could that be one of the gang in disguise? A dribble of spittle oozing down his beard quickly ruled him out. What about those two scribes, comparing notes on the steps of the shrine?
'Alms,' she squawked, shuffling closer. 'Arms for a blind widder woman.'
'What? Oh. Here. Take this.' One of them tossed her a pie. 'Now should that be spelled with a 9 or a 9?'
'Phi orpsi! Haven't a clue.' His companion frowned, and Claudia realised they were genuinely having trouble translating their Latin into Greek. The grief of the caulker could not possibly be an act, the man was distraught, and most of the
other visitors to this quiet grove were drifting away as new ones arrived to take their place. But that's what it was, the Camensis. A crossroads, a place for passing through. Linger for a moment, take a minute to relax, then on with whatever business you were concerned with. Had Junius seen something? Someone he recognised?
'Shit!'
She'd never thought to check behind the statue! Suppose the ransom had been collected shortly after being placed in position? Junius might already be hot on their trail! Shambling sideways up the steps like a crab, the old woman's good eye scanned the park. No one seemed interested. No one was watching the beggars.
'You gonna ea
t this?' Flea waved the scribe's pie in front of Claudia's nose.
'No, but the sparrows - what on earth are you doing?' The girl was stuffing it inside her tunic!
'In my line, you never know where yer next meal's coming from,' Flea explained. 'It'll keep all right down here.'
Claudia thought of the mountain of food her steward reported the girl had packed away, eating like there was no tomorrow. How unfair that Flea remained as thin as a reed!
The shrine to the nymphs who presided over this gentle and inviting grove was circular and built of anio, a dull-brown building stone, which had the distinction of being durable and solid, but was ugly in the extreme. Clearly, though, the sprites had taken no offence. Perhaps they'd been mollified by the green marble flooring, the waist-high criss-cross fence which ran round the grove, or the fact that their likenesses had been captured in dazzling bronze. Or maybe they simply appreciated the fact that the shrine had been left open to the elements with no roof to cage them in and revelled in the freedom that it gave them. Whatever the reason, it worked. Finches twittered in the branches of the oaks, birches and almonds. Dog roses and yellow honeysuckle scrambled over trellises and pillars, much to the delight of droning bees. In winter, yellow aconites and hellebores flourished round the edges of the watercourse,
but today, in high summer, dark purple helmets of monkshoods nodded alongside angelica, hedge hyssop and the great golden globes of the trollius.
Claudia glanced at the scribes, still unable to tell their deltas from their kappas, and thought at least we know where their pi has gone. Inside Flea's ragged frock! Finally, the two young men decided they couldn't give an iota for their alphas and, with a demonstrative snap of hinged notebooks, took themselves off to the baths. Even the caulker, his face blotchy, his eyes red and puffy, appeared to be over the worst and was now staggering off down the path - Claudia suspected to make a vigil over his dead child. Little else reduced a man to such despair.
She and Flea were alone in the shrine.
Slipping behind the right-hand statue, Claudia was surprised to see the chest still in place. Perhaps, though, they'd emptied the contents? A tiny key appeared from the depths of her rags and in seconds the padlock sprung open.
'Holy moly, look at that!' Flea's eyes jumped out of their sockets and bounced off the green-veined marble floor.
Golden coins winked in the sunlight like fish in the ocean. Quickly Claudia snapped the lid shut. Damn. She locked the chest. What the hell was Junius playing at? Why wasn't he here, watching the drop? She pulled off the eyepatch - a piece of pigskin marked with streaks of red dye to resemble stitches - and rubbed at her eyelid where the resin had held it in place. There was no reason, at least none she could think of, why her bodyguard weren't here, all four of them, watching and waiting and keeping close tabs. Junius knew where to come, for gods' sake. He'd put the wretched ransom chest in place! What had happened? What possible occurrence could have lured four big, strong lads away from their surveillance?
'How much is in there?' Flea's jaw was hitting her knees.
'Come along.' The old crone pulled her veil over her forehead and, patting the central nymph for good luck, limped off down the steps. They'd lingered long enough, she thought. Any
longer will only draw attention, the gang might be watching covertly, who knows.
'It's gotta be a million.'
Leaning heavily on her granddaughter and scratching at her itchy woollen rags, the old woman shambled over to the spring. Bright Aegean blue to reflect the summer sky, bubbles coiled their way to the surface, making ripples like raindrops on a dewpond. She positioned herself on a log in the shade, resting on her stick, but only two young children approached the wretched shrine, and then only to poke fun at the statue with a patch over one eye.
'I've never seen so much flaming money,' Flea was saying. 'I can't hardly believe it. All that gold!'
Claudia continued to ignore her.
The afternoon wore on.
Come on, Junius. What's keeping you? I should have arrived earlier, she told herself. I shouldn't have placed the onus on him. Dammit, Flea, this is your fault! If you hadn't escaped and run me halfway round Rome, I wouldn't have been behind schedule in the first place. Claudia's thoughts turned to the ransom demand. Two thousand gold pieces indeed! Where the hell did the kidnappers imagine Julia and Marcellus were going to lay their hands on a sum like that at short notice? For that matter, how was she? It had taken some doing, filling that ransom chest!
Come on, come on, where the hell are you? Time flipped back a couple of hours to Junius, standing in her atrium resplendent in a toga, his fingers dripping rings and his hair oiled slick. The sight of him had made her feel as though the floor had been ripped from under her. Time had become suspended.
'Borrow my husband's stuff,' she had said. 'Help yourself, it's still in the cellar,' and he had.
So much so that, when she saw him, just for an instant, it could have been Gaius standing in the hallway . . . Something had pricked inside her, misting up her eyes. Overweight and overbearing, Gaius had taken Claudia as the ultimate status
symbol, a trophy to be wheeled out at important functions, look-at-me-I'm-not-just-rich-I'm-lucky. She, in turn, had married him for money. They'd each struck a deal, no more than that, and throughout the four years of the marriage, both had stuck fast to their bargain. (All right, if you're going to be pernickety, maybe Claudia had stretched the rules from time to time, but who the hell counts gambling, adultery and debt?) The point was, it had worked. Then one day he was gone. Snap. As fast as that. Alive one minute, laid out upon his bier the next.
But Junius was no ageing lardball and the moment quickly passed. Time - and its urgency - slammed her back to the present and she'd dispatched him to the Camensis, after which she'd changed into these smelly rags and rubbed some resin on to the pigskin patch before positioning it over her eye. When yells from the bath room indicated the battle against grime had resulted in a home win, she'd grabbed the newly scrubbed parasite and made her way to the Camensis. Later than she would have wished, but with four big burly fellows keeping watch, that shouldn't have been a problem.
The smell of rodents began to tickle in her nostrils. Claudia had already suspected that Flea was a pawn in a very deadly game, and now it looked as though Junius had been lured away, as well. But the young Gaul was no fool. He'd be on his guard.
Dammit, the run-around is an integral part of every kidnapper's pattern, a reminder of just who's in charge here. More often than not, this was every bit as important as the money. Was it more important? Supposing they'd brought Flavia along to Camensis as bait? Would Junius have rushed over? Tried to free her? Claudia's imagination ran riot.
Two more hours passed as the old woman and her reluctant granddaughter moved round the park, making garlands here, snoozing there, gathering armfuls of fern for their bedding that night. Any fresh developments and someone would have fetched a message. Which they didn't. What the hell was going on?
'Oi! Clear off!'
'Yeah! Sling yer hooks, yer plague-ridden bags!'
Claudia's beggarwoman act had finally reached saturation point and, when the crowd began hurling rocks at her, she reasoned that this was indeed an appropriate time for hooks to be slung.
In fact, no one ever recalled seeing an old woman sprint so fast.
Chapter Eight
The Cradle of Ra rocked with the gentle rhythm of the breeze. Poplar trees shivered with pleasure as the hot, sticky wind played about their branches while the broader, flatter leaves of limes flapped like thin green hands, as though shooing the zephyr on its way across the valley. Far below the Mount of Osiris, goats clustered under the shade of a squat umbrella pine as workers in soft, wide-brimmed hats swished at the hay with long twin-handled scythes and piled it into mounds. Sleds fetched in carrots, peas and cabbages from outlying fields, also cherries, plums and pears. The sunlight caught a busy pitchfork here, a pruning knife there, the flash of an ankle
t or ring. Goosegrass was mercilessly winkled out with hoes, beehives inspected, an ox was being trained to the yoke.
Sitting on the heart-shaped rock high above the valley, the man, stark naked despite the searing sun, watched over it all. Distant bleats floated up from time to time, the occasional laugh, a honk of protest from the ox, a verse or two of communal singing from the men who swung the scythes. Bees droned around the thistles and the thyme, a lonely whitethroat trilled out its liquid melody and a flock of tiny iridescent purple butterflies explored the tops of oak and ash.
This, thought the man, is my territory and its beauty is everlasting.
He lay back upon the scorching rock, folding his hands underneath his head, and gritted his teeth against the burning on his skin. Endurance and the everlasting, the two went hand in hand. Without the former, the latter could not be attained
and, if nothing else, the man was determined upon the course of everlasting life. He alone possessed the secret. He alone could win the battle against Death - against the serpent who lay in wait in the void which lies beyond the west - for he was the incarnation of the Dark Destroyer, Seth, and you dismiss the Dark One at your peril.
The Cradle of Ra! The very thought was laughable, the dwelling place of the Ten True Gods, my arse. The man sprang to his feet, fixing his gaze on the temple doors. They were closed now, as they closed every afternoon, once the morning ceremonies were concluded and those who wished to petition the sun god had finished their entreaties. Ten of them, indeed! The Dark One pictured them in their orderly little line, each cloaked to the ground in swirling black or silver, each masked by the deity they represented, and yet what were they? Nothing more than animals - the cow, the cat, the falcon, the crocodile, the jackal, the cobra, the vulture and the ibis plus those two human gods, Isis and Osiris. Ignorant and stupid, had they learned nothing? Could they not see what was in front of them?
'Oh, yes,' he whispered to the breeze. 'Ignore the Master of the Powers of Darkness at your peril.'
They had neglected him. In their arrogance, they had omitted Seth from their so-called Holy Council and yet had the temerity to call themselves the Ten True Gods. When there should be eleven at the table.