`Why have you left Silius?’ I asked.
`We quarrelled over ethics.’
`After four years in practice with him, isn’t that a bit late?’
Honorius learned fast. He copied me and held his peace.
Negrinus burst in, eager to set me straight: `Honorius has watched Silius and Paccius combining against our family - particularly against me. He knows it is an injustice. His conscience is aroused.’
`He knows,’ Rubiria Carina told me pointedly, `that my brother will not find anyone else qualified or willing to take on his case.’
`So you will do it?’ I smiled at Honorius. `Highly commendable! And you should make quite a name for yourself…’ I paused. This young man was after the money, just as we were. He must have been badly disappointed to find Falco and Associates were already handling the case. `Sorry to be blunt, but I wonder if Silius deliberately stirred up your sense of outrage, knowing that in court you would be easy meat?’
Now Honorius went pale. If he had not thought of this himself, he managed to disguise the fact. He made out he was mature enough to know all Silius was capable of. `I shall have to prove him wrong, Falco.’
`How?’
`Without being immodest -‘
`Be truthful.’
`I am a decent advocate.’ Somehow he made himself sound very modest.
`Are you? Oh face facts, man! You have attended your principal at some high-profile, highly political pleadings. You have spoken for him sometimes; I saw you in the Metellus corruption case.’ Honorius had been handling minor evidence; he was competent, but the stuff was routine. `I also know this: you are slapdash back in the office, you look to me as if you want to be a playboy, and the worst thing is - if you really came here out of idealism, that is not what we need. Your motive is naive. You’re dangerous. We don’t want a luminous conscience; we need someone to kick balls!’
`Now look, Falco -‘
`No. You listen. You propose taking on some wary old wolves - these are devious, manipulating chancers. You are too inexperienced and you are too straight!’
`There has to be a place for believers in justice,’ Negrinus pleaded with me, as if he had overheard Aulus and Quintus last night.
`Too right! I believe in it myself. That’s why, if you are innocent, I don’t want to see you destroyed by an inadequate defence.’
`That’s insulting,’ Honorius said tightly.
`Well, you insulted me. Falco and Associates have taken on this man. We at least are an established team. You were an apprentice. You sweep in like some high-priced god, offering Negrinus redemption after no research into the evidence -‘
`There is no evidence,’ Honorius retorted, more warmly. `That is precisely what disgusts me. I heard Silius and Paccius both admit they cannot prove that Metellus Negrinus directly took any action against his father. They say he administered hemlock, but they don’t know how or when. They intend to win not with proofs but with arguments.’
I was not surprised. `That’s obvious. Blacken his character, make leering suggestions, and rely on the fact that if he is innocent, he won’t have any idea what really happened - so he can’t fight back. We can all imagine their arguments.’ I took a big breath. `So you defend in the case. You will have to produce better ones.’
`Not me,’ said Honorius. `Us.’
`No.’
`Yes, Falco. I need you. I need you to find out what we can produce in rebuttal. Silius has people working on it constantly. I don’t have his network. I admit it frankly -‘
`And how will you pay me?’
He looked shy. `When we win.’
`If!’ Both Honorius and Negrinus were waiting for my reaction. `I can’t answer you. I shall have to consult my associates.’
`There is no time, Falco.’
`All right.’ I could take decisions. `But we will not work for you.’ Honorius ran a hand through that short hair in exasperation. I cut him off. `Equal status. We’ll work with you. That’s the deal. No fees, but fair shares if we win.’ Before he could argue I went straight into my plan. `Tomorrow you and I will attend the pre-trial. The praetor will set the trial date, allowing time for enquiries. This is the tactic: we let the other side ask for the longest investigation delay they want. We shall not dispute it.’
Honorius leapt up. ‘Falco, it’s customary to -‘
`To cut it short, to hamper the prosecution. Well we need investigation time ourselves. Now when they all think that’s sorted, we’ll throw in a surprise: we shall ask for the case to be heard not in the Senate - to which Negrinus is entitled - but in the murders court.’
Honorius was bright. I was probably right that he was useless, but he could take a point fast. `You mean the full Senate will view me as a jumped-up boy, backed by a low-grade team, people they all despise. But in the special murders court, the judge will be keen to enjoy himself-and Silius and Paccius won’t have trained him to their ways.’
I said nothing for a moment. `Something like that.’
I watched Honorius evaluate my comments. He had stood for too long in the shadow of Silius Italicus and was fretting for more independence. He clearly enjoyed planning and making decisions. That was fine - if his decisions were the right ones. `If Negrinus didn’t kill his father, someone else did - and you intend us to discover who.’ Light dawned. `And in the delay before Birdy comes to trial - we shall go in and prosecute the real killer!’
Rubiria Carina leaned forwards attentively. `But who is it?’
I gazed at her for a moment then stated the obvious: `Well, your sister has been tried for it and acquitted, your brother is to be tried shortly but we say he’s innocent - face it, lady: that only leaves you!’
XXI
IT WAS brutal. There was a shocked silence.
As they all began to react, I held up a hand. Looking from the brother to the sister, I addressed them quietly: `Time to get things straight, please. If you want my team to work with you, you have to trust us and work with us. There are very big unanswered questions. Please stop dodging them. Rubiria Carina, if we were as heartless as Paccius and Silius, then you really would be the next target. You were estranged from your family, and you are known to have made loud accusations against family members at your father’s funeral. Either you tell me what that was about, or I walk.’
Negrinus began to interrupt.
`The same goes for you,’ I snapped. `You make mysterious pronouncements. You clearly keep things back. Now it’s time for honesty.’ I half turned to Honorius. `Don’t you agree?’
Honorius agreed.
`Right.’ I was terse. ‘Honorius and I are going to pop out to use your domestic facilities. You two had better confer. If you decide to co-operate, I want to discuss your family background - and I want full details of your father’s will.’
I jerked my head to Honorius, who meekly followed me from the room.
`Now listen, Honorius -‘
`I thought we were going for a pee?’
`In a house like this it’s useless for a case conference. They will have some damned one-at-a-time latrine.’ I grinned. `Anyway, your previous encounter with Falco and Associates should have taught you to keep your legs crossed.’
Remembering how the two Camilli had trapped him in his office and bullied him into paying up our fee from Silius, Honorius went red. Just thinking about it made him absolutely desperate for relief. I sat on a bench in a corridor unconcernedly, as if ready for a lengthy chat.
`I need -‘
`Colleague, you need to know my thoughts. My information, gleaned today, is that Birdy and his father were on good terms - but they were cash-hungry. Why? Next, my two lads have so far failed to find out where the hemlock - if it existed - was bought. The family’s usual herb supplier denies selling it -‘
`That’s Euphanes?’
`You have a grip on the cast list; good! So my poor juniors will have to tread the streets asking every damn purveyor of pungent greenery if they sold a bunch of hemlock way ba
ck last autumn.’
`You are not hopeful.’
`True.’
`Does it matter who bought it, Falco?’
`Very much. If we are to get Birdy off, it’s no use just crying that he’s a good boy and he never harmed his papa. We have to show who really did it. And this is urgent.’
Honorius was gripped by what I was saying. `But who are we to accuse, Falco?’
`I suggest the mother.’
`Not Carina?’
`No. I was just trying to scare her. Calpurnia Cara did originally hatch the hemlock plan, if Birdy told us right. So Calpurnia is my chief suspect - with the possible connivance of Paccius.’
‘Paccius!’ Honorius looked scared. ‘Paccius conspired to kill his client? You live in a harsh world, Falco.’
`Welcome to it,’ I said gently.
Then, since I was getting desperate myself, I stood up and let him tag along as I searched for the household facilities.
Instead of the normal plank over a pit in an earth-floored cupboard, Carina and Laco had a well-tiled room with a stone throne; it stood over a pit, but the pit was very clean and there was a huge mound of fresh sponges beside the white marble washing bowl. I pointed this out to Honorius. `This is why I don’t suspect Carina. I don’t mean because her house is unusually hygienic. I mean, the woman is damn rich.’
`She doesn’t need her father’s money?’
`No. Supposing there is any left…’ Which I was starting to doubt.
When we returned, Negrinus and Carina looked subdued, but prepared to talk. I told Honorius to take Birdy off somewhere, while I flame-grilled Carina. It was the first time we had had access to her; I intended to be thorough.
`Please don’t worry.’ In fact she seemed unconcerned. She gazed at me with that direct, thoughtful stare. She was sitting upright, hands lying still in her lap. A maid was there to chaperon, but the elderly woman sat at a distance with her eyes cast down. ‘Rubiria Carina, I am sorry we have to do this. I just want to talk to you about your family. Let’s start with your childhood, if you don’t mind. Were you a happy household?’
`Yes.’ If she stayed so monosyllabic, this would be useless. Her husband was off out socialising somewhere; I hoped to finish before he came back to interfere.
`I imagine your mother was a little strict. What was your father like at home?’
Carina now decided to go along with it. `He was a good father. We all liked him.’
`You and your sister were both married young. Were you both happy with your choices?’
`Yes.’ Back to the stone wall. The chaperon was ignoring our discussion; I wondered if she was deaf.
`And your brother? I haven’t talked to him much about this strange situation where he became the second husband of his best friend’s wife.’
`It happens,’ said Carina bluntly.
`I know.’ I waited quietly.
‘Licinius Lutea and my brother were educated together and they served in the same province for their army duty. They had been close friends all their lives. Lutea married first. They had a son. Later, he suffered financial difficulties and Saffia Donata’s father insisted on a divorce.’
I raised my eyebrows. `Hard! That’s a rather old-fashioned idea, isn’t it? Nowadays we tend to believe the parents should not break up happy couples.’
`I only know,’ Carina said slowly, `that Saffia did not argue with her father.’
`Any husband can go through a bad patch… I met Donatus. A frantic old buffer. He worries that his girls’ dowries will be frittered away while in other hands.’
Carina made no comment on my hint about the old buffer’s claim for negligent estate management against her own father. `I think my brother felt sorry for his friend,’ she said. ‘Lutea was afraid he would lose touch with his son, who was then just a baby. My brother agreed to marry Saffia himself-he needed a wife, he was rather a shy person, and he knew Saffia. It would mean Lutea could still see little Lucius often and eventually Lucius could go and live with his father without too much disruption.’
`So Lutea would once have been a frequent visitor to your brother’s home. I gather he and your brother are less close now? And Lutea still seems to be on rather close terms with Saffia?’
Carina knew what I meant. `So he does,’ she spoke drily. But she said no more.
I looked her in the eye. She was a married woman, the mother of three children. She must know the world. `Do you think Lutea and Saffia have been playing around during your brother’s marriage?’
She coloured and looked at her lap. `I have no reason to suspect it.’ She had every reason, I thought.
`Did your brother worry about them?’
`My brother is good-natured and easygoing.’ If it were true that he had been cuckolded, I wondered who had fathered Saffia’s as yet unborn child. Then I even wondered who had really fathered the first child in this second marriage, the two-year-old daughter.
`Some would say your brother is too easily pushed about.’
`Some would say that,’ Carina agreed quietly.
‘Saffia told me you were a nice woman,’ I remarked. `Would you say anything similar about her?’
`I have nothing to say about Saffia Donata,’ said her ex-sister-inlaw. It did not surprise me. Carina was nice. Nice - or else hiding something.
`Let’s talk about your mother now. As I said before, don’t be alarmed. I want to establish some background. Were your parents only ever married to each other?’ A nod of the head. `That’s a rare and beautiful situation nowadays! So you children had a happy upbringing and theirs was a comfortable marriage?’
`Yes.’
`They produced three children as the law encourages -‘ I noticed a flicker of some emotion. Carina stilled it quickly. `You were all born fairly close together, weren’t you? Do I deduce that after your mother had her three babies, deliberate measures may have been taken -‘
Abortion is illegal; contraception discouraged. Carina bristled. `I could not possibly say anything about that, Falco!’
`I apologise. Excuse me, but your father died in “his” bedroom, I understand. Did your mother have her own room?’
`Yes,’ Carina agreed, rather stiffly.
`Plenty of people do,’ I assured her. `But my wife and I find the marital bed a more companionable arrangement, I must say.’ She made no comment, and I could not bring myself to ask what arrangements she and Laco preferred. `You have a different outlook from your parents. Your mother insisted Saffia had her daughter put to a wetnurse, I’m told. Did you farm out your own children?’
`No.’ Again I saw a fleeting expression I could not place. Perhaps Carina, on the surface so composed, was uneasy about admitting she had spurned Calpurnia’s strict childcare advice.
`Dare I ask, is your independent outlook why you have a reputation for being somewhat estranged from your family?’
`I am on perfectly good terms with my family,’ Carina declared.
`Oh?’ I toughened up. `I heard that there had been trouble, that your husband had to put his foot down over interference - that you yourself refused to attend your father’s farewell meal, and that you made an outburst at his funeral accusing your relations of killing him.’
Panic struck her. `I don’t want to talk to you any more!’
`Well are my facts right?’
`Yes. But you don’t understand -‘
`Tell me then.’
`There is nothing to say.’
`When your father had announced he would commit suicide, why didn’t you want to see him?’ She was silent. `Do you regret that now?’
A tear did start lurking. `It was not like that, Falco. I never refused to attend that lunch; I was not invited. I knew nothing of the discussions. Juliana had told me Papa had decided against suicide - and I even thought my brother was away.’
`So you were estranged?’
`No, they all thought it was easier…’ She was trying to rationalise. She wanted to excuse them for leaving her out.<
br />
`So does this explain your accusations at the funeral? You felt you had been fed the wrong story -‘
`I was upset. I made a mistake.’
`Not entirely - if it turns out that somebody did kill your father.’
`Nobody in my family.’
`You changed your mind about that?’
`I had a long talk with my brother. He explained -‘ She paused. `Things I had not known before.’
`Your brother told you his story and you accepted that your father’s death came from outside the family? So who did it?’ ‘I can’t say. You must deal with it.’
`You are not helping.’
`This is a nightmare.’ Rubiria Carina looked at me straight. She spoke like a woman who was being quite honest. Women who are lying always know just how to do that. ‘Falco, I wish it would all go away. I want us to know serenity again. I want to hear no more of it.’
`But your brother is accused of parricide,’ I reminded her. She was clearly under enormous strain and I feared she would break down.
`That is so hard,’ Carina murmured bitterly. `After all that we have suffered. After all he has to live with. It is so unfair on him.’
Her feelings were deep and explained why she had now given refuge to Negrinus at her home. Yet somehow this was not what I had expected her to say. She meant something else; I was missing it, I sensed it.
I asked Carina about her father’s will. When she fell back on pretending she was only a woman and unfamiliar with family finances, I dropped the conversation, collected Honorius, and went home.
Honorius had learned little new from Birdy. Still, I expected that.
The young lawyer was not entirely useless. `I asked who holds the copy of the will. This may, or may not, surprise you, Falco. It is with Paccius Africanus.’
I was surprised - but I was not going to show Honorius that.
`Don’t tell me -‘ Informers of the Paccius and Silius type are infamous for chasing legacies. ‘Paccius has had himself made the main heir!’
Lindsey Davis - Falco 15 - The Accusers Page 12