by Marilyn Todd
With the setting sun beating on his neck, the Whisperer attuned his ears to the high-pitched whistles that told him the hunting bird was keeping in close contact with its nestlings, and he spat. Traitor, patriot, what difference did it make, it was only a word. A name. And how many times had he changed that since the tribe cast him out? He buffed his ring down the side of his pantaloons. It was a man's identity that mattered. What he held true to his heart.
Those greybeards had sold their own people out, and if the tribes were too weak and too stupid to see what was happening - and sentenced those who spoke up to be shunned - then someone had to stand up for what was right. Someone had to give the tribes their spirit back before it was broken completely. They needed to be shown that the Romans were not overlords to be feared, but flesh and blood, who screamed when their bodies were sluiced with tar and set alight in the night. Who gushed blood when a broadsword hacked off their heads as they slept. Who fell when the slingshot caught them square on the temple.
It had reached the point now, though, where ambushing patrols wasn't enough. Defacing milestones wasn't enough.
Even sabotaging the likes of granaries, wells and bridges wasn't enough. The rot needed to be stopped before it infected the Nation and tranquillity could be restored to the landscape. It wasn't too late to have the water margins ring with the bleating of sheep again, instead of the clatter of hobnail boots.
'You can't reverse progress,' the Chieftains insisted, 'any more than you can make the sun rise in the north.'
Who couldn't? Measureless eyes followed the bird as it glided on unflapping wings. Was it progress that the legions, with their fancy uniforms and sophisticated ways, had turned the women against their own tribes? Fuck, no. Progress didn't produce mongrels through intermarriage that diluted the purity of the Aquitani, and the Chiefs could bleat about the benefits of fresh blood all they liked, the truth was, those half-breeds were vermin. Pests to be exterminated before they bred further, and killing the little bastards was doing the Nation a favour.
Luckily for the Aquitani, enough brave hearts still beat among the tribes to see the truth for what it was, and he nodded in satisfaction, recalling the heat that had fired in the veins of the warriors as they vowed on their oaths to smear their faces with the blood of their enemies and drive the eagle out of this land, ripping up the stones from their roads, tearing down their buildings and giving the riverbanks back to the cattle.
But it wasn't purely the physical aspects that troubled the Whisperer. Under Rome, the thinking had gone soft as well, and one only had to look up there, to the smoke spiralling upwards through the trees, to see the evidence of that degeneration. It was said that the power of the Druids was waning under Rome, now that people no longer turned to them for guidance. Fuck that. It was the power of men that was being eroded - and those bitches on the plateau were living proof.
The lies and the falsehoods he'd fed to the Druids were no more than they deserved. Bloody bitches. The HundredHanded had it coming and that was a fact. High time someone redressed the balance and put women back in their place.
Against a backdrop of the setting sun, the bird whistled and wheeled. Confident, skilful, sure of itself, it surveyed
its territory with unblinking eye and soared without one feather fluttering on its chestnut-brown wings.
'We'll show them!' one of the warriors shouted, rattling the medallions of dead soldiers that hung from his belt. 'We will show these pretenders what the Aquitani are made of!'
'Aye!' cried the others. 'We have weapons, war chariots, horses, siege engines! What are we waiting for, lads?'
But just as Rumour needs an anchor to attach itself to lest it withers away into nothingness and dies, so War needs a commander.
'Patience, my friends,' the Whisperer had counselled. 'Our stocks and supplies are limited reserves. We must use them wisely.'
Food, clothing, bandages, even armour don't last for ever, he'd told them, and a direct assault on Rome would deplete precious reserves in no time.
'But we've set traps—'
'- dug pits—'
'- sharpened spikes—'
'Which we will use carefully and to our advantage,' he'd assured them. 'But to charge down on Rome would only invite disaster. We must fight the enemy on our terms, my friends, and in a way we can win.'
Think of Rome as a beehive, he'd said. United, they work in harmony and the swarm is invincible. But make them angry ...
'How do we do that, though?' the young hotheads demanded. 'How do we make Rome angry enough to make them lose their discipline?'
'Women and children,' he said simply. 'We slaughter their babies, we slaughter their wives, their daughters, we slaughter everyone who's placed themselves under Roman protection, and by the axe of the Thunder God, we cut them down without mercy.'
Grief and fury, outrage and anguish were enough to make anyone's self-control crumble. Especially when those strikes were aimed at the innocent and came totally out of the blue.
Not a traitor. The Whisperer notched a three-feathered arrow into his bow. A patriot.
Without a sound, the eagle plunged to the earth.
Seven
Immersed up to his chin in hot scented water, Marcus Cornelius groaned. Most people go to sleep counting sheep, but due to a distinct lack of woolly ruminants, he'd tried counting bruises instead. Eventually he gave up, partly because there were too many and partly because he was never going to nod off with that thumping great hammer pounding his brains out. So he'd lain awake through the wee small hours, which ought to have been dark but were punishingly bright, wondering which gods he'd offended this time. He made a mental note to placate them all.
Stretched out in the bath, fragrant with myrtle and hyssop, he felt the first twinge of divine forgiveness. Sod's law stated that it would be him, one of the good guys, who was rewarded for saving the Governor's life by being clonked on the head with a footstool and he supposed he should be thankful that the scribe hadn't been armed with a knife. These pen-pushers were more dangerous than they looked.
Attendants materialized in and out of the steam, topping up the bath with hot water and adding extra phials of healing oils. Orbilio thanked them and closed his eyes again. In fairness, yesterday's sorry interlude hadn't been all bad. Between the Governor, his scribes and himself, the would-be assassins had been prevented from escaping and if he was feeling somewhat the worse for wear after that encounter, imagine what it would be like for them. Gauls who worked with Rome to make life safer and more prosperous for their own people were honoured with citizenship, should they choose to accept it. The three men who'd been lugged off to the dungeons hadn't been given that option, and, since they weren't citizens, torture tended to be Rome's preferred method of interrogation. It wasn't necessarily the most effec-
tive way of obtaining information. But in some cases (the attempted assassination of the Governor, for instance) it proved the most satisfying.
Holding a sponge somewhat gingerly to the goose egg on his skull, he reckoned the Governor would probably make political capital out of the attempt on his life. Personally, Orbilio hadn't been convinced that creating a new branch of the Security Police here in Aquitania would serve any real useful purpose, knowing the Governor only set it up in order to make it seem the province was in safe hands from within as well as without.
Orbilio had seen himself as nothing more than a pawn in those politics, which wasn't a problem in the short term, but the squad's success took them both by surprise.
Without the army's bureaucracy getting in the way, crimefighting was free to take a much broader approach, and since prevention was every bit as important as solving, the Governor had also given Orbilio a liberal budget for rewarding informers. One of the more pleasant adjustments, since in Rome he'd tended to pay them from his own pocket! But it was like he'd always said, pay informants well and you get good results in return, and one only had to look at the present situation to see the benefits. Without financial
incentives, it was doubtful that news of this latest uprising would have come to his ears, much less intelligence regarding the sheer number of disenchanted warriors that there were among the various tribes that made up the Aquitani Nation. Instead, thanks to a few overpaid informants, he was well abreast of the Scorpion's activities and—
'Mother of Tarquin!' He jumped, as a woman's figure loomed through the swirls of hot steam. 'This is the men's bath!'
'Constantly nit-picking, Orbilio, that's your trouble.'
'Claudia?"
'Yes, and I know what you're thinking.'
'I doubt that.'
'You thought I was in Rome and behaving myself, but as you can see, I'm here - good grief.' Suddenly a mass of unruly curls were peering over the rim of the bath. 'How many of them jumped you?'
'Forty-two.' Marcus belatedly covered his embarrassment with the sponge he'd been holding to the bump on his head. 'Claudia, do you mind? I'm naked.'
'People in baths usually are, but don't worry. I've seen your wife-pleaser before and, impressive though it is, Marcus, I promise to keep a close rein on my self-control.'
'I could make it a widow-pleaser,' he offered.
'Don't flatter yourself, Orbilio, it's not that impressive.'
'Did you come three hundred miles just to insult me,' he laughed, as she settled herself on the tiles, 'or do you simply enjoy startling me out of my wits?'
'In an ideal world, both, but since time is not on my side, I need your help - and quite frankly, Marcus, that spluttering is not remotely amusing.'
'I rather think that depends whose perspective we're dealing with here.' Claudia? Asking for - remind me again - help? 'Could you pass me a towel, please?'
'Typical. That's all you ever think about, me, me, me.'
When she threw her hands in the air, he caught a whiff of her intense Judaean perfume. Dear god, how he'd missed that smell—
'Now for heaven's sake, Orbilio, will you stop playing games and tell me, are you coming or not?'
Conscious of the reckless jolt in his loins, he thought she had no idea.
'Slow down, will you.' His head was hurting enough. 'Claudia, what exactly is it you want?'
'The Governor said you saved his life.'
'I may have played a small part in—' Wait a moment. 'Why would the Governor be telling you?' The average petitioner waited weeks for an appointment, and even then they were palmed off with a minion.
'Because I introduced myself as your ex-wife, of course.'
Orbilio wondered whether it was too late to change places with the assassins down in the torture chamber.
'And be honest, Marcus, who better to take care of a man who's been battered to a pulp and give him the rest and convalescence that he needs than his deeply repentant ex-wife?'
If only that scribe had hit him harder.
'Why is it I have a feeling that "rest and convalescence" is the one thing I won't be getting?'
'There you go again. Negative, negative, negative, when all I'm asking is a tinksy little favour.'
He drew as deep a breath as his ribs would allow. 'I'm scared to ask, but go on.'
She made herself comfortable on the edge of the bath and traced the dolphin mosaic with her finger. 'You know the Hundred-Handed?'
'The priestesses who communicate silently through signs?' That twinge earlier wasn't divine absolution. It was the gods warning of impending retribution. 'Yes, I know them.'
'Good,' she said, 'because I won't bore you with the details. Suffice to say I'm staying there to investigate the murder of a twelve-year-old novice called Clytie, a case I'm sure will have come to your attention, being identical to a series of murders that took place in Santonum two years previously, even though you weren't in the hot seat back then.'
Similar, he thought. Not identical.
'Have you been sniffing hemp seeds?' he asked, and under the circumstances that wasn't an unreasonable question.
'Orbilio, which part of the phrase "time is not on my side" don't you understand? Do you seriously think I'd risk limp curls and runs in my make-up if this wasn't urgent?'
For the first time, something close to alarm rippled through him.
'Has another girl been killed?'
Claudia shifted position. 'To say the Hundred-Handed lead an unnatural existence is an understatement. They breed their own servants, and I mean that quite literally. They keep men as slaves in a stud up on the hill, they don't let the fathers anywhere near their own children—'
'All societies keep slaves,' he reminded her gently. 'Including our own.'
'Who at least receive an allowance, which is theirs to spend as they see fit, even to the extent of owning their own slaves if they want, or saving up to purchase their freedom!'
'Am I imagining this, or is there more steam rising from you than there is from this water?'
'Marcus, these women take babies away from their mothers to be raised in a commune, brainwashing them from the earliest possible age, and although they're charming, friendly and well intentioned on the surface, I tell you, that College breeds poison.'
'What has this to do with Clytie?' he asked, steering the conversation back on track.
'For one thing, she was killed three months ago on the spring equinox, yet the priestesses don't seem remotely bothered that the killer's still free. In fact, the head of the College dismisses the death as a copycat killing and is perfectly happy to sit back and wait for another victim to die before someone else does her job for her and puts paid to the butchery. While the alternative viewpoint seems to be that this murder was nothing more than an experiment by a young warrior curious to know what it felt like to take a human life and then trusting to providence that the sick bastard's worked it out of his system. Don't pretend to me that that's normal behaviour.'
'Unusual,' he agreed, 'and to our way of thinking it might seem a tad callous, but in their minds, remember, the killing of beasts in the arena is mindless and barbarous, and the sect don't understand it at all.'
'Actually, I don't really understand that bit.'
'Me neither, but we've drifted away from the point. Claudia, the Hundred-Handed live very separate lives from the rest of society. Their philosophies are bound to have mutated over the course of time.'
'Morals. You mean morals, Orbilio, and they haven't mutated, they've bloody well disintegrated.' She wagged her finger at him. 'Something is going on up there, I can smell it. We need to find out what that something is and put a stop to it before anyone else dies.'
'Have you considered the possibility that the priestesses are simply idealists?' he asked. 'That they've become so wrapped up in their hierarchies and titles and worship of trees that they've lost sight of— What do you mean, we?'
'What everyone else means by the word. You and me. Us. Look, do you want a grammar lesson or are you going to put some clothes on and come with me?'
'Where to?' he asked warily.
'There's a slave auction starting on the quay any second. We - that is, you and I, us, both together - have just a few minutes to get down there, and actually you'll be perfect, covered in those lovely fresh bruises.'
'Perfect for what?'
'Isn't it obvious?' she tutted, tossing him a towel. 'To undertake any kind of investigation, you need access, and really, what better excuse for a late addition to the auction block? A strong, handsome young slave who tried to escape, was beaten for his pains but whose master wants rid of the troublemaker? And for heaven's sake, shut your mouth, man. You're reminding me of a goldfish.'
On the small writing tablet beside Claudia's bed, a metal stylus carefully engraved two words in the soft yellow wax.
I know.
Tempting as it was to rifle through the clothes chests and belongings, the author of the note resisted the urge. There was plenty of time yet, and the cross-eyed, blue-eyed dark Egyptian fiend that protected them with its bared fangs and arched back tended to give weight to the argument.
The door closed with b
arely a whisper.
Eight
Declining Fearn's offer to hang around the slave auction, Claudia opted for watching Marcus get snapped up by Dora then returning to the College to investigate Clytie's death. There were several good motives propelling that action, the most obvious being that if Beth was right and this was some sick copycat, it was vital to track him down before he claimed another victim. Conversely, should Clytie have been killed for a reason, the quicker Claudia picked up the spoor before the trail cooled completely, then so much the better. Admittedly, after three months, the spoor would have lost much (if not all) of its scent, but at the back of her mind there was another case to be made for solving this murder and taking the next boat back to Rome.
Dammit, she really must cover her head next time she went out, because the sun was clearly stronger than she had thought. Janus in heaven, of course her heart pounded like a kettledrum when she saw him. What criminal's wouldn't, when reduced to beg favours of the Security Police? And of course her breath would have been coming quick and shallow. In that steam, how could it not? And good gracious, the tightness in her chest was what any young woman would have experienced, faced with that amount of raw naked masculine muscle.
No, no. Definitely time to solve Clytie's murder and bugger off back to Rome, she decided, skipping down the wooden steps towards the caves. Because to feel that level of sympathy for the very man who was intent on stepping into the Senate on the back of her felonies meant heatstroke was deceptively potent. Though now she thought about it, and dammit knowing he'd be a prize asset to the College, she really ought to have hung a higher price tag round
Orbilio's neck. The derisory little sum that she'd pocketed in the end would barely cover her outstanding account at the bloody cobbler's ...
Inside the cave, it was cool but not dark. Lamps inset in niches hacked out of the stone lit the interior as brightly as noon, and the scent of the roses and honeysuckle that decked the entrance mingled with the bunches of healing herbs that hung from the roof and whose fragrance had been released by a light crushing of leaves between fingertips. Claudia helped herself to a ladle of water from the stone basin that was fed by the constant trickle from the rock, and was just about to pour herself a second when she realized that the sound she'd assumed to be part of the spring was actually the sound of weeping.