Solid Citizens
Page 1
Table of Contents
Cover
Previous Titles in the Marcus Corvinus series by David Wishart
Title Page
Copyright
Map
Dramatis personae
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Author’s Note
Previous Titles in the Marcus Corvinus series by David Wishart
OVID
GERMANICUS
THE LYDIAN BAKER
SEJANUS
OLD BONES
LAST RITES
WHITE MURDER
A VOTE FOR MURDER
PARTHIAN SHOT
FOOD FOR THE FISHES
IN AT THE DEATH
ILLEGALLY DEAD
BODIES POLITIC
NO CAUSE FOR CONCERN
SOLID CITIZENS *
* available from Severn House
SOLID CITIZENS
David Wishart
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain and the USA 2013 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
9–15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.
eBook edition first published in 2013 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited.
Copyright © 2013 by David Wishart
The right of David Wishart to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Wishart, David, 1952– author.
Solid citizens. – (A Marcus Corvinus mystery ; 14)
1. Corvinus, Marcus (Fictitious character)–Fiction.
2. Murder–Investigation–Fiction. 3. Rome–History–
Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D.–Fiction. 4. Detective and
mystery stories.
I. Title II. Series
823.9’2-dc23
ISBN-13: 978-1-78029-054-6 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-454-6 (epub)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
Dramatis personae
Only the names of characters appearing or referred to more than once are given.
Castrimoenium
Bathyllus: Corvinus’s major-domo
Marilla: Corvinus’s adopted daughter
Clarus, Cornelius: Marilla’s husband
Lupercus: Clarus and Marilla’s major-domo
Perilla, Rufia: Corvinus’s wife
Priscus, Titus Helvius: Corvinus’s stepfather
Vipsania: Corvinus’s mother
Phormio: Vipsania’s chef
Bovillae and elsewhere
Andromeda, Opilia: owner of the Bovillan brothel
Anthus: Quintus Caesius’s major-domo
Baebius, Quintus: an antiques collector
Caesius, Lucius: the murdered man’s brother
Caesius, Quintus: the murdered man, Bovillan censor-elect. His wife (now dead) was Vatinia and his father (also dead) was Marcus Caesius
Canidius, Sextus: the current quaestor
Carillus: head slave in the Bovillan brothel
Decimus: Manlius’s rod man
Dossenus: a mentally-defective vagrant
Garganius, Sextus: a former night-watchman
Libanius, Quintus: a Castrimoenian senator
Lydia: a prostitute
Manlius, Marcus: one of the current aediles
Mettius, Aulus: Quintus Caesius’s nephew
Nausiphanes: an elderly freedman
Nerva, Publius Silius: a Bovillan senator
Novius, Publius: a lawyer
Opilia Lucinda: brothel owner in Tibur; Andromeda’s former mistress
Roscius, Quintus: a farmer
Ulpius, Marcus: a carter
Vatinia Secunda: Mettius’s mother
The story is set during the first half of December AD39.
ONE
I like the Winter Festival.
Oh yeah, sure, it can be a complete pain in the rectum, and it’s really a time for the bought help. Still, there isn’t much to beat the simple pleasure of coming downstairs on that first Winter Festival morning, particularly if it’s cold and crisp and early, and seeing them all lined up waiting for their candles and dolls and little packets of holiday money, their innocent faces bright with the prospect of a whole five days’ skiving off work, rubbishing the master, stuffing themselves until they’re sick with rich food in the best dining room and generally behaving like a pig’s backside with total impunity. Or at least technically: any slave stupid enough to go over the top by, say, pissing in the ornamental pool or trying it on with the mistress in the linen cupboard deserves all he gets – even if he can’t be given it until after the party’s over for another year. Rome might let her hair down on occasion, but you don’t mess with her.
So there we were, in the lead-up to the Winter Festival, tucked away in the Alban Hills, visiting our adopted daughter Marilla and her new husband Clarus at what had been, the year before, Perilla’s Aunt Marcia’s villa outside Castrimoenium. Me, I’m a city boy, myself, but Castrimoenium – or the villa, rather – is special. Courtesy aunt or not (she and Perilla weren’t directly related), Marcia and her husband Fabius Maximus had been practically the only family she’d had, and when Maximus died just before the Ovid business that first brought me and the lady together, Marcia had sold up and moved out of Rome, to what until now had been a holiday property. Since we’d been married, Perilla and I had been coming through to stay pretty regularly, at least once or twice a year. For all she was a damn-your-eyes straight-down-the-line old-style blue-blooded aristocrat I’d had a lot of respect for old Marcia. Then Marilla had appeared and almost immediately moved in for keeps. It’d suited them both: Marcia had no family herself, at least none living, while Marilla with her penchant for collecting lame-duck animals – particularly the bloody-minded, eccentric or just plain weird ones – had never been happy in Rome. Besides, the city had painful memories. Then there was Clarus, the local doctor’s son, and that was that. When Marcia had died she’d left them the villa – lock, stock and menagerie.
Mind you, it wasn’t all sweetness and light. We were expecting Mother and her older-than-time-itself husband Priscus, the antiquarian’s antiquarian, in a few days. Fortunately, she’d be leaving her serial-poisoner chef Phormio behind in Rome, just as we’d left Meton. Not Bathyllus, though: he
’d always had a soft spot for Marilla, and I couldn’t do that to the little guy, not at Winter Festival time. Meton, now … well, Meton was different; being in Castrimoenium did something to his already-warped brain. After the business with Dassa the oenophilic sheep and his more recent celebrity chef scam, I wasn’t risking letting that scheming bastard anywhere near the place.
It had been a quiet morning, for me, at least, which suited me fine. Perilla and Marilla were out with the hellhound Placida, terrorizing the local wild boar population plus any stray wolf silly enough to get in the way – or at least Placida was – while Clarus made his rounds: his father’s eyesight had deteriorated badly these past few months, and Clarus was gradually taking over the practice. I was stretched out on one of the atrium couches, with half a jug of more-than-decent Alban on the side table, and was just giving myself a top-up when Lupercus came in. Lupercus was Clarus and Marilla’s major-domo, the replacement for old Laertes who’d been given his freedom in Marcia’s will and had gone off to the fleshpots of Baiae to live with his sister. Not a bad lad, Lupercus, albeit – in the arch-conservative Bathyllus’s view, anyway – on the far-too-young and over-sassy side for the job. He and the little guy seemed to be getting along fine. Just about. If you could call pointedly ignoring each other’s existence getting along. Still, there’d been no blood spilled so far, which by my reckoning was a definite plus.
Taking Bathyllus aside just before we’d left home and warning him that I’d shove his feather duster where the sun didn’t shine if there were trouble might have helped, mind. Never discount the power of intimidation.
‘Publius Silius Nerva to see you, sir,’ Lupercus said.
I sat up. ‘Who?’
‘The senator, sir. From Bovillae. He said to mention a connection with Quintus Libanius?’
Oh. Right. Fuzz-face Libanius I knew, the only non-Greek I’d ever met with a beard you could hide a badger in, and First Speaker of the Castrimoenian Senate. The last time I’d seen him he’d been trying not to throw up over a corpse.
‘So what’s it about, pal?’ I said.
He shrugged; something that, if Bathyllus had seen it, would’ve had the little guy tearing his hair. If he had any, that is, which he doesn’t. ‘I don’t know, sir. But he says it’s important.’
I sighed; there went the quiet morning. And I didn’t like the mention of Libanius much, either.
‘OK,’ I said. ‘Wheel him in.’
Lupercus did. Nerva was a little tubby guy impeccably dressed in a broad-striped mantle that looked like it’d come from one of the best shops in Rome. Which made sense, because the Silii are one of the top Roman families. Bovillan senator he might be, but I’d guess he was one of the honorary appointees, a local only by residence who’d been drafted in because he’d held office in Rome itself.
‘Ah, Corvinus, glad you could see me,’ he said. ‘Enjoying your holiday?’
‘Yeah.’ Up to now I had been, anyway. ‘Take a couch. You like a cup of wine?’
‘It’s a little early for me, thank you.’ He lay down. ‘Do carry on yourself, though. Quintus Libanius sends his regards.’
I took a sip of the Alban. I was sorely puzzled: something was definitely not right here. Oh, sure, Bovillae’s only four or five miles away, the other side of the Appian Road, but you didn’t get one of their senators dropping in on an out-of-the-way villa just to pass the time with a visiting stranger, particularly a top-notcher from the very crest of the social tree like Silius Nerva. ‘So,’ I said. ‘What can I do for you?’
He cleared his throat. ‘It’s, ah, a little embarrassing.’
‘Yeah? In what way?’
‘There is …’ He hesitated and began again. ‘Not to beat about the bush, my dear fellow, we in the Bovillan Senate are faced with what amounts to a rather unfortunate and sensitive problem at present. I happened to be, ah, discussing this over dinner with Libanius yesterday evening and he mentioned your name, plus the fact that you were currently visiting. He suggested that since you have a certain amount of experience in these matters it might be worth the senate’s while to contact you.’
Uh-oh. I was getting a very bad feeling about this. Men of Nerva’s standing and background are used to fixing you with their eye and telling you straight out what they want you to do for them. They don’t expect any arguments or backchat, either. What they don’t do is what Nerva was doing here: hum and haw and go round as many bloody houses as would make up a substantial city block in the process. Evidently a small nudge was called for or we wouldn’t cut to the chase this side of the festival.
‘Uh … I don’t want to hurry you, pal,’ I said. ‘But do you think you could be just a tad more explicit?’ Before we all died of old age and boredom.
‘I’m sorry, Corvinus. Quite right, quite right.’ He cleared his throat again. ‘To be brief, Libanius told me about that terrible business involving Lucius Hostilius last year here in Castrimoenium and how good you’d been in, ah, bringing things on behalf of the Castrimoenian Senate to a satisfactory conclusion. He thought you might be able to help us in a similar way.’
Gods! Well, one of us had to spell it out, and from the looks of things it wasn’t going to be mealy mouthed Nerva here.
‘You mean there’s been another murder,’ I said.
He winced like a dowager confronted by a dirty picture. ‘Ah … not to put too fine a point on it,’ he said. ‘Yes. Yes, there has. That is indeed the case.’
Hell. Oh, I knew it had to be something like that – Libanius wouldn’t have sent the guy to me if he’d only wanted a recommendation for a good wine to serve with duck – but just before the Winter Festival, for the gods’ sake! Like he’d said, I was on holiday here. Perilla would definitely be unchuffed, for a start. The lady gets really, really serious about murders at holiday times.
Even so, I was still slightly puzzled. Murders aren’t nice, but they can happen even in the most well-regulated families. It still really didn’t account for the guy’s embarrassment.
‘OK,’ I said. ‘Who was the victim?’
‘Our censor-elect. Quintus Caesius.’
Well, that explained the high-powered emissary, anyway. A single provincial censor is appointed every five years in place of the town’s normal two chief magistrates, taking up office on the first of January. Like his Roman equivalent, his prime job is to revise the list of senators and citizens, cutting out the dead wood. But it doesn’t stop there: he’s also responsible for the settlement of the community’s finances for the next five-year period, which means he has the power to choose new contractors to handle the sources of that finance, such as publicly owned land, commercial businesses and the like, and to terminate any existing contracts, as he sees fit. The operative phrase being that last one. Oh, sure, technically any decisions he makes are only recommendations and so subject to full senatorial approval, but human nature being what it is they usually go through on the nod. Plus, because for that particular year he’s on his own at the top, with no equally empowered colleague to queer his pitch if he has a mind to, given that said senate has a hundred members who are generally more interested in getting through the day’s agenda and home for a cup of wine and an early dinner than actually thinking of the implications of what they’re voting for, so long as he’s careful and a good talker he can do whatever he likes.
All of which means that a censor is a pretty big cheese. Ipso facto, he also has to be a pillar of honesty, morality, sobriety and rectitude, the best exponent the community can show of traditional provincial family values. At least, that’s the theory. Don’t laugh. It could technically happen, although the chances of these qualities coinciding with an interest in politics is well within the flying-pigs category.
‘So how did he die?’ I said.
Nerva cleared his throat yet again and swallowed before he answered. His expression had gone wooden. ‘He was, ah, found with his head beaten in at the back entrance to the local brothel.’
I stared at him. The
silence lengthened. Finally, I said: ‘Ah.’
I could see now why he’d had difficulty getting down to the nitty-gritty: now the dreadful truth was out, the guy was literally glowing with embarrassment, so brightly you could’ve used his face to roast Winter Festival chestnuts.
‘“Ah” is right!’ he said. ‘It’s appalling!’
It had its funny side, too, mind, but Nerva wouldn’t’ve seen that, so I kept my face straight.
‘So was he actually on his way in or out when it happened?’ I said.
He pursed his lips primly. ‘I don’t know.’
‘Oh, come on, pal! You must know that, at least!’
He gave me a look that would’ve curdled milk. ‘I don’t know, Corvinus,’ he said slowly, ‘because I haven’t asked. Nor do I intend to. My task – with the full approval of the Bovillan Senate, naturally – is simply to put the matter completely into your capable hands, if you’ll accept the charge. As an outsider …’ He stopped.
Yeah, well, I could see where he was heading. If there was dirt to be dug – and there undoubtedly would be – then the solid citizens of Bovillae would rather not know the details; while if a visitor from Rome were to do the digging none of them need be personally, embarrassingly, involved in the investigation. Nevertheless, the guy wasn’t getting off that easily.
‘OK,’ I said. ‘Let’s get some facts at least, things that you do know. First of all: when did this happen?’
‘Two nights ago. At least, the body was found yesterday morning, as I said in the alleyway behind the brothel.’
‘He couldn’t’ve just been passing the door?’
‘No. The alley is a dead end. And all the other buildings are shops and storehouses. They would have been – in fact, were – locked and shuttered for the night.’
‘The brothel owner tell you anything useful? About exact timing, for example?’ He just looked at me. Yeah. Right. Got it. ‘OK, forget that. I can find it out for myself. Next. Who do you think might’ve done it?’
‘How should I know?’ he snapped. ‘That’s your job to find out, surely.’