‘And Lucius Caesius knew this?’
‘That I’m afraid I can’t tell you. You would have to ask him.’
There was something puzzling me. ‘His major-domo, Anthus. He said his master had freed him.’
‘Indeed he did. But the freeing was done not in accordance with a will but as the result of a Declaration of Intent.’
‘Which is?’
‘Exactly what it says. Fortunately for Anthus, it happens that several years ago Quintus promised him, in my personal hearing and in the presence of other witnesses, that when the time came he would have his freedom. I was delighted to be able to confirm this and so make it legally binding, as no doubt Quintus would have wanted.’
‘The two brothers had nothing to do with each other, as I understand. And it went a long way back. In fact, the estrangement was originally between Lucius and his father.’
‘Who told you that?’ Novius said sharply. I said nothing. ‘Well, it’s true enough, as it happens, and no secret. Lucius was always a wastrel. Old Caesius – Marcus Caesius, that was, the father – was extremely patient with him for many years after he’d put on his adult mantle, but finally he gave him up. Oh, he didn’t actually go as far as disinheriting him, or not at that stage, but he did make it clear that he wanted no further contact. The feeling, I should say, was quite mutual, and from the time Lucius was about twenty-five until his father’s death they had no connection barring the financial one.’
‘Financial?’
‘Yes. I acted as the intermediary myself, as it happens. Marcus Caesius made his son a small allowance, payable each month. After he died, Quintus continued it.’
‘Hang on, pal,’ I said. ‘I’m no lawyer, sure, but even I can see an inconsistency there. If the father didn’t disinherit Lucius then why was it necessary? Why didn’t Lucius get half the property in his own right when the old man died?’
‘I did say “at that stage”, Corvinus. Old Caesius disinherited Lucius in his will. The whole property went to Quintus.’
I sat back. ‘What?’
Novius shrugged again. ‘It was perfectly legal. And Lucius had no right to expect anything else, after all that time. He and his father – and, of course, his brother – had been virtual strangers for most of their lives. Also, Lucius had got quite enough out of him already over the years.’
‘When did the father die?’
‘Comparatively recently. Only eleven years ago, in fact. He was a very old man, well into his eighties.’
‘Just before Aulus Mettius was relegated, in other words.’
This time Novius did blink. ‘I beg your pardon?’
‘Mettius. Caesius’s nephew.’ I’d rattled him, which was the hope and intention. ‘He was working for you at the time, I think.’
‘I’m afraid I don’t see the connection.’
I gave him my sunniest smile. ‘I didn’t say there was one. Is there?’
‘Certainly not! Why should there be?’
‘No reason. But he was the other thing I wanted to ask you about. Theft, wasn’t it? And you were the injured party?’
Rattled was right: the old guy’s mottled face was almost purple.
‘Corvinus, this has nothing whatsoever to do with Quintus Caesius’s death!’ he snapped.
‘Maybe it hasn’t. I don’t know. But like I said I’m just getting an idea of the background here, so indulge me. Unless it’s a secret, naturally.’
‘Of course it isn’t! The circumstances are a matter of public record!’
‘Then there’s no problem, is there?’ I carried on smiling, and waited.
Novius frowned and cleared his throat. ‘Very well, Corvinus,’ he said. ‘But this is under protest, and only to prevent you from thinking that I’m concealing something from you. I should point out, however – and Silius Nerva would agree with me here – that you are greatly exceeding your mandate.’
‘Fine,’ I said equably. ‘I can go with that.’
‘Theft, then, is not quite the correct term for Aulus Mettius’s crime. What he was guilty of was embezzlement. He had been with me as clerk-apprentice for just under five years, initially on Quintus’s recommendation. I discovered that he was, and had been for much of that time, helping himself from the clients’ fees, of which he had administrative charge. Under the circumstances, prosecution was my only option.’
‘You didn’t think that maybe just a smack over the knuckles and a warning would be enough? Considering that he was your friend Caesius’s nephew?’
‘No. The man was a crook. And Quintus agreed with me. He’d already washed his hands of him.’ He picked up the stylus. ‘And now, unless you have any other questions more germane to the issue, I’m an extremely busy man. No doubt there are already clients waiting outside. I’ll bid you good day.’
I stood up. ‘Yeah, right,’ I said. ‘Thanks for your time, pal. If I do have any more germane questions – which I probably will, when things get going – I know where to find you.’
I left him glaring after me.
EIGHT
So, onwards and upwards. Time to talk to the brother and – as far as the cui bono aspect of things went – prime contender for wishing Caesius dead and burned. If I could get a hold of him …
My barman friend Scaptius had said that Lucius rented a room in the street to the right of the market square, above a bakery. That should be easy to find, although at this time of day he probably wouldn’t be at home, unless he was sleeping things off. Which, I supposed, was possible.
I came back down the steps. Before turning left and heading towards the centre of town, I happened to glance the other way, up the road in the direction of the baths at the end of it. And I noticed something odd.
It was a quiet street, virtually a backwater. When I’d first arrived, there’d been only one other punter in evidence, on the far side of the road but walking parallel at the same pace: a big guy in a freedman’s cap. When I’d gone into Novius’s office he’d kept on going, presumably bound for the baths. But now there he was again, leaning against the wall and communing with nature a few yards up from me.
Uh-huh.
I set off slowly down the road, gave it a couple of minutes, then turned round as casually as I could manage. Chummie was tagging along, a few dozen yards behind, moving at the same unnaturally slow speed. So. Unless my paranoia was getting worse in my old age the bugger was tailing me sure enough. The big questions, of course, were why and who for?
OK. The first thing was to rule paranoia and coincidence out of the equation. I crossed the next street, stopped on the far side and turned round. Chummie, a dozen yards behind, slowed almost to a halt and became very interested in the sandals on display outside the shop just shy of the corner itself. I ignored him, but instead of retracing my steps, or carrying on past the street, I turned down it: by my reckoning, it would run parallel to the top end of the square, so it’d bring me out more or less where I wanted to go in any case.
It was much busier than the street I’d been on. A couple of dozen yards further along it was a guy selling poppy-seed bread rings from a hand cart. I stopped and bought one, glancing behind me as I took the copper coin from my belt pouch. There was no sign of the freedman. OK; so maybe it had been straightforward paranoia, after all. Or maybe – which was just as likely, if not more so – the bastard had realized he’d been sussed and decided to cut his losses for the present. Whatever the reason, I’d lost him.
The strange thing was that, when I’d turned round at the corner and got a proper look, something about him had rung a bell. Not his face, which I’d seen clearly; I’d be ready to swear that to my knowledge I’d never clapped eyes on the guy before in my life. It was just the way he moved and held himself …
Memory tugged.
Ah, bugger. Leave it. No doubt if I wasn’t actually on the brink of wearing my underpants on my head and he had been tailing me for some reason it wouldn’t be the last time he did it. Next time, I’d be ready.
&nbs
p; I carried on along the street and took a right at the corner. Yeah, this was the street the barman had meant, all right: I could see the bakery a few yards down. On the other hand, there was a wine shop a bit further along, on the opposite side, just after the entrance to an alleyway. Maybe a better place to try, at least in the first instance: the chances were that one so close to home would be Lucius’s local. I crossed the road and walked towards it, glancing down the alleyway as I passed.
It was a cul-de-sac, with two small shops in it: a general merchant’s and a bootmaker’s. Check. Yeah, I’d thought there was something familiar about the street I was on. I’d come down it, or the bottom half of it, rather, the day before, heading for the main drag and Caesius’s house, after I’d left the brothel by its back door. The alley was the same one, the one behind the brothel, seen from the other direction.
I carried on to the wine shop, pushed open the door and went in.
The place was pretty basic, cheap and not particularly cheerful, not much more than a stone counter beside which stood two or three barflies who looked like they’d come as a package with the furniture and fittings. There wasn’t a lot of choice on the board, either. Still, I wasn’t there for the wine list or the ambience. I waited until the barman had served the punter on my immediate left with his cup of wine and then caught his eye.
‘What can I get you, sir?’ he said.
‘Actually, I was looking for a Lucius Caesius,’ I said. ‘He come in here at all?’
The guy grinned. ‘He does. In fact …’ He turned towards the punter at the end of the row to my right and raised his voice. ‘Hey, Lucius. You’ve got company.’
The punter was half-slumped over the counter on his forearms, a jug and a cup in front of him. He raised his head. I recognized the resemblance straight off, but where Quintus Caesius’s silvery hair had been carefully trimmed his brother’s grey equivalent looked like he’d cut it himself. Sawn at it, rather, and with a blunt knife at that. Younger brother or not, he wouldn’t’ve passed for seventy, let alone ten years short of it. His tunic hadn’t seen the inside of a fuller’s for quite some time, either, and from its condition probably wouldn’t survive the experience if it did.
The phrase ‘human wreckage’ came to mind. Well-preserved, bursting with self-respect and in good shape for his age he was not.
‘Who wants me?’ he said.
I made another quick inspection of the wines on offer; none of them looked very promising this time round, either. ‘Make it a half jug of your best, pal,’ I said to the barman. ‘Whichever that is.’
‘That’d be the Arician, then.’
‘Arician it is.’ I moved over to join what was left of Lucius Caesius and pulled up the stool next to him. ‘Hi,’ I said. ‘The name’s Marcus Corvinus.’
‘Corvinus?’ He gave me an uncomprehending poached-egg-eyes stare. ‘Is that so?’ Then he nodded. ‘Oh. Right. I’ve got you now. You’re the Roman those bastards in the senate have got to look into my brother’s death. Doing the rounds of the suspects, are you?’
‘More or less,’ I said easily. The barman came over and set the jug and cup down beside me. I paid and poured, then held the jug poised. ‘You want some of this?’
‘If it’s going spare, sure. Mine’s dead.’
I filled his cup. ‘Health,’ I said, and sipped from my own. Actually, maybe I’d misjudged the place, because it wasn’t bad stuff, certainly a lot better than I’d been expecting. Mind you, if you can’t get a decent house wine in the Alban Hills then where else can you get it? And Aricia wasn’t far away; the landlord probably had family connections with the vineyard.
Lucius took a good long swallow and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
‘Mind if we talk?’ I said.
‘Suit yourself. You’re buying, and I’m not doing anything special.’
I glanced behind me. There was one small table with a couple of stools, squeezed away in a corner. ‘Over there?’ I said. ‘It’s more private.’
‘I’ll be saying nothing that I’d be ashamed gets overheard,’ he said. But he picked up his cup, levered himself off the stool and walked carefully to the table. I followed and sat down opposite him. ‘Now. Talk away.’
‘You weren’t at the funeral,’ I said.
His face with its three-day-old stubble split into something between a grin and a snarl. He wasn’t doing so well in the teeth department, either. I reckoned four or five, all told, but I might’ve been overgenerous. ‘Bugger that,’ he said. ‘I’d no truck with my brother when he was alive and I’ll have none with him now he’s dead.’ He drained his cup at a gulp and edged it over in my direction. Wordlessly, I refilled it. ‘Shock you, that, does it? Offend your nice Roman-patrician sensibilities? Well, disapprove all you like. I’m no hypocrite, and I don’t do platitudes.’ He must’ve noticed my expression, because he said, ‘Also, I’m a drunk by choice and inclination. That doesn’t mean I’m a monosyllabic oaf. So don’t patronize me either, right?’
Jupiter! Talk about having a chip on your shoulder! The one this guy was carrying around was so big you could use it as a doorstop.
‘I wasn’t going to, pal,’ I said. ‘And no, it doesn’t shock me at all. Still, you’re his heir, aren’t you?’
‘Indeed I am, seemingly.’ He half-emptied his newly refilled cup and smacked his lips. ‘The Caesius now. The only living representative of the family. No surprises there, then.’
‘How do you mean?’
‘“Concerning the dead, nothing except good.” That how the old tag goes? Well, since I can’t in all honesty manage the qualifi-cation without gagging I’ll settle for the first option and say nothing. I can afford to, after all; I reckon I’m worth a good million plus now, thanks to dear brother Quintus, what with his own money and my late sister-in-law’s dowry, and if that means drawing a line under his sacred memory then so be it.’ He belched. ‘Pardon. He had his head beaten in, they tell me, coming out of our local knocking shop. That right?’
‘Yeah. More or less.’
‘Couldn’t’ve happened to a better person. And that fact in itself is a glittering wonder and marvel to all who knew and loved him. Or didn’t, as the case might be.’ He chuckled to himself and took another swallow of wine. I said nothing. ‘So. Rest his bones, whatever the truth of it. Concerning the dead and so on; I’ve no quarrel with him now. How’s your investigation going? If I’m allowed to ask?’
I shrugged. ‘As well as can be expected. I’ve just started. As you say, I’m just doing the rounds of the suspects at present.’
‘That’s nice. I’ll tell you what.’ He struggled to his feet, swaying. ‘Put the interrogation on hold for a minute, will you, while I take a leak round the back. The old bladder’s not what it was. I promise I won’t run.’
‘Sure. No problem,’ I said.
‘You’ll excuse me, then?’
I waited while he staggered out of the door and closed it behind him. Then I got up and went over to the bar.
‘Yes, sir,’ the barman said. ‘You want the other half?’
‘No. Just the answer to a quick question, pal, if you will. Four nights ago. Was Lucius in here at all, do you remember?’
He shot me a look. ‘The night of his brother’s murder?’
‘Yeah, that’s right.’
‘Sure. Same as he always is, from the time we open right up until closing time. He was where you’re sitting now, talking to Roscius.’
I stared at him. ‘Roscius? You mean Quintus Roscius?’
‘Yeah. Farms just outside town on the Castrimoenium road.’
Shit! ‘He a regular?’
‘He comes in now and again.’
‘Pally with Lucius?’
‘Not especially, but it was a quiet night, what with the weather being so bad. They were the only two in the place.’
‘Until closing time, you said. Sunset, would that be?’
‘About an hour after.’
‘That late?’
‘I wasn’t in any hurry. Lucius is a good customer, and I didn’t have the heart to throw him out. My brother has an olive farm, and he lets me have the oil cheap. It’s not the best stuff, third pressing standard if that, but it’s good enough for the punters I get from around here. And keeping open the extra hour sometimes is good for business. These days, you have to make use of every edge you can get.’
‘They leave together?’
‘Yeah. When I closed up.’
‘Thanks, pal.’ I went back to my seat. Bugger! There went straight-as-a-die Roscius’s alibi! When the bastard had told me he’d been at home the evening of the murder he’d been lying through his teeth!
Lucius came back in and sat down with a sigh. ‘That’s better,’ he said. He topped up his cup from my jug. ‘Now where were we? Oh, right. Your investigation. You’ve just started, you say.’
‘Yeah.’ No harm in putting out a few feelers and seeing if they produced any result. ‘I was round at Publius Novius’s earlier. The lawyer.’
‘I know who Novius is. Scumbag.’
‘He tells me that you were disinherited in your father’s will, ten or so years back. That so?’
Lucius scowled. ‘My father never made that will, Corvinus. Oh, sure, we’d had nothing to do with each other for twenty-odd years before that, but he wasn’t the bastard that Quintus was. He wouldn’t’ve done that to me, disinherited his own son.’
‘Hang on,’ I said carefully. ‘You’re saying the will was a fake?’
‘Of course it was. It must’ve been. I’m telling you, my father would never have cut me off without a penny. Quintus and that slimy lawyer pal of his cooked the will up between them. Did Novius tell you I challenged it?’
‘What?’
‘No, he wouldn’t, the canny bastard. Certainly I did. In open court. For all the good it did me.’ He emptied his cup again; at this rate I’d have to get the other half jug after all, but at least it didn’t seem to be having much effect. If anything, the old guy seemed to be sobering. Mind you, it was only halfway through the morning, and he was used to it. ‘Novius and Quintus and their like lead the senate by the nose. They are the senate. And the senate provide the aediles, and the aediles do the judging. Two solid citizens and a jury stacked with their pals against a drunk with a grudge? What do you think the verdict’d be?’
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