“The sea is raging just as the mountain, Valerius. You will not reach two stadia!”
He seemed not to hear her, still pulling her toward the water.
This was her moment, then. At last, there was to be both vengeance and freedom. In the crush of the mob, many of whom were now fixed on Valerius’s ship as their salvation, no one would care when he went down.
She planted her feet as best she could, dug her heels into the grainy sand, and halted their progress. He turned to her, his eyes pleading as though she were his daughter and not his slave. “There is still time!”
It took only a quick twist of her arm to release his grasp, a puncturing kick to his midsection to double him over, and a forearm blow to his neck to send him to her feet where he belonged. She moved, swift and sinuous, and the action warmed her limbs and flushed her with confidence.
Her sandal dug into his neck, poised for the death stroke. She had trained well. She could kill a man in a dozen different ways, even without weapons. Which would cause the most pain? Which method would kill him surely, yet let him linger in agony?
This is not My will, child.
The words were audible, even over the screams and shouts of those on the beach and the bellowing roar of the mountain. She looked for Micah, found his eyes, but could not tell if his fear came from the voice or the imminent murder of Valerius.
I gave My life to redeem yours. And vengeance belongs to Me.
She inhaled sharply, then coughed, the air noxious in her lungs. Yeshua?
Valerius’s face had paled beneath her foot. His pinched, unnatural lips hung open. She was his Scorpion Fish, leaping out of the fishpond to stand over its master, full of venom.
But the poison drained from her. It ran down into the sand and left her with nothing but impossible compassion for the vacant shell of a man beneath her. He would meet his death today, she felt certain.
But it would not be at her hand.
She shoved against him with her foot, signaled Micah, and ran. They pushed against the flow of people, two small fish traveling upstream against a powerful current of fear, and were lost in the mob. Above them, the spreading gray cloud blocked out the sun like a heavy curtain, turning noon to dusk in an instant.
It proved nearly hopeless to shove through the bottleneck of the Marina Gate, and Ariella squeezed Micah’s hand until her fingers were numb. She would not lose him again.
But then at last they were through, bursting into the open air, fighting through the panic that flowed toward the city gate.
And from high above them, like a toxic, dirty snow, ash began to fall.
43
Cato watched from the street, mesmerized, as the gray cloud above the mountain bubbled and foamed. But nothing prepared him for the explosion.
The top of the mountain blew off with such force it knocked people to the street. Cato kept his footing but raised stunned eyes to Vesuvius, seeing it bellow out gas and rock, its peak shattered into fragments that shot to the heavens.
Merciful God, protect us.
Townspeople got to their feet, the earthquake forgotten, and faced the mountain, like children cowering before a wrathful parent. The roar of the rock raining upward drowned out their cries.
He ran back into Seneca’s home and found the entire household assembled in the atrium, slave and family alike. They turned panicked eyes to him, as if he held an answer to the blast that had rocked the city.
“The mountain—” He labored to speak, as though he had run a distance to give the news. “The mountain has blown.”
A slave cried out, her voice tearful. “Vulcan is displeased!”
He had left such beliefs behind. It was a sudden realization. Still, it was impossible not to think of the god of fire’s feast day yesterday and the townspeople’s efforts to earn favor. They had sought safety from crop fires, never dreaming that their beloved mountain seethed with flames.
Seneca pushed forward to Cato. “Should we flee?”
Cato inhaled and surveyed the group. “Not yet. We would not know where to flee to escape. Or if there is a need. For now, the rocks fly straight upward.”
“And at some time, they will come down.”
True. “But the mountain is miles away. We are safe for now. Besides, the street is already filled with panicked peasants. The quake will have set fires through the insulae and the poor will run for safety. You are better off in your home.”
Seneca nodded and turned to his household, opening his arms to include them all. “We will stay here.”
Cato clapped Seneca on the back. “Bar the door behind me. There will be looters about.”
“You are leaving?”
“I must get to my own family.” He eyed the group. How many would he see again? Flora clung to Europa. Jeremiah stood near the two, leaning on his staff. He caught Cato’s glance and nodded slowly.
A swell of emotion caught Cato off guard. He placed a hand over his own chest, bowed to the old man, and received the blessing of his smile in return.
In the street, he heard the bar slide into place behind him and breathed a prayer to Jeremiah’s God to keep them safe.
It had grown darker since he entered the house. The gray ash cloud had spread, dimming the sky. In the streets, rich and poor alike streamed toward the edges of the city. Carts rumbled past, piled with furnishings and valuables, and their owners yelled at slaves to hasten.
And yet as crowded as the streets were, it was clear that with the quake over and the threat now coming from the sky, the majority of the town had taken refuge in their homes.
He shoved his way through the panicked citizens, past taverns and brothels, bakeries and thermopolia, all gone silent, their inhabitants either hiding or fleeing. People knocked him against the stone walls and once down into the gutter. He pushed on, heart pounding.
He found his own door barred when he reached it. Octavia’s doing, certainly. Good woman. He smacked his palm against it and heard the call of a slave in return. “It is Portius Cato! Open the door!”
The bar slid upward, the door cracked open, and he shoved through the opening, turned, and barred the door himself.
Isabella and Octavia rushed from the atrium. His sister called to him in her dramatic way. “Is it the end of the world?”
He opened his embrace and caught them both, breathed a prayer of thanks over their heads. “Only the end of the mountain, my good women.”
And perhaps the town.
Octavia’s eyes were red-rimmed and she held a letter in her hands. “Everything is coming to an end.” She waved the letter. “I have just had word that my brother Servius is dead.”
Cato exhaled, unable to take in this news with all else that had transpired.
“Where should we go?” Octavia was all practicality, though he could see the fright in her eyes.
“Nowhere at present. The buildings are unsafe because of the quake, and fires are raging. There are enough panicked people in the streets. You are safer here.”
Isabella was quick to note the you. “Quintus, you are not going back out there!”
He faced his mother. “I must see to Portia. It is madness to leave prisoners underground during a quake. She must be freed.”
Octavia’s face blanched. Clearly, she had not thought of the danger to her elder daughter.
“Courage, Mother. I will be back soon and return Portia to your arms. Keep Isabella secure.” He spoke of courage, even as fear dampened his neck and forehead.
Octavia seemed torn between duty to each of her children, as though she wished both to stay with Isabella and to go with her son to see Portia freed.
He kissed her cheeks, kissed Isabella also, and turned to go, calling over his shoulder, “Stay away from the walls and the columns. Keep to the garden.”
He had no doubt his mother would secure the door behind him. He launched back into the street, joining the human current flowing toward the prison, the Forum, and the Marina Gate.
He would free Port
ia if at all possible, but in truth it was not his only errand. There was another woman whose safety concerned him, and he would see her protected before he returned home.
The mountain still poured forth its foul contents, a column so high he had to crane his neck backward to see the spreading summit. The edges of the black cloud reached the sun in its midday position and crept across it, eclipsing the day and turning it to dusk in moments.
The darkness seemed to cast unreasonable fear into the people in the streets, and the chaos spiked. Horses and wagons plunged down the narrow roads. People fell beneath cart wheels to be trampled underfoot. Cato kept to the walls, turning his body sideways at times to avoid the press of madness. His breath came in gasps, as though the air had thickened.
Halfway to the prison the ongoing rush grew sluggish. It took only a moment to discern the cause. The people stood in the street, faces and palms raised to the sky.
Snow? In the heat of Augustus?
But it was not snow. It was ash.
Seneca’s prediction. It had begun. The mountain was beginning to rain down on them.
In the lull caused by wonderment, Cato pushed forward and gained ground. By the time he reached the prison, the ash was falling heavily. The white marble paving stones of the Forum grew gray with a layer of it, and footprints could be seen where people trod.
He hurried across the Forum toward the magistrates’ buildings and the prison beneath. The crowd thinned here, freed from the confines of the narrow streets.
He did not see it coming. One moment he was pushing across the Forum, and the next a burning boulder larger than his head dropped from the sky as though hurled in spite. The black-and-orange projectile smashed the paving stone only a cubit in front of him. He jumped backward, safe by only a fraction from the superheated rock. The bitter taste of fear rose in his chest.
The scare gave new meaning to the danger. Falling ash could be brushed away. Burning rocks could not. He risked a glance upward, expecting an avalanche from the sky. He could see no other blackened rocks, but it began to rain light pebbles that stung the skin. He bent his face to the ground, held out his hand to catch a few in his palm.
The stone hail was dirty-white, light and porous—like bits of bleached sea sponge from Greece—but solid. The sound of it hitting the Forum stones brought memories of echoing theater applause.
Again, this new revelation from the sky gave the townspeople pause, and the spacious court ceased its churning for a moment, then resumed in earnest.
Cato, too, pushed forward toward the prison, his mind keeping pace with his feet. First the thick ash, and now rocks, some light and some fatal. It was growing more dangerous aboveground than below it. The quakes had stopped. Would Portia be safer in the prison than they were aboveground?
He was not the first to consider it. The prison entrance thronged with people shouting to be allowed underground. Several guards fought them off, striking down men and women alike with their heavy rods. Cato kept his distance, measuring his chances, measuring the danger.
In the end, he followed his instinct. For now at least, Portia was safer underground. How ironic . . . when this nightmare ended, perhaps the prisoners would be the only survivors.
And what of those toward the north? Of Nigidius Maius and his estate outside the north wall of the city, and the one who was held there against her will? To run there was to run toward the mountain. Which meant she was even nearer the danger.
Cato raced through the Forum to the north end, where the Temple of Jupiter still stood unrepaired from the last quake that had wrought destruction. Would Pompeii survive this disaster?
The stones assaulted his face and arms, raising welts. He ran through the Street of Tombs, empty and silent save the continued rush of the fire-breathing mountain and the clatter of pebbles hitting the street.
The street wound upward slightly, to a rise outside of town where Maius’s estate farmed the rich, black soil and the grapes grew in abundance.
He reached the villa breathless and beaten by the falling pebbles. The gravel accumulated underfoot now, crunching beneath his sandals. No more flaming boulders had accosted him, but he ran half-expecting to be struck down. Above him, the black cloud had reached to every horizon. Daylight had been overtaken by a foul midday night, a darkness that traveled on an evil wind and wormed its way through mind and heart.
Cato ran the length of the empty peristyle along the southern end of the villa, under a doorway, and into Maius’s first atrium. The pleasant plink of rocks falling into the impluvium basin’s water deceived. The reds and yellows of the garden’s flowers glowed with the strange light of a coming storm.
He’d formed no plan as he ran. Foolish. Where would Valerius keep Ariella? Where would Maius have housed his guests? The household had fled the safety that open space provided during an earthquake to hide from the falling sky.
Should he yell for someone? Would they hand over Ariella? He must at least be certain she was safe, that she had survived the quake.
He ran through the house, coming upon a girl in a shadowy colonnade, about Isabella’s age. She paced the hallway alone. She turned on him as though he might save her. Maius’s blue-eyed daughter, Nigidia. With a flash of recognition, he realized that he had seen her several times—among the Christians. Flora’s friend.
“Have you seen my father?” In the murky light her face seemed luminescent.
He shook his head. “I am looking for the slave girl Ariella. She belongs to Valerius.”
Nigidia blinked several times, her lips parted.
He shook her. “Have you seen Ariella?”
“They have gone.”
“Gone? Where?”
“Valerius. All of them. He left for Rome.”
Cato released his grip on her. It had only been last night that Valerius arrived. “Because of the mountain? Is he a fool?”
Nigidia shook her head slowly. “No. They left before the quake. He wanted to sail today.”
Cato turned from her, left her in the hall, guilt nipping at him. But she was not his responsibility. He already had four women to look after.
“Will you tell my father I am waiting for him?” Her voice was plaintive, childlike.
“Keep out of the open,” he yelled in response, already across the atrium and heading back through the house. His tunic was damp with sweat now.
The ash seemed to have thickened while he had been indoors. He stopped under the peristyle roof to rip a swath of fabric from the bottom of his tunic and tie it around his face, to cover his nose and mouth. Chest heaving, he ran back toward the town, through the dirty ashfall that lay ankle-deep, mixed with the pebbles and rising fast. When would it stop?
More important, could Valerius have put out to sea before the disaster? And if he had . . .
What had become of his ship—and the slaves it carried?
44
Ariella and Micah pushed against the foot traffic on the inside of the gate and threaded through the crowd in the street. Ahead, though she could not see it past the people, lay the Forum. But between the gate and the Forum, people flooded into the entrances of the basilica on the right and the Temple of Apollo on the left, seeking refuge together. Stones began to fall on them, stinging bare skin. How could such a thing be? She understood the ash—it settled out of the sky from unseen fires. But stones from the heavens? It was beyond understanding.
Where should they go? There was something illogical about fighting against the flow of people. Did it not mean she and Micah were headed the wrong direction? And yet any direction away from Valerius seemed right.
She longed for reassurance that Isabella and Octavia were safe. And Europa and her household. Jeremiah. The faces flitted across her mind. She fought the desire to weep and kept pressing onward.
They reached the basilica and joined the flow into its central courtyard. The structure built for handling legal matters of the town had not yet been repaired since the quake that damaged the city years ago, as b
roken columns and a partial roof attested. Citizens clogged the nave, huddled in tight family groups. Children wailed and mothers tried in vain to comfort them, all the while looking at the treacherous black cloud spreading across the sky and the ash and pebbles it rained down on their heads.
Ariella slowed to watch the sky. It was unreal, like something from one of Maius’s dark frescoes, with its billowing darkness blocking out the sun. How could they find safety from such a widespread, fearsome thing? She had been trained to defeat any foe. But this was an enemy far beyond her reach, and the helplessness both angered and terrified her.
Micah pulled her to the front of the building, to the raised apse that had retained its stone roof. They pressed against the wall, watching the turmoil as though they were ruling magistrates, looking down from positions of authority. Throughout the crowd, prayers to the various gods, chief among them Vulcan, were shouted from frightened lips.
Beside her, Micah spoke over the people. “This is what the Holy One says: ‘Soon I will shake the heavens and the earth, the sea and the dry land again.’”
Ariella looked up at him, into the man’s face of the boy she had known. Yes, a man now, of twenty years. A man who quoted the prophets as though their words were part of him. Since their meeting yesterday, they’d had so little time to speak. Who had he become in the nine years since their separation? Had he carried anger as she had, refusing to bow his knees to a God who would rip him from his family and give away his inheritance?
He met her eyes, looked deep into her heart.
Regardless of what would become of them, for this moment they were together and they were free. She gave way to her emotions at last and reached up to wrap her arms around his neck. Tears flowed unchecked, so unlike her and yet a welcome release.
Micah held her head against his chest and patted her back as she sobbed out her fear and her joy. She had been a fool to think him still a boy, and the relief of being in his protective arms brought more tears.
“I have missed you, sister.” He pulled her away and held her arms. “I never gave up hoping that I would find you.”
City on Fire Page 27