LV
Helena’s foray into the markets produced an excellent Athenian breakfast of steaming hot honey-and-sesame pancakes. Those of us who were without a hangover tucked in, afterwards filling up any crannies with barley bread and olive paste, all topped off with pears.
‘What’s for lunch?’
‘Anything you like, apparently - so long as it’s fish.’ That would explain why the Panathenian Way was so full of fish-heads, fish guts, crab claws, prawn shells, and cuttlefish.
Aulus asked us to stop talking about food.
We propped him up, made belated introductions where necessary, and shared our various discoveries about the murders. Aulus had nothing to tell us about Marcella Caesia and little to add to the details we had learned for ourselves about Valeria Ventidia. But he could tell us more of Turcianus Opimus, the invalid; he had met the man.
‘He was desperately ill. It was horrible. He was being eaten up inside.’
‘So you think his death was entirely natural?’ Helena asked.
‘I know it was.’
‘You were with the group when they went to Epidaurus,’ I chipped in.
Aulus looked embarrassed. ‘The others were all twittering on about their aches and pains,’ he complained. ‘They were booking themselves into dream cells - and when they came out next morning there was a big fuss because Marinus had been bitten by a dog. None of them seemed to realise that their little rheumatics - and even a few septic teeth marks - were nothing to what Turcianus was going through.’
‘So?’ Helena, who knew her brother well, was watching him closely.
‘Well, I just felt so sorry for Turcianus. He was struggling to keep up a facade of jollity. He tried not to be a nuisance. But he must have been regretting that he ever came on that last journey, he was in so much pain. Keeping it all to himself, he must have been lonely, for one thing.’
‘So?’
‘When the medics had assessed him, they tipped me the wink he was on his way out. Nobody else volunteered, so I sat by his bedside all that night. No one did anything to harm him. I was with him when he died.’
Aulus fell silent. He was about twenty-seven. As a senator’s son, he had led a sheltered life in some respects. He would have lost grandparents and family slaves, maybe one or two men in his command while he was a tribune in the army. In Rome, he had once found a bloody corpse at a religious site. But nobody had ever died right in front of him before.
Helena put her arms around him. ‘Turcianus was dying, alone and far from home. I am sure he knew you were there; you must have reassured the poor man. Aulus, you are good and kind.’
Gaius and Cornelius were shifting about awkwardly at this sentimental moment. I saw even Albia raise her eyebrows in that sceptical way she had. She had a tomboyish relationship with Aulus, which certainly had not involved seeing him as a philanthropist. We all tended to think of him as a cold fish. I for one was shocked to imagine him sitting with a virtual stranger, murmuring supportive words through the small hours, as the man slipped away.
‘Did he happen to say anything?’
‘No, Falco.’
‘Marcus!’ Helena rebuked me. I bent my head and looked humble. I had known it was useless. Deathbed revelations do not happen in real life. For one thing, anyone with money makes sure his doctors provide oblivion by giving him a good tincture of poppyseeds.
Still, I was an informer. So I had to ask.
‘It was all sad, but perfectly natural, ‘Aulus assured me. I’ll vouch for it; there was nothing untoward.’
‘I’m glad. I don’t want to find unnatural deaths at every turn.’
‘From what you say, you have quite enough with Cleonymus and Statianus.’
‘Reckon so.’ Mention of Cleonymus made me think of our last venue. ‘Aulus, something bothers me. Before we left Corinth, that quaestor, Aquillius, said he wanted to free the Seven Sights group from house arrest because they had threatened him with a lawyer. Your tutor, apparently!’
‘Minas?’ Aulus detected my note of disapproval; he was quick to dissociate himself. He shook his head in disbelief. ‘I cannot imagine Minas has ever even heard of the group. I’ve never told him about them. I can’t face him making me translate it all into some ghastly legal exercise.’
‘You sure of that?’
‘He wouldn’t thank me for discussing a real situation. He may be a master of jurisprudence, but he tries to avoid legal practice nowadays. I am astonished if he has intervened.’
‘They just got hold of his name somehow.’
‘Phineus used it to back up a threat. How could Phineus get the name Minas of Karystos from you?’ asked Helena.
‘He didn’t.’
‘Aquillius was specifically told that Minas was your tutor.’
Aulus considered that carefully. ‘There is only one way. I wrote to Statianus after I left him at Delphi. For something to fill the scroll, I mentioned that Minas would be teaching me. But I only met Minas after I came to Athens, so nobody else could know. I never wrote to any of the others - Hades, they are a terrible lot! Statianus must have told them.’
As far as we knew, Statianus lost contact with his travel companions after he went across to Delphi. I had found no letters when I searched his luggage in that dismal hired room. I would definitely have noticed one from Aulus.
‘The news of Minas must have got passed from Statianus to Polystratus. They spent an evening together. We’ll have to assume your name came up in conversation.’ I did not want to think Polystratus also searched the baggage, after Statianus left, and removed the letter naming Minas.
‘It was just a friendly letter.’ Aulus shrugged his shoulders. ‘Why does this worry you, Marcus?’
‘Phineus and Polystratus are my suspects. Suspects talking about you - that’s not healthy.’ He and I exchanged a glance. In front of his sister, I played down my concern. Alert now, he saw why I felt uneasy. ‘Don’t visit any oracles,’ I warned, trying to make a jest of it.
Young Glaucus, who as usual had said nothing at all, caught my eye, looking professional. I nodded, keeping it discreet. But Helena Justina came right out and asked Glaucus to stick at her brother’s side wherever he went. Our big young friend gave a sombre nod. This was why I had brought him, after all.
It would cause friction tonight when Aulus joined in yet another procession of party-going scholars, trailing around after Minas. Young Glaucus was so clean-living, he would loathe the debauchery. And Aulus became fractious if he was nannied.
I suggested we could ask the tutor whether anybody from the travel group had ever contacted him. Aulus, now recovering from his hangover, warned me to time it right. ‘It’s no use trying to see Minas in the morning, Falco. Even if you manage to wake him up, you’ll get nothing. You have to wait until he comes alive at party time. Don’t worry. I’ll ask him this myself tonight.’
‘Still up for another banquet? Well, you enjoy yourself so I can tell your mother you have thrown yourself into the academic life: the star of the symposium. Forget the case: try to find the travel group.’
‘Athens is too big to search for them haphazardly. If they are still here, Phineus and Polystratus will be showing them the sights. Marcus, I suggest you go sightseeing too; you may run into them viewing a temple. Even if you don’t, ‘Aulus urged,’ you are in Athens, man - make the most of it. Take my sister to the Acropolis. Go and be tourists!’
LVI
Helena Justina was not one to hanker for leisure pursuits when we had an investigation. She had shared my work ever since I met her, five or six years ago. She was as stubborn as me, hating to be thwarted when the evidence ran out, or when new clues seemed to prove our theories wrong. She claimed she was happy to spend all day searching for the Seven Sights party.
But I was not stupid. A man who has chosen to live with a woman he considers both beautiful and talented does not take that woman to Athens, the birthplace of civilisation, and fail to entrance her with a day on the Acropolis. H
elena had been brought up within grasp of the world’s literature in Rome’s public libraries; her father owned his own collection, so many of the best works had existed in copies in her own home. Given that her brothers had both inclined to be slackers in the intellectual arena, it was Helena who had drawn out every last scrap of knowledge from the home tutors the senator provided for the two boys. I read for pleasure, intermittently; Helena Justina devoured the written word like a heron downing fish. Put her in a pond of information, and she would stand there until she had cleared it. We could have screaming children torturing the dog while a skillet boiled over, but if Helena was stuck in a scroll she was enjoying, she missed everything else. This was not wilful. She went into a space of her own, where she heard nothing of her real surroundings.
I took her to explore. I was a romantic lover; I did not take the others. I gave time and pretty well my full attention to this duty. For Helena it would be a lasting great experience. We looked at the ancient city, saw the agora, theatres, and odeons, then we climbed up the Acropolis slowly together, taking the main processional route past the Temple of Athena Nike and by way of the steep steps under the Propylaia, the towering ceremonial gate. There we had a fracas when we cold-shouldered the buzzing site guides.
‘We guides can give you much useful information!’
‘Guides give us a headache! Too late; we’ve already been punished at Olympia and Delphi - so just shove off.’
The day had begun overcast, but the sun had now burned away the clouds and was beating down. Up here, however, a breeze blew pleasantly, so in the wonderful Athenian light we could admire the sights and the views without discomfort. Once free of the guides, I let Helena wander at will around the Parthenon and all the other temples, statues, and altars, while I carried her parasol, water gourd, and stole. I listened attentively when she described the monuments. We marvelled at the Phidias Athena and the work of legendary Greek architects. We cringed at the Roman monuments imposed by Augustus’ henchman Marcus Agrippa - a crudely positioned statue of himself and a Temple of Rome and Augustus. These were insulting and embarrassing. Greece might be conquered, but what other empire would despoil the Athens Acropolis?
I kissed Helena beside the caryatid porch of the Erechtheion. Informers are not complete worms. I enjoyed the day too.
I, however, was keeping my eye out all the time in case we ran into the Seven Sights group. They never appeared.
Late that afternoon, Helena and I returned to the others, happy but somewhat weary, then we braced ourselves to transfer our luggage to an inn. We did this by hand, that is, on foot. Since we had brought ample gear with us in the first place, and had added the Corinthian pots Helena had bought for Pa’s business, it was a long, heavy job. At one point, I nearly broke my arm lifting a kitbag that belonged to Gaius.
The boys were hopeless at looking after their luggage, so the pack was familiar. I had had to rescue it several times. I knew it had not been this heavy originally. Normally I preferred not to investigate the nephews’ personal possessions. I was sixteen once. The thought of the unwashed laundry was deterrent enough. This time, Gaius’ guilty face made me tip out his collected treasures.
His bag was full of tiny bronze and pottery figures: miniature gods and animals. According to Gaius, he ‘found’ these.
‘Don’t lie to me. I’m not your dopey father. Found them where, Gaius?’
‘Oh… just at Olympia.’
Thundering Zeus! These trophies of my nephew’s were centuries-old votive gifts. Gaius admitted he had dug them all out of the twenty-foot-high mound of ash that formed the great, cumulative Altar of Zeus at Olympia. How he did it unseen was a mystery. I took a deep breath. Then I shovelled the offerings back into his luggage, and told Gaius that when he was arrested for defiling a religious site, I would deny knowing him.
He looked scared. Cornelius squirmed nervously. I warned them both that when I had more time I would conduct a full scrutiny of their luggage. A look that passed between them suggested there was more loot.
We carried on settling into our inn, which Helena Justina had rightly identified on her pictograph map as a four-tower effort: spacious enough to be an imperial post station, well equipped with stabling, baths, gardens, and eating facilities. While we were in the agora that morning, Helena had taken me to see her father’s Greek banker. Julia Justa was now paying for our accommodation. Believing that a senator’s wife would herself only stay in a really good lodging house, we were letting her provide us with a similar standard of comfort.
After dinner, Aulus joined us there, much earlier than we expected, which was good. His mother would like me to protect him from the night-life.
‘All getting too strenuous, lad?’
‘I told Minas I had to leave the party early because of my purse-lipped brother-in-law and my spoilsport sister.’
‘Thanks, you dog! So, between mighty quaffs, what does Minas have to say?’
Minas of Karystos had never been approached by the Seven Sights group - though now he had heard of their many trials, he said he would be delighted to help them with compensation claims against the travel company.
‘Students’ fees must not be paying enough,’ I muttered.
‘He’s bored,’ said Aulus.
‘Well this is not some party game!’
‘Settle down, Falco.’
‘Your sister can tell me that. Don’t you try it!’
Minas had thrown himself into trying to find the group. Aulus was confident that, provided they were still in the Athens area, it would happen. Minas knew everyone, having cadged dinners and so-called symposia out of most people who had a dining room or a courtyard that lay close to a good wine cellar. From tonight’s perfumed banquet couch, Minas would put the word out; some acquaintance would have seen our people.
Helena sat down beside her brother, taking his hand.‘I am glad you are having such a good time here, Aulus.’
Aulus, a true brother, freed his hand as soon as possible. ‘Are you teasing?’
Helena assumed her worried big sister face. ‘You have been sent to this fantastic finishing-school to acquire two years’ intellectual polish. But you don’t have to stay here, if you don’t like it.’
‘Rome has its own jurisprudence teachers,’ I agreed. If we ever suggested that Aulus was a shy flower who found the pace too hot in Athens, I reckoned he would feel obliged to stick it out. I was right too.
‘This is a great environment,’ replied Aulus rather stiffly. ‘I feel completely at home and I am learning a lot.’
Well, we tried.
Gaius and his treasure trove of stolen religious offerings had unnerved me. I decided to supervise our younger companions more closely. I left Helena and Aulus munching hazelnut cakes he had brought back from tonight’s party, while I tiptoed off to spy on the troublemakers.
In this way, I overheard a touching scene.
Young Glaucus had returned with Aulus. Freed from his duties as minder, he was now secreted in one of the cool, vine-scented courtyards with which this high-class inn abounded. I noticed him seated on a stone bench, talking to Albia. Normally he did no talking, so that pulled me up.
Albia was merely listening. That was another shock. She was by nature an interventionist.
I could see her sitting rather upright in her favourite blue dress, with her hands folded around a late rose one of them must have plucked. I guessed who had presented her with the flower. In his position, I would have tackled Albia with a packet of raisin pastry half-moons, but Glaucus was just a big lump of bone and muscle; he knew nothing about women and their weaknesses. I had been Cupid’s personal representative on the Aventine once; years later it was still my job to understand women, especially the tricky ones. He should have spoken to me first.
Glaucus made his oration: a resume of his long-term plans to remain in Greece and travel to the whole series of the Panathenaic Games. One day, he hoped to return to Rome triumphantly as an Olympic champion. According to him
, with the right support package and personal dedication, this was feasible. His father, my trainer, would put up the money and perhaps even come out to supervise his son’s programme. Young Glaucus was now asking Albia to stay here too, as his soulmate. Share his life, rub him with oil, encourage him.
Albia would make her own choice. I would have groaned in private and slunk off - but I could see Gaius and Cornelius hiding together behind an old cracked amphora containing a young fig tree. So far, Gaius had mastered the art of the silent guffaw, but that could not be relied upon. I stayed, ready to intervene.
Glaucus talked for far too long. He had clearly never done this before. I was amazed he could sustain such a long monologue. It remained one-sided, for Albia merely tucked her chin in, and listened with her dark head on one side. Planning his life was the young man’s passion. Once he was cantering through the details, he couldn’t bear to stop. If you liked sport, it was not too boring. If you hated sport, it was dire.
Finally Glaucus produced his master stroke. From a fold in his tunic he drew a small moving object. In the light of an oil lamp which hung from a pillar close by them, he showed Albia an owl he had captured in the courtyard. Beautifully feathered - but extremely annoyed - this was his solemn love-gift. Albia, a sensible girl, refused to take it and be pecked.
Glaucus then summed up his curriculum vitae again. The owl struggled between his enormous dark hands. Albia must be wanting to escape too. Gaius and Cornelius were wetting themselves with mirth, the rascals. I was preparing myself to stride across the courtyard and grab the boys by the necks of their tunics if their mockery exploded.
No need for that. Albia jumped to her feet briskly.
‘That was very interesting. I will consider when I have time!’ I winced. Young women are so brutal. Helena must have been giving her advice on how to keep men guessing. Albia pointed at the little owl. ‘So. Now Glaucus, your owl is very sweet but you had better let him go quickly. This is the symbol of Pallas Athena. But I have been told the Greeks are superstitious if an owl comes indoors. They nail it to the front door by the wings - alive!’
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