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Authors: Lindsey Davis

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“I guessed as much!”

He was one of the impassive breed. Long years of service had taught him to expect the worst, and that nothing was ever worth getting excited about. He had very dark brown eyes, as if his origin was southern, and a face like an ostler's old rubbing-down cloth: deeply creased, stiff with use, and worn to a shine. His air of disillusionment was as weathered as his features. He looked a sound, utterly reliable officer.

I told him that the tribune Camillus had agreed he could be excused normal duties for a spot of goodwill effort in the local community. Helvetius was happy to visit the potter, so I took him out to the factory area with me.

*   *   *

It was another chilly morning, though a pallid sun was trying to burn away the mist. The changing season added to my sense of urgency. I explained to Helvetius that I would probably need to go across the river soon, and that I wanted to get the journey over before winter set in. The last thing I needed to face was being stuck in barbarian territory when the European snows came down.

“Bad enough at any time,” he said grimly.

“Have you done it?”

He didn't answer immediately. “Only when some daft tribune fancied a boar-hunt in a more exciting locality.” Not Camillus Justinus, presumably. No one would call
him
daft.

“Naturally a young gent in senatorial stripes doesn't want to risk the
real
excitement of leaving his escort behind … Did you meet any trouble over there?”

“No, but you have the distinct feeling that you're lucky to reach home again without running into some liveliness.”

“Some of us have a suspicion the Fourteenth's legate may have gone across.”

“Gracilis? Whatever for?”

“Searching for Civilis—or Veleda, possibly.”

Again there was a slight silence. “Didn't think he was the type.”

“What type would you call him, then?” I asked.

Helvetius, who was a true centurion, only chuckled into his beard, which was a richly curling military one. “He's a legate, Falco. The same horrible type as them all.”

*   *   *

Just before we reached the potteries our conversation returned warily to the two dead men. Helvetius asked my particular interest. I described how I had been drawn in by seeing the quarrel at Lugdunum. He smiled slightly.

I wondered why he was curious. His face set, with a stillness that implied his mind was somewhere else—somewhere else by a long way. After yet another pause, however, just when I thought he had no comment, he suddenly spoke: “I said nothing when we came across the bodies, because I didn't know you, Falco. But I had seen the men before, alive, myself.”

“Where was that?”

“Same as you: Lugdunum.”

“Were you there on official business?”

“Should have been. The army can be efficient! Our commander had a brainstorm and made my one journey serve two—well, three—purposes: home leave, recruiting manpower, and then a site visit to check out the ceramics tenderers. That was the plan, anyway.”

“So what happened?” I could guess.

“I turned up, but taking notes about suppliers was a waste of time. His Excellency Gracilis had been there before me and had swept up the whole business himself on behalf of all the legions in Upper and Lower Germany.”

“Fancy!” I marvelled. “Some responsibility!”

“Some haul, if he was on the take!” Helvetius must have drawn his own conclusions.

“Careful, centurion! And the two local potters?”

“Like you, I saw them there having a right barney.”

“In a crowd?”

“No, just with a sneering beanpole and a couple of hangers-on. I spotted Lanky later as well.”

“Oh?”

“On the road. The day before we found the stiffs in the ditch.”

Now that was a detail I found most interesting. I remembered the sneering Gaul, but I must have missed him while travelling. Things looked black for Florius Gracilis. I told Helvetius we would keep this to ourselves for the time being. He looked at me askance. “Were you sent out here to compile a dossier on graft?”

It was beginning to look that way.

*   *   *

At the pottery I made the introductions, then left Helvetius to discuss how he had reported the deaths at Cavillonum. There hadn't been much interest from the magistrate, needless to say. Helvetius was sufficiently discreet to disguise that while speaking to the dead men's friend, but I could tell what must have happened—and not happened—from his tone.

I left them together, still talking over Bruccius and his nephew, while I roamed around yearningly looking at samianware. When Mordanticus came out he asked whether anything particular had caught my eye.

“All of it! You create a stylish platter.” This was not mere ingratiation: his pottery was fired with a satisfying colour; it had tasteful patterns, a pleasing gloss, and a good balance in the hand. “I'd set myself up with a decent dinner service, but the problem is a distinct lack of collateral.”

“How's that? I assumed you had a rich girlfriend!” The way he spoke made the joke acceptable even to a touchy swine like me.

For once I went along with it. “Ah, it's her father who owns the lush estates on the Alban hills. If you were him, would you let the fruits of your vintage pass into the grip of a lout like me?” Besides, I had my pride.

It was not simply the hope of possessing Helena that drove me into these mad missions for the Emperor. I had a dream of one day living without squalor. Living in my own quiet house—a house surrounded by vine-covered walkways, luxurious in space, and full of light to read by. A house where I could age an amphora of decent wine at the right temperature, then drink it philosophising with my friend Petronius Longus beside a maplewood table laid with Spanish linen—and, maybe, samian winecups, if we were tired of my chased bronzes with the hunting scenes and my gold-flecked Phoenician glass …

I dragged the conversation to more useful gossip. “Thanks for your message. What's this about a woman? Julia Fortunata is going to be put out if Gracilis has been two-timing her—not to mention the rumpus he can expect from the tight-buttocked little wife!”

“Well, I don't know anything definite…” Mordanticus looked embarrassed. It was pleasant to witness how respectfully the provinces regarded Rome: he was almost ashamed to confess that one of our high-ranking officials had let down the Roman moral code. “I hate to destroy the man's character—”

“No need for you to end up in court on a slander charge,” I prompted. “Just tell me what you've found out, and I'll draw the defamatory conclusions for myself.”

“Well, one of my colleagues was once asked how Florius Gracilis could contact a woman called Claudia Sacrata.”

“Is that significant? Should I have heard of her?”

Again he looked decidedly awkward. “She is a Ubian, from Colonia Agrippinensium.” He studied a beaker as if he had just noticed that its handle was affixed crookedly. “Your general Petilius Cerialis was supposed to have had an intrigue with her.”

“Ah!”

I had an impression of Cerialis; so far women did not come into it. In Britain he had commanded the IX Hispana legion. When the Boudiccan Revolt flared, he had made a desperate dash to help but was ambushed by the tribes in a forest—meaning he must have been rushing along without proper scouts ahead of him. Petilius lost a large contingent of his men and only just escaped with a few dregs of cavalry. The remnants of the IX took part in the final battle against the Queen, though unlike the XIV and the XX they were not honoured by Nero afterwards. By all accounts, the general's more recent campaign to recapture Germany from Civilis had featured similar ill-considered incidents, from which the general himself had somehow escaped—always in time to take part in the winning engagements, and always keeping his good reputation intact.

I said with a deadpan expression, “A Ubian temptress was not widely featured in the official accounts of his victories.” Perhaps because Petilius Cerialis wrote the accounts himself.

Mordanticus realised I was teasing, but did not quite know how to react. “There was probably nothing in it…”

“I'm disappointed! But why should our own Florius Gracilis be visiting this beauty? Consoling her loneliness, now that Cerialis has popped off to Britain? I suppose he couldn't have taken her. Installing his Ubian bundle in the provincial governor's palace in Londinium would soon get back to Rome and cause a stir.” Having won his province, Petilius Cerialis would now be looking forward to a consulship. He was related to the Emperor—through
marriage
—and the Emperor was widely known to hold strictly old-fashioned views. Vespasian himself kept a long-term mistress now that he was a widower, but people seeking appointments from him dared not risk such a luxury. “Do the Ubians have close links with the Batavians?”

Julius Mordanticus was writhing with unhappiness. “That's difficult to answer. Some allies of Civilis punished the Ubians very heavily for their pro-Roman sympathies, but by the end some of them were battling against the Romans with him…”

“A right tangle! Did Claudia Sacrata know Civilis?”

“Possibly. He has relations who were living in Colonia Agrippinensium.”

“Which could explain why Gracilis has gone to see her. He knows this woman has had connections with high political circles on both sides, so she might know where Civilis can be found?”

“Perhaps.”

“Alternatively,” I suggested more facetiously, “not content with the official mistress he brought from Rome, our trusty legate Florius Gracilis is looking for an
unofficial
one—and Claudia Sacrata fits. Perhaps a liaison with Claudia Sacrata is the traditional perk for men in purple cloaks on tours of duty in Germany? Perhaps her address is handed on with their initial briefing reports. Which only leaves one question. Mordanticus: since I'm just a low weevil, who will give Claudia Sacrata's address to
me?

The potter was not prepared to comment on her status; but he told me where to find the woman.

That only left one other question: how could I explain to Helena Justina that I was disappearing to visit a general's courtesan?

 

PART FOUR

A
TRIP DOWN THE
R
HENUS

From Upper Germany to Vetera, October–November, AD 71

“Their commander … was saved by a mistake on the part of the enemy, who made haste to tow away the flagship, thinking that the commander was aboard. Cerialis in fact spent the night elsewhere (according to general belief at the time, because of an intrigue with a Ubian woman called Claudia Sacrata).”

Tacitus,
Histories

 

XXXV

It caused less strain than I feared. That was because Helena decreed Colonia Agrippinensium to be a place she was dying to see. I went along with it, for reasons of my own.

My hope of some peace with Helena was thwarted. First her brother insisted that we take Augustinilla. Apparently he was reluctant to be left on his own at the fort with a lovesick little maid.

Then Xanthus eagerly joined the excursion. He was still suffering a serious reaction from having killed the soldier. He said it had made him think seriously about life. He liked Germany, and wanted to settle there—he could see plenty of scope for his hairdressing skills. Moguntiacum was too military, however, so he wanted to look for another town which might offer a more refined welcome to an ambitious former imperial slave. I told him flatly he could not come with me beyond Colonia, but he said that suited him.

We had the tribune's dog, too. It had bitten an armourer, so had to be removed from the fort fast.

So much for a gentle river cruise alone with my girl.

*   *   *

Despite the entourage, shipping north on an official fleet vessel was a joy: past jutting crags and green pastures, small quays and local moorings, outcrops of rocks and rapids, and slanting upland terraces where the new wine industry was establishing its vineyards for light, pleasant wines, some of which we tasted as we went. We dreamed on deck, watching the ducks floating downstream among occasional spars of driftwood, then heaving themselves out of the water to fly back and start again. Low barges, laden with every conceivable item, sailed down in twos or threes, then were rowed or dragged back the other way. It seemed a satisfying life. What was more, the merchants who plied their trade along this waterway were visibly affluent. With Helena beside me, I could have stayed for ever, becoming a happy river bum and never going home.

“What's in your mighty baggage pack?” Helena demanded.

“Scrolls to read.”

“Poetry?”

“History.”

“As in Thucydides?”

“As in Great Cock-ups of Modern Times.”

Helena glanced round to see if Augustinilla was in earshot of this irreverence, but saw my niece was too busy trying to find ways of falling off the boat. She laughed. “Why the interest?”

“Research for my various projects here. An archivist in Rome copied out some despatches about the rebellion for me.”

Now that Helena knew what I was carrying downriver, there was no point in hiding it. I excavated the basket, and was soon absorbed in Rome's sorry exploits while trying to dislodge Civilis. The more I read about the campaign, the more I cringed.

All too soon we had surged past the conjunction with the River Mosella at Castrum ad Confluentes, experienced Bingium and Bonna (both still heavily scarred and burnt, but with new ridge-poles rising), and reached our goal.

Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium tried hard to live up to its overpowering titles. Founded by Agrippa (as Ara Ubiorum), it was renamed after herself by his daughter, the forceful wife of Germanicus whose domineering reputation still had the power to make brave men feel queasy. It was the officially sanctioned shrine of the Ubii and the provincial capital of Lower Germany. It also boasted the main Roman tollpost on the river and the headquarters of Rome's Rhenus fleet, guarded by a small fort.

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