Lindsey Davis - The Ides of April

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I unwound my hot person from the confining folds of my stole. He greeted the process with the excitement of a child unwrapping a present. As soon as he saw the scroll, he seized it from me, chuckling over the confidentiality notice and the seals.

I explained: "Although your Faustus ordered the vigiles to deter me from my private assignments, the confused man has now hired me himself. That is my formal report for him."

"And you have given it," joked Andronicus, "to the one person who is capable of undoing the strings, reading the secrets, and replacing the seals undetectably!"

"Ah yes." I did have second thoughts, though briefly But I trusted him. "I suppose counterfeiting legal seals is the first thing an archivist learns!"

"No, the first is how to hide your beaker of posca in a scroll-box quickly, if your master walks in."

Posca, which is little more than vinegar or wine spoiled by bad storage, is a slave's drink. I did not comment. I knew he would hate being reminded-and would hate me being too aware of his past.

Taking my right hand, he examined my seal ring. After comparing it to the marks in the wax, he kept hold of my hand. I like a masterful lover, but felt awkwardly conscious that we were in a public office. In Rome, only very low-grade people-or very drunk nobles- make love in public. For his part, Andronicus seemed to enjoy the danger of being discovered.

"Luckily," he said, gazing into my eyes from a rather close position, "I do know what is going on. People are being attacked in the street. There have been high-powered meetings involving all the aediles, occurring for some time now. Three out of four of them are hoping they can delay any action until their term of office ends, sticking the problem onto next year's stooges. Our Faustus has to be different. He has made this his personal mission. He wants to catch the Aventine killer, and if he fails, the idiot will be brokenhearted."

"Maybe he is right. Don't the public deserve protection?"

"Of course." Andronicus had his distracted look, almost as if he had been intending to give a different reply. I reckoned he had a low opinion of the public-for which I could not entirely blame him. The more of them I met, the more I despaired.

"Is Faustus here today?"

"No, thank Jupiter."

"Any of the other three?"

"Naturally not. You don't think these golden boys work , do you, Albia?" Andronicus pulled me close, beginning some gentle neck-nuzzling. He smelt of an attar that must be expensive; I was amused to find he liked such luxuries and had money to buy them. "So what have you discovered for the sad man?"

"Oh it's all there," I murmured back, still trying to keep one eye on the door in case someone came in. I do have standards. I have never liked smooching in public. I want to relax and give my all. I like comfort too. I was certainly willing to give my all to Andronicus, but not backed up against the money-chests in a magistrates' public office. Who wants a rusty old hasp in the ribs? "You will see, if you do break the seals … I was asked to interrogate Laia Gratiana."

"Over that incident where her friend's maid died?"

I was glad Andronicus had heard about it, without me needing to reveal a confidence. "Yes, I get all the wonderful jobs … I had to force myself to be polite."

"Poor you! She's a cow. I can't bear taking documents to the temple when she's swanning about in her Queen of Heaven mode."

"I managed."

Andronicus then mused, "Laia Gratiana, eh? — You know she and Faustus share a murky past?"

"Hence me being sent for her statement." Wonderful though it felt to be in his arms again, I had no intention of telling Andronicus that Laia Gratiana may have seen the killer. Nor would I pass on what Tiberius had confided in me regarding that ancient divorce.

"Yes, he will run vast circles to avoid any contact with the haughty Laia-and she won't ever approach him either. Something went on there, Albia. I would give a lot to know exactly what it was!"

To sidetrack my inquisitive friend (and to try to ignore where his hands were wandering), I mentioned my wise theory that if either of the maids had a secret liaison, she would have kept it to herself, given my view that any woman should avoid boasting about her lover. We fantasised comically: "You know-either he's on the verge of dumping her unexpectedly, to fulfil his real ambition of joining the legions or of going on a long sea voyage-"

"— Or else," Andronicus finished for me, "her confidante, who was previously her best friend, turns out to be a deceitful bitch, the very woman with whom sonny has been two-timing her…"

We laughed. It was wonderful to have someone to share such zany moments in the midst of serious work. Andronicus was the master of the art of light flirting, of easy friendship. He made me feel safe. I sank into this pleasant sensation, even though I knew that much trust could be dangerous.

"So…" he suggested. "I gather you won't be boasting about me?" He couldn't help it. He was a man; he needed to be the centre of everything. I just smiled wisely.

We returned to the topic of my investigations.

"Are you supposing a boyfriend made this attack on the maids, Albia?"

"There is no evidence of that."

Footsteps sounded outside in the colonnade. By the time the damned runner entered, Andronicus and I were innocently sitting apart on separate stools.

"You ditched the feeble disguise, I see," jeered Tiberius, nodding at my discarded stole. He had to let me know he really did see me earlier, in the Vicus Altus. I wondered if he then followed me here deliberately, to interrupt any fun with Andronicus. "When you two have stopped giving each other the glad eye … I presume that is your report? Shall I take it?" He glared pointedly at Andronicus, who had to part with my scroll.

"I pretty well covered everything," I intervened, trying to distract them from their mutual hostility. "I have still not spoken directly to the second maid, but a source told me she claims she saw nothing. Of course I want to check that. I will keep trying for a proper follow-up."

"Keep me informed."

I did not reprise my opinion about women and their lovers. Tiberius was not a man to joke.

Tiberius left us, clutching my scroll, and took himself off somewhere else in the building.

I mentioned to Andronicus how I had seen the runner patrolling the street where incidents had happened. "He seems obsessed."

"Of course, there could be another explanation," said Andronicus sombrely.

"What?"

"Does it never strike you that Tiberius is an odd character himself? A loner. A prowler. A cold, friendless, arrogant, unsocial person who cannot make anybody like him, even if he tries to-most times he does not bother to try. A man who has been given the task of moving among the public, exercising his judgement about their characters and their behaviour … So, might he have decided to impose a personal punishment on those he regards as being at fault?"

"Go on." I felt unhappy with where this was leading, but I let him add his finale.

"What a coincidence, Flavia Albia, if he turned out to be involved in what you are investigating! Suppose Tiberius is your villain."

XXVI

Romans were marinaded in suspicion these days. Our paranoid emperor had made us all too ready to distrust people. I said that I would think carefully about Andronicus' suggestion. I meant it. Normally I like to exercise my own judgement. But this idea about the runner had struck me too.

Tiberius had certainly known of Salvidia, because it was he who chalked up the advertisement for witnesses after her driver's accident. I knew of no connection between him and the old woman, Celendina, nor was I aware that he had ever met the oyster boy, though it was by no means impossible. He certainly knew a lot about Laia Gratiana. Given the official links between the aediles' office and the Temple of Ceres, which must include the cult, he probably knew her friend Marcia too. A trusted runner was not too disreputable to engage with such women, nor too lofty to have spoken to their maids.

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