Lindsey Davis - Ode to a Banker
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- Название:Ode to a Banker
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Thinking about how silent the library had been, I was puzzled.
Sound would never carry from indoors to the street. 'The men in red were very quickly on the scene. Someone ran out from the house?' He looked vague.
'I think so.'
'Do you know who it was?'
'No. Once the alarin was raised, it all happened in a blur -'
'Was anybody in either area of the library when you first went in?'
'No.'
'Nobody leaving as you arrived?'
'No.'
'Anybody there the first time you went? I mean, when you first delivered the tray?'
'I only went in the lobby. I couldn't hear anyone talking.'
'Oh?' I eyed him suspiciously. 'Were you listening out for conversation?'
'Only politely.' He kept his cool at the suggestion that he eavesdropped. 'Often the master has somebody with him. That's why I leave the meal outside for him to collect when they have gone.'
'So go back a step for me: today you delivered his lunch as usual; you put down the tray on the side table, then what – did you call out or go in to tell your master it was there?'
'No. I never disturb him. He was expecting it. He normally comes out for it soon after.'
'And once you had delivered the tray, how long elapsed before you returned for the empties?'
'I had my own food, that's all.'
'What did you have?'
'Bread and mulsum, a little slice of goat's cheese.' He said this without much enthusiasm.
'That didn't take you long?'
'No.'
I removed the tray from his resisting fingers and laid it aside. The master's lunch had been more varied and tasty than his own, yet not enough for an epicure: salad leaves beneath a cold fish in marinade, big green olives, two eggs in wooden cups; red wine in a glass jug. 'It's over now. Try to forget what you saw.'
He started trembling. Belated shock set in. 'The soldiers say the slaves will get the blame.'
'They always say that. Did you attack your master?'
'No.'
'Do you know who did?'
'No.'
'No need to worry then.'
I was about to check with Fusculus what else had turned up, but something made me pause. The waiting slave seemed to be staring at the luncheon tray. I peered at him, querying. 'He's had one thing,' he told me.
'What do you mean?'
The slave looked slightly guilty, and certainly troubled, as though there was something he could not understand.
I waited, keeping my face neutral. He seemed intrigued. 'There was a little slice of nettle flan.' He sketched out the size with his thumb and one finger, a couple of digits of finger buffet savoury, cut as a triangle; I could imagine it. We both surveyed the food. No flan slice.
'Could it have dropped on the floor when you panicked and ran out?'
'It was not there when I went for the tray. I noticed specially.'
'How can you be sure?'
'He doesn't like pastry. I had seen it when I took the tray in. I thought he would leave it.'
'You were hoping to eat it yourself?'
'He wouldn't have minded,' he muttered defensively.
I said nothing, but that was interesting. I don't only mean that their cook served a rather eggy type of lunch. Nobody breaks off from work, investigates his tray, eats the one thing he dislikes, then abandons the rest. Somebody else must have been in that lobby. Maybe the killer himself passed that way when he left. Coolly grabbing a handful of his victim's meal? That would take nerve. Or else he was brutally callous.
Mind you, if anybody spotted him on the way out, having a fistful of pastry and a mouthful of crumbs would have made him look casual.
Fusculus approached, followed by one of his men.
'This is Passus, Falco. You probably don't know him. Joined our team recently.'
Passus looked at me with suspicion. He was a short, shock-haired neat type with a belt he was proud of and stubby hands. He had a quiet manner and was no raw recruit; I guessed he had been seconded from some other cohort. His air was competent but not too pushy. He was carrying a set of waxed tablets, with a bone stylus bending his right ear forward, for taking notes.
'Didius Falco,' I introduced myself politely. I had always respected the men Petro gathered around him. He was a good judge and they responded well to him. 'Petronius Longus has called me in to assist on a consultancy basis.'
Passus still said nothing, glancing sideways at Fusculus. He had been told, or had deduced, that I was an informer; he did not like it. 'Yes, it stinks,' I agreed. 'I'm no happier than you are. I have better things to do. But Petro knows I'm sound. I gather your squad is floundering in summer crime and needs to farin out the surplus.' I had had enough of justifying myself. 'Either that, or my dear friend Lucius has his hands full with a new girlfriend.'
Fusculus jumped. Petro's love life fascinated his men. 'He's after a new one?'
'Guesswork. He's said nix. You know how close he is. We'll only be sure when the next outraged husband comes to ask if we know why his turtledove is always tired… So, Passus, what's the story from the staff here?'
The new enquiry officer gave his report slightly stiffly at first, warming to the task: 'Aurelius Chrysippus had been occupying himself in his normal business. There were morning visitors; I took names. But he had been seen alive – when he asked for his lunch – after the last one is thought to have left.'
'Thought?' I queried. 'Are visitors not monitored?'
'The regime seems rather informal,' said Fusculus. 'There is a door porter but he doubles up as a water-carrier. If he is not at his post, people come and go as if the house was an extension of the shop.'
'Casual.'
'Greeks!' Apparently Fusculus harboured some old Roman prejudice against our cultured neighbours.
'I thought they like to protect their womenfolk?'
'No, they're just all over other peoples' women,' Fusculus sneered bitterly. A personal beef, no doubt of it. Find the female? I didn't even know that Fusculus had a girlfriend, let alone that he had had her pinched by some Piraeus skirt pirate.
'They have plenty of staff about.' Passus wanted to continue with his notes. 'It was a normal day. Chrysippus did not seem out of sorts. Thealarin was raised by slaves just after midday. Most of them fled, terrified.'
'Terrified of being blamed,' commented Fusculus. Well, the vigiles, with their usual light-handed tactics, were making sure the slaves' terror was justified.
'Any of them touch the body?'
'No, Falco.' Fusculus, as senior officer present, was quick to let me know the vigiles had checked that aspect. 'They say they only looked in and then ran – well, it's pretty repellent.'
Passus took over again: 'We listened to their stories, then we carried out a hands and clothing check. No bloodstains on most of their tunics. One did have that spilt stuff from the library all up his backside, but that was because his feet had slipped from under him on the oil in there and he landed in the stuff; it's clear he has not been in a fight. Those with blood on their footwear match those who admitted they went in to gawp.'
'Arms and legs?'
'Clean.'
'Untoward bruising? Signs of a tussle?'
'Nothing new. A few bangs and cuts. All readily explained as natural wear and tear.' In most households a survey of the slaves would produce a fair set of black eyes, cuts, burns, knocks and sores.
'What do they say about the way they are handled here?'
'Routine. Smacked ears for making themselves unpopular, meagre servings in their food-bowls, hard beds, not enough women to go round.'
'So the slaves are affectionately-treated adjuncts to a normal family?'
'Model behaviour by the paterfamilias.'
'Did he extract sexual favours?'
'Probably. Nobody mentioned it.'
So far, this was not helping. 'I am still unclear how the alarm spread to the street,' I said. That niggled me. 'Who was it who ran out of the house making a noise?'
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