Reading Online Novel

Roman Games(85)



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Martial runs down the Via Sacra, his heart pounding in his shaggy breast. His knees are aching and his chest is on fire. How much farther to Verpa’s house? Up the Citadel steps and down the other side, not the easiest route but the most direct. He doesn’t think he can make it. But he must!

He hadn’t meant to tell Stephanus so much—not about Amatia! But the man had threatened to knife him right there in the street and, after wringing everything out of him, had dashed off somewhere. Parthenius’ creature!

At last! He stumbles against Verpa’s door. A trooper opens the door cautiously, recognizes him, and pulls him inside. In the atrium the others are sitting about, grim-visaged and talking in low voices.

“Valens!” The poet is panting so hard he can barely speak. “Gaius Plinius—needs you—at once! What? What are you saying?”

“I’m saying that we’ve been ordered to return to barracks and surrender our arms to the fucking Praetorians. If we’re seen in the city we’ll be treated as rebels. We’ve just been talking about what to do.”

“What you must do is come with me, now! I’ll explain on the way.”



“Your pink-cheeked senator friend has gotten himself in trouble? How is that our problem?”



Assenting grunts from the men.



“Valens, that will he was going to write for you? You may need it sooner than you think!”



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“And why, madam, are you here in my house?” Pliny challenged.

“You invited me,” Amatia said simply. “And there was no more to be done at Verpa’s house. Without Iatrides I had no way of communicating with the others. So, on my own, I decided to spy on you, I confess it gladly. You insisted on investigating the case, day after day, with your obnoxious friend, as if it actually mattered whether a few slaves were executed or not! What if you somehow stumbled on the truth? I had to steer you away from that.”

It dawned on Pliny then how easily he had let himself be fooled by this woman. There were a dozen ways he could have checked her story, but it had simply never occurred to him. Why should it have? He was so bent on exposing Lucius and Scortilla, and Amatia was so good to his wife. Was that only a charade too?

“Now, I have told you everything,” she said, “I appeal to you. If you simply do nothing, all of this will be over in a matter of hours. Today is the appointed day.”

Do nothing? His anger flared. “You speak so contemptuously of the slaves, lady. Does justice mean nothing to you? You are willing to sacrifice the lives of forty innocent human beings who will be punished for murdering their master when it was you who committed the crime?”

She rounded on him, matching her anger against his. “You expect me to risk all our lives for slaves! Tell me, Pliny, aren’t we all slaves? Slaves to the tyrant? Have you no tears for us? Or for yourself? For you are as much a slave as any of us. You know what kind of man he is, don’t deny it. I studied your face when you returned from those midnight visits with him. I saw the fear in your eyes. You know what that monster will do to us and to our families and friends if we fail. We’ve suffered him for fifteen years. He could live for another twenty or thirty. The fate of Rome is more important than your wretched handful of slaves!”

“No, madam. I sympathize, I understand, but I do not agree. The Deified Julius was murdered, Claudius murdered, Caligula murdered, Galba and Vitellius murdered amid the horrors of civil war when blood ran in our streets. And now Domitian, too? Do you want that again? He’s popular with the legions in Germania. They’ll demand blood for blood. We have been lucky in Vespasian and Titus, not so lucky in Domitian. But we must endure him. Otherwise it is back to the old ways where everything is decided by the knife. Are we a great and noble people or are we a pack of savages?”

“You little prig!” She was on her feet, her small fists clenched. “Don’t talk to me of nobility. My family was noble when yours was still hoeing turnips. You have the soul of a subordinate, you will always have a master, if not Domitian, then someone even worse. You were the emperor’s praetor three years ago, weren’t you, when the philosophers were purged. On your watch, good men like Rusticus and Senecio and their noble wives were executed or deported to prison islands. These men were your friends, your mentors. Was one word heard from you?”

He looked away. He remembered that Scortilla, on the day of the funeral, had called him an informer. Then it had merely exasperated him. But coming from this brave woman, the words cut like a knife. “I loved them, I admired their courage. Secretly, I wept for them.”