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The Sacrilege(66)

By:John Maddox Roberts


“The chief wants to see you at the baths, Senator,” the man said without preamble.

“The baths? At this hour?” I said.

“He doesn’t keep most people’s hours,” the Gaul said.

When I thought of it, a long, hot soak sounded like a good idea. I told Hermes to get my bath things and followed the Gaul through the streets. Celer was a busy man and probably wouldn’t even notice that I was absent. The bathhouse we went to was a modest one, but it adjoined the building that served as Milo’s home and headquarters.

Leaving Hermes to watch my belongings, I followed the Gaul into a steam room, where Milo sat with a group of his cronies. He looked up and grinned when I walked in.

“It’s true!” he crowed. “All Rome says you fought a pitched battle with Clodius and his men and ended up right in front of Octavius while he was holding court!” He laughed his huge, infectious laugh. I would have joined in, but it would have hurt too much.

“Come back from the army without a scratch,” Milo went on, “then cut to ribbons in the streets of Rome! What irony!”

“Oh,” I said, sitting down stiffly, “one expects the occasional scar when in service to Senate and People.” Indeed, in this company it was easy to be modest about a few little scars. Some of the men were arena veterans with more scar tissue than skin showing when they were stripped. One of them leaned forward and studied my shoulder.

“Neat bit of stitching there. Asklepiodes, eh?” I confirmed that he was correct.

“Seems unmanly to me, all this Greek seamstress work,” said another veteran. He gestured to a hideous trough of puckered flesh that slanted from his right shoulder to his left hip. “A red-hot searing-iron, that’s the way to stop a cut bleeding. Atlas gave me this one, a left-handed Samnite.”

“Got to watch out for those lefties,” said a companion.

Milo turned to me, and the others turned away from him. They were a well-drilled band, and we might as well have been alone.

“How did it go with Fausta?” he asked bluntly.

“Extremely well,” I assured him. “I conversed with her for some time, and she seems most sympathetic to your suit. She is bored with the men of her own class, as well she might be, and finds you exciting and interesting. I think that if you call on her, she will welcome you most warmly.”

“Very good,” he said.

“Always glad to be of service,” I told him.

“And I’ll be of service to you as well. I’ve passed the word that any assault against you by any of Clodius’s men earns instant death. My people will watch out for you in the streets. As long as you stay in plain view, that is. When you go sneaking around, as you have a habit of doing, I can’t guarantee your safety.”

“I can take care of myself,” I said, slightly miffed.

He leaned close. “Are those teeth marks on your face? I thought you fancied yourself a swordsman, not a bestiarius.”

“I do appreciate your help, Titus. My real problem now is that I am at a loss to understand what is going on. With each new bit of evidence that comes my way, I think I have the key that will make all else fit, but it never does.”

“Bring me up to date,” Milo said. I told him of the various oddments of information I had picked up. He raised an eyebrow slightly when I spoke of Julia, and frowned when I mentioned Fausta’s words.

“I do not like the idea that she is involved,” he said ominously. Keeping the sundry women out of the matter was getting difficult.

“Oddly, I think that both she and Julia are speaking the truth. How this can be so I can’t say yet.”

“Then here is another bit of information for you to exercise upon: The day after the sacrilege, Crassus posted surety for all of Caesar’s greatest debts. He is free to leave Rome now. All that keeps him here now is Pompey’s upcoming triumph.”

“This is significant,” I said. “But why should he hang around for the triumph, other than that it is sure to be a fine show? I would think that the only triumph that could interest Caesar would be his own, and the very prospect of that is laughable.”

“That’s another little question for you to ponder, isn’t it?”

“How does this happen, Titus?” I said, a little of my long-held disgust coming to the surface. “Here in Rome we’ve built the only viable Republic in history, and now it’s falling to the shadowy machinations of shadowy men like these. I mean, it all worked so well. We had the popular assemblies, the Centuriate Assembly, the Senate and the Consuls. No kings. We could have the occasional Dictator when the times called for one, but only on a time-limited basis, the power to be handed back to Senate and People as soon as the emergency was over. Now it’s all falling to military adventurers like Pompey, plutocrats like Crassus and demagogues like Clodius. Why?”