Fausta smiled. “Julia says that you are mad but very interesting. I’m beginning to see what she means.” No sooner had she pronounced this enigmatic statement than the lady herself showed up.
“This affair is getting utterly out of hand,” Julia said. “Decius, I think we should return to the embassy.”
“You talk as if the two of you were married already,” Fausta observed.
“Will you come with us?” Julia asked Fausta, not bothering to inquire whether I wished to leave.
“I think I’ll stay,” Fausta said. “I’ve always heard about the debauchery of the Egyptian court, and this is a chance for a close look. Go on, you two. Enough of the Roman embassy staff remains for the sake of decorum.” Actually, most of them had passed out or were well on their way, but I never doubted Fausta’s ability to take care of herself.
We boarded a barge for the short row back to the Palace wharf.
“I’ve just had an interesting conversation with the concubine of the Parthian ambassador,” Julia said.
“He didn’t bring his wife, I take it?” I said.
“No. Wives and children must be left behind in Parthia against the ambassador’s good behavior.”
“The poor man. And what did this consolationary female have to say?”
“By great good luck she is a highly educated Greek hetaira. The ambassador’s Greek is deficient, and she helps him with documents written in that language. Most of it is the usual tedious embassy business, but recently she read for him certain illustrated documents which he translated into Parthian. He sent the originals and translation to King Phraates in a locked chest under heavy guard.”
I felt the familiar angling, the one I always get when an important bit of the puzzle clicks into place. “And the nature of these documents?”
“They were plans for war machines. She could make nothing of the drawings, and most of the text was in technical language she wasn’t familiar with, but there was some sort of device for setting fire to ships, and others for breaching walls and hurling missiles. There was also a receipt for a large sum of money in payment for these plans. The money was paid to Iphicrates of Chios. She thought it a great coincidence that he was murdered so soon after.”
“Remind me never to entrust my secrets to a talkative Greek woman. Did she recall anything else?”
“This came out in the middle of a great gush of words concerning all the details of her life. I thought it would be unwise to press her about it. Easterners never listen to women, and she was dying for somebody to talk to.” This, as it turned out, was an unfortunate choice of words.
6
“THE MAN’S NAME IS EUNOS,” AMPHYTRION said. “He is from Rhodes and was personal valet to Iphicrates for two years.”
“Can he read?” I asked.
“Of course. All the Museum slaves assigned to personal service must meet certain standards of education. After all, if one must send a slave from a lecture hall to fetch a certain book, he must be able to recognize it.”
“Sensible,” I said. “Tell me, do you know whether the General Achillas or any other of the military nobles paid frequent visits to Iphicrates?”
He looked at me as if I had taken leave of my senses. “Meaning no disrespect to his Majesty’s noble servants, the military men are an ignorant lot of Macedonian mountain bumpkins. Why would they consort with a scholar like Iphicrates?”
“Was Iphicrates ever absent for extended periods?” I asked.
“Why, yes. He took monthly trips by boat upon the river, taking measurements of the water’s rise and fall and observing the effects of flowing water upon the banks. He was deeply interested in the dynamics of water. You saw the canal lock he was designing.”
“Yes, I did. What was the duration of these trips?”
“I fail to see the pertinence of these questions, but he always took six days at the beginning of each month for these journeys.”
“Is that a common sort of arrangement here?” I asked.
“Within reasonable limits, our scholars have perfect freedom to pursue their studies as they see fit. They need not even give lectures if they do not wish to. Here in the Museum, our goal is pure knowledge.”
“Most commendable,” I murmured. I was beginning to have severe doubts concerning the purity of Iphicrates’s knowledge. There was a knock at the door and a middle-aged Greek entered, dressed in the livery tunic of the Museum. He bowed to Amphytrion and to me, then waited with that dignified self-possession common to slaves conscious of their own superiority in slave society.
“Eunos, the Senator wishes to question you concerning the late Iphicrates of Chios.”