“Do you know of anyone besides Gaeto who might have been involved with Gorgo?”
She pursed her mouth and arched her eyebrows. “As far as I know, she was as blameless as her eulogy would have it.”
“Is anyone ever that blameless?” I asked.
“Never. But she lived a rather secluded life out there in the temple. We never mixed much with them except at municipal banquets and that sort of event. They’re local aristocracy, or fancy themselves so, too well-bred for the likes of us.” She laughed again. “If that’s how aristocrats live, you can have it!”
“I couldn’t agree more, though I’m something of an aristocrat myself. In Rome we like to affect a taste for the simple, rural life. In truth, we’d all love to live like Lucullus, if only we could afford it.”
“You’re not doing too badly,” she said. “Old Hortalus’s villa is said to be the finest in Italy.”
“Alas, it’s just a loan. Before long, I’ll have to go down to Bruttium and you know how miserable that’s going to be. It’s like Rome two hundred years ago and I’ll be surrounded by Bruttians.”
“It is a backward place,” she agreed. “Actually, you should be grateful these murders have occurred. It gives you an excuse to prolong your stay.” She looked up under her thick eyelashes and smiled slyly.
“By Jupiter, you’re right. I suppose that makes me a suspect.”
“I think I would commit murder to stay in Baiae and out of Bruttium!” she said, bursting into laughter again. She had been into the wine before she joined our table.
“I still wonder, though,” I went on, “why the men deferred to him so. Only a small minority would have found in him the same attractions the women did.”
“More than you would think,” she said. “But you are right. The fact is, many of Baiae’s noblest had business dealings with Gaeto. Very deep, important business dealings. Some of our most impeccably respectable citizens are involved in extremely dirty dealings.”
“What sort of dealings?” I asked.
She leaned forward on her elbows in a parody of intimacy. “It’s all about using money to get more money, Senator. That’s what business is. You Roman aristocrats like to pretend that the only respectable sources of wealth are land and plunder in war. The businessmen here prefer the luxury trades. But you and they know the truth: The greatest source of wealth is human flesh. And the only true power is absolute dominion over human flesh.” The worldly cynicism in her eyes was an unsettling thing to behold.
“Go on,” I said, through with clever banter.
“Do you know why everyone despises the slaver? Because he reminds us that we are all slavers. Where would our empire be without slaves?”
“We wouldn’t have an empire,” I answered. “We wouldn’t have a civilization.”
“Exactly. They grow our food, and then they cook it and serve it to us and clean up afterward. They build our houses and tend our baths. They provide us with fornication and when we tire of them, we can sell them off. They race chariots for our amusement and die in our arenas for the same purpose. They teach our children and tend us in our illnesses.”
“It’s hard to imagine a decent life without them,” I agreed.
She sat back with a depraved smile. “We consume them, Praetor, just as surely as if we were cannibals eating their flesh. We dangle before them the prospect of freedom to keep them pacified and ensure more willing service, but the whip and the cross are always there just in case kind treatment and prospective freedom aren’t enough.”
“It’s the price of losing wars and choosing the wrong parents,” I said. “Been that way since Deucalion’s Flood. What is your point?”
“That we all know it’s true and it shames us. So we’ve singled out the slaver, the man who buys and sells the flesh, to bear the brunt of social disdain while we all merrily profit from his business. If it came out that some of our most revered public figures were silent partners with our richest but most despised resident, certain reputations would be sullied for-ever.
This tickled my memory, suggested some question that had eluded me or that I had failed to ask. But she went relentlessly on and the moment passed.
“There are worse things than being a slave, Praetor, and I’ve been some of them. Luckily, it was only temporary and now I’m a great lady again. Some things can be covered over and forgotten. Others can’t. Bear that in mind while you look into these killings.”
“I shall do so,” I assured her.
Abruptly she dropped the serious discussion and resumed the gossipy banter more suitable to the situation. A few minutes later her litter arrived and she made her good-byes.