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Synopsis
Twenty tales of intrigue, murder and mayhem from this most bloodthirsty and exciting of times. With dramatic settings ranging form the Eternal City of Rome to the most remote outposts of her Empire, here are new tales form the masters of the historical detective story, with classic gems and rare reprints - plus a special introduction, and a new Gordianus the Finder novella from Steven Saylor. A Gladiator Dies Only Once, Steven Saylor: set just before the rebellion of Spartacus, Gordianus is sent to investigate, not a murder but a resurrection. Heads You Lose, Simon Scarrow: someone is beheading soldiers during the siege of Jerusalem, but could the assassin be within the Roman camp? Never Forget, Tom HOlt: having defeated Hannibal, Scipio Africanus has a murder to solve and consults a wily Greek philosopher to help him. The Hostage to Fortune, Michael Jecks: during Caesar's invasion of Britain, the murder of one of the hostages causes a real problem for the guards. The Finger of Aphrodite, Mary Reed and Eric Mayer: with Rome under siege by the Ostrogoths, John the Eunuch is faced with a locked room murder. Edited by Edgar Award winner Mike Ashley
Release date: February 27, 2014
Publisher: C & R Crime
Print pages: 743
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The Mammoth Book of Roman Whodunnits
Mike Ashley
“Damnun Fatale” © 2003 by Philip Boast. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author and the author’s agent, the Dorian Literary Agency.
“The Malice of the Anicii” © 2003 by Gillian Bradshaw. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author and the author’s agent, the Dorian Literary Agency.
“De Crimine” © 1952 by Miriam Allen deFord. First published in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, October 1952. Reprinted in accordance with the instructions of the author’s estate.
“The Cleopatra Game” © 2003 by Jane Finnis. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“Never Forget” © 2003 by Tom Holt. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“A Hostage to Fortune” © 2003 by Michael Jecks. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“Great Caesar’s Ghost” © 2003 by Michael Kurland. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“Bread and Circuses” © 2003 by Caroline Lawrence. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author and the author’s agent, Teresa Chris Agency.
“A Golden Opportunity” © 2003 by Jean Davidson. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“The Case of His Own Abduction” © 1966 by Wallace Nichols. First published in London Mystery Magazine #72, February 1967. Unable to trace surviving representatives of the author’s estate.
“The Finger of Aphrodite” © 2003 by Mary Reed and Eric Mayer. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the authors.
“The Will” © 2003 by John Maddox Roberts. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“Caveat Emptor” © 2003 by Rosemary Rowe. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author and the author’s agent, the Dorian Literary Agency.
“Introduction: The Long Reach of Rome” and “A Gladiator Dies Only Once” © 2003 by Steven Saylor. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“Heads You Lose” © 2003 by Simon Scarrow. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“Some Unpublished Correspondence of the Younger Pliny” © 2003 by Darrell Schweitzer. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“Sunshine and Shadow” © 2003 by R.H. Stewart. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author and the author’s agent, Laurence Pollinger Limited.
“Honey Moon” © 2003 by Marilyn Todd. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author.
“The Lost Eagle” © 2003 by Peter Tremayne. Original to this anthology. Printed by permission of the author and the author’s agent, A. M. Heath & Co., Ltd.
Towards the end of the last century (circa 1987), I took my first trip to Rome, and like many a traveller I was overwhelmed by the sensation of making visceral contact with the past. In no other city do so many layers of history coexist so palpably within such a small space. In a matter of hours one can follow Caesar’s footsteps through the Forum, take a short rail excursion to the excavated ruins at Ostia, view the art of Michelangelo and contemplate Papal intrigues at the Vatican, gawk at the Fascist architecture at Mussolini’s EUR, and even take a tour of the film studios at Cinecittá with their echoes of Fellini and La Dolce Vita.
Inspired by that visit, and having developed an insatiable appetite for crime fiction, I found myself craving a murder mystery set in ancient Rome.
It seems remarkable now that no such thing was to be found on the bookshelves as recently as 1987, but such was the case, and so I felt compelled to fill the gap myself. A couple of years later I finished a novel called Roman Blood featuring a sleuth called Gordianus the Finder. Only days after sending the manuscript to an editor in New York, I came across a copy of Lindsey Davis’s The Silver Pigs among the new titles at my local bookshop, and had an inkling that a whole subgenre combining murder mystery and Roman history was about to be born.
Indeed, so popular has this particular field of literary escapism become in the last dozen years that a volume like the one you hold in your hands seems as inevitable as it does intriguing.
The booming subgenre has grown to include its own well-established crime-solvers, and here readers will find new adventures for John Maddox Roberts’s hero of the SPQR series, Decius Mettelus; for that randy vixen Claudia, the heroine of Marilyn Todd’s novels; for Rosemary Rowe’s Libertus, a freedman who solves crimes in Roman Britain; for John the Eunuch, the Byzantine sleuth of Mary Reed and Eric Mayer; for Peter Tremayne’s Sister Fidelma, who dwells on the furthest edges and in the last feeble twilight of the Roman Empire’s glow; and even for the young detectives of Caroline Lawrence, who takes the Roman mystery into the realm of children’s fiction (grooming a new generation of readers for my own Gordianus books, I hope).
Here readers will find traditional forms of the mystery story, including a “locked-room” puzzler by Michael Kurland, in which the great pedagogue Quintilian plays sleuth for the emperor Vespasian; traditional forms of historical fiction, such as Darrell Schweitzer’s epistolary “Some Unpublished Correspondence of the Young Pliny”; and even a story which purports to be actual history, Gillian Bradshaw’s “The Malice of the Anicii”, complete with footnotes.
Many of the stories are set in Rome itself, but the locales range from ancient Egypt (“The Missing Centurion”) to the besieged city of Jerusalem (Simon Scarrow’s “Heads You Lose”) to the Canterbury of Tremayne’s Sister Fidelma – all the better to demonstrate the extraordinary reach of Rome across both seas and centuries. (Quite a few of the stories take place in Roman Britain, including those by R.H. Stewart and Jean Davidson.)
Inevitably, perhaps, the shadow of Julius Caesar falls across these pages (see Michael Jecks’s “A Hostage to Fortune” and John Maddox Roberts’s “The Will”), as does that of Cleopatra (whose demise haunts Roman high society in Jane Finnis’s “The Cleopatra Game”).
Given the imperial might of Rome, it’s not surprising that a number of these stories are set in a military milieu. But Rome was also about the world of intellect and spiritual contemplation. Confronted by a bizarre death, it makes perfect sense that the mighty conqueror Scipio Africanus should seek a Greek philosopher’s advice in Tom Holt’s “Never Forget”, and even the advent of that curious sect, the Christians, is occasioned by murder, as seen in Philip Boast’s “Damnum Fatale”.
For my own part, as a bit of homage to a movie that gave a considerable boost to our subgenre (and because I’ve never written at length on the subject before), I decided to spin a tale set in the world of gladiators. The most famous gladiator of all does not appear in my story, but his shadow is eventually cast over the proceedings, as it was cast, if only briefly, over the entire Roman world.
While it may have gained its greatest popularity in recent years, the crime story set in ancient Rome was not actually invented in the 1990s, but has numerous precursors. This volume includes a small but intriguing sampling of some earlier forays, including Miriam Allen deFord’s “De Crimine” from 1952, featuring the famous advocate Cicero and based on actual events, as well as one of Wallace Nicholls’s vintage tales of the Slave Detective. The anonymously authored “The Missing Centurion” dates from 1862, and so constitutes one of the earliest efforts to mingle historical and mystery fiction; kudos to editor Mike Ashley for rescuing it from utter obscurity.
Here then is the panoply of ancient Rome cast across continents and ages, viewed through the gimlet eyes of those who make it their business to write about the lowest human activity (murder) and the highest (the quest for truth). What better way to celebrate the virtues and the vices of a city that claims to be eternal?
Steven Saylor
We start our investigations in ancient Rome at a time when Rome was establishing its pre-eminence in the Mediterranean world with Scipio’s defeat of Hannibal in the Second Punic War in 202 BC. Tom Holt may be best known for his humorous fantasy novels such as Who’s Afraid of Beowulf? (1988), Paint Your Dragon (1996) and Snow White and the Seven Samurai (1999), but he is also the author of several fine historical novels set in the ancient world. These include Goatsong (1989), The Walled Orchard (1990), Alexander at the World’s End (1999) and Olympiad (2000).
“Fine,” said Publius Cornelius Scipio, the World’s Biggest Man, “but what does a philosopher actually do?”
Your typical Roman question; ignorant, offensive and unpleasantly awkward to deal with. “We think about things,” I said.
“You think about things?”
“Yes.”
“And that’s it?”
Oh no you don’t, I said to myself. You may be a military genius and the man who beat Hannibal, but I’m a Greek lawyer. You don’t stand a chance.
“That’s it,” I said. “Because, after all, thought’s what separates men from animals. Thought’s the part of us that makes us like the gods. So we think about things.”
He shrugged. “What things?” he asked.
Outside the tent, soldiers were moving about; I could feel the tramp of their nailed sandals on the baked ground, coming up through the soles of my own feet. Where the tent-flap was slightly open, I couldn’t see anything except the blinding African sun, occasionally eclipsed for a split second as people hurried past. The smell of Army was everywhere and overpowering, but I tried to ignore it.
“Everything,” I said. “Everything separately, and everything together, in the context of everything else. That’s what’s so special about thought.”
“Really.” I could see I’d lost him, which wasn’t good. I needed the job. “In other words, you sit on your bum in the shade with your mouth open, and for that you’re worth more per day than a blacksmith makes in a year.” He shook his head. “No disrespect,” he said, “but you’re full of it.”
I smothered a grin. “Absolutely,” I said. “I’m full of everything, because I’m full of thought. In thought, the whole universe exists in microcosm inside my head, perfect in every detail. More to the point, I can recreate the universe any time I like, just by thinking. You give me a feather, and I can think you the whole chicken. From first principles, as it were.”
He turned his head ever so slightly, and I knew I’d got him. Using his own tactics against him, of course. In the great battle, a week ago, he’d provoked Hannibal into committing his elephants to a charge, and then opened his lines and let them pass harmlessly through. Scipio’s mind was all elephants.
“You reckon,” he said.
“Yes, I do,” I replied. “Which is, of course, why you need me on your team. It’s the perfect combination; Roman energy, vigour and muscle, Greek intellect. And please bear in mind, so far all you’ve done is the easy bit; fight Hannibal, win the war, that stuff. Now you’ve got to face the tricky part. Which is why you need me.”
“Tricky part,” he repeated. To do him credit, he spoke Greek like – well, not like a proper Greek, but he could’ve passed for a half-breed Sicilian, on a good day, with a bad cold to mask his accent. “Like?”
“Like going home,” I said. “Surviving victory. Winning is easy. Staying won; that’s hard.”
He laughed; strange man, I thought. “Well,” he said, “tell you what, here’s the deal. I have a very nasty, inconvenient problem that needs to be cleared up fast; in two days, to be precise, and assuming the weather doesn’t get even hotter. And the thing of it is, this is a thinking problem, not a doing one. It means going back into the past. Do you reckon you can manage that, just by thinking?”
“Of course,” I said. “And if I succeed, I get the job. Agreed?”
He smiled. Good-looking man, for a Roman. “Agreed,” he said.
“Excellent. So, what’s the problem?”
Here’s a rule of life for you; don’t try being clever around Roman generals. They’re all of them thick as valley oaks, but sly. There’s not a lot that your finely honed lawyer-philosopher’s brain can do about sly; it sneaks past your defences and bites your ankles.
Scipio grinned at me, then led me through the camp to the big open space in the middle, where the soldiers do drill and stuff. Just off this main square (Roman camps are like towns, with a square and streets and everything) was a little canvas and ox-hide alleyway, backing on to a high paling fence. When we reached the end of it, I saw something that made me realize I’d just been taken for a garlic-nibbler.
Dead body. Very dead. The glorious Plato, looking for the perfect encapsulation of the essential nature of Dead, would’ve jumped up and down and clapped his hands in glee.
I have this thing with dead bodies. I don’t like them terribly much.
“That’s the problem,” said Scipio, pointing at the red and black thing slumped in the dust, attractively garnished with flies. “Marcus Vitellius Acer, Roman senator, sort of a second-cum-third cousin of mine. If you look closely, you’ll see he’s had his head bashed in. It’d be a great help to me if you could think about it, and tell me who did it.”
Silly fool; last thing I wanted to do was look closely at that. I’ve seen worse, I ought to point out. I’ve seen half a stonemason sticking out from under a three-by-six granite block, where a bit of second-hand rope couldn’t take the strain. I’ve seen kites stripping sun-dried meat off a ribcage, where some old nuisance of a beggar dropped dead beside the road and it was nobody’s business to tidy him away. And I’ve seen a battlefield, but I’d rather not remind myself by talking about it. Marcus Vitellius Acer was bad, but he could’ve been worse. I guess.
“Hence,” Scipio was saying, “the need for urgency; because unless we get him burned in the next two days, he’s going to stink the place out so bad you won’t be able to smell the elephant dung. Also, the family are going to want to know why I made poor dear Marcus hang about on the wrong side of the River with all the riff-raff, and I have better things to do with my time than explain myself to my second cousin Vitellia.”
I was thinking; investigate deaths, what do I know about investigating deaths? Whereupon, I thought, elephants; he’s tricked me into charging, then opened his ranks. And me a lawyer. I was ashamed.
“No problem,” I said. When all else fails, act cocky. “Only, I’ve got to ask you this, what sort of investigation are you looking for?”
He looked at me. “I want the truth,” he said.
“Oh,” I replied. “That old thing. You sure? I mean, it’s not for me to tell you your business, but wouldn’t it be neater just to arrest someone you want to get shot of anyway, and make out it was him? It’s how we handle these situations back home, and we find it works pretty well.”
Romans do scorn very well; they’ve got the lips for it. “Kind thought,” he said, “but the plain old truth will do me just fine. So; are you up for it or not?”
It occurs to me that when my mother taught me to speak, she entrusted a deadly weapon to my worst enemy. “Of course,” I said.
“Now you’ve examined the body,” Scipio said, as we sat opposite each other in his tent behind big cups of wine, “I expect you’ll be wanting some background on Acer. Right?”
I nodded slowly. I was reluctant to open my mouth just then, for fear of what might come gushing out of it. It’s embarrassing when strangers can see what you’ve been eating lately.
“Fine,” he said. “The main thing about Acer was, he was a Senator. Big man in the Senate, all through the war; supported Fabius after Trasimene, stuck with him after the Metaurus, when everyone else was on my side about the invasion of Africa. I respected him for that, but nobody much else did. Probably that’s why he was so keen to come out here, to show them all he was big enough to accept the Senate’s decision even though he didn’t agree with it. So he wrote to me asking for a command; and he’d been a good soldier when he was young, fought against Demetrius in Illyria, so I didn’t mind accommodating him, and anyhow, he was family. Did well in the battle, too; I’d tucked him away at the back of the heavy infantry where he couldn’t get hurt, but an elephant broke through the line and went crazy, caused a real mess. Acer was back there with the reserve; he charged out in front of the horrible creature, on foot, alone, and actually managed to keep it pinned down until the archers shot off its crew and our people were able to get ropes on it. Not quite sure how he managed it, because every time he told the story it was slightly different, but a man who was there said he stuck a spear right up through its lower lip, then danced about in front of it dodging and yelling, and somehow contrived not to get trampled or swatted. Not bad work for a man in his fifties.”
I nodded. Vitellius Acer had been living on borrowed time after that, no question. It’s a Roman knack, doing bloody stupid things that History later turns to gold, like the contents of Midas’ chamber-pot.
“Anyway,” Scipio went on, “that tells you he was brave, impetuous, not the sharpest needle in the case maybe, but he had nerve.”
“Enemies,” I said.
Scipio laughed. “Oh, he had enemies all right,” he said. “In politics, the number of enemies you make is one of the most reliable ways of keeping score. I can give you three names straight off the top; Servius Gnatho, Publius Licinius –” he paused, and grinned. “And me, of course.”
I hadn’t been expecting that. “You,” I said. “But I thought –”
“I liked him, actually,” Scipio said. “And he was a sort of cousin, and he did well in the battle. Fact remains, he was a very effective supporter of Fabius Maximus, and therefore my sworn enemy, politically. Also,” he added, with a shrug, “he hated me like poison, which made him a security risk, if you follow me. Oh, I didn’t kill him, and I didn’t tell anybody else to take care of it, either. Trouble with being the man in charge, though, you get a lot of people who’re always trying to guess what you want well in advance, so they can suck up to you by doing it. Killing my acknowledged enemy is just the sort of thing some ambitious hothead’d do on the offchance there’d be a nice reward.”
“In which case,” I said quietly, “you wouldn’t want him caught, right?”
“Wrong.” He looked all Roman at me, down his nose. “Unauthorized murders aren’t approved procedure in my army.”
“Fine,” I said. “And approved murders?”
He smiled. “War is approved murder,” he said. “But Hannibal didn’t kill this poor sucker.”
Thing about being a lawyer, you get used to the other guy being the straight man. “You assume,” I said. “But there’s escaped prisoners, spies –”
“Or maybe he was hit by extremely solid lightning. But it’s rather unlikely.”
“Noted,” I said. “Tell me about those other two people you just mentioned.”
“Ah yes.” Scipio nodded. “Gnatho. Nasty piece of work, though you wouldn’t think so to look at him. You’re a Greek, so I’m assuming you buy into this beauty-equals-virtue idea that my teachers tried to beat into me when I was a kid. Don’t believe it. Gnatho’s a good example. Rich man, young, handsome; Calabrian, if I remember correctly. The short version is, Acer stole his boyfriend, so he got back by seducing Acer’s wife.”
“Which means,” I interrupted, “Acer had a good motive for killing Gnatho, not the other –”
“No, that was just the start of it. Since then, they’ve been at each other’s throats like Spartan hounds. In fact, I think the feud led to the seductions, rather than the other way about. They just didn’t like each other much, fundamentally.”
“Well,” I said, “that’s a start. Who’s the other man? Licinius?”
“Wealthy knight,” Scipio said. “Made a fortune buying prisoners straight off the battlefield in the Gallic war, selling them quick and cheap to the big Senatorial estates. Quite the inspirational success story, because he came out of nowhere, father was a blacksmith in Apulia, and suddenly he appeared on the scene with a purseful of money, and nobody knew where he’d got it from. Turned out some time later he was fronting for Acer – as I’m sure I don’t need to tell you, since a philosopher like yourself will undoubtedly have figured it out from first principles, Roman senators are forbidden by law to sully their paws with Trade, so what we all do is set up some likely character in a good line of business and quietly collect 60 per cent of the profits. As Acer did with Licinius; only he misjudged his man, because Licinius ran the business but quietly omitted to pay Acer his share; and of course Acer couldn’t sue or do anything about it, because he wasn’t supposed to be waddling about in the cesspit of commerce in the first place. So Acer had to use other methods to get his money.”
“Such as?”
“Such as sending a couple of retired gladiators to kidnap Licinius’ family, as a bargaining aid. But the boys he hired must’ve got clonked on the head once too often; they made a hash of it, Licinius’ houseboys started a fight, and the result was that Licinius’ father, brother and kid son all got killed. Well, Licinius paid up after that; but I’d call that a motive for murder, wouldn’t you?”
“Sure,” I said.
“And,” he went on, “Licinius has been following this whole campaign, buying prisoners at the pit head, so to speak; he hadn’t left last evening, waiting for half a dozen of his convoy escorts to turn up, and I’ll send someone just to check he’s still here in camp.”
“Thanks,” I said.
He shrugged.
“So, that’s two strong leads for me to follow up,” I said. “I’ll go away and have a think about it, and catch up with you later today.”
He grinned. “Don’t pull a muscle in your head,” he replied. “Like I told you, you’ve got till tomorrow evening.”
“Thanks,” I said, “but it shouldn’t take me as long as that. Thought, you see; all I’ve got to do is sit down and think about it for an hour or so, and I’ll have the answer for you, smooth and warm as a hen’s egg.”
I do say some stupid things, don’t I?
But, like I said, I needed the job; so I waited till he was out of sight, then went straight to work. Solving mysteries is all about prepositions, the first being how? Acer had had his head bashed in, with spectacular thoroughness. First question therefore had to be, what with? No way a human fist could’ve scrunched bone like that; but there were no blood-spattered rocks, sticks, iron bars or heavy implements anywhere to be seen. Conclusion; the killer either took the weapon away with him, or hid it somewhere.
Well, I could search the whole camp for a brain-speckled rock; but I wasn’t in the mood, so I looked for something that’d give me a clue. Shuffling round on my belly isn’t my idea of a big time, but I did find something down there on the ground that set me thinking; a long row of little round dimples pressed into the dirt, next to a tent where they stored great big skeins of horsehair.
A couple of off-duty soldiers were lounging about nearby. I decided that Scipio would want me to make whatever use I felt necessary of all available facilities, and called them over. They didn’t seem thrilled with the job I gave them, which basically consisted of a lot of scrabbling about in dirt and splintered wood. Their bad luck; they shouldn’t have joined.
Anyhow; I had a hunch about the how, and no other leads whatsoever. Rather than waste time, I made up my mind to skip resolving how, and make a start on when.
Roman army camps; they’re crowded, noisy and smelly, and there’s always someone about. But all Scipio had said was that Acer’s body “was found”, by the first patrol of the day, just after reveille. Helpful.
Yes, really. When is a doddle in an army camp, because at night, when there’s nobody about, they have sentries. A little bit of bluff with the duty officer got me a look at the previous day’s duty roster, and I sent a runner to fetch me the decurion in charge of the night watch; he in turn gave me the names of the sentries who should’ve been guarding that sector of the camp, and I had them brought up to see me.
No, they assured me, they hadn’t seen or heard anything. I told them I knew they were lying and why. They panicked and said they’d tell me the truth; they hadn’t seen or heard anything, really.
I believed them; but it was awkward, because if they genuinely hadn’t seen anybody alive or dead (and they’d have noticed a dead body, for sure) it meant that Acer arrived at the place where he died and was killed in the short period of time between the sentries’ last stroll down the alley, and the end of the nightwatch, which was when the body was found, according to Scipio. I worked out how long that period was by walking the route myself with my hand on my wrist, counting heartbeats. Figuring that reveille must be the cut-off point – the whole camp seething with people getting up and rushing about – I ended up coming to the conclusion that Acer must’ve left his tent, which was where he’d last been seen, five thousand heartbeats before reveille, in order to have time to walk from his tent to the place where he was killed; furthermore, that he was killed pretty well as soon as he got there. Implication; the killer knew he’d be coming, and was waiting for him.
Which made it interesting; since the killer had to get there too, unless his assigned sleeping-place was in the alley itself – and nobody matched those criteria; I checked. The alleyway was formed by the stores on one side and the plunder-stash on the other, and it goes without saying that both of those were heavily guarded at night against the depredations of light-fingered squaddies, so no chance of anybody sneaking in during the day and hiding till Acer arrived.
Fine, I thought; so I went and talked to the guards. The quartermaster, in charge of the stores, swore by the River that he hadn’t seen or heard, et cetera. More to the point, he had four Greek clerks who spread their bedrolls out in the four entrances to the stores compound, a simple and praiseworthy precaution. On the other side, the soldiers who’d guarded the plunder were equally adamant, which accounted for three points of the compass; “and you don’t have to worry about anybody coming from the north,” one of them added with a grin, while the other two sniggered.
“Don’t I?” I said. “Why’s that?”
The soldier smiled and pointed.
“All right,” I said, “there’s a palisade of high stakes. What about it?”
“That’s the animal pen,” the soldier said. “Where all the captured livestock’s kept; horses, loads of mules, several dozen camels –”
“And the elephant,” his mate reminded him.
“And the elephant. Bloody thing,” the soldier added. “Never goes to sleep, and a sneeze’ll set it off crashing about. No way anybody could sneak in through there without a hell of a racket.”
Well, that ruled out access from either side; which meant Acer, and Acer’s killer, must’ve come up the alley, during the period (nine hundred heartbeats) between the last time the nightwatch passed the entrance to the alleyway, and reveille. I had when.
I was doing well. I’d got when, I had a gut feeling about how, and Scipio had presumably given me all I needed for a shortlist of candidates for why. Trouble was, all those together had to make up who, and they didn’t.
Well; I supposed I could get rid of one suspect, one way or the other. I went and found Licinius, the slave dealer. His compound was just inside the camp (he was allowed inside as a special privilege by the camp prefect, who owed him money), and I found him perched on the rail like a small boy at a fair, flanked by two Syrian clerks, taking inventory.
“Bloody sun,” he said. “You’d think they’d be used to it, since they live in this godsforsaken country. But apparently not; it boils their brains inside their heads, and they die. After I’ve paid for them,” he added bitterly. “Six since the battle; that’s a lot of money.”
I sighed. “Some people have no consideration,” I told him. Then I reached into my purse and pulled something out for him to see. “This belong to you?” I asked.
He took it and examined it; a longish iron nail with a ring passed through its head. “No,” he said.
“You know what it is.”
“Course I do, it’s a tethering-peg. We use them to peg down the stock en route. But this isn’t one of mine.”
“You can tell?”
He nodded. “This is army issue,” he said. “I don’t use anything that’s military specification. Saves bother, see; other
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