Authors: Marilyn Todd
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths
The cocked eyebrow suggested he wasn't referring to the heat of the ocean.
'The
when
doesn't interest me, only the why.'
No legionaries, no back-up, just a lone investigator from the Security Police. There was a strong smell of rat in the air, not least from the one sitting beside her.
'The King invited me.'
The world started spinning. 'Why?'
The Security Police grinned. It was the sort of grin leopards make when they're eyeing a kill.
'Who do you think put your name forward as a suitable bride to his old friend?'
Claudia heard a crashing sound, as all her theories fell on the floor and shattered at once.
'Friend,' she repeated flatly.
'More in the sense that he's a good friend of Rome, I suppose, but yes.' Orbilio spiked his thick, wavy hair with his fingers. 'Personal friend all the same.'
She refused to look at him. Wouldn't give him the satisfaction.
'Orbilio, if I had a knife on me, I swear I would face the lions a happy woman. What else have you told him about me?'
'On my mother's eyes, Claudia, your secrets are safe with me.'
'Your mother's dead.'
'A mere technicality.'
That was the problem. You could trust him as far as you could throw an elephant with a rhinoceros tied to its back, yet all the while he charmed you like a snake. And now it seemed the island was infested with the bloody things! Mazares the cobra had gambled, as well. He had gambled on a vivacious young woman being captivated by turquoise seas and sun-drenched sandy beaches, seduced by sheltered coves and the scent of cypress, pine and myrtle. He'd lost the bet, and the irony that the only people she could trust were the louts who'd destroyed Salome's farm wasn't lost on her.
'I suppose you know Mazares?'
'I do.'
'And you'd call him a friend?'
'I would.'
Naturally. Mazares would make damn sure of that.
'What excuse did the King give for inviting you here?' she asked. 'To give the blushing bride away?'
Around her feet, the ocean lapped the hot, bleached rocks and seabirds wheeled overhead.
'Because I have news for you, Marcus Cornelius. You know the job of the Security Police? To root out conspiracies, forgery, fraud and assassins, and all the other nasty hobgoblins that threaten to destabilize the Empire and prevent it from plunging into tyranny, or, worse, into anarchy? Well, while you've been dressing up in silly silver masks, Histria is being brought to its knees, and right beneath your long patrician nose.'
Several seconds passed.
'Honestly?' he asked. 'You thought the mask was silly?'
'Wake up, Orbilio. You've been manipulated every bit as much as I have—'
'Can you hear that?' He pretended to crane his neck. 'The sound of tables turning? Tell me, Claudia, does it hurt
very
much, being on the receiving end for once?'
'At least you accept that I've been manipulated.'
'Only by me, I'm afraid, and I'm sorry about the moon mask. It was just that I wanted to gauge how happy you were—'
'Well, now you know. I'm absolutely delirious, because in the six short days that I've been on this island I've fallen down a flight of stone steps, witnessed a murder that's been swept under the rug, almost got myself raped and now, thanks entirely to you, I'm also a prisoner on this wretched island.'
'Par for the course, then?'
But his voice was a rasp and the laughter in his eyes had been replaced by something resembling anguish.
'Claudia . . .'He cleared his throat and started again. 'Claudia, were you really just one step away from being . . . I mean, Pavan said those men last night—'
'Pavan's exaggerating,' she retorted. She swallowed the guilt of betraying Pavan and fixed her eyes on the horizon.
'He's just making himself more of a hero, by telling everyone how he stepped forward in the nick of time to save the honour of the King's bride.'
'So, those bruises on your arm appeared out of nowhere?'
'A pregnant sow whose sty is on fire can turn pretty nasty, believe me.'
'Well, that's rather the point, isn't it?' He tugged at his earlobe. 'I don't.'
No wonder this man was top of his bloody profession. He had the tenacity of a limpet in a hurricane.
Claudia smiled.
'You forget how protective Histrian men are when it comes to their womenfolk.'
Teeth, teeth, show more teeth.
'They hear a few louts crashing about, then two and two makes five.'
She didn't want him to know.
She didn't want him to know that she'd bawled like a baby for two solid hours. That she'd curled into a ball, shaking with emotions she couldn't identify. That she'd spent the night scrubbing her skin with a sponge until she'd scrubbed herself raw . . .
'You were the one who said you almost got yourself raped.'
'And
you
are the one who's not grasped what's going on here.'
She squared her shoulders and threw back her head.
'Orbilio, so many people have been taking premature ferry boats across the River Styx that Hades is nailing up "Full" signs. You don't realize it, but you've walked straight into a cold-blooded and extremely well-planned campaign to eliminate the King and, trust me, your being here is not coincidence.'
'No. My being here is not coincidence.'
'Nor is your attending the trial of the men who tried to raze Salome's farm to the ground, either. Mazares needs a witness who can confirm to the authorities that justice has been done.'
Oh, Mazares, you're even cleverer than I thought. Not only did you arrange to have Claudia Seferius out here as your
bait, you lured the Security Police's most ethical member, so that he could testify to Rome that whatever tragedy befell her and the King, it had truly been an accident!
'He staged that raid last night,' she said.
That's why the soldiers got out there in record time. He wasn't watching. He was waiting . . .
'Mazares planted destruction in those men's minds, stirring up their Histrian prejudices and—'
'Claudia.' The baritone brooked no argument. 'Claudia, I know Mazares. He wouldn't topple a hay cart, much less this government, and, since you ask, I have no intention of being a witness at those men's trial. This is a local issue and Rome would do best to keep its nose out.'
'Bollocks. Salome's a Roman citizen. By attacking her farm, they're effectively attacking Rome.'
'Agreed, but that was not their intent.'
She saw his argument for the dispensing of local justice, but, hell, for the Security Police not to even take notes on the sidelines . . . ? No, no. Orbilio was too shrewd to have been conned completely. There had to be more to this. Something he wasn't telling.
'What is it, piracy?'
'Sorry to disappoint you, but Mazares keeps these coasts pretty damn safe.'
'Same thing,' she sniffed. 'By policing these waters, it's just another way of following the ancestral vocation.'
'I warned you,' he said, and was that a muscle that twitched at the side of his mouth? 'I warned you the Histri were cunning and sneaky and that they were all double-dealers. They've had to be, to survive. The King walks a fine line with his people, but only because he knows them for what they are.'
'We've had this conversation before. Five generations under the eagle, butchers under the skin.'
'Let's just agree that negotiation isn't their instinctive choice.'
He leaned back on the rock, folded his hands under his head and closed his eyes. High in the pines that were shading
the cove, flycatchers trilled, brown butterflies danced and squirrels scurried from branch to branch.
'Also, it's not helped by their ignorance,' he continued. 'Histria is a wealthy kingdom in comparison, but virtually all its communities are isolated either by virtue of the sea or by the mountainous terrain of the interior. The coastal communities have a better grasp of the political situation, but for those living in the landlocked villages, they have no comprehension of what the world's like beyond this peninsula.'
Claudia was beginning to understand.
'Specifically, the
size
of the Empire?'
'Exactly.' He splashed his feet languorously in the water. All they know is that it's bigger than, say, Illyria, but they can't accept - or perhaps won't - that it's a hundred, a thousand, times more powerful. It's completely beyond the scope of their imagination.'
Explaining why rumblings of sedition were suddenly rearing their head. Pula! While it was still a glorified trading post, nobody minded. No doubt when it was razed to the ground for backing Mark Antony, half of Histria rose up and cheered, but when the city came to be rebuilt, and on such a grand scale, the enormity of the situation sunk in.
'That's why the late King, Dol, moved the seat of justice to Gora,' she said, as much to herself as to Marcus. 'So his people could acclimatize slowly.'
'Histria has never built cities,' he added. 'But the King's seen Rome and he liked what he saw, the running water, paved streets, marble temples, the libraries, bathhouses and gymnasia. You only have to look around Rovin to see his influence, and all of it's good.'
The islanders were approving of these developments, too, but deep in the interior, where villages were merely clusters of single-roomed homesteads, the concept of thousands of people living together in one settlement was incomprehensible. Boiling it down to one basic principle: what you don't understand you either hide from - or you fight it head on.
'Now you tell me what any civilized individual has to gain by inciting his own people to rebel,' Marcus said, 'knowing it will result in Rome crushing this kingdom once and for all.'
Damn.
Claudia chewed her lip as warblers sang, and an adder slithered out from its nest amidst the thick layer of pine needles to bask in the sun. Across the lagoons, fishermen hauled in their nets, emptied their catches into their baskets and cast them again.
'So if it's not piracy or sedition, why
did
you come here?'
'Me?' He plucked a blade of grass and chewed on it. 'I'm looking for a runaway slave.'
And I'm the Queen of Sheba.'
He closed his eyes again. 'My workload's quiet at the moment.'
'Yes, I can hear it snoring all three hundred miles from Rome.'
He honestly expected her to believe the Security Police were reduced to chasing runaways, the preserve of professional slave catchers, moreover a matter for the civil courts, not the judiciary? It was the equivalent of assigning the architect of a temple to Jupiter to tour the building site picking up litter!
'Orbilio, I don't know whether you've been smoking those hemp seeds again or it's a question of blood being thicker than water and you being thicker than both, but let me spell it out for you. There's a conspiracy here, whether you like it or not, and Mazares is at its heart.'
Ticking the deaths off on her fingers, she started at the beginning.
'Brae, the King's older brother, a young, fit, nineteen-year-old, newly married and with a full life ahead, suddenly dies of a fever.'
'Gosh, you're right. No one's ever died of a fever before.'
'Not when you're the King's son surrounded by physicians and, dare I say it, pretty red-headed herbalists. Did you hear
those children at Zeltane the other night?
Brac be nimble, Brac be quick, Brac jump over the candlestick. Brac jump long and Brac jump high, or Brac fall into a fever and die.'
'Your point?'
'My point is that his death was so sudden that it was instantly absorbed into folklore. Tell me that's a common occurrence! Then we have the King's father, a man called Dol. Dol the Just.'
'Yes, I met him once, when I was small.' Orbilio reached for another blade of grass to gnaw on. 'He did a lot of good things for this country.'
'Apparently so, but he died, to quote your dear friend Mazares, suitably young.'
'Claudia, it was a lung complaint. Pleurisy, pneumonia, I don't know exactly, but hundreds of people die from lung complaints every year.'
'Not when they're a king and surrounded by physicians and, dare I say it, pretty red-headed herbalists. Is a pattern starting to emerge here?'
'You don't seriously believe Salome poisoned Brac and Dol?'
'With Mazares's help, I bloody know she did. Anyway, things settle down for a while. Delmi, Brac's widow, has been palmed off on the new heir to the throne, a situation that suited neither of them, but they put on a brave face and are now the proud parents of two healthy children, a boy and a girl.'
This was the hard part.
'The girl was twelve when
she
died.'
Claudia's knuckles turned white as she recalled the story recounted by Broda's mother.