Rather, he smiled, like a certain firebrand he could mention.
Goddammit, why didn’t she admit she was a courier? That way he could relieve her of both map and culpability, and no matter what she was promised by way of payment, he could reimburse her, either through the state or his own pocket, heaven knows he was affluent enough. But would Claudia Seferius stoop to accept assistance? The sun would turn green before that happened.
He shook his head. Her and her bloody independence! For a second, he abandoned himself to the birdsong, the coils of mist rising from the grass, the geometric patterns on the water. Good grief, he was the first to admire self-reliant individualists, but someone ought to point out to her the difference between initiative and bone headedness.
The hour was still early, and the party slumbered on in restless, dreamless sleep. Claudia had left to snatch a couple of hours’ rest, leaving Marcus alone with the wooden nymph, both of them buried knee-deep in the mist. At one point, he thought he’d seen a shadow in the trees, but this was shortly after Claudia’s departure, and it was doubtless her shape he saw, or a deer perhaps, or simply a trick of the dawn light.
She knew much more about the deaths than she was letting on. But for all the problems weighing on his shoulders, it was funny that all he could think about was how sexy she looked in lilac pantaloons, the way they shimmered when she moved, clung to the curves of her thighs when she sat down, and stretched tight across the roundness of her hips. Every ripple in this pool, every rising bubble, reminded him of the silky way the cotton billowed and, despite the sweet lush smell of grass and clover, her spicy balsam perfume lingered in the glade. Faint, tantalizing, and now the ripples became her curls, loose and springy as they burst free of their bondage. Janus, Croesus, how he ached to scrunch them in his hands, pull out the hairpins one by one, that bone pin carved in the shape of a flamingo, the ivory fawn, and let the curls tumble round her breasts as he buried his face in their spicy warmth…
He laughed aloud in the clearing. Twice he’d used ‘spicy’, but was any word more appropriate than one which conjured up the exotic, the hot, the scandalous, the tempting Claudia Seferius?
The desire which had stirred his loins abated, filling the vacuum with a different warmth and longing. An ache to share the long, hot days of summer, strolling in the parks and gardens, rowing on the Tiber, with picnics in the hills. To discuss his cases, take her to banquets on his arm and, when the sun began to set, counteract the emptiness of his customary wine-buffered nights.
Whenever his work required him to travel, she would travel with him, alongside him all the way, and when they returned to Rome, it would not be to a rattling, great house on the Esquiline-they would come home. Together.
That he would have to share her with a blue-eyed, cross-eyed cat with the filthiest of tempers he tried not to think about.
No way, though, would he tolerate that bodyguard of hers. Junius. Uh-uh. Orbilio had not forgotten the malevolent glare he had shot at him when he had arrived, breathless and ragged, down the hillside to the valley where the group had been camped. Sometimes, he thought… Sometimes, the two of them… Bugger it, he was never certain what went on between Claudia and that drop-dead handsome Gaul. The way his eyes latched on to her. Possessive. Like a lover. Glances passed between them, coded messages for sure, but whether these were intimate exchanges or for business purpose, Orbilio couldn’t tell. (And didn’t want to, either.) But no, that last part wasn’t true. He did want to know, even if the knowledge drove a knife into his gut. In what way, exactly, was Claudia Junius’s mistress?
He stripped off his clothes and slid into the bubbling spring. With each minute of encroaching daylight, the water grew more and more pellucid, taking on a rich blue hue, the colour of a peacock’s breast. He let himself float, eyes closed, drinking in the happy warbles of the blackcaps, the fragrant woodland scents.
The Silver Fox would be banned from here. He must collect his water downstream for fear of offending the gods. Did he miss the spring, and everything it stood for? A man didn’t need to believe in Gallic deities to find in this place a holiness, a bonding. Man with nature, man with god. The woodsman’s name was Arcas, Orbilio had been told. A Roman name, one which he must have adopted himself, since it meant ‘son of the bear’, and he wondered what significance could be attached to that.
In legend, Arcas was the result of one of Jupiter’s many cavortings, this time of a beautiful nymph, who Juno, out of spite, turned into a lumbering grizzly instead. One day, when the boy was on the brink of manhood, he came across his mother in the woods and would have speared her with his javelin, had Jupiter not spirited them both away and set them as neighbouring constellations in the sky.
What should Orbilio read into that?
That the Silver Fox was the king of heaven’s son? All Gauls believed they were descended from Dis, so maybe it was not so much a god, as a chieftain he meant. Was Arcas therefore claiming to be a bastard son of the Sequani king? He wore the fox-fur armband, denoting nobility, that was one of the first things Orbilio had noticed in the firelight last night, and certainly it was no dog-Latin that he spoke. There was no air of peasantry about the Silver Fox. Was this an act? The product of deluded fantasies, which, when disproven by the Druid court, he could not accept? Or was the name taken from the bear aspect, him being the huntsman that he was? Did he feel in some way close to the constellations, guided by them? Or did he know nothing about the conquerors’ legends, simply picking a name he could get his Celtic tongue round?
The very fact that he had chosen a Roman name, however, was significant. It suggested he had turned his back on the Sequani, and maybe a man who was truly innocent of his alleged crime but still received sentence to be shunned would feel bitter. It would then be logical for him to live out his term in secrecy close to his village, reappearing in Vesontio as Arcas the Gaul (as opposed to Whoever the Sequani) when the sentence was up. New identity, new beginning. Arcas would not be the first.
That he trusted no one, Marcus read in his gimlet blue eyes. The challenge between them last night went beyond a squabble over money (although Arcas would be set for life after this.). Orbilio imagined every human encounter would be turned into confrontation as the Silver Fox took on the world.
People might not like me, he was saying, but by the gods, they respect me.
Orbilio left the fizzing waters of the pool and dried himself with his tunic. By allowing his mind to wander over subjects as diverse as Claudia and their enigmatic guide it had acted as a mental massage, leaving his brain refreshed and invigorated. Which was just as well because the next step was to work out who among the party was the traitor.
*
Outside the roundhouse, the travellers began to stretch and yawn, rubbing life into stiffened muscles and shaking the ants from their clothing. Among them, the murderer watched the patrician enter the camp, his hair dripping, his skin aglow. It was difficult to know what to make of him.
Designer of mosaic floors, he said, and when Galba’s agent had riffled through his belongings, up popped a well-used portfolio with no shortage of professional sketches and high-quality samples. Absently, the agent watched a squirrel grooming its tail in an oak. Virtually every patrician’s son, on account of their expensive education, ended up a lawyer or a civil servant, or else set himself up as a merchant, but even aristocrats recognized art when they saw it in the family and few stood in the way. True, they tried to channel it into a career with kudos-say, an architect-but Orbilio would not be the first patrician to follow his muse. Galba’s agent could think of numerous poets, painters, even one who became a musician. In fact, the combination of clout and contacts would ensure his commissions were of the highest order, so that in itself was not a problem.