Again the troops cheered and, in no better order than before, the unit made its way off the campus martius.
The courier stood by the head of his camel and waited. The telones, the customs official, had disappeared into the registry on the ground floor of the southern tower of the Palmyrene Gate. The courier looked up at the northern wall of the courtyard between the two great wooden gates. Above head height the wall was plastered and painted with an offertory scene. Glancing down, the courier noticed a merchant come out of the registry, climb on a donkey and, leading another donkey, ride off. The courier returned to studying the wall. Below head height the wall was plain brick, but covered in graffiti, most scratched or painted in Greek or Aramaic, some in Latin. Some just consisted of a man's name and that of his father. For the most part, these two words were preceded by 'I thank you, Tyche of Arete.' Without having to look, the courier knew the southern wall was much the same.
'Ah, it is you again,' said the telones. 'Business is good.'
'No, business is bad,' replied the courier.
'Where are you going?'
'Downriver. To Charax. To Persia.'
'Men of business need their letters to get through no matter what politics says. What do you have to declare?' The customs officer began to open the near-side pannier on the camel.
'Nothing. There is nothing in there except my spare clothes and bedding.'
'I had a philosopher come through here not long ago,' said the customs officer, rummaging in a desultory way. 'He looked the complete part – naked except for a rough cloak, big bushy beard, hair down to his arse. Dirty. Absolutely fucking filthy. But he was no poor Cynic. Had a pretty-boy attendant, a shorthand writer and a calligrapher to write down his wisdom.'
The courier watched the boukolos, the controller of herds, on the other side of the road counting a herd of goats a tent-dweller wanted to bring into town to sell. He wondered how soon it would rain.
'So, I say to the philosopher, "What are you taking out of the town?" and he says, "Temperance, Justice, Discipline"… and a couple more forget.' The customs official moved round the camel, and started to open the other pannier.
'There is nothing in there except the three sealed writing blocks that I have to deliver.'
'So then I say, "Well, it does not matter what fancy names you have given them, you will have to pay export duty on these whores!" And he says something like, "You cannot tax virtue!"' The customs official laughed. The courier smiled politely.
The telones did up the pannier, the writing tablets undisturbed inside. The courier passed some coins into his hand. 'Talk about not getting a joke. Silly fucker is standing just where you are, in the middle of the road, with his pretty boy, shorthand writer and calligrapher. Not a girl in sight! Silly fucker!'
The courier climbed into his saddle, flicked his whip and the camel got to its feet.
'Safe journey.'
And so it was that the traitor's letter left Arete.
Big dark clouds were piling up in the north-west. Now and then a rumble of thunder was just audible. Ballista had a nagging headache. It would get better when the storm reached Arete.
Several hours had passed since the manoeuvres on the campus martius. What had promised to be a long day had become even longer. As ordered, prompt at the fourth hour, Acilius Glabrio, his accountant, and his secretary had presented themselves at the principia. The exactor and the librarius had explained all the relevant paperwork in minute detail to the new Dux Ripae, his praefectus fabrum and his accensus. Ballista, Mamurra and Demetrius had concentrated hard. Acilius Glabrio had sat in a chair examining his highly ornate sword belt. Absolutely everything with the vexillatio of Legio IIII Scythica was in good order. The unit was virtually at full strength; very few men were missing, in hospital or in jail. Pay and provisions were up to date. Not only were the men fully equipped but there was quite some number of weapons, shields and armour in reserve. After nearly two hours Ballista had turned to Acilius Glabrio, who was now reading a book of poetry, Ovid's The Art of Love, and congratulated him on the state of his unit. The young patrician took it as no more than his due. If anything, he seemed somewhat put out to find himself in a position where he could be commended by the likes of Ballista.
The sixth hour, of course, was lunchtime. Yet that was when Ballista had ordered Turpio to present the accounts of Cohors XX. Hunger never improved Ballista's temper. When the first centurion had arrived, with the unit's exactor and librarius in tow but without its commanding officer, the northerner had made a conscious effort to rein in his anger. Not even asking about Gaius Scribonius Mucianus, he ordered all the paperwork they had with them to be handed over. Next, he announced that they would go next door to the headquarters of the cohors. Military clerks had scattered like chickens as the party, headed by Ballista, swept into the converted Temple of Azzanathcona. In the record office Ballista had demanded the two general registers previous to the current one, and the register of soldiers' money on deposit 'with the standards' in the unit's bank. Deciding to enlist hunger on his side, Ballista commanded that Turpio, the accountant and librarian should attend him at the palace at the tenth hour, dinner-time (and if by some miracle he appears before then, you can bring your tribunus with you – under arrest). He said heavily that this would allow time for he and his staff to study the documents closely, very closely indeed.
Back at the palace, Calgacus had produced a late lunch: cold roast partridge, black olives, the local round unleavened bread, figs, nuts and dried damsons. This was spread at one end of a long table in the dining room. At the other were the accounts of Cohors XX.
After they had eaten they had got down to work. Mamurra had gone through the current general register reading out the name of each soldier and the annotation that indicated his posting. A straight line meant that the soldier was with the unit and available for duty; ad frum(entum) that he had gone to secure supplies of wheat; ad hord(eum) that he was getting barley for the horses; ad leones that he was hunting lions; and so on. Finally, there were the unlucky ones against whose name was just the Greek letter theta, the army shorthand for dead. Other annotations indicated where detachments of the cohors were stationed – Appadana, Becchufrayn, Barbalissus, Birtha, Castellum Arabum, Chafer Avira and Magdala.
At last they had finished. But the pattern had emerged almost from the start: on paper the unit was at full strength – but there were far too few straight lines and far too many soldiers off hunting lions or stationed in places with strange names. There were just two thetas.
The next stage was to cross-reference the information in the general register with the list of deposits 'with the standards' to find those who did and did not have savings in each type of posting.
It was approaching the ninth hour, and they were about two-thirds of the way through. Again a pattern had emerged: almost all those with just a line against their name had savings. Next to none of those on detached duty had a denarius to their name.
The thunder was closer now. Flashes of lightning lit the interior of the line of black clouds. There was a yellow tinge to the rest of the sky. Ballista's headache was no better. He had ordered food, and issued instructions that, when they arrived, the accountant and librarian were to be put in a room off the first courtyard. Calgacus was to make sure that Turpio heard them being offered food and drink. Turpio himself was to wait in the main reception hall off the second courtyard. He was not to be offered even a chair and Maximus was to keep an eye on him – or hang about in such a way that Turpio thought he was keeping an eye on him.