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There was one further nominee for list three, a name she’d been reluctant to add. That of Antonius Scaevola, dammit. She liked Scaevola. For a start they enjoyed a different arrangement, since he was no pervert wanting to be trussed up and beaten, or clamped and humiliated. His was a healthy, energetic libido, all bounce and chortle. But for all that, his two previous marriages had failed to provide him with an heir, leaving him with a zest for procreation, even in middle age. Claudia bit clean through her pen and spat out the tip. Scaevola was pivotal in her plans, she couldn’t think of him as a crazed killer. Dear Diana, what am I thinking of? In less than a fortnight he’ll be married off to Flavia and if he doesn’t get her pregnant on her wedding night he will by the second, I’ll lay odds on it.

‘Good morning, my sweet!’

‘Gaius!’

Juno, Jupiter and Mars, look who was with him! Of all people, it was that pasty-faced twit, Balbus, staring at her with a strange half-smile on his face. The sort of halfsmile that is remembering a tune and can’t yet place it…

In her haste to stand up, the parchment fell to the ground. Faster than she could have imagined, Gaius swooped to pick it up.

‘What’s this, then? You? Writing a letter?’

She could barely speak, her legs had turned to aspic. ‘Oh. Yes. You remember Octavia?’

He looked blank.

‘Octavia whatsername. Husband’s big in olive oil. Lives up on the Palatine. Seven children. Mother’s a cripple.’ What on earth’s making her trot out this drivel? ‘Well, she’s sick-thought I’d drop her a note, cheer her up. Usual thing.’

‘Very thoughtful. What’s wrong with her?’

‘VD.’

Claudia, shut your mouth before you swallow your foot altogether!

‘So what brings you this way, Gaius?’ She snatched the list out of his hand, surreptitiously glancing at Ventidius Balbus, who was still smiling blandly. Please, please, please don’t let him make the connection!

‘Oh…things. Business…’ Gaius trailed off. ‘Bumped into Balbus, you remember him?’ he added by way of belated introduction.

I do, Gaius, I do. The question is, does he remember me?

‘You are indeed looking lovelier than ever, Claudia.’ There was little enthusiasm in his voice, but his eyes bored into hers and she decided no, she wouldn’t have slept with him back in Genoa. Starving and desperate she might have been, but never suicidal.

There was a brief lull, then Claudia’s prayers were answered when a short, bald-headed man came puffing up.

‘Ventidius, what luck! I was just on my way to your office.’

Apparently some property that Balbus had been interested in purchasing had suddenly come up for sale, and so linking her arm through Gaius’s, as much for her own support as for his, Claudia made what she hoped were polite noises at Balbus’s departure. As she fell into step with her husband, she thought again he looked old. Really old. His eyes were sunken, his cheeks seemed to have collapsed and several times recently she’d stumbled upon him sobbing like a baby.

‘You look tired, Gaius. I think you overdid it yesterday.’

‘Oh, don’t fuss. It was only a mild seizure, the doctor said so. Besides, what would people think if I missed the Festival of Wine? What good would that be for business, eh?’

‘Seferius wine tells its own tale, Gaius.’

‘Yes, but to miss the augur pronounce the vintage? Claudia, how could I not attend?’

She snorted. ‘With Flavia’s wedding coming up, you should take it easy, conserve your strength…’ She paused as a thought struck her, and indicated to Cypassis by a gesture to hang back so she could speak more privately. ‘Gaius, exactly what are you doing out here this morning?’

‘The, er, library, my dove-’

She stiffened and snatched her hand back. ‘Liar! You’ve been to one of those foul little backstreet parlours, haven’t you?’

‘Don’t look at me like that, I’ve been discretion itself. We agreed-’

She made no effort to hide her contempt. ‘Don’t tell me what we agreed, Gaius, you conned me into marriage.’

‘Hardly conned, Claudia. I didn’t realize you wanted children, I thought after three you wouldn’t want any more.’

‘They died, Gaius.’ Dammit, now she couldn’t even remember how old this fictitious brood was! ‘Of course I wanted more.’

Tears filled the big man’s eyes. ‘My son-my babies, Claudia. There’s only little Flavia left. You can surely forgive a man his pleasures now and again?’

Claudia scrunched her list into a ball and pummelled it.

‘Your letter…Claudia, what about your letter?’

‘What about it?’ she snapped, hurling it into a grove of lotus trees. ‘Couldn’t stand the woman, anyway.’

If Orbilio was half as clever as he made out, she wouldn’t need the bloody list. She’d kill the bugger long before it got to the confession stage, even if it meant poison.

Gaius stood staring at her, his face haggard but his jaw set. ‘I’m sorry you feel I’ve let you down, but this is the way it is, Claudia.’

‘I accepted that long ago, but if I find it’s anyone I know’-the unspoken name hung in the air between them-‘a day won’t pass when you don’t live to regret it, Gaius, you have my solemn promise on that.’

XIX

Paternus the lawyer was dictating to his scribe when the stranger arrived.

‘I bring a message from your brother, sir. Says it’s a matter of exceptional delicacy and under the circumstances he would be obliged if you would treat it with the same confidentiality you bestow on all your cases and mention it to no one.’

The messenger then coughed politely. ‘Including your scribe, sir.’

Paternus leaned back and rubbed the furrows in the bridge of his nose. He didn’t recognize the messenger, but then again he rarely did. This one wore the long, dark hair of a Cretan. He didn’t like Cretans.

‘You purport to be from Caius Paternus, is that correct?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘Are you employed by him?’

‘Oh, no, sir. Freelance. The name’s Milo, should you ever need my services. No message too complex, no distance too…’

The look in the lawyer’s eye quelled his sales pitch.

‘Well, Milo,’ Paternus’s reedy voice made the name sound unclean, ‘perhaps you would be so kind as to furnish me with the address from which you were dispatched?’

‘The large red house up on the Aventine, sir. The front part is let as a poulterer’s, there are two-’

‘Yes, yes, that’s quite sufficient.’

So it wasn’t an error. Paternus chewed the inside of his lower lip. Would wonders ever cease? he asked himself. He hadn’t heard from his brother in-what? — oh, it must be seven, eight months now, that’s right, December. And now, like one of Jupiter’s thunderbolts, he sends a message out of the blue. Well, Caius can go to hell, he thought. That business over the slander case had driven such a wedge between them that, personally, he’d be quite happy never to see or hear from his brother again.

He looked down his long nose at the Cretan, treating him to one of the interminable silences for which he was famous in court. At the same time he could sense, rather than see, his scribe’s interest picking up moment by moment. Should he decide to despatch the fellow, no doubt he’d have his wretched ear to the door, given half a chance. Servants are like that these days, no breeding, no dignity. In court, Paternus’s silences were tools to impress and unnerve. Today, however, he was thinking. In particular, he was thinking about Publius Caldus, the latest official to fall victim to this crazed killer. Outside he could hear the chants of children reciting their alphabet, the rattle of a chariot on the stones, the crush and chatter of the market. The sweet smell of fruit ripening in the hot sunshine filtered in through the open window. It wasn’t wise to be left alone these days, he thought. Not wise at all. On the other hand (and he was a lawyer, after all), it had to be argued that Caldus had been killed just days previously and the last murder was how many weeks ago?