‘Ah!’ She was beginning to understand. ‘How much?’
‘Pardon?’
‘Is this man bothering you, Claudia?’
Julia’s husband, a man with the face both the colour and texture of an underripe mulberry, slipped his arm around her shoulder. She could feel a damp patch forming, but resisted the urge to flick his hand away.
‘Marcellus, kindly convince this fellow I’m not the bookbinder’s wife. He won’t take no for an answer.’
Her brother-in-law ostentatiously adjusted his toga. ‘This,’ he said pompously, ‘is the wife of Gaius Seferius, the wine merchant. His sister is my wife. Now clear off and pester someone else.’
Ligarius opened his mouth to speak, then changed his mind. ‘Sorry,’ he mumbled to Claudia, backing into the crowd.
‘You can remove your sticky hand now, Marcellus.’ He ran his palm lingeringly over her shoulderblades and down her backbone.
‘Now, you bastard, or I’ll slap your face in full view of everybody!’
‘All right, all right.’
When he smiled, she could see the gap in his teeth. Thank Hymen Gaius had a full set! Even if they weren’t that good.
‘Keep your hair on, Claudia.’
‘I do,’ she snapped. ‘It’s your wife who runs up the wigmaker’s bills.’
‘She needs the adornments,’ Marcellus replied, running the back of his hand down her cheek. ‘You don’t.’
‘Oh look, there’s Gaius.’
‘No, it’s not. Stop teasing.’ He inched closer. ‘I’m serious. You don’t need cosmetic aid, not even round those lovely big eyes of-Ouch!’
Claudia was grinding her heel on his little toe. ‘Remus, I love a woman of spirit. Suppose we make sweet music together?’
That he’d been drinking heavily was in little doubt, yet Claudia had the impression he was making genuine overtones.
‘Frankly, Marcellus, I’d rather throw myself to the lions.’
Yes, the killer must be a punter, because someone’s tongue was definitely loose. No matter, when she found him, she’d loosen it for good!
‘Second thoughts, I’d prefer to throw you to the lions.’
There were limits, after all, on what a girl would do, even for money. Small wonder Julia was frigid.
Having despatched the reptile that passed for her brother-in-law, Claudia was laying into Junius for allowing Marcellus to get within ten paces when Flamininus the censor sidled up.
‘Tomorrow morning?’ he whispered, pretending to look the other way.
‘No.’ She’d have to give up working for a while. It was the only way to stop the bloodshed.
‘But you promised!’
Or was it? The killer might be working through a list. Great heavens, Flamininus himself might be responsible. She decided to meet him as planned and question him. Maybe she wouldn’t have to go on to that smelly tenement afterwards.
His voice took on a wheedling tone. ‘Please, Claudia. I’ll make it worth your while.’
You bet your sweet life you will. ‘No.’
Urgency crept in. ‘Claudia, you must. I’ll double the price.’
‘Treble it.’ If she was to clamp his testicles and lead him around by a halter while he called her filthy names, the least he could do was pay for the privilege.
‘Very well. Treble it is. Goodbye, Claudia.’
When she turned round, he’d melted into the crush. Now, perhaps, she might be able to enjoy a peaceful moment to herself.
‘There you are, my sweet. Look who I’ve found.’ Gaius was standing beside her with a huge grin pasted across his face.
‘A long-lost cousin from the north. You might not remember him, of course, you were very young at the time, but he assures me he remembers you very well.’ There was no one from the north who could remember her, that was the point. She had chosen her new identity with extreme care. The other Claudia had no family, her relations by marriage were killed by the plague. Every last one of them.
‘Hello, Claudia.’
Her face set like marble, Claudia slowly turned round. ‘Remember him now, my sweet? Marcus Cornelius Orbilio?’
VI
‘Little Markie! My word, how you’ve grown!’
The sarcasm flew right over Gaius’s head, as of course she knew it would.
‘You recognize him, then? Splendid, splendid!’
‘I’d know him anywhere,’ Claudia replied sweetly, watching Orbilio squirm. ‘And to think I believed myself without a relative in the whole wide world.’
Whatever reaction the miserable worm had been expecting, it wasn’t being welcomed with open arms. She smiled. And whatever devious game he was playing, she could match it in spades.
‘Oh, well-it’s a very distant connection…’
‘Yes, indeed. Remind me again, Markie, my poor mind’s gone completely blank.’
‘Ah, well… Your mother was my mother’s, er second cousin. Yes, that was it. Of course,’ he said apologetically to Gaius, ‘Claudia and I rarely saw one another.’
‘Nonsense, you used to visit an awful lot, Markie, don’t you remember? Your mother couldn’t wait to get shot of you.’ She tilted her head to one side. ‘You might not believe it, Gaius, but Marcus here was a perfectly horrible child. Always following me about, forever poking his nose into matters that didn’t concern him and asking the most preposterous questions.’
Orbilio gave a brittle smile.
‘Not much family resemblance,’ Gaius said, cheerfully peering from face to face, ‘although you’re both fine-looking specimens. Must have been a damned handsome family on your mother’s side, what?’
‘Absolute stunners, the lot of them,’ Claudia chipped in before Orbilio opened his mouth. ‘Although underneath Marcus’s mother was a frightful old boiler. Gave him a terrible childhood.’
She stood on tiptoe and whispered loudly in Gaius’s ear.
‘No one can say for certain exactly who Markie’s real father is.’
It was clear Gaius attributed Orbilio’s colour and discomfort to the airing of his family background. Claudia linked her arm firmly through Orbilio’s and drew him away.
‘So how is the old bat these days?’
‘My mother? She’s dead.’
‘Fancy.’ Claudia placed the flat of her hands against his chest and pushed gently until he was sitting on the stone seat. ‘Then I’d really appreciate it,’ she said quietly, ‘if you’d be kind enough to go and join her just as quickly as you can.’
She patted his mop of curly hair and returned to her husband.
‘Loathsome fellow,’ she said. ‘Never want to see him again.’
‘I think you’re being unfair my sweet. He’s your only living relation and I’m sure he’ll have mellowed over the years.’
Claudia followed his glance to where Orbilio was sitting, frantically combing his hair with his fingers.
‘Doubt it. See? Still sulking like he used to. Oooh, look, there’s Octavia. I’ll catch up with you later, Gaius.’
Elbowing her way towards a make-believe friend across the other side of the amphitheatre, Claudia wondered whether she’d been a trifle hasty in disposing of Orbilio so quickly. Maybe she could have wheedled some information out of him? No matter. He was up to something, and in her experience a pre-emptive strike always proved the most effective form of attack. She was still congratulating herself as she summoned the rugged young Gaul.
‘Junius, I want you to run an errand for me. You know Gratidius, the mercer? Good. Well, I want you to find his assistant…’
The slave listened attentively, repeating Claudia’s instructions back to her practically verbatim.
‘Oh, and Junius.’ She was feeling quite sublime about the way she was handling this dodgy business. ‘Drop my winnings off at Lucan’s counting tables on the way.’
The Gaul’s mouth twisted. ‘There are no winnings, madam. You bet them all on the Nubian.’
‘Bugger!’
Claudia slapped her forehead. This is all that bloody Orbilio’s fault, she thought. Odious little snooper.
‘Listen, if that investigator chappie comes slinking round asking questions,’ she said, ‘you just smile and nod and say yes to everything he asks. And I mean everything.’