Tilla could not imagine. It seemed the empress did not share her husband’s taste for eating simple fare with his soldiers. She hoped Accius was not behind those screens, helping to empty the wine flagon. He would not want to be called away to be told something that was only going to cause him more trouble. The problem was she could not see him anywhere else.
He had definitely dismounted: The bay stallion was in the line of horses under a stand of trees. She and Virana hurried along the verge, trying to search the crowds of men without appearing interested. Still, they attracted remarks that she pretended not to hear. Eventually they had to turn and retrace their steps, silently grateful to an officer who barked at his men to shut up and show some manners: Did they want the empress thinking she was guarded by a herd of animals?
The speech about manners might have usefully been given to Minna too. She was bustling toward the screens with a jug of something when she stopped and announced loudly enough for the whole lunch party to hear, “There’s the prostitute from the mansio!”
Tilla heard Virana draw breath to reply and jabbed her with one elbow. “You are mistaken,” she said, approaching and deliberately speaking a little more quietly than Minna, because with luck around them everyone was listening now. “This young woman you have insulted is my assistant. I am the wife of the Medicus, as you well know, and we are bringing the medicine requested by the tribune.” She held out the bottle, chosen not because it was anything he might need but because it had been the nearest to being empty before she topped it up with water.
Minna frowned at it. “What is that?”
“It is a private matter for the tribune only,” said Tilla, adding, “We will accept your apology after we have seen him.”
“Ha! You think the tribune will fall for that? I know nothing about any medicine.”
“It is a private matter,” insisted Tilla, hoping he was listening from behind the screen, because she could not draw out this conversation much longer. If a body slave-or indeed anyone more sensible and less nosy than Minna-arrived, she would be expected to hand the bottle over and leave, and there was no knowing whether he would take the hint and come and find her.
“Really, Tribune!” exclaimed a voice Tilla had not expected to hear. “So you too have been having secret meetings with the Medicus’s wife!”
Whatever the tribune said in reply to the empress was lost beneath a ripple of laughter from the lunch guests. Male hands appeared, grasping one of the screens. Minna gave a squeak of terror and fled. The screen moved to reveal Accius, looking even fiercer than usual. He stepped out. The screen was replaced.
Tilla gulped. Accius was standing over her like an eagle deciding which part of its prey to tear at first. “What?”
“Sir,” she murmured, “I have information.”
“Not now!”
“Then when?”
He glanced round. “Gods, woman! Do you have no idea how this looks?”
“That is why my assistant is here,” Tilla assured him. “Perhaps, sir, you would like to discuss the use of the medicine away from the ears of the guards?”
Chapter 65
They paused to stand halfway between the road and the line of horses flicking their tails against the midday flies. Anyone watching-and there were plenty of men with nothing much else to look at-would have seen Tilla hand over a small bottle to the tribune and give a small bow of respect. They might, if they thought about it, have seen several other things. They might have seen that neither man nor woman wanted to be thought of as holding a secret meeting with the other. They might also have seen that neither trusted the other-the woman had a companion and the tribune had three guards-and yet that they did not quite trust their own people, either, since the companion and the guards had been made to stand out of earshot.
They could not have heard Accius say, “Another anonymous informer?” and Tilla reply, “They are the best sort. These men have no reason to lie: They would rather not have seen or heard anything at all.”
“You expect me to believe that you can get information from these people when our questioners can’t?”
“They told what they knew. Your torturers needed to ask better questions. Nobody asked what they heard, and they were frightened of getting involved.”
“They’re involved now. They’re spreading dangerous rumors, and yet again only you know their names. The only evidence that our recruit was at home in bed comes from a wife who is bound to say that-and from you. I have been patient with you. The Praetorians won’t be.”
Tilla had not thought of that. It was not good. Why did this man always look at things backward? “Sir,” she said, squaring her shoulders, “you have a choice. You can hand me over to the Praetorians for questioning and I will give up the names before long, because I am not brave, and they can catch the witnesses and silence them. Or you can bring justice for your lost relative and defend your own men against false charges of murder.”
“Don’t presume to tell me what my choices are!”
“No, sir. I am sure you can see them for yourself.”
Was that a smile? It was gone before she could be sure.
“It’s very convenient,” he said, “that you should find anonymous informers who point away from your husband.”
“Any true witness would point away from my husband, sir.”
“It won’t free him, you know.”
“No, sir.”
“Who else knows about this?”
This was it: the tricky moment that she had known would come. Naming Pera might put him in danger. On the other hand, if she said nobody else knew, Accius could find a way to silence her and carry on as if nothing had changed.
“I have sent a sealed letter ahead to Deva with a merchant, sir. It is addressed to the legate.”
She might as well have punched him in the stomach. “You’ve done what?”
“Saying that if anything happens to you, he should know that you were investigating the murder of a centurion by the Praetorians.”
“You’re lying.”
“No, sir. I knew you would not want anyone here to be told, but this knowledge may put you in danger, and you know how easily a bad thing can happen to someone, and then it can be covered up.”
The smile was definitely gone now. “So some common scribe knows as well?”
“No, sir. I wrote it myself. My writing is not good but I think he will be able to read it.”
He stared at her for a moment, trying to decide whether this ridiculous invention was true, or perhaps whether a native woman really could write. She did not blink.
Finally he muttered, “You stupid, interfering … A letter like that should be in code!”
Yes! He believed it. Or at least he was not sure it was a lie. She lowered her gaze. “I do not know the codes, sir. I have only just learned to write, and I did not think. I am sorry.”
He gave a sigh of exasperation. “This trip has been nothing but trouble.”
There was no need to reply to that.
He peered through the glass of the bottle. “What is this muck?”
“A mixture to ease coughs, sir.”
He put a thumb over the stopper and shook it in a way that suggested he would rather be shaking her. Then he handed it back.
“Drink it,” he ordered.
“But it was only-”
“All of it.”
Conscious of everyone watching her, she twisted out the stopper. Then she raised the bottle to her lips, wondering what an overdose of cough mixture might do. It tasted disgusting. She was glad she had not brought the mandrake. That would definitely have killed her.
“If you’re still alive later this evening,” he said, “report to me. Alone. Then I’ll consider what you’ve said.”