The shadowy interior of Tent V, Row VII contained a lone human form under a blanket: head at one end, feet-one sporting a fat linen bandage-poking out from the other. Beside him, bedding was stacked on top of a large wooden box that was in turn resting on two logs above the damp. A couple of shields in leather cases were propped against the upright at the far end. A limp and mildewed straw sun hat dangled from the ridgepole.
“Shift yourself, sunshine,” said the watch captain, applying a boot to the sleeper. “Got an officer here looking for a man called Candidus.”
The sleeper blinked, then scrambled hastily out of bed and attempted a salute. “I’m recuperating, sir,” he explained. “Doctor’s orders. Burned foot.” There was a moment of mutual recognition. “You remember me, sir. I trod in a bucket of lime.”
“I do,” agreed Ruso, remembering the sufferer’s foot better than his face. “How is it?”
“Not too bad, sir, thanks. I can manage on crutches. Or I could, if it wasn’t for-” He gestured toward the treacherous pathway outside the tent.
“Candidus,” the watch captain repeated. “Where is he?”
“Haven’t seen him, sir.”
“Not ever,” suggested the watch captain, “or just not lately?”
The man scratched his head, as if this were too subtle a question for one who had only just woken up.
“He arrived several days ago,” Ruso prompted. “He was assigned to this tent.”
“Ah,” said the man, apparently enlightened. “Him.” He pointed toward a leather bag resting on a shield by the goatskin wall that separated indoors from outdoors. On top of the bag sat a helmet speckled with rust. Next to it, shoved halfway out under the flap and onto the grass, lay an untidy roll of bedding. “That’s his kit, sir.”
Ruso leaned across and lifted the equipment out to where he could examine it. “Did you see him arrive?”
The man was looking apprehensive. “I’ve never seen him, sir. He turned up while I was in the sick bay.”
Ruso understood the soldier’s nervousness when he examined the contents of the bag: some musty undergarments, a crumpled tunic, three odd socks with holes in them, and a pen with a broken nib. He turned it upside down over the empty bed and shook it. Two dice tumbled out. He rolled them around on his palm for a moment, then threw everything back in.
An empty waterskin was tied to the strap on the shield cover. The shield itself turned out to have CANDCSILXXVV painted in uneven white letters at the base, covering the name of a previous owner. Candidus in the century of Silvanus, Twentieth Legion Valeria Victrix. He definitely had the right man. Or rather, he didn’t have him, and he had no idea who did.
Eyeing the meager collection of possessions, he said, “Where’s the rest?”
The man opened his mouth, but nothing came out.
“Food pan, cup, spoon?” Ruso prompted. “Weapons, armor?” Without the owner, he had no way of knowing what else was missing.
The man swallowed. Petty theft caused such disruption amongst men who had to live closely together that punishments ranged from flogging to dismissal. Small wonder, then, that he looked relieved when Ruso said, “If somebody else is looking after them for him, tell us now. I don’t want to waste time searching the tent.”
A scrabble in the box and the unraveling of bedrolls produced a bronze cooking pan with a folding handle, another pen in better condition, and a pottery inkwell. As Ruso expected, cand had been scraped or burned into each item by a soldier who was keen to guard against this very eventuality. These were followed by two tunics, two pairs of socks, and a neckerchief, none of which were labeled but would have been easily identified by their owner.
The man seemed confident that no spoon or eating implements of any kind had been removed for alleged safekeeping, nor had any weapons or armor. Since Candidus had taken the precaution of marking everything else, Ruso assumed he was telling the truth and that none had been found when the tentmates raided the absent newcomer’s belongings.
“Money?” he suggested, without much hope.
“No, sir,” said the man, knowing as well as he did that any coins that had vanished into someone else’s purse would be safely anonymous.
Ruso gathered up what he had managed to salvage of Candidus’s possessions. “If he turns up, tell him his kit is up at the fort hospital. Meanwhile I need to talk to anyone who might have seen him.”
When Ruso confirmed that he had no more questions, the watch captain eyed the invalid. “Aren’t you on cooking duty?”
“I was just about to start, sir.”
Outside, the watch captain shook his head. “Looks like your man’s deserted, sir.”
“In his armor?”
“You’d be surprised, sir. He’d look less suspicious that way. And he could always sell it later.”
Ruso sighed. “I promised his uncle I’d keep an eye on him.”
“I wouldn’t worry, sir,” the watch captain assured him cheerily. “A lot of the lone wanderers come back. It’s no fun out there on your own with the natives, as our plumber’s just found out.”
“What happens to the ones who don’t come back?”
The watch captain had no more idea than anyone else. “I’ll let you know straightaway when he turns up, sir.”
“In the meantime if you can find anyone who’s seen him-anyone at all-I want to talk to them.”
Ruso lashed Candidus’s possessions together, slung them over his shoulder, and squelched his way back toward the gates. Candidus’s new accommodation was a definite step down from the permanent quarters over at Magnis. Perhaps the tent-or its occupants-had frightened him off. He had not seemed the toughest of individuals, and Albanus had described him as not only sensitive but-and this was more believable-“rather easily led.” But where, in this land of wide rolling hills, wooded valleys, native huts, and building sites, could anyone have led him? And what if he had not been led but forced?
A stronger-than-usual smell of burning hung in the air as he made his way back to the comparative comfort of the fort. Glancing around, he saw thick columns of black smoke billowing up into the clouds on the western skyline. Even at this distance, he could make out glimmers of orange flame inside them. A cluster of four or five things that shouldn’t be burning were fiercely ablaze, and it was not difficult to guess what they were. The locals who had attacked the plumber would be long gone, but the stink of their homes going up in smoke would linger in the nostrils for days. It would be a lesson. Or another wrong to feel aggrieved about, depending on which side of the divide you were born. He could understand why Senecio, having lost one son and with another clearly spoiling for a fight, was doing his best to prevent any repeat of the vicious battles that had taken place around this border only a few seasons ago. It was a pity more of his countrymen did not feel the same way.
A squad of legionaries carrying shovels and picks were tramping past him. Their salutes were exemplary, but their gazes lingered a little too long. He glanced down at himself. Was there something unusual about him? Tunic caught up in his belt? Dirt on his nose? Something stuck in his hair? Then he realized. They were enjoying the sight of an officer carrying his own kit.
They would have been even more surprised if they had known it was somebody else’s.
Chapter 11
Ruso was barely through the door of the hospital at Parva when he heard raised voices. He left the door open, dumped Candidus’s kit in front of Pandora’s cupboard, and followed the sound. A cluster of legionaries were blocking the far end of the corridor.
The cries of “No visitors!” from Gallus, Ruso’s baby-faced deputy, were barely audible above the various voices demanding to be let in on the grounds that they were his mates, he would want to see them, they would cheer him up, and yells of “You all right in there, old son?” and “Chin up, mate!”