Allowing the winking cook to hustle them out of the kitchen, the four men ate their pies, blowing on the hot filling as they nibbled at the pastry.
‘Come on, we can eat these as we go. Follow me and I’ll show you a place you only want to visit once.’
Once outside the domus’s sprawling property, Scaurus raised an eyebrow at his first spear.
‘Well then, did you get what you needed?’
Julius looked in turn at the men who had accompanied him, and the older of the two nodded happily.
‘Everything, Tribune.’
Scaurus nodded grimly, indicating the two men lounging brazenly on the next street corner.
‘Good. Make a start as quickly as you can. I fear the senator has very little time left.’
‘Well then, Tettius Julianus, I hear that you’re giving us all a bit of a treat at the end of the day?’
The procurator started at the quiet voice in his ear. While his attention had been on an attractive young woman in the company of one of his fellow senators, the imperial chamberlain had left the imperial box and strolled onto the senatorial podium that ran alongside it, his approach silent until he’d spoken in Julianus’s ear.
‘Yes!’ His voice sounded high-pitched, and he cursed Cleander’s ability to make him feel guilty in even the most innocent of situations. ‘We had a trio of walk-ins yesterday, three former centurions all of whom seem to be as capable as the best of my men.’
‘Really?’ The chamberlain arched an eyebrow, clearly enjoying his discomfiture. ‘As good as the Death Bringer?’
Julianus shrugged.
‘Maybe not that good, but …’
‘Good enough for you to risk their lives against three desperate prisoners of war apiece though?’
Julianus smiled weakly.
‘My lanista tells me-’
‘Your lanista? Surely as the procurator of an imperial gladiatorial school you take a close personal interest in the abilities of the men you send into the arena? After all, as I’m sure I hardly need to remind you, Caesar takes a very dim view of things when the men sent onto the sand to amuse him are proven to lack the necessary skills and bravery to entertain him. After all, he is exceptionally skilled with any weapon you might care to mention …’ Cleander raised both eyebrows in mock question. ‘We’ll just have to hope that your lanista has sufficient discernment to ensure that Commodus will be entertained on this occasion.’
He waited for a moment expectantly and then, just as Julianus was about to speak, smiled widely.
‘I’m just having my fun with you, Senator, don’t pay me any attention. I’m sure your new men will be sudden death personified once they come face-to-face with a handful of underfed Dacians. Tell me though, I am curious — where did these three men come from? I’d hate to think that serving soldiers might have sought refuge from their duty in your school, no matter how risky an alternative it might make …’
Julianus gabbled an answer into the chamberlain’s long pause, relieved to find himself on firmer ground.
‘No fear of that, Chamberlain, no fear at all! One of them’s a legion man listed as dead — I had my slave check with the military records — and the other two are Tungrians, honourably discharged. I checked that with their tribune in person, because I …’
He fell silent, waiting for the Chamberlain’s intrigued expression to turn into speech.
‘Tungrians? I see. And the legion man, what’s his name?’
The procurator wracked his memory for a moment.
‘What did he call himself … ah, yes, his name is Horatius.’
Cleander’s smile broadened.
‘Is it indeed! Well there’s a happy coincidence! I’ve been hearing tales of a centurion with the same name who gave some men of mine a most thorough display of his fighting skills only a few weeks ago. Let’s hope that your Horatius shares his skills, for if he does we’re in for the most gripping performances for a good while. Now, do carry on considering that young lady’s finely turned ankle …’
He patted Julianus on the shoulder and turned back to the imperial box, the guards’ crossed spears opening to admit him to the emperor’s presence. The procurator realised that he was sweating profusely despite the day’s unseasonal cold, his appetite for covert examination of the city’s aristocratic females suddenly absent.
Velox led the friends through the tunnel’s cool gloom, the floor sloping gradually downwards before levelling out to run under the arena’s length to the east, its walls lit by blazing torches that provided just enough illumination to see. A familiar tang filled the air, and their guide inhaled deeply.
‘There it is. That’s the smell I associate with the arena. Blood.’
The tunnel started to climb, and he gestured to an opening on the right. They followed him in and found themselves in a torchlit chamber some thirty feet square and ten feet high, its floor filled with tables large enough to accommodate a man’s corpse.
‘This is the spolarium’s lowest level. Once Charun’s stoved their brains in, the bodies are carried down here to be relieved of their kit. Corpses go out of the building on carts for disposal, equipment goes to the armamentarium to be reconditioned for the next man to use it. Efficient, isn’t it?’
On one of the tables lay the body of the dead beast fighter, stripped of his clothing and in the process of being washed clean of the blood that had poured from the dreadful wound in his throat. In one corner a man was crouched over something large and dark, and Mortiferum led them over to stand beside him.
‘Cheer up man, nothing lasts for ever!’
The animal trainer looked up from the dead leopard’s corpse with bitter, tear-filled eyes.
‘He had dozens of fights left in him, dozens! And now he’s dead because one stupid bastard lost his temper! All because the two of them were fucking each other, the pair of tunic-lifting b-’
‘Now now, let’s not say something we might regret, eh? You’d be surprised at some of the people who prefer the company of other men … my brother, for example.’ The trainer’s eyes widened as he realised how close he was to offending the champion, but Velox patted him gently on the shoulder. ‘And never mind, I’ll sell you a secret that will help you towards some of the money you’ll need to replace him, in return for something you’ve no need of any more.’
The trainer looked up at him suspiciously.
‘What are you offering?’
‘Only a sure-thing bet on the mid-afternoon fight.’
‘How sure?’
The gladiator smirked at him.
‘Totally. You can put as much as you like on the result in the certainty that it’ll come back to you in style.’
The trainer pursed his lips.
‘And what do you want from me? His cock, I suppose.’
Velox shook his head.
‘That’s more my brother’s style. No, I want the teeth, or more to the point, his fangs.’
The other man pulled a face.
‘I was saving those to sell to a lucky charm dealer I know, they’re worth at least-’
‘Not as much as the information I can give you for them. Put an aureus on the right side of the fight I’ve got in mind and it’ll come back as three, I’m telling you.’
‘An aureus? Where am I going to get a bloody aureus from?’
The gladiator reached out with the toe of his boot, nudging the dead leopard’s underbelly.
‘You already know the answer to that one. Any one of half a dozen potion dealers will give you good money for his family jewels. So, do we have a deal?’
The trainer nodded, ignoring the commotion as a pair of dead beast fighters were carried into the room and dumped without ceremony onto tables next to the first corpse.
‘Deal. So what’s the big secret with this fight then?’
‘Procurator? You have two guests, sir, military men.’
Julianus nodded with relief, grateful for the welcome distraction from the revolting scene playing out in the arena below him, although he was careful to keep a smile plastered across his face given the emperor’s apparent rapt attention. Gesturing to the podium’s entrance for the Tungrian tribune and his senior centurion to be admitted, he walked across to greet them and acknowledged their respectful bows with one of his own.