Household Gods (16 page)

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Authors: Judith Tarr

BOOK: Household Gods
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Women here, she'd observed, powdered and painted themselves as heavily as a geisha in full regalia—and into much the same dead-white mask. The makeup Umma had used was less finely ground than the pricey Clinique that Nicole had held onto even when money got tight, as her one by-God extravagance. Its texture and color made her think, rather disjointedly, of quite another white powder, one that had been distressingly common in L.A. Rome might lack flush toilets and bathroom tissue—but it was also blessedly free of cocaine.
It was free of powderpuff and makeup brushes, too. She smoothed the powder on as best she could with a bit of rag—no cotton balls, either. Who'd have thought there'd be a world without cotton balls? Or swabs? Or—
Or eyebrow pencils, or lipsticks. Her finger had to do for both, and the rag growing grubbier with each step in the ritual. No cold cream, either, to remove mistakes or clean her fingers. If she could figure out how all those things were made, she'd be willing to bet there'd be a market for them.
It was enough, for the time being, that she'd armored her face against the world. She'd understated the effect—probably people would think she was trying for a little too much of the natural look—but she still looked, to her own eyes, clownish and overdone. “Tammy Faye Does Carnuntum,” she said to her reflection. A smile, she noticed, cracked the paint just a little. No wonder geishas never seemed to wear an expression, just the blank white mask.
It did what it was supposed to do, at least. It kept the world from guessing how lousy she felt.
“Cash box,” she reminded herself, and scooped up that and the key before she headed out the door. She didn't go straight downstairs, but paused at the curtain to the children's room. No sound came from inside. She peered in. Enough of the early light seeped through their shuttered window to show them both still sleeping. Their faces were quiet, neither flushed nor pale. Aurelia had taken all the covers, but Lucius didn't seem to mind. He slept on his stomach with his black hair all in a tousle. He looked nothing at all like either of Nicole's in the way he slept, but the soft baby-cheeks, the nub of nose, caught at her throat.
That was why children looked the way they did, wasn't it? So their mothers wouldn't throw them out before they could walk. Not just their mothers, either. Whoever found herself in charge of them.
Aurelia stirred and kicked off the covers. Nicole froze, but neither child woke. Aurelia was clutching a cloth doll the way Kimberley would have hung onto Scratchy the bobcat. Other toys lay on the floor: another doll or two, a toy cart, a wooden sword.
Nicole frowned at the sword. No children of hers were going to play with war toys—even if they weren't, strictly speaking, her children.
Her frown changed, darkened. Lucius' father had been a soldier, from what she'd heard. Titus Calidius Severus was a veteran, too; he'd made that plain. Several of her other customers, from snatches of overheard conversation, also must have served in the legions. A legion had been based around here—she remembered that from her honeymoon day trip to Petronell. Hadn't Rome had a Vietnam, then? Didn't they understand what a horror war was?
She shook herself, shrugged. War was far enough away from this here and this now, that there was no point in worrying about it. She slipped backward as quietly as she could, let the door-curtain fall back into place, and trudged down to her work. She was her own boss, after all. Nobody else was going to do it for her. No secretarial pool, no janitorial staff. Just herself—and Julia.
Julia had the tavern open already, the fires going, everything in order and ready to start the day. She greeted Nicole almost too brightly, though her words were solicitous enough: “Good morning, Mistress! How are you doing now? Are you well?”
Nicole caught herself wondering just how smug Julia felt. She quashed the thought and answered as civilly as she could manage, which wasn't very, without coffee and with none in sight for the next however many hundred years. “I'm all right. I may even live.”
Julia smiled one of her wide halfwit smiles. “Oh, Mistress! The last couple of days, you've had such a funny way of putting things.”
Nicole's heart thudded. God—what if Julia had guessed—what in the world was she going to—
But Julia's smile had turned conspiratorial. “And here you put your paint on, and you didn't even bother with it yesterday.”
“Right,” Nicole said a little too quickly. “Yes, that's right. I didn't need it yesterday. Today—”
Julia nodded, woman to woman now instead of slave to mistress. “I know just what you mean. There's nothing like a nice coating of white lead to keep people from guessing
you aren't right underneath it.” She stopped. Her voice rose in surprise. “Mistress! Where are you going?”
Nicole was already halfway up the stairs. “To wash it off!” she flung back.
My God,
she thought, over and over.
My God!
Had she swallowed any? Had any gone up her nose?
My God. Even the makeup was poisonous. And hadn't she thought it looked a little like cocaine? It was worse than cocaine—a more certain, a more deadly killer than cocaine had ever been. Had she got any in her eyes? Could the blood vessels in her eyes absorb it? God, what was she supposed to do? She didn't know a thing about lead poisoning, except that it was bad—and she was a prime candidate for it.
At the top of the stairs, she almost bowled over Lucius, who obviously had felt well enough to get out of bed. “Mother!” he called as she rushed past him. “What's the matter? Are you all right?”
She didn't answer. She dived into her bedroom, slammed and barred the door, and leaped on the washbasin. No facecloth, no towel, but rags—rags! She yanked a fistful out of the drawer and dunked them, and scrubbed at her face, over and over, till the skin stung and burned. Every time she splashed herself with water, she made herself blow out through her mouth and nose, to keep from getting any more of the lead into her system. Once she had it all off, or hoped to heaven she did, she took the little pot of makeup over to the window and dumped it out, as she had with the chamber pot not long before. This time, she watched the cloud of white powder drift down to the ground. No one was passing below, to be startled by the small deadly snow. Nothing moved but the flies, seething in the noisome mess that, she could see, lined every house-wall. There'd be a few million fewer, she thought, thanks to her latest contribution.
She was calm again—or calm enough, at least, to face the world. She took a deep breath and braved the stairs again.
Lucius and Aurelia were both down below and both eating breakfast: a little bit of bread without oil, and something in a cup that was probably watered wine. Nicole couldn't find the energy to make an issue of it.
Julia, of course, wasn't about to leave well enough alone. “Why did you get rid of your makeup, Mistress?” she asked. “You looked nice with it on.”
Nicole caught herself wondering if Julia was a little slow in the head—or if it was a game slaves played, to ask questions that sounded wide-eyed innocent but were calculated to catch a person in the raw.
If that was a game, Nicole could play one of her own. “Can I get face powder that doesn't have lead in it?” she asked. And held her breath, hoping she hadn't come too close to sounding like the foreigner she was.
Julia didn't seem to find the question that far out of the ordinary. Maybe she was slow; or maybe slaves learned to expect any kind of oddity from their masters. She frowned, as if in thought. “Some people use white flour, but I don't like it myself—you don't either, much, do you? No matter how tight you close it up, sooner or later it gets bugs in it. That never happens with white lead.”
“I should hope not!” Nicole said. “Lead's poisonous.”
“Oh, it can't be, Mistress.” Julia sounded absolutely sure of herself. “If it were, they wouldn't use it for water pipes.”
Nicole started to say
They do?
but stopped before the question was out of her mouth. They did, and she didn't need Julia's word for it. The Latin for lead was
plumbum.
She and Julia had said it close to a dozen times between them. What was a plumber but somebody who messed around with
plumbum?
It was a lead-pipe cinch that was how plumbers had got their name.
What she did say was, “They shouldn't.”
“Mistress,” Julia said in a tone that reminded Nicole rather too strongly of her mother trying to be very, very patient with her father when he came home—because he'd said or done something right out of line, but if she called him on it too soon or too strongly, he'd take a swing at her, “Mistress, really, haven't you been complaining an awful lot, the past day or two?”
And about things like wine and water that made you nice and sick, too,
Nicole could almost hear her thinking,
and look where that got you.
“What are they supposed to
use for pipes, Mistress? Clay breaks too easy, and wood rots.”
“Copper—” Nicole began.
“And how expensive would that be?” Julia asked. Impossibly so, her tone said. “Besides, copper's no good for you. Cook vegetables in copper and you'll see the verdigris right away, and taste it, too.” She made a face. “And it'll sicken your stomach faster than drinking water will. That's why they put lead on the inside of copper kettles, for goodness' sake.”
“It is?” Nicole said faintly. “They do?”
Yesterday morning, she'd looked around the restaurant with delight. Now she looked again, with growing horror. Some of her cooking pots were lead-lined? Her eye fell on a jar of olive oil, which was made of glazed pottery. What was in the glaze? Every so often, the TV news would report that batches of stoneware from China or someplace were being banned from the USA because their glazes had too much lead. The amphorae of wine under the counter were glazed, too, all but the one that held the cheapest local stuff. You couldn't even put lead foil over the corks on wine bottles anymore, not in California you couldn't.
God knew, this wasn't California. This wasn't anyplace fit or healthy for human occupation, from the looks of it.
What about the
terra sigillata
pitcher and bowl in her room? How was she going to know? How could she find out?
God. God, God, God. What was that book she'd seen in a used bookstore once, with the day-glo pink cover?
Future Shock,
that was it. So what was this? Past shock? Culture shock? Pure unadulterated shock? Nothing here was safe. Everything could poison you. Every little taken-for-granted thing.
Julia was happily oblivious to Nicole's confusion. She seemed to think they were still playing some kind of game, a game of wits maybe, a test of her cultural literacy. Or was it literacy, if it had nothing to do with reading?
Julia spoke again as the voice of sweet reason, as if that
were the role she'd decided she was cast in. “Besides, Mistress, if lead were poisonous, we'd all be dead, wouldn't we?” She laughed at the absurdity of the notion, the same way people in the twentieth century had laughed at the notion that DDT might hurt the environment.
Lead poisoning was insidious, Nicole knew that. It took a long time to build up. But she couldn't explain that here, even if there were words to express it. Julia wouldn't listen, any more than people had listened about DDT, or fluorocarbons, or the hole in the ozone layer.
Julia seemed to have decided the game was over; that it was time to go back to work. Her tone had changed, and even the way she held herself. She was the slave again, carefully submissive; no more arguments, no thinly veiled rebukes. “What would you like for breakfast, Mistress?” she asked.
Nicole wasn't pleased to note how glad she was that Julia had gone back to being servile again. “Bread and watered wine, same as the children,” she said—and that was a capitulation, too, but she couldn't see any way out of it. Except possibly one. “The one-
as
wine,” she added, “nothing fancy.” That was the one that came in the unglazed amphora. If it was bad wine, so much the better. Then maybe she could keep from growing too fond of it.
Even if it didn't have lead—she hoped it didn't have lead—it still had alcohol in it. The odor rising from the (unglazed, thank God) cup made her shiver. She could all but hear her father downstairs yelling at her mother, while she lay in bed with the covers pulled up over her head and tried not to listen. She had to will herself to sip.
Diluted, the wine tasted like watery, half-spoiled grape juice. It had a tang to it, a sharpness and a kind of dizziness in back of it, that had to be the alcohol. She'd never tried any before, to know. She'd refused.
Her heart was thumping again, as it had when she discovered her face was armored in lead. She'd thought, somehow, that the first taste would do it: would hit her hard enough to make her stagger. Apparently, that wasn't how it worked.
She sipped again, deeper, and again, till the cup was empty. Did she feel anything? Was there anything to feel? Maybe she was a tiny bit more detached from the world than she had been before. Maybe she wasn't. She'd been in varying degrees of fog since she woke up in Carnuntum—and for certain sure she was detached; she was a complete stranger to this whole world and time.

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