Read Gordianus The Finder Omnibus (Books 1-4) Online
Authors: Steven Saylor
‘And very much in love with Catilina. Did you not see that, Rufus? Might she have killed in a frenzy to protect her lover?’
‘This is too fantastic, Gordianus.’
‘Perhaps you’re right. The murmur of distant chanting and the pool fall of stars carry me away. I even find myself considering the possibility that it was Licinia who wielded the knife . . .’
‘The Virgo Maxima! But for what purpose?’
‘To deflect attention from her own impending trial. To take vengeance on the young lovers – assuming they are lovers – because she is insanely jealous of them. Or to protect them, by killing the man sent to spy on them – because she grows more sentimental as she grows older, like myself. Except that her plan failed when the man cried out and the other Vestals came running . . .’
‘Deep waters,’ Rufus agreed. ‘Can we ever find the truth?’
‘In bits and pieces,’ I said, ‘and perhaps by looking where we don’t expect to find it.’ I rubbed my eyes and fought to stifle a yawn. I closed my eyes – for just an instant, I thought . . .
I awoke with a start at the touch of a hand on my shoulder, and looked up to see Catilina.
‘The search . . . ?’ I said.
‘Fruitless. We looked behind every curtain, under every couch, inside every chamber pot.’
I nodded. ‘Then I’ll return to my house now, if Licinia will be kind enough to send some litter-bearers to the foot of the stairs. I’ll wait on the steps outside.’ I began to walk towards the great barred doors. ‘I suppose this is the only time I shall ever be inside this place, at such an hour of the night. It has been a memorable experience.’
‘Not too unpleasant, I hope,’ said Catilina. He lowered his voice. ‘You’ll do what you can for me, yes? Go snooping on my behalf, locate that messenger boy, uncover what you can about Clodius and his schemes? I don’t forget my friends, Gordianus. Sometime in the future I’ll repay you.’
‘Of course,’ I said, and thought:
If you have a future, Catilina.
The Vestal who had admitted us came to unbar the door. She kept her eyes averted, especially from Catilina.
As the door swung open, I heard a liquid
plop
from the pond. I smiled at the Vestal. ‘The frogs are restless tonight.’
She shook her head wearily. ‘There are no frogs in the pond,’ she said.
The door closed behind me. I heard the bar fall. I walked slowly down the steps. A sudden wind blew through the Forum, carrying the smell of rain. I looked up and saw the stars begin to vanish one by one behind a mantle of black clouds coming from the west.
Suddenly I realized the truth.
I ran up the steps and knocked on the door, at first softly. When there was no answer I banged my fist against it.
The door gave a shudder and opened. I slipped inside. The Vestal frowned at me, confused. Catilina and Fabia stood beside the pool, with Licinia and Rufus nearby. I walked to them quickly, feeling the full strangeness of the starlight, the distant chanting, the atmosphere of sanctity and death within the forbidden walls.
‘The murderer is still here, within the house,’ I said. ‘Here in our very presence!’
Suspicious glances passed from eye to eye. Licinia stepped back. Even Fabia and Catilina drew apart.
‘Do you still have the knives you carried for your search?’
Licinia produced a kitchen knife from the folds of her stola, as did Fabia.
‘And you, Rufus?’
He pulled out a short dagger, as did I. Only Catilina was without a weapon.
I walked to the edge of the pool. ‘When I entered the House of the Vestals, I saw reeds growing from the centre of the pool – only from the centre. Yet these reeds are very near the edge. Something keeps softly splashing, yet there are no frogs in the pond.’ I reached for the hollow reeds, jerked them from the water and threw them onto the paving stones.
A moment later a man emerged from the water, sputtering and choking. He bolted and slipped, struggling against the encumbrance of the sodden woollen cloak that hung on him like a coat of mail. The cloak was black and hooded, like the one his confederate had worn. In the darkness he looked like a monster made of blackness, emerging from a pool of nightmare. Then something swung through space, glittering in the starlight. He staggered towards me, wielding his dagger.
It was Catilina, weaponless though he was, who threw himself on the assassin. The two of them tumbled into the water. Rufus and I ran after them into the pool, but amid the foaming chaos it was impossible to strike a blow.
Then the struggle was over, as abruptly as it had begun. Catilina rose onto his hands and knees, water dripping from his beard, his eyes open wide, as if he had surprised even himself with what he had done. The assassin lay writhing in the water, surrounded by an effusion that even in the dark water could not be mistaken for anything but blood; the stars reflected in its murk were fiery red.
‘Help me pull him from the water,’ I said. ‘Quickly, Rufus!’
We dragged the man onto the paving stones. His knife was plunged hilt-deep into his heart. His fingers still gripped the handle. His eyes were open wide. He shuddered and twitched occasionally, but his face – broad-nosed, beetle-browed, shadowed with stubble – was oddly peaceful. The household slaves, alerted by the noise, gathered around. From the Temple of Vesta, the priestesses continued to chant, oblivious.
Like Cicero – like Catilina, I suspect – I am not a particularly religious man. Yet it seems to me that Jupiter himself showed his favour to Catilina at that moment. Would the assassin have confessed before he died, had not a thin filament of Jupiter’s own lightning bolted across the sky?
The dying man saw it. His eyes grew wider. Rufus crouched over him and touched the man’s hand where it gripped the pommel of his dagger. ‘I am an augur,’ he said, with a tone of authority that far exceeded his years. Despite his shock of red hair, his freckles and bright brown eyes, he did not look at all like a boy to me in that instant. ‘I read the auspices.’
‘The lightning . . .’ the man groaned.
‘On your right-hand side; the hand that grips the dagger in your heart.’
‘A bad omen? Tell me, augur!’
‘The gods have come for you – ’
‘Oh no!’
‘Look where they will find you, in the House of the Vestals, with the blood of the man you murdered still warm. They will be angry – ’
Another bolt of lightning shattered the sky. The heavens rumbled.
‘I have been an impious man! I have offended the gods terribly!’
‘Yes, and you had best appease them while you can. Confess what you have done, here in the presence of the Virgo Maxima.’
The man convulsed, so violently that I thought he would die then and there. But after a moment he rallied. ‘Forgive me . . .’
‘Why did you come here?’
‘I followed Catilina.’
‘On whose orders?’
‘Publius Clodius.’ (‘I knew it!’ whispered Catilina.)
‘What was your purpose?’
‘We were to follow him into this house, unseen. We were to spy upon him in the Vestal’s room. I was to wait until the most compromising moment – except that they never took their clothes off!’ He laughed sharply, and gasped with pain.
‘And then?’
‘Then I was to kill Gnaeus.’
‘The man who came with you?’
‘Yes.’
‘But why? Why kill your partner?’
‘How better to ruin Catilina beyond hope, than to have him caught naked with a Vestal, along with a corpse and a bloody dagger? Except that they wouldn’t . . . take off . . . their clothes!’ He barked out another laugh. Blood ran from the corner of his mouth. ‘So . . . finally . . . I went ahead and slit Gnaeus’ throat. The poor fool never expected it! Then I was to escape in silence, and raise an alarm outside the doors. But I never counted on Gnaeus making so loud a scream! I dropped my knife – as Clodius told me to do, to be sure there was a weapon to incriminate Catilina. Then I took Gnaeus’ knife, and ran to the courtyard. Suddenly lamps began to appear from everywhere, blocking my way to the doors. I remembered a trick my old centurion taught me in the army – I slipped into the pool, as quiet as a water snake, and cut a reed to breathe through. When I came up after a while to see how things stood, the doors had been closed and barred, with a Vestal guarding it! I slipped back under the water again and waited. It’s like death beneath the water, staring up at the black sky and all those stars . . .’
Lightning danced all around us, both to the right and the left. There was a great crack of thunder and the sky split open above our heads to release a torrent of rain. The assassin gave a final convulsion, stiffened, and then grew limp.
As all Rome knows, the trials of the Vestals Licinia and Fabia and their alleged paramours ended in acquittals all around.
Licinia and Crassus were tried simultaneously. Crassus’ defence was novel but effective. His reason for passionately pursuing Licinia, it turned out, was not lust, but simple greed. It seems that she owned a villa on the outskirts of the city which he was determined to purchase at a bargain. It is a measure of Crassus’ reputation for avarice that the judges accepted this excuse without question. Crassus was publicly embarrassed and made the butt of jokes for a season; but I am told that he went on badgering Licinia until he finally acquired the property at the price he wanted.
The separate trials of Fabia and Catilina quickly descended into political name-calling. Cicero remained noticeably absent from the proceedings, but some of the most respected orators in Rome spoke for the defence, including Piso, Catulus and – probably the only man in Rome reputed to be more impervious to sexual temptation than Cicero – Marcus Cato. It was Cato who made such bold insinuations about the machinations of Clodius (unprovable, since the assassins were dead and the murder had been hushed up, but damaging nonetheless) that Clodius found it convenient to flee Rome and spend several months down in Baiae, waiting for the furore to pass. Afterwards, Cicero privately thanked Cato for defending his sister-in-law’s honour. Cato haughtily replied that he did not do it for Fabia, but for the good of Rome. What a pair of prigs!
Catilina was acquitted as well. The insistence that he and Fabia were discovered fully dressed weighed heavily in his favour. For my own part, I remain undecided about his guilt or innocence in regard to seducing Fabia. It seems strange to me that he should have spent so much time courting a young woman sworn to chastity, unless his intentions were base; and how did Clodius know that Catilina would respond to a forged note from Fabia, unless he had reason to believe that the two were already lovers? The assassin’s repeated lament that
they would not take off their clothes
might seem, on the surface, to vindicate Catilina and Fabia; but there are a great many things that two people can do while still, more or less, fully dressed.
Catilina’s intentions and motivations remain a mystery to me. Only time will tell what sort of character he truly is.
Long after the trials were over, I received an unexpected gift from the Virgo Maxima – a scroll containing the collected poems of Sappho. Eco, seventeen now and a student of Greek, declares it his favourite book, though I am not sure he is quite old enough to appreciate its manifold subtleties. I like to take it from the shelf myself sometimes, especially on long, moonless nights, and read from it softly aloud:
The moon is set, and set are
The Pleiades; and midnight
Soon; so, and the hour departing:
And I, on my bed – alone.
That passage in particular makes me think of Licinia, alone in her room in the House of the Vestals.
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF GORDIANUS THE FINDER: A PARTIAL CHRONOLOGY
This list places the stories in this volume and the novels (published so far) of the Roma sub Rosa series in chronological order, along with certain seminal events such as births and deaths. Seasons, months or (where it is possible to know) specific dates of occurrence are given in parentheses.
BC | 110 | Gordianus born at Rome |
| 108 | Catilina born |
| 106 | Cicero born near Arpinum (3 January) |
| | Bethesda born at Alexandria |
| 100 | Julius Caesar born (traditional date) |
| 90 | Events of ‘The Alexandrian Cat’ |
| | Gordianus meets the philosopher Dio and Bethesda in Alexandria |
| | Eco born at Rome |
| 84 | Catullus born near Verona |
| 82–80 | Dictatorship of Sulla |
| 80 | Roman Blood |
| | ‘Death Wears a Mask’ (15–16 September) |
| | Bethesda tells Gordianus ‘The Tale of the Treasure House’ (summer) |
| 79 | Meto born |
| 78 | Sulla dies |
| | ‘A Will Is a Way’ (18–28 May); Gordianus meets Lucius Claudius |
| | ‘The Lemures’ (October) |
| | Julius Caesar captured by pirates (winter) |
| 77 | ‘Little Caesar and the Pirates’ (spring–August); Gordianus meets Belbo |
| | ‘The Disappearance of the Saturnalia Silver’ (December) |
| 76 | ‘King Bee and Honey’ (late April) |
| 74 | Oppianicus is tried and convicted on numerous charges |
| | Gordianus tells Lucius Claudius the story of ‘The Alexandrian Cat’ (summer) |
| 73 | ‘The House of the Vestals’ (spring) |
| | Spartacus slave revolt begins (September) |
| 72 | Oppianicus is murdered |
| | Arms of Nemesis |
| 71 | Final defeat of Spartacus (March) |
| 70 | Gordiana (Diana) born to Gordianus and Bethesda at Rome (August) |
| | Virgil born |
| 67 | Pompey clears the seas of piracy |
| 63 | Catilina’s Riddle |
| 60 | Titus and Titania (the twins) born to Eco and Menenia at Rome (spring) |
| | Caesar, Pompey and Crassus form the First Triumvirate |
| 56 | The Venus Throw |
| 55 | Pompey builds the first permanent theatre in Rome |
| 52 | A Murder on the Appian Way |