Saturnalia (24 page)

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Authors: John Maddox Roberts

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: Saturnalia
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“Ah! The facial features of the Metelli are indeed distinctive. Welcome, Senator Metellus. Are my services required by your family?”

“I take it then that you’ve assumed the practice of the late Ariston?”

“I have.”

“No, I have some questions about your former patron and mentor. But please attend to your patient first.”

Narcissus turned and clapped his hands. A hungover slave appeared from the penthouse that formed the fourth side of the terrace. “Bring a chair and refreshment for the senator,” the physician ordered.

The man in the examining chair was a stout specimen in his thirties, whose head was a bit malformed on one side. He wore a somewhat sleepy, dazed expression.

“This is Marcus Celsius,” Narcissus said. “He is a regular
patient of mine. Last night, during the celebrations, he passed by a tenement where a party was being held on the roof. A tile was dislodged from the parapet and fell four stories, striking him on the head.”

The slave brought me a chair and a cup of warmed wine, and I sat down to watch the proceedings with interest.

“I see,” Asklepiodes said. “Was he carried here or did he walk?”

“He walked and he can speak, although his words grow disjointed after a while.”

“So far, so good then,” Asklepiodes said. He went to the patient and felt the man’s skull with long, sensitive fingers. He probed and poked for a few minutes, during which the patient winced slightly, and only when he touched the minor lacerations of the scalp. Satisfied, Asklepiodes stepped back.

“You are of course familiar with the
On Injuries of the Skull
of Hippocrates?” Asklepiodes said. He had switched to Greek, a language in which I was tolerably fluent.

“I am, but like my former patron I commonly deal with illnesses rather than injuries.”

“What we have here is a fairly simple depressed skull fracture. The detached cranial fragment moves rather freely and should only need to be lifted back into place and perhaps set with silver wire. I cannot say until I see the fracture exposed, but it may be possible to raise the fragment with a simple probe. Otherwise, it may be done with a screw. My Egyptian slaves are very skilled in both procedures.”

Actually, Asklepiodes did much of his own cutting and stitching, but that was not considered respectable by the medical community, so in public he pretended that his slaves did it all. “The injury is common among the boxers who wear the
caestus,
so we have a few such cases after almost every set of games that feature athletic contests.

“It is of course impossible to predict these things with certainty,” he went on, “but I see no reason why a complete recovery may not be effected. Have him carried to my surgery at the Statilian
ludus
and we shall operate this afternoon.”

“I am most grateful.”

Narcissus called in a pair of muscular assistants and they bore off the unfortunate Marcus Celsius. No mention was made of fees, such things being forbidden. But physicians, like politicians, have their own ways of arranging favor for favor.

“Now, Senator,” Narcissus said, “how may I be of service?”

“Your former patron, Ariston of Lycia, attended my kinsman, the consul Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer, in his final illness. Did you accompany him on that occasion?”

He nodded gravely. “I did. He was a most distinguished man. His passing was a great misfortune to Rome.”

“Indeed. Did Ariston remark at the time upon, oh … any irregularities in the manner of Celer’s passing?”

“No, in fact he stated rather emphatically that the symptoms were those common to death from natural, internal disorders such as attend a great many common deaths. This time, he declared, the only unusual circumstance was the seemingly robust health enjoyed by the deceased.”

“You said ‘seemingly robust health,’ “I pointed out. “May I know why you qualify it thus?”

“Well, first of all, he was dead. This alone means that he was not as healthy as he had seemed.”

“Clearly, unless said good health was terminated by an outside agent. Poisoning has been freely conjectured.”

Narcissus nodded, a puzzled expression on his fine, serious features. “I know. It made me wonder why Ariston never told the widow or the close relatives about Celer’s previous visits.”

My scalp prickled. “Previous visits?”

“Yes. I said nothing at the time because that would have been in violation of the confidentiality that must always exist between physician and patient. But since both Celer and Ariston have passed on, I see no reason why I should withhold evidence that should lay to rest these rumors of poison.”

“None indeed,” I said encouragingly. “Please, do go on.”

“Well, you see, the distinguished consul came here about a month before the termination of his period in office, needing urgently to confer with my patron.”

“Wait,” I said, “he came
here?

“Oh, yes. Ordinarily, of course, a physician is summoned to attend upon so prominent a client. But in this instance, the consul called after dark, dressed as an ordinary citizen. Truly, this is not a terribly uncommon occurrence. You must understand,” he glanced back and forth between Asklepiodes and myself, “that the confidentiality I mentioned sometimes calls for clandestine meetings between physician and patient.”

“To be sure,” I affirmed. More than once I had called upon Asklepiodes to patch me up after some extra-legal encounters.

“So it was in this instance. The consul had been suffering severe pains in the chest and abdomen. He was a strong and soldierly man and was able to conceal this infirmity from even his closest companions. Apparently even his wife was unaware of it.”

“Not a difficult bit of deception considering how much they saw of each other,” I commented.

“And you must understand why he did not want his condition to become known?”

I nodded, much becoming clear. “Exactly. He had been given the proconsular command everyone has been drooling over for the last year or two: Gaul. He couldn’t afford to appear unfit for the command.”

“It was not the first time a man of great public importance came to Ariston for confidential treatment of a condition potentially injurious to a career, rather as women often resort to the clandestine treatment of a
saga
for the well-known condition so injurious to marriage.”

“And did Ariston provide a satisfactory treatment for the consul’s condition?” Asklepiodes asked.

“As you know, Master Asklepiodes, the symptoms evinced in this case are the classic signs preceding death from apoplexy, although men may suffer them for many years before the inevitable happens. However, Ariston provided a medication sufficient to suppress the painful symptoms.”

“I see,” Asklepiodes said, apparently full of professional interest. “Do you know what the contents of this prescription might have been?”

Narcissus frowned slightly. “No, Ariston insisted that I was not yet advanced enough in my studies to entrust with that particular formula.” That flicker of disloyalty told me why Narcissus was willing to discuss Ariston’s questionable behavior. “I do know that each time Celer was given a supply sufficient to last for a matter of weeks.”

“He had some on hand at the time of the first visit?” I asked.

“Yes. I heard him instruct the consul to take it each morning. Celer said that he would mix it with his morning
pulsum.

“I see. This way the vinegar would disguise the taste of the medicine?”

He looked puzzled. “No. He told Celer that the medicine was nearly tasteless. But the consul was a man of regular habits, and the
pulsum
would ensure that he took it regularly every morning.”

I glanced at Asklepiodes and he raised his eyebrows quizzically.

“How many times did Celer call here?” I asked.

“Three times that I am aware of. The last time was about half a month before his death.”

I stood. “You have been most helpful, Narcissus. I am grateful.”

He stood as well. “It is nothing. Consider it a part of my service to the illustrious Metelli.” Reminding me that he, and he alone, would follow in the footsteps of Ariston of Lycia as physician to the Metelli. Asklepiodes and I made our way down the stairs.

“What do you think?” I asked when we were out on the street. Before us lay the cattle market, where even the livestock looked hung over.

“Much is now made plain, but much is obscure. In the first place, Celer may not have had a fatal condition at all. Narcissus is correct in naming the symptoms as those of a preapoplectic condition, but they could as easily reveal ulceration of the stomach or esophagus, not uncommon conditions among men who spend their careers arguing with people.”

“The condition is hardly material. What is important is that it provided an excuse to introduce poison into the daily ingestion of a man who rarely needed medication. I think there is no doubt that we have our poisoner here.”

“The question is one of motive,” Asklepiodes said. “Why would a man like Ariston want to poison Celer? He was unscrupulous, I admit, but this is rather extreme.”

We were walking along the street, our heads down and our hands behind our backs, like two academic philosophers conferring on abstruse points of logic. Or was it the peripatetics who walked around like that?

“Cicero has expounded to me upon a very basic principle of criminal law, a question the investigator must ask himself and a prosecutor expound to the jury in every case of anomalous wrongdoing:
Cui bono?
Who stands to benefit from this?”

“As you have said, Celer was not a man without enemies.”

“Envious enemies. Noisiest and most colorful among them being the tribune Flavius.”

“Their public rows were the talk of Rome last year,” Asklepiodes said. “But Roman politics are usually boisterous. And yet it seems to me that Flavius accomplished his ends without resorting to poison.”

“Not for certain. The very day he dropped, Celer was going to court to sue for the return of his Gallic command. Flavius still stood to lose.”

“But by that time Flavius was out of office,” Asklepiodes pointed out.

“Out of the office of tribune. But he was standing for the office of praetor for next year, and it wouldn’t have looked good if his coup against Celer failed. Besides, their conflict went far beyond ordinary partisan politics and into the realm of personal insult and violence. Plain revenge could play a part here.”

“That much makes sense,” Asklepiodes admitted. “But
how would he have known that Celer would need to be treated by Ariston?” Learned as Asklepiodes was, he did not extrapolate very well, probably the result of receiving wisdom from long-dead Greeks.

“Ariston told him. You heard Narcissus say that the medication was supposed to be tasteless?”

“And was puzzled by the statement. It scarcely agrees with what the woman Ascylta said.”

“That is because the first time Celer visited he was given a legitimate medication, at least one that was not harmful. Once Ariston realized the possibilities, he went shopping for someone needing his services. In the case of Celer, there was probably no shortage of buyers.”

“That was extraordinarily cold-blooded.”

“I suspect that it was not the first time. He knew exactly where to go to find the poison he needed. He may have been a regular patron of Harmodia’s little stall. A list of Ariston’s late patients might make for some interesting reading. Who is in a better position than a physician to surreptitiously hasten one’s transport to the realm of shades?”

“Assuredly,” he murmured, “this is a most exceptional case.”

“I don’t doubt it a bit. Still, from now on I shall be very careful in my choice of physicians. I am, of course, more than fortunate in having a friend such as you to patch me up while I am in Rome.”

“Will your stay be a lengthy one this time?” he asked.

“No, everyone wants me away while Clodius is tribune. My father wants to pack me off to Gaul with Caesar.” An involuntary shudder ran down my spine. “I must find some way out of it.”

“If I may make so bold, certain men have come to me
desirous of avoiding hazardous service. The usual expedient is to amputate the thumb of the right hand and pretend that it occurred in an accident. I am quite skilled at the operation, should you …”

“Asklepiodes!” I said. “How utterly unethical!”

“This presents a problem?”

“No, I’d just rather not lose my thumb.” I held up that unique digit and exercised it. “It comes in handy. Nothing like it for jabbing a man’s eye in a street fight. No, I’d feel incomplete without it. Besides, nobody would believe it was accidental. I’d be accused of cowardice and barred from public office.”

“Even heroes resort to stratagems to avoid particularly onerous or foolhardy military adventures. Odysseus feigned madness, and Achilles dressed as a woman.”

“People already think I’m insane. Anyway, if I dressed like a woman, everyone would think I was just one of Clodia’s odd friends.”

“Then I fear I run short of suggestions. Why not go? You might find it amusing, and a countryside filled with howling savages is no more dangerous than Rome in unsettled times.”

“Yes, why not? Shall I suggest to Caesar that you accompany the expedition as army surgeon?”

“And here I must leave you,” he said, turning abruptly. “I must go prepare to operate on the unfortunate Marcus Celsius.” He walked off in the direction of the Sublician Bridge.

I proceeded to the Forum, where Rome was beginning to come shakily to life. Most of the drunks had risen like animated corpses to totter off and seek dark corners to continue their recovery. The business of the City was resuming, after a somewhat late start. Everywhere, state slaves were listlessly
but steadily plying their brooms and mops, repairing the wreckage of Saturnalia.

I went to the basilicas and asked questions and eventually ended up in the Basilica Opimia, where several of the praetors-elect were conferring, making their final arrangements for the ordering of their courts. Some of them had already assumed the purple-bordered toga of curule office; others were waiting until the beginning of the new year.

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