"Big Gaul. A complete ass. How he managed not to get himself slaughtered twenty years before this, I'll never know."
Lupus spoke matter-of-factly. I could accept that half his workforce were mad hats Almost certainly they came from poor backgrounds. They led a gruelling life with few rewards. "Give me the picture." I left off the stylus to look informal.
"What do you want?"
"Background. How things work. What are the good and bad aspects? Where does your labour hail from? Are they happy? How do you feel yourself?"
"They come from Italy mostly. Along the way a few Gauls are recruited. Spaniards. Eporix was one of my Hispanians. The tine trades get workers from the east or central Europe; they pick up on the orders for materials in the marble yards or wherever, and follow the carts looking for high wages or adventure."
"Are the wages good?"
Lupus guffawed. "This is an imperial project, Falco. The men just think they will get special rates."
"Do you have trouble attracting labour?"
"It's a prestigious contract."
"One which will embarrass people in high places if it goes wrong!" I grinned. After a moment, Lupus grinned back. Dry lips parted slowly and reluctantly; he was a cautious partaker of mirth. Or just cautious. He was at least talking to me, but I did not fool myself. I could not expect his trust.
"Yes, it's rather public." Lupus grimaced. "Otherwise, it may be bloody big, but it's just domestic, isn't it?"
"Major engineering is more complex?"
"The governor's palace in Londinium has more clout. I wouldn't say no to a transfer there."
"Any snobbery because the client is a Briton?"
"I don't care who he is. And I don't let the men complain."
Most of his front teeth were missing. I wondered how many barroom fights accounted for his losses. He was of burly build. He looked capable of handling himself, and of splitting up any troublemakers.
"So you have a whole crowd of migrant workers scores, or hundreds even?" I asked, recalling him to the subject. Lupus nodded, confirming the larger number. "What sort of life is there for the men? They get basic accommodation?"
"Temporary hutments close to the site."
"No privacy, no room to breathe
"Worse than house slaves at some luxury villas- but better than slaves in the mines," Lupus shrugged.
"Yours is tree labour?"
"Mixture. But I hate slaves," he said. "A big site's too open. Too many transports leaving. I don't have time to stop the merry hordes running off."
"So your men get adequate rations, washing facilities and a roof."
"If the weather holds, our fellows are out of doors all day. We want them fit and full of energy."
"Like the army."
"The same, Falco."
"So how is discipline?"
"Not too bad."
"But the high value of materials on site leads to diddling?"
"We keep the risky stuff locked away in decent stores."
"I've seen the depot with the new fence."
"Yes, well. You wouldn't think there was anywhere around here to sell the stuff, or any means of moving it away but some bugger will always manage. I arrange the best watchmen I can, and we've brought in dogs to help them. Then we just hope."
"Hmm." That was an area I had to pursue later. "And how is life out here? The men have leisure time?"
He groaned. "They do."
"Tell me."
"That's where my troubles really start. They are bored. They are thinking they will get large bonuses- and half of them spend the money before we even dole it out. They have access to beer there's too much, and some are not used to it. They rape the native women or so the women's fathers claim when they come haranguing me- and they beat up the native men."
"That's the fathers, husbands, lovers and brothers of their attractive lady friends?"
"For starters. Or on the right night, my lads will take on anyone else who has a long haircut, a strong accent, or funny trousers and a red moustache." Lupus almost sounded proud of their spirit. "If they can't find a Briton to abuse, they just beat up each other instead. The Italians gang up on the Gauls. When that palls, for variety the Italians tear into each other and the Gauls do the same. That's less tricky to deal with in some ways than distraught civilian Britons hoping for a compensation payout, though it leaves me short-handed. Pomponius gives me all Hades if too many on the complement are laid up with cracked heads. But, Falco -' Lupus stretched towards me earnestly 'this is just life on a building site abroad. It is happening all over the Empire."
"And you are saying it means nothing?"
"It means I have my work cut out but that's what I'm here for. These are simple lads, mostly. When they start a feud, I can find out what's up by reading the curse tablets they lay lovingly at shrines. May Vertigius the snotty tiler lose his willy for stealing my red tunic, and may his chilblains hurt him very much indeed. Vertigius is a swine and I don't like him. Also, may the foreman, that cruel and unfair person Lupus, rot and have no luck with girls."
I laughed quietly. Then I threw in, "Are you unfair, Lupus?"
"Oh I look after my favourites scrupulously, Falco."
I thought not. He seemed like a man who was as much in control of a slippery situation as he could be. He seemed to understand his men, to love their craziness, to tolerate their stupidity. I reckoned he would defend them against outsiders. I thought only the truly mad among them and a few real lunatics would be on the payroll would seriously curse Lupus.
"And how are you with girls?" I asked mischievously.
"Mind your own business! Well, I do all right," Lupus could not resist boasting.
He was an ugly trout. But that meant nothing. Toothless whippers in can be popular. He held a position of authority and his manner was confident. Some women will sidle up to anyone in charge.
I stretched. "Thanks for all that. Now tell me, have you a couple of recent acquisitions from Rome called Gloccus and Cotta?"
"Um -not that I can think of. Do you want to scan my rolls of honour?"
"You keep lists?"
"Of course. Pay," he explained sarcastically.
"Yes, I'll look through them, please." They could be using false names. Any pair of tradesmen who had turned up just before me would be worth checking out. "Just one more question you control the immigrant labour, but I gather there are British workers too?"
Perhaps Lupus closed in slightly. "That's right, Falco." He stood up and was already leaving. "Mandumerus runs the local team. You'll have to ask him."
There was nothing in his tone to imply a feud directly, yet I felt he and Mandumerus were not friends.
"By the way, Falco," he informed me as we parted. "Pomponius asked me to pass on his apologies; he mistook you for a travelling salesman we get a lot coming around to bother us."
"Mistook me, eh?" I sucked my teeth.
"He sent a message he's found the scroll explaining you. He wants to give you a presentation about the full scheme. Tomorrow. In the plan room."
"Sounds like that's all of tomorrow taken care of, then!"
He grinned.
XIII
helena came with me from Noviomagus for the project presentation. On arrival at the palace, we wandered around the scaffolded part and looked at the roof where poor Valla must have fallen to his death.
It was a straightforward case of sending a man aloft, on his own, too high up, with inadequate protection. Apparently.
We had time in hand. Turning back, we surveyed what they called the old house. Togidubnus' palace, his reward for allowing the Romans into Britain, must have stood out in the land of hill forts and forest hovels. Even this early version was a gem. His fellow-kings and their tribesmen were still living in those large round huts with smoke holes in their pointed roofs, where several families would cram in festively together along with their chickens, ticks and favourite goats; but Togi was fabulously set up. The main range of the royal home comprised a fine and substantial rornanised stone building. It would be a desirable property if it stood on the shores of the lake at Nemi; in this wilderness it was an absolute cracker.