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Gwellia looked doubtful. ‘He may just unload his produce in the morning and go home. Have a friend or relation with a market stall, perhaps?’

‘In which case I shall ask around till I hear news of him. If not, there is a chance I’ll meet him on the road. He might be passing at this moment, while we are talking here. I’ll go outside at once and keep a watch for him.’

It seemed a useful strategy, and I had hopes of it. I went out to the gate where a pair of garden slaves were occupied in fixing a bough of evergreen, under the chief steward’s watchful eye.

‘A sign that we’re in mourning,’ the steward said to me, as if I required an explanation for this activity. ‘It isn’t proper cypress, like they’d have in Rome, but we don’t have a lot of cypress in this part of the world. This is the nearest to it, so the mistress says.’ He shook his head. ‘I don’t know what that visitor from Rome will make of it, but that’s the mistress’s orders. I just do as I’m told.’

I murmured something non-committal in reply, and went to take up my station in the lane. It would have been immensely convenient, of course, if the farmer and his cart had just happened to come by, but the Fates were not spinning in my favour, it appeared.

The road was resolutely empty. Not even a glimpse of Aulus and his makeshift bier.

Finally the wine merchant came lumbering down the farm track in his cart. He was dark and surly and quite belligerent — not at all pleased at having being ordered to carry passengers. However, rank and money are effective arguments and Marcus, as usual, was going to have his way.

The man was even less delighted at being asked to wait, first for Niveus to come running out with Marcus’s and Lucius’s letters in his hand, then for him to disappear again and fetch my wife and son.

At last we were assembled and ready to begin. My family squashed up on the driver’s seat, while Niveus climbed up among the wine amphorae in their racks. I did not demand the letters — there was time enough for that — though I could see him clutching them from where I sat: both scratched on wax tablets and both sealed up with such care that you would think they were concerned with affairs of state, and not merely a request to have me brought back here and a letter of condolence to some relatives in Rome.

We lurched down the lane to the roundhouse, and Gwellia and Junio were duly delivered to the enclosure gate. Maximus and Cilla came out to help them down, and I took the opportunity to send in for some food. So I was munching a welcome piece of bread and cheese when Niveus came to sit beside me and we could talk again.

‘Do you know a farm cart that brings produce to the town?’ I said, between mouthfuls, as we set off again and made our way towards the military road. It was the long route to the town, but by far the safest one since the cart was piled with racks and racks of fragile pots of wine. ‘I know you haven’t been working at the villa very long, but you might have noticed, since it goes past every day.’

Niveus nodded. ‘I think I know the one. Rather a battered-looking vehicle — and the farmer’s old, as well. Tall and withered, with a creaky voice. I’ve seen it several times. I even spoke to him one afternoon when there was a delay with litters at the gate. The farmer was on his way back from the market and had to wait for us. He wasn’t very happy, though I apologised.’

‘Well, keep looking out for him as we drive along,’ I said. ‘I want to have a word with him if I get a chance.’ But we’d got to the military road by now, and there was no sign of the cart.

There was a good deal more coming and going on that larger thoroughfare: slow ox-wagons and donkey-carts lumbering along, piled high with goods to be delivered in the town, in no especial hurry. Most were aiming to arrive outside the walls at dusk, because wheeled transport was not permitted in the colonia in daylight hours and they would otherwise have to join the queue outside the gate. Foot-travellers and horsemen had the opposite idea — hurrying to get there as soon as possible, since strangers were often turned back after dark and forced to seek accommodation in the seedy inns outside the walls. And there were people coming the other way as well — though no sign of the cart that we were looking for.

I was alarmed in case we came across a group of soldiers on the march — any military traffic had priority. For one thing we would have had to retreat on to the margins till they passed — where there was a good chance that our axles would bog down in the mud — and for another its simple presence would have delayed us very much, and separated us neatly from anything on the far side of the road. A marching unit, though it always keeps up a spanking pace, is often accompanied by carts full of unofficial wives and their supplies (a soldier cannot marry until he leaves the service, of course), to say nothing of the tradesmen and general hangers-on, who follow the peacetime army everywhere it goes. Such a procession can take a long time to go by.

Today, however, there was no such problem and the sun had hardly dipped by half an hour before we found ourselves bowling down the road towards the town.

There was the inevitable gaggle and turmoil at the gate and the road was almost blocked. Wagons which had got there early were waiting for dark, and the unloaded carts of market traders were drawn up at one side pending the reappearance of their owners when the forum shut. Many of them were battered, and I glanced at Niveus, hoping he would point out the one we were looking for, but he made no sign.

Closer to the gate, and closer still. Here there were hiring carriages and litters jostling for trade — and, taking up the very middle of the road, a smart private conveyance with a bored slave at the reins. And foot-travellers always struggling to get through — women with baskets full of eggs, a thin man with an even thinner cow, two slave boys carrying a huge baulk of wood.

The wine merchant stopped the cart and looked resentfully at me. ‘Here you are, citizen. This is as far as I can go. I have a storehouse on the east side of the town. I’ll have to hurry before the gates are shut — not really made for passengers, these carts. So. .’ He held his hand out, hoping for a tip, but I knew that Marcus had paid him earlier and I had nothing I could give him. I got down hastily, and so did Niveus.

‘I’ll mention it to His Excellence when I get back,’ I said, and saw the man flush sullenly as he drove away, forcing his way back through the throng by flourishing his whip, and loudly cursing at other drivers as he passed.

A fat guard was trying to keep order at the gate, red-faced and hollering in an effort to be heard above the shouts of drivers and the rumbling of wheels. ‘No pushing there, or I’ll arrest the lot of you!’ he shouted, waving his baton as a sort of threat. Then he saw my toga, and his manner changed. ‘Make way for the citizen. You, with the handcart — get it out of there.’ He began to wield his weapon against shoulders, backs and legs, and, very suddenly, the crowd obeyed. A sort of pathway opened up to allow me past. I sent Niveus over to deliver the wax tablets to the guard (‘tell him they are for the attention of the commander of the garrison’) and set off ahead of him through the archway in the gate — just as a horseman came the other way.

I stepped aside to let the rider through — I may be a citizen, but I know my place, and this was an expensive animal. A rich man or his messenger by the look of it — I glimpsed a hooded figure in a handsome cloak. I crammed myself against the woman with the eggs, and flinched as he went flashing past within an inch of me.

There was no time to straighten up again. There was a pursuit in progress — that was clear to see. A pair of sturdy townsmen came charging after him, urged on by a puffing, plumpish woman in a shawl who brought up the rear. ‘Stop him! Stop that rider!’ But he was out of sight by now. They rushed into the gap the passing horse had made, using their elbows mercilessly to force their own way through, and the shouting and excitement moved off towards the gate.