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Albia looked interested but I cut in firmly. ’Is Jason still a handful?’

‘Worse than a man, Falco. Talking of being a menace, your father is a right case.’

I breathed carefully. ‘So how did you hook up with Pa?’

Thalia grinned - a wide, rascally grin that she shared with Helena. ‘He heard I was coming out here and fixed a berth on my ship. Of course, your name swung it.’

‘I suppose he paid no fare? Well, you’ll know next time.’

‘Oh Geminus is all right . . .’

Had I not been sure that Thalia had a full-time old flame called Davos, I might have worried. Pa had a past. Even the bits I knew about were lurid. He had always been up for barmaids, but now Flora, his girlfriend of thirty years was dead, he seemed to think he had extra freedom. Yes, my mother was alive. No, they had never divorced. Since she and Pa had not spoken or been in one room together since I was about seven, she did not inhibit him. In fact Ma reckoned she had not counted for much when they lived together either. According to Pa, that was vindictive and unjust. So probably true, then.

‘How is the trusty Davos?’ I asked. He was a traditional actor-manager, with some talent. I had found him congenial.

Thalia shrugged. ‘Touring tragedy in Tarentum. I opted out. I like that play with the bloody axe murders, but you can have too much gloom thrown at you by a chorus of black-robed women. Besides, there are never good parts for my animals.’

‘I thought Davos was a good thing.’

‘Love of my life,’ Thalia assured me. ’I can’t get enough of his thundering virility or the way he picks his teeth. I’ve known him for years, which is cosy and familiar . . . But good things are best kept in a fancy box for festivals. You don’t want them to go stale, do you?’

‘What brings you to Alexandria?’ Helena then asked Thalia, smiling.

‘The future lies in lions. That monstrous new amphitheatre creeping up in Rome. It’s almost up to roof level and they are planning a grand opening.’

‘Plenty of wild beast importers will make fortunes,’ I said, picking up her lion reference. It was a trade I had investigated once. I was working on the Census at the time, so I knew all about the fabulous sums involved. ’But I never saw you as selling meat for slaughter, Thalia.’

‘A girl has to earn a living. It’s a damn good living or I would opt out. I don’t really agree with going to all the trouble of capturing and keeping complicated wild animals if you just want them to die. It’s hard enough to keep them alive in captivity in any case. But I’m no sentimentalist. The money’s too good to ignore.”

‘So now you’re in Egypt, are you travelling south where the beasts live?’ Helena asked.

‘Not me. I like the easy life. Why struggle, when there are men daft enough to hunt them for you? I have special contacts, some of them at the zoo.’

I wondered if ’special contacts’ were as exotic as ‘special dancing’.

‘Not Philadelphion?’ queried Helena.

‘Him? He’s a dry stick.’ From what I knew of Thalia that meant the handsome Zoo Keeper had rejected her advances. ‘No; mostly I come to see Chaereas and Chaeteas. When the dealers are bringing them specimens, they organise extras for me.’

Did Thalia’s specimens appear in the Museion ledgers? ‘I’m looking for fiddles at the Museion.’ I decided Thalia and I were good enough friends to be frank. ‘I won’t land you in it, you know that - but who pays for these extras, if I may ask?’

I pay - the going rate!’ snapped Thalia. ‘And it’s damned expensive. The lads just put dealers in contact. And if the dealers come up with some beast I’m not familiar with, Chaereas and Chaeteas advise me how to handle it. There’s no fiddle, Falco.’

‘Sorry; I’m just working on a problem. You know me. A case makes me suspicious of everybody.’

Helena waded in. ’You can help Marcus, Thalia. What do you know-about finances at the Museion? Do they have any money troubles?’

Mollified immediately, Thalia sniffed. She had saved Helena’s life once after a scorpion bite, so they shared a special fondness. ‘The zoo always seems flush. They don’t get privileges, mind you - it may have been different in the pharaohs’ day, when everything belonged to the man on the throne, but now the man on the throne is a tight-arsed tax collector’s son back in Rome. When they buy a new animal, they have to pay the going rate! They moan - but they still get whatever they need.’

I grinned. ‘The same going rate as you pay?’

‘No fear. I have to beat the dealers down, so I can afford to pay Chaereas and Chaeteas for their kind assistance.’

‘So would you say -’ Helena posed the critical question - ‘the way the zoo is run is straight?’

‘Ooh, I should think so, darling! After all, this is the one city in the world that’s stuffed with geometrists who know how to draw a straight line . . . Mind you,’ said Thalia darkly, ‘it a group of us went out for a fish supper, I wouldn’t trust a geometrist to work out the bill.’

At this point Uncle Fulvius appeared with Cassius and Pa. Pa had introduced the others to Thalia last night. She was just the kind of colourful element that Fulvius and Cassius liked. Pa took all the credit for bringing her into their orbit; Helena and I, who had known her for years, were sidelined.

In this gathering of entrepreneurs, I felt an outsider. I picked up my notebooks and after arranging to meet Helena later for a visit to the Serapeion, I went out.

At the Museion I tidied up unfinished business.

I was still looking for Nicanor, the lawyer. He still would not let himself be found. If he had been the errant husband of a client in Rome, I would have thought he was avoiding me.

I found out where the dead Librarian had lived and went to search his quarters. I should have done this before, but there had been no opportunity. I discovered nothing that might explain his death, though the apartment was sufficiently spacious and well furnished to show just why there was keen competition to inherit Theon’s post. Subdued staff showed me around meekly. They told me when the funeral was to be - over a month away because of mummification. It was clear they were upset at losing him. I thought it was genuine and saw no need to make them suspects. A personal secretary, who seemed a decent fellow, had written to the family and packed up Theon’s private possessions, but he had had the sense to keep them here in case I needed to see them. I looked through all the packages and again found nothing of interest.

‘Did he say what he would be working on at the Library, the evening he died?’

‘No, sir.’

‘Were any Library documents kept here?’

‘No, sir. If the Librarian ever brought work home, he always took it back next day. But that was rare.’

‘Who cleared his office at the Library?’

‘One of the staff there, I suppose.’

I asked if he knew of any anxieties Theon had, but a good secretary never tells.

XXIII

I had some time before I had arranged to meet Helena. I went to the Library and managed to find my way back to the Librarian’s room.

The damaged lock had been repaired and polished. The doors were closed. Even with the lock-bar off, they were hard to budge. I used my shoulder to barge my way inside, nearly damaging myself and landing in a heap. ‘Bull’s balls! I wonder if Theon kept the doors so tight to discomfit visitors?’

I had asked the question of Aulus, whom I found in the room by himself, sitting in Theon’s chair, with an enormous scroll half unrolled. He had made himself at home, with his sandals kicked off and his bare feet on a footstool. The scroll lay across his lap as if he was genuinely reading it. He looked like a classic sculpture of an intellectual.

‘If you stay here long enough, Aulus, you may see which of the notable scholars slips into the room to measure himself for Theon’s fancy chair.’