In the past, the people of Cressia made no secret of their dislike of their overlord. They'd resented his high-handed Roman ways, the way he strutted around as though he owned every inch of the island, dispensing justice when a crime had been committed, ensuring taxes were paid to the Collector once a year. Every time they saw one of his slaves in their bright-yellow livery and watched how many sacks were unloaded from the trade ships for just one villa, and every time they counted the timbers shipped to him from the mainland, the bales of bright cloth, amphorae of wine, the barrels full of lemons from Africa, Damascan plums, Egyptian melons or ridiculously priced spices from India, the islanders' resentment grew fiercer. It reinforced their own poverty, the usurping of traditional Cressian ways. In Leo's wealth and ostentatiousness, their noses were rubbed into the footprint of Rome.
Oh, but what would they give to have Leo throwing his weight around once again! To return to the safety and security of Rome at their back. The islanders were too shocked to weep at their misfortune, but already they realized they'd taken Leo for granted, and without his protection, their chickens had come home to roost.
At the Villa Arcadia, the end result was the same, even if the process was different. Here, spunk from the slaves had drained away slowly, like water from a cracked bowl. A slave is a chattel, an object to be bought and sold at the auction block, at least, that's the theory. In practice, most rich men's slaves lived better than freemen. They were guaranteed food in their bellies, good food at that. They were housed and clothed well, their children educated and taught a trade. They earned money from the work that they did, and this bought them fancy clothes, jewels, concubines and, best of all, they did not have to pay tax. Even the lowliest labourer lived well. Prudent slaves put their salaries aside to save for businesses of their own — usually a shop — and they often owned slaves of their own. It wasn't a bad life, considering, and many chose to remain enslaved rather than purchase their freedom. They lived better that way. Got fat quicker.
Providing their master was alive to look after them.
Now Leo was dead, brutally murdered, who would protect them when the pirates came back? Even in the unlikely event that Rome came to their aid in time, families would surely be broken up as the estate was sold off. Where would they go? Who would buy them? Would their new masters beat them?
In killing Leo, hundreds of other lives had also been wrecked.
And still the birds sang and the butterflies danced, and a lone dolphin made silvery arcs in the water.
Twenty-Four
The heart of the demon rejoiced. It could feel it physically I swelling with happiness, pulsating with energy against its chest wall.
A tide of destruction had been unleashed.
Let there be more.
Let there be no end to the carnage.
Twenty-Five
In a bedroom darkened to near blackness by closed shutters for privacy, Claudia sniffed back the tears. Leo had his faults — more than most — but no man deserved to die in such a manner. Whatever score Jason wanted to settle, that was simply too high a price.
You bastard! You cold-blooded, calculating, evil-minded bastard. She saw Jason standing in that rosy-pink dawn three days ago on the prow of his warship. That insolent bow. The slow mime of the handclap. The gold which had glinted at hi neck and his belt in the sun. You didn't even have the decency to kill Leo quickly, you callous son-of-a-bitch.
But he'd made a mistake, killing a high-ranking Roman Leo's barbaric murder would bring the whole damn Roma Navy up here — there would be no place for Jason to hide Informers would be richly rewarded, retribution on those who backed Azan would be grim, and reprisals for those who sheltered the Moth did not bear thinking about. There would be no port or cove left for the rebels to put in to, and Claudia had no pity for Jason once they'd been run to ground Captured alive (the Emperor would make sure of that), he'd be dragged back to Rome, paraded in chains round the street and sentenced to a humiliating, protracted death in the arena 'And I shall be in the front row, cheering for Leo,' she said aloud.
'Hrrrow,' Drusilla agreed.
It was so unfair. She scrubbed away the tears that streamed down her face with her sleeve. 'The only way Leo gets to see his beautifully refurbished atrium is with a coin under hi tongue for the ferryman.'
'Mrrrrr.' pity his family, too. He'd be in his urn long before the news reached halfway to Rome. His sisters and brothers, his cousins and nephews, friends and colleagues would gather instead in the Forum to hear a sombre ovation in his honour. Like the families of soldiers killed in war, they would have to hold the feast without holding the funeral. Grieving would be harder because of it.
Fumbling in the drear darkness, Claudia stuffed a protesting Drusilla into her cage.
'Meeee-out!'
'Sorry, poppet.' She rammed the latch home to make her point and hurriedly tossed underclothes into her trunk. 'We need to get clear of the risk zone. Pronto.'
'Worried Jason'll come back?' a voice asked from the doorway.
Thank Jupiter for bodyguards! Hardly his job, but with the maids poleaxed from shock, Junius would just have to pitch in with the packing. Claudia wedged a pair of sandals down the side of the chest and said,
'Not Jason, you clod. Orbilio.' Get in there, dammit. She pressed down on her gowns, stuffed the last two on top, but would the wretched lid close?
'Would that be so much of a problem?'
'Junius, I am not in the mood for stupid questions.' How the hell were her cosmetic jars supposed to fit into that tiny space? 'Supersnoop will win enough glory bringing Jason and the rebels to book, they'll erect a statue to him in the Forum.' May the pigeons have a field day with it. 'He doesn't need to add my little dodge to his heroic collection.'
'Which little dodge might that be exactly?'
How come I've got a blue slipper left over? 'Junius, come and sit on the lid of this trunk, will you?'
Damn. The doorway was devoid of bodyguards. Claudia sat on the lid herself and bounced up and down until it closed.
'No, really.' Now the voice came from the corner. 'Are we talking about the tax dodge on your wine exports to Spain? That spot of smuggling earlier this year? Or slipping narcotics to the hot favourites in provincial derbies?'
When she stood up, the lid sprang up too. 'For goodness' sake, Junius, stop buggering about and put your Gaulish butt where it matters. On this trunk.'
But Junius wasn't in the corner, either. Squinting in the blackness, she could just about make out his shadow by the windows, then suddenly she was blinded as the shutters were flung open and sunlight dazzled her eyes. And now, of course, she realized her mistake. The hair was too dark, far too wavy, and the figure wore a long patrician tunic.
'Sorry, Leo, I thought you were my bodygu-'
Leo? Oh. Shit. His ghost was still walking.
'Father Mars, protect me from the undead.'
Beans. I need beans. Beans are used to drive away ghosts. There was fruit in the silver bowl — cherries and apricots, peaches and figs — but what calibre of servants forget to include black beans in the arrangement?
'Deliver me from the vengeance of this poor wretched soul in torment.'
The words tumbled into one, but still the ferryman didn't row Leo away. Had someone forgotten to slip him the down payment?
'Mighty Pluto, god of the underworld, take this stubborn shade to his ancestors. Quickly, if you don't mind.'
What was this, another aristocratic perk, that noble spirits were allowed to remain earthbound longer than anyone else's? Exorcism! That's it, I'll exorcise the bloody thing. Claudia made the sign she'd seen a priest use during an exorcism in Rome, thumb and first two fingers raised stiff, the fourth and little finger turned down. Unfortunately, it had been a Phrygian priest making the blessing for a Phrygian ghost; clearly there was a language barrier here. She tried making the sign with both hands, which set the spirit's shoulders heaving, as though it found something amusing.