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I hastily scrawled a note to my superiors concerning Maxant’s death, thinking it powerful enough information to request assistance; I stuffed it in a messenger tube before issuing it to one of the men from the Civil Cohorts, demanding he dispatch it immediately.

Within the hour, Leana, Veron, myself and Constable Farrum were riding out of the city at a ferocious speed.

Along the coast the wind was strong, and the skies were as usual clear and mesmerizing. Little licks of white surf littered the sea and birds sliced through the sky in all directions. There was a pungent, vegetative tang, which cleared my head. It was an invigorating change from the odours of the city.

The journey had not taken long and just after midday we came on the final stretch of road, which led to Maxant’s villa. Though much of the land on the approach had been put aside for agricultural use, a few olive and fig trees were dotted about the local landscape. Either side of the road, enormous, narrow poplars reached up like the fingers of a god.

Eventually we reached Maxant’s villa, a splendid, sprawling red-roofed, limestone house with several similar, smaller structures nearby. The estate was large enough that I guessed some of these may have been for religious purposes or were even purely ornamental. A soft haze had rolled in from the sea, and so his formal gardens to our right had taken on the appearance of some mythological scene. The rest of the property seemed to be in the middle of being refurbished, which was not unusual considering he had spent many of his recent years abroad on military campaigns.

One of the servants stumbled out to greet us – a pale-skinned, old, bald man wearing a grubby white tunic. With tears in his eyes he told us, much to my relief, that we were the first people from Tryum to have arrived at the scene. The servant fell to one knee after Veron announced who he was, but the senator picked the old man up by the shoulder with a tenderness that surprised me. When he began to tell us what had gone on, the servant babbled incoherently. I asked him to speak more clearly and he said, ‘Thank Trymus you’ve come so soon. We… we were going mad. We don’t know what to do.’

‘You need not worry now,’ Veron said calmly, glancing towards me. ‘Please, show us the way.’

Three other servants gathered in the villa, their concerned expressions obvious: probably worried what their future would now hold for them given their master was dead. They ushered us outside, through the house itself, which was also in some state of renovation, out through the ornamental gardens and down to the beach. The servant gestured for us to stop, and he indicated the footprints in the sand. ‘These are the master’s steps. They lead down to his body.’ My gaze followed the footprints to the high-tide mark, the sea having receded into the distance, where wading birds strode through the shallow pools.

‘Where are your footprints?’ I asked.

‘Mine?’ he asked, his eyes wide in fear. ‘No, I came from another way – they are over there. That is the route I took.’

‘Why did you go that way and not straight down to the shore from the house?’

‘Each morning before dawn I walk the beach. When the sun rises there is little chance to stop working. I came from that direction. We do not like to disturb the firmer sand around where master likes to look. It isn’t proper and it annoys him greatly.’ He pointed along the shoreline. ‘Those are the steps I made on the way back.’

‘And it was you who sent the messenger.’

‘I sent the boy with a note and some coin to go to the nearest town for help, very early on. He was lucky to find someone to send a message so soon.’

‘You said it was suicide.’

‘Yes,’ the servant said. ‘I hope I did not do wrong.’

I shook my head. ‘Can I confirm you found the body before sunrise?’

‘I did not hear the master return last night, but he is a man of exquisite skill and such a quiet return would not be surprising. Sometimes… sometimes we were going about our work and he would suddenly be there, talking to us, ordering us about. Like a spirit he could move through rooms.’

‘You’ve not known him long have you?’

‘Many years, though I have not seen him for much of this time. I help manage the estates while master is away.’

I examined the one set of footsteps, Maxant’s own as he moved down the beach from the garden. I asked the others politely if they could refrain from disturbing the tracks for the time being, and so we took a long looping route to the body.

When we arrived it was clear to see that only one other set of footprints led here, along the shore – tracks that belonged to the servant. There was hardly anything to suggest signs of a disturbance. The sand here was well compacted, meaning that the wind would not create ripples – any disruption to the surface would have been by a human or animal. But there was simply nothing else.

I enquired if anyone had moved Maxant’s body at all. The servant said he had pulled the corpse over onto its back to see if he was truly dead, but other than that no one had touched it.

The hilt of a blade stuck out of Maxant’s chest directly over his heart, and his clothing was soaked with blood. The general had been wearing the same formal garb he had on yesterday, at the Stadium of Lentus, including his crimson military cloak. Though he had been quite a presence in life, his dead body was just like all the others, and it was a cold, grim reminder of one’s own mortality.

This was such a waste of a life. The servant began weeping once again and I asked him to leave us in peace for the time being.

Rigor mortis had set in some hours ago, and Maxant’s skin was currently in the process of changing colour; but none of these signs told me anything more than I knew already. We had all seen him late yesterday afternoon and now we could all see him here. If indeed this was a suicide – and all the signs did appear to indicate this – then he would have returned late from the Blood Races and in the hours of darkness seen that his own life was ended.

What reason could a victorious general – one who had been experiencing glories that hadn’t been seen since the days of Empire – possibly possess for killing himself ?

‘Well, Drakenfeld,’ Veron called over above the wind, ‘what do you make of this suicide business? Maybe the general suffered from some military trauma and could no longer stand to be around. It happens to veterans, now and then, so I hear. Being around death so much can do that.’

As I crouched down over Maxant’s corpse, Constable Farrum leaned in. ‘I would see it as an honour, sir, if you could teach me something about the signs you’re looking for on this body?’

‘Oh, come on,’ Veron scoffed. ‘Now’s not the time, surely? Let the man do his work, Farrum. We can play such games later. Besides, what’s to see, other than that sword?’

‘Actually,’ I said, ‘there is much to learn here at the scene. And I think I am starting to piece together exactly what might have happened.’

‘How do you mean?’ Veron asked.

‘I do not believe this to be a suicide,’ I announced above the sound of the surf.

Veron gave an expression of surprise. ‘I’ll be impressed if you can explain how it is not.’

‘Constable, have a sniff of this.’ I beckoned Farrum forwards, to his knees alongside the corpse, so that he could smell a dubious stain on Maxant’s cloak. The constable leaned forward eagerly.