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Just then Perilla came out. She had my mother with her. Mother swept over in a cloud of perfume, kissed me, and planted a covered casserole on the table.

'Marcus, dear,' she said, 'I'm dreadfully sorry. We've been away and I've only just heard. How are you, darling?' I could see she'd noticed the wine. 'I've brought you some soup. Barley with rocket. Much better for you than that nonsense.'

Barley with rocket. Oh, hell. I tried a grin, but it didn't come off: mothers are all the same, and you never quite get rid of them.

Maybe Lippillus wasn't such a rarity after all.

42

Perilla was smiling all over her face — she has a sadistic streak a mile wide — but she didn't comment. Instead she said: 'Has Flavonius Lippillus gone, then, Marcus?'

'Yeah. I let him out the back. I think he had another monkey to deliver. Or maybe it was a tame snake this time. Anyway, he's coming to dinner tonight. With his mother.'

'Oh, really?' Nothing fazes Perilla. I could've said the guy was bringing six pigmy jugglers and a tame baboon and she would've said the same. I just hoped the baboon wasn't too near the truth, but from the sound of things it just might be. 'That's nice. I liked him.'

Bathyllus came out with an extra chair. Mother sat carefully and arranged her mantle in perfect folds. 'Perilla didn't explain what happened to you, Marcus,' she said. 'Not exactly. An accident with a kitchen knife, so I understand.'

'Uh, yeah.' Jupiter, I'd strangle that lady when I got her alone! Or maybe force-feed her the barley and rocket soup, which would come to the same thing. 'I was…ah…sharpening it.'

Mother stared at me. 'But what on earth were you doing that for, dear? I'm sure Meton is perfectly capable of sharpening a knife. Oh, Bathyllus.' The little guy was hovering. 'Yes. Some fruit juice, please. Apple, I think, with just a twist of wormwood.'

'And for me, Bathyllus,' Perilla said. She hadn't tried that one.

'Bring one for Marcus too.' Mother's voice was firm. 'And take that wine jug away.'

Bathyllus gave me a look. I think one eyebrow was raised in sympathy but I wouldn't swear to it.

I sighed; I knew when I was beat. And I didn't actually have to drink the stuff, just glare at it until it went away. 'Okay, little guy,’ I said. ‘Do it. So, Mother, how are you?'

'Terribly well.' She looked it, but then she always did. 'We have a new chef who does things with colewort that you simply would not believe.'

My stomach shifted. 'Is that right, now?'

'Titus is looking years younger.' She smoothed out a non-existent crease in the lambswool mantle. 'Acting it, too. We must have you both round to dinner again soon.'

'That would be lovely,' Perilla said brightly. 'As soon as Marcus is feeling better.'

I touched my ribs. 'Yeah. Give it a month or so, Mother, and we'll be back to normal.'

'Oh, it shouldn't take that long, dear! Unless there's something wrong with your diet. Send Meton round and we'll go through a few recipes together. Besides, I thought you said you had a friend coming round for dinner.'

'You mean Lippillus?' Jupiter! I didn't need this! 'Uh, Lippillus isn't a friend, Mother. At least not exactly a friend. He's…er…a doctor. He's coming round to check what I'm eating.'

'An animal doctor, presumably?'

'Sorry?'

'You said he was delivering a monkey, or possibly a snake. Delivering in the literal or the obstetrical sense? But I thought snakes laid eggs. Or is that crocodiles? Or perhaps they both do. Not the monkeys, of course, the other things. And why should he bring his mother with him?'

Hell. This was getting weird, as conversations with Mother in one of her freewheeling moods frequently did. The gods knew how Priscus survived them; they were probably the reason why he spent so much of his time grubbing around old Etruscan graveyards. 'Lippillus moonlights for his cousin,' I said firmly, trying not to look at Perilla. 'He runs an import agency. The monkey and the snake are customers' orders. And they're a very close family. So. What have you been up to?'

'Oh, nothing much,' Mother said. Bathyllus had arrived with the wormwood twists and set them on the table. Mother picked hers up and sipped delicately; I had the distinct feeling from her expression that she knew damn well what was going on and the freewheeling was pure devilment. 'I'm trying to persuade Titus to take me to Baiae this summer, but I'm not having much luck. He wants us to go tomb-hunting around Lake Clusinus again, and it's so boring you wouldn't believe.'

'Why not go to Baiae by yourself?' Perilla suggested.

Mother looked at her wide-eyed. 'Oh, but I couldn't do that, my dear! Not for all summer. We may compromise, July and August tomb-bashing, September in Campania. Titus has a weakness for crayfish that I can exploit, and of course after that terrible business with the runaway column Lucia Philippa won't be needing her villa this year. Probably never again, for that matter, poor girl. But then perhaps Baiae wouldn't be the best choice either. It's bound to be more crowded than usual with the young imperials being there. Bauli would be better. The problem is that I don't know anyone with a villa.'

'Which young imperials?' Perilla sipped her own drink. I tried not to look.

Mother stared at her blankly, then shook her head. 'Oh, of course. You wouldn't know. You and Marcus were in Syria when the engagements were announced. Germanicus's eldest Nero and Drusus's daughter Livia. A lovely couple. Such a shame about the others, even although it was a mismatch from the beginning.'

'The others?'

'Poor mad Claudius's son and Sejanus's Aelia.'

I'd been wool-gathering, staring at a bee climbing the boxwood hedge. Now my head jerked round.

'What?'

'Marcus, dear, don't do that. You startled me.'

I'd done nothing of the kind. Not even Etna erupting six feet from her ear would startle my mother. 'Sorry,’ I said. ‘Uh, could you run that last bit past me again?'

'I was simply saying that the Drusus-Aelia match was a mistake, darling. Why don't you listen properly the first time?'

'You mean Sejanus's daughter is engaged to Claudius's son Drusus? Claudius as in Claudius Caesar? The emperor's nephew?'

'Really, Marcus.' A sigh. 'I'm sorry but you are your own worst enemy. You simply will not listen. There was an engagement, at the same time as Livia's and young Nero's. But the marriage won't take place for the simple reason that the poor boy is dead.'

I was staring at her. 'We're still talking about an imperial, right? Engaged to Sejanus's daughter?' Gods! 'How did he die?'

'He choked on a pear, a few days after the ceremony. A pity for the boy, naturally, and for Aelia, of course, but politically…' She paused. 'Well, perhaps it was for the best.'

Perhaps it was for the best. Sure it was, but even so fate had been given a little nudge along the way and I could bet whose elbow had done it. Brain churning, I picked up my cup and took a swallow…

Shit! The wormwood! Too late, and Bathyllus had taken away the wine jug!

'Marcus, will you stop making faces, please,' Perilla said. 'It's not as bad as all that.'

'It's worse, lady!'

'Then why did you drink it?'

I looked over at Mother. She was grinning. Freewheeling featherbrain, nothing. That was some clever cookie. She beats me every time.

So. Claudius's son and Sejanus's daughter. An alliance with the imperial family. That was it, the last piece. That was what Sejanus was angling for. It was power after all; not that there was a lot I could do about it. Face it, sunshine, I thought. There's nothing you can do. Nothing at all.