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I took a swallow of the Spoletan. It’s good stuff, or Renatius’s is, anyway; not nearly up to Latian standards, but a good swigging wine perfect for getting the brain cells working. Over at the bar, two of the punters had started up a dice game: strictly illegal in a public place and where money’s involved, but that’s a technicality that no one pays any attention to. Renatius wasn’t even making a token gesture to stop it.

Albucilla had been pretty cagey over her friendship with Soranus as well. That was more understandable. If the bastard was bent — which he was — she wouldn’t want that connection pointed up. Especially if, somewhere along the line, blackmail was involved…

Hell. I needed more facts!

Then there was Acutia. I’d met the lady years back, when we were in Antioch chasing up the Germanicus connection. She’d been a local-poetry-klatsch pal of Perilla’s, married to Publius Vitellius on the governor’s staff, and even allowing for her literary interests she was your total archetypal bubblehead. She’d be a widow now, of course, unless she’d remarried, because Vitellius had slit his wrists at the time of the witch-hunt after Sejanus fell, and good riddance to the bastard. Acutia puzzled me seriously. Oh, sure, given she was in Rome there was no reason why she and Albucilla shouldn’t be friends or meet at the Apollo Library, particularly if Acutia was still on her poetry jag. No problem there, none whatsoever. But why, when she caught sight of me and Albucilla together, should she act like she’d just strolled out onto the sand in the arena and found that the cats were loose?

Odd, right? And suspicious as hell.

She’d wanted to talk to Albucilla about something important, that had been clear enough. Oh, yeah, there was the slight possibility that I might be over-dramatising: like I said, when I first met her in Syria the lady had been a complete bubblehead, and to a woman like Acutia something important could cover anything down to an invitation to a honey-wine party or the latest snippet of society gossip. I knew that, I’d been around bubbleheads most of my adult life, both the male and female varieties. Still, taken together with her reaction when she spotted me I couldn’t help wondering if there wasn’t a lot more to it. There had been genuine panic in her voice. Panic and fear, which chimed with the way Albucilla had reacted to me.

So let’s go the whole bean-bag and assume that whatever she wanted to talk about had something to do with Sextus Papinius…

I took another swig of wine. It didn’t help.

Bugger. I was building sandcastles here, and I knew it. Come to that, I was building sandcastles without any sand. Sure, Albucilla and Papinius were connected, because she’d been the kid’s lady-friend, or whatever. Also, she had links with Soranus who was definitely in the frame. Albucilla I could see working out somewhere along the line, no problem. But Acutia? Where did she fit in? If she fitted in at all. Or maybe I was just letting my suspicious nature lead me by the ears…

All I had was questions where what I needed was facts. The case just didn’t make sense.

Leave it for now, Corvinus. Give your head a rest. At least I wasn’t being dragged through the streets of Rome at the end of a boarhound.

I stood up, hefted the jug and wine-cup, and went over to the bar to shoot the breeze with Renatius and the punters.

The sun was well past the half-way point and almost into its third quarter when I left the wine-shop and walked up Iugarius towards Market Square. The Senate meeting might not’ve broken up yet, but I could sit on the steps of the Julian Hall across the road from the Curia and watch for the doors to open. It beat a hike to the Pincian, anyway, and I didn’t know Allenius’s address. I just hoped that he wasn’t still in mourning — if he ever had been — and had skipped the session.

In the event, I’d cut it fine. I was just passing the Temple of Saturn when I saw the first broad-striper heading towards me through the crowd. Shit. I pushed through and stopped him.

‘Excuse me, sir,’ I said. ‘Was Papinius Allenius at the meeting?’

He gave me a pop-eyed stare. ‘Yes. Yes, I believe he was.’

‘You happen to know if he’s gone yet?’

The guy turned, scanned the crowd for a moment and then pointed. ‘There he is,’ he said. ‘You’ll have to be quick if you want to talk to him, though. He’s on the grain surplus commission and they’ve got a meeting this afternoon.’

‘Fine. Fine, thanks.’ I slipped between a couple of narrow-stripers haggling over a shipment of roofing-tiles, trod on the toes of a plain-mantle who’d decided he needed some valuable time out and was standing staring at the sky and finally ran the guy down just short of Vesta’s temple.

He wasn’t all that pleased about it, mind.

‘Papinius Allenius?’ I said.

‘Yes,’ he snapped. ‘What do you want?’ He was a tall, thin-faced guy in his mid to late forties who looked like he lived on a diet of bread, lemon juice and rectitude. He reminded me a lot of my own father: Dad had had that same look of pokered-rectum respectability. In fact — although I’d never met the man before to my knowledge — twenty years back they’d probably been bosom chums. I noticed he wasn’t wearing a mourning-mantle, and he was freshly shaven.

‘My name’s Valerius Corvinus, sir,’ I said. ‘I was hoping to have a word with you about your son.’

He stared at me for a moment. Then he nodded. ‘Your name has been mentioned to me, Corvinus. I have a meeting shortly, but I can spare a very few minutes if that will suffice. We’ll ajourn to the Temple of the Twin Gods, if you don’t mind. It’ll be quieter.’

‘Sure. No problem.’

We left the main drag and headed down Vestals’ Alley. Twin Gods wasn’t exactly private — nowhere in Market Square is private, that time of day — but at least we’d be out of the crowd. He went up the steps and stopped beside a pillar.

‘Now,’ he said, ‘before we go any further let me say that I viewed Sextus as no son of mine. I had very little contact with him after the divorce, nor with his mother, except what duty compelled, and I can tell you absolutely nothing about the reasons for his suicide. Is that clear?’

I blinked. ‘Uh…right. Right.’

‘It’s as well for you to understand my position right from the start.’

‘Sure.’ Jupiter! ‘But you did get him his job? With the Aventine fire commission?’

He looked at me down his nose and took his time answering. Finally, he said: ‘I know my duty, Corvinus, and I have never in my life shirked it. Sextus’s post was part of that duty. It was a completely separate issue and has nothing to do with anything else. Now if you’ll excuse me — ’

‘Did you give him — lend him, whatever — sixty thousand sesterces?’

He’d been turning away. Now he turned back, mouth hanging. ‘Did I do what?’ he said.