"Really?" Ruso wiped his toe with a damp cloth and wondered if dinner invitations were so rare in Britannia that guests felt the need to boast about them.
"And," Valens continued, "it's a pity you've already performed your party trick, because so have you."
25
A small informal dinner, as arranged by the wife of Centurion Rutilius, was one where Ruso was required to make conversation with seven people he didn't know plus one he'd seen too much of, while eating a selection of elaborate dishes that bore little or no resemblance to their stated ingredients.
He had been introduced to his fellow guests and promptly forgotten most of their names. This was a situation he was hoping to salvage by not speaking unless spoken to. He would ask Valens afterward. Valens would know what everyone was called, particularly the two daughters of their host. Obviously they were both Rutilia something, but Ruso was damned if he could remember what. The younger one wasn't supposed to be there anyway: She had been summoned at the last minute when the second spear, who turned out to be her uncle, arrived alone. Apparently his daughter had a bad head cold and wouldn't be coming after all.
Valens, who might conceivably have been disappointed at this news, seemed to accept it stoically enough when etiquette now demanded a rearrangement of the seating plan and he found himself lounging between the plump and giggly wife of another centurion and the elder Rutilia, who must have been of marriageable age.
Ruso took another spoonful of something soft and eggy and wondered how long it would be before Valens offered the second spear's daughter a house call. Around him, his fellow diners were finding ways of informing one another that they thought Hadrian would make a fine emperor, largely because nobody was yet drunk enough to dare say anything else. It was an example of the meaningless conversation that, as Ruso had once tried to explain to Claudia, was one of the reasons he could not see the point of dinner parties.
"What's wrong with people being nice? I suppose you'd rather stay at home and be grumpy?"
"I'm not grumpy. I'm busy."
"Well, just because you're busy, why do I have to stay at home by myself and be miserable?"
Claudia's parents, Ruso felt, had done their daughter a serious disservice. It was clear that they had never introduced her, either by education or example, to the words "obedience" and "duty."
His hosts were going to have similar problems with the other Rutilia, who was not much younger than her sister, if they were not careful.
While the plump wife moved on from praising the emperor to admiring the catering and the decor of the dining room, Rutilia the Younger was beckoning the wine jug over for the third time. The slave, who should have had the sense to refuse, didn't.
Ruso licked meat sauce off his fingers and realized his hostess was speaking to him. "I'm sorry, you said…?"
"I said, are you enjoying our venison gravy, Doctor?"
He nodded. "Excellent." (So that was what it was.)
"I'll have the recipe sent over."
He thanked her, wondering what sort of sauce would be produced by two medics who between them could barely boil an egg. Across the table, Valens caught his eye and grinned.
The plump woman, casually propping one hand under her jaw to disguise her chins, leaned forward and peered at Ruso. He was diagnosing short sight as she said, "So, how long have you been in Britannia, doctor?"
"Two weeks," replied Ruso.
The woman appeared to be waiting for more. He felt there was something else he should add to this reply to pad it out a little, but since he had fully answered the question he could not think what the something might be. This was another reason why he disliked dinner parties.
Claudia would insist that attending them was for his own benefit ("You must put yourself forward, Gaius! How will you advance if you never meet the right people?"), but afterward she would complain about his refusal to chatter mindlessly to the right people when he met them. It had just struck him that he could pass the baton by asking this woman the same question back, when she gave up waiting and asked, "And what do you think of it?"
He hesitated. Britannia was dilapidated, primitive, and damp, but some of these men might have chosen to serve here. "It's interesting," he said.
"Our mother doesn't think it's interesting," piped up a young voice from across the table. "Our mother says it's the Back of Beyond."
"Rutilia Paula!" The woman frowned at her daughter across the top of the tureen. Her earrings glittered in the lamplight as she turned to Ruso. "And what do you make of the natives, Doctor?"
"I haven't met many yet," said Ruso, omitting the fact that he owned one of them.
"Are you married?" inquired Rutilia Paula.
"Divorced," replied Ruso as one of Rutilia the Elder's sandals gave her little sister a hefty kick and her mother reinforced the message with, "Paula, dear, really!"
The mother turned back to Ruso. "I'm so sorry, Doctor. You were saying?"
Ruso shook his head. "I'd finished."
Rutilia Paula, evidently encouraged by this response, said, "Is it true you came from Africa and all your things were eaten by ants and now you're very poor?"
Her mother said loudly, "They're not very interesting, I'm afraid."
"Terribly primitive and superstitious," put in the woman with the chins. "They put their enemies inside great big men made of sticks and burn them alive, you know."
"Not now they don't," pointed out her husband. "We've put a stop to all that sort of carrying-on."
"I certainly hope so," replied the wife.
"Now they're just bloody argumentative," put in her husband. "Half the trouble we get is trying to stop them fighting each other."
"They don't want to pay the taxes," put in Rutilius, "but they expect us to turn up when there's trouble."
Ruso deduced that they were talking about the natives. "Is there much trouble?" he asked.
"The lowland tribes don't give us much these days," said the second spear, "but the higher the mountains, they worse they get."
"And they are so terribly dirty."
To Ruso's relief the mention of dirt turned the conversation to the vexed question of who was responsible for the slow completion of the work on the fort bathhouse. As the finger of blame moved around the fort and beyond, Valens remarked to their hostess how nice it was to meet someone socially who wasn't in the medical profession. "Most people think we're either going to poison them or slice them up," he explained, "So we end up just socializing with one another." He glanced at Ruso. "Except those of us who don't socialize with anybody, of course."
"You're another of these medical fellers, then?" inquired the second spear, eyeing Valens through the steam rising from a roast bird (duck? large hen? small goose? It had been announced on arrival, but Ruso had been distracted by the sight of Rutilia the Elder clamping her hand across the top of her sister's wineglass until the water jug appeared).
"I am," Valens was saying. "I was wondering-"
"Never believed in doctors, myself," said the second spear. "Bunch of squabbling buffoons."
Valens shook his head sadly as if in total agreement. "It's not a well-regulated profession, I'm afraid."
"Bloody right," agreed the second spear. "Killed my father. Only had a bit of a cough. Could have lived to be eighty. That lot started at him with the blood-cupping and the silly diets and shoving stuff up his backside, and he was dead within the week."
The younger Rutilia started to giggle.
"Very unfortunate," said Valens.
"That's what they said too."
Their hostess stepped in. "Marcus, Doctor Valens was marvelous to Aulus when he was ill. Wasn't he, Aulus?"
Aulus Rutilius grunted assent.