The hire establishment was just outside the western gates, and I live to the south, but, of course, we could not take a horse-drawn vehicle through the streets till dusk, so we went the other way, taking the minor, gravelled road that skirted round the outside of the walls and joined up with the major road again beyond the southern entry to the town.
I had been hoping to ask questions of the sentry there, in case he’d seen anyone with an unwilling red-haired slave, but it was not possible. The main road back to town was already crammed with carts and wagons, lining up to try to get in through the gates and make deliveries. I should have known, of course. This happened every evening in the half-hour before the gates were closed, and there was always a jostling competition to be first, with quarrelling drivers wielding curses, fists and whips. No one was going to let a mere workman in a hired gig get through.
But going the other way the road was clear — a military Roman road is deliberately built with enough width for a century of soldiers to march down it eight abreast, which means two loaded wagons can also pass, with care, if they each put a wheel on the margin path. So there was little hindrance for a narrow gig. I was slightly regretful as we drew away, but my hope of learning anything was, in any case, remote. If rebel brigands had captured Minimus, they were unlikely to have walked him boldly through the gate — he would have struggled and drawn attention to himself. They were far more likely to have tied him up and smuggled him out hidden in some donkey-load or, it occurred to me, a handcart full of hides. So I sat back as the gig-man drove past the throng, and we were soon clear of the confusion and in open countryside.
‘There is a turning on the left-hand side three miles or so down here, and half as long a stretch of gravelled track before we reach my door,’ I murmured to the driver at my side. ‘A full half-sestertius if you get me there in half an hour.’ (I had struck the deal for just a little less, with precisely this intention in mind.)
‘Provided we don’t meet any soldiers on the way, we should do that with ease,’ he told me with a grin.
He was right to make no promises, of course. If we did meet a contingent of legionaries on the move, we should be obliged to pull over on to the muddy margins and wait until they passed, with all their supplies and followers as well — and that could take a considerable time. Even a training party from the local garrison engaged on their daily eight-mile exercise could cause us some delay.
We were lucky. We did not encounter any marching troops. In fact, once we had gone a little way from town, there was very little traffic of any kind at all. We did see one official messenger, riding hell for leather with the imperial post, and, of course, we ceded priority to him, but he was past us in an instant and we moved off again.
It was a comfortable journey, as such journeys go — the body of the gig was hung on leather straps to minimize the jolts — and normally I would have quite enjoyed the ride, but I was very anxious to be home. We were passing through darkening forests by this time, and my mind was full of Minimus. I wondered where he was — supposing that he was anywhere at all. I only hoped that he was unhurt and not too terrified. If he was being held captive in this very forest now, I wondered whether he could hear the clatter of the gig. Or was I foolish to suppose that he was still alive?
I wished again that there was something I could do to look for him, but I had no idea at all of where to start. None of my enquiries had told me anything. My only hope was that if the rebels had him, they planned to ransom him, in which case they would doubtless send me a demand. There had been nothing of that nature at the shop, but perhaps it would be waiting for me at my home, since Minimus could obviously tell them where I lived. Then, at least, there would be a place to start. I was increasingly impatient to get there and find out.
I clung to the leather strap beside my seat as we jolted from the major road on to the country lane which led past my roundhouse to my patron’s large estate, and so on to the distant farms beyond. The roadway was much narrower and darker here, though it was kept in good repair, and the last half-mile seemed agonizingly slow.
The driver was anxious for his extra money too. ‘I’m sorry, citizen, I’m doing what I can. At least it’s better than the other route.’
I nodded. There was another way into the town which cut off several miles, but that was an ancient farm track, twisting and precipitous, full of rocks and roots and sudden gradients, and far too treacherous for horse-drawn vehicles to use.
At last we reached the junction with that other lane. My roundhouse had been built not very far away — we were already at the corner of my enclosure fence. I was leaning forward in my open seat, craning to see the welcome glow of firelight through the door and smell the cooking on the central hearth. But, to my amazement, there was no sign of life, not even a wisp of smoke curled from the chimney hole.
The driver drew up at the gate where I had told him to and turned to me. ‘Doesn’t seem as if they are expecting you,’ he said. ‘That’s a pity — I was hoping you could light my torch for me.’ He gestured to the bundle, ready dipped in pitch, which he carried in the torch-frame at the front corner of the gig. ‘It will soon be really dark, and it will take a lot more than half an hour to get back again.’
He was clearly mentioning the ‘half an hour’ as a way of reminding me that he had earned his fee — as probably he had — but, of course, I had no accurate way of measuring the time. My promise had only been a way of ensuring he made haste, as we were both aware.
I gave him his coin and took the torch from him. ‘Wait here a moment. I will see what I can do. I don’t imagine that they’ve entirely put out the fire.’ As soon as I had said that, I felt a shiver of alarm. I was reminded suddenly of my cold hearth at the workshop earlier. What was awaiting me in my roundhouse now?
My heart was thumping as I went in through the gate. I knew that Maximus, the other red-haired slave that Marcus had lent me, was in Glevum with my son, but the lad who tended the animals and the garden should be here. He helped in the kitchen when there was no other slave to spare. ‘Kurso?’ I shouted, but there was no answering sound of running feet. ‘Gwellia?’ I called more urgently. My wife did not reply.
I glanced into the dye-house and the servants’ sleeping hut, but there was no one there. Apart from the contented clucking of the ducks and chickens in the coop, and the rustle of the sheep and goats within the barn, the whole enclosure was as devoid of life and as sinisterly silent as the inner room of my shop had been this afternoon.
So it was with trepidation that I pushed open the door of the roundhouse that was my modest home. The circular room was empty, but a glance was enough to show me that it was not disturbed. Everything was just as usual. The bed of reeds and rushes was ready to one side, two three-legged stools stood by the central hearth, and a bench beside it held the cooking-pots and food. Even my wife’s loom was standing up against the wall, the stones that weighted down the weft still neatly in a row.
I found that I was almost shaking with relief. There was no sign of a struggle, and — thank the gods! — no corpse awaiting me. The fire had not been strangled either. It had been carefully banked up for the night, though there was no clay cook-pot in the embers, or any sign of Gwellia’s usual baking bread. That was doubly a surprise. There was a naming feast tomorrow and, though it would not be a grand affair as Marcus’s had been, we had invited a good many people to attend. If ever there was time for baking, it was now.