'I know a man was killed, if you don't mind,' barked the old man.
‘We saw nothing, heard nothing. Only the gossip the next morning.'
'Gossip?' I said. 'Then there was talk in the neighbourhood. Was he a local man?'
'Not that I knew o£' said the man. 'Only they say some of the regulars from the Swans were in the street when they turned him over next morning and recognized his face.'
'The Swans?'
'A house of entertainments, for men. I wouldn't know anything about it myself' He rolled his eyes back in his head, indicating his wife, and lowered his voice. "Though my boy used to tell some pretty wild stories about the place.'
The knife banged against the counter with a special ferocity.
'At any rate, it happened some time after we closed up the shop and went upstairs for the night.'
'Then you heard nothing? I'd think there might have been screams, some other noises.'
The man started to answer, but the woman interrupted.
'Our rooms are at the back of the building. We don't have a window on the street at the front. What's your interest in the matter, anyway?'
I shrugged. 'I only happened to be walking past and noticed the handprint. It seemed strange that no one should have covered it over.'
'My wife,' the old man said, with a pained expression. 'Superstitious, like most women.'
The knife came down. 'It stayed there for a very good reason. Have we had any thefts since it happened? Have we?'
The old man wrinkled his lips. 'She imagines that it keeps out thieves at night. I told her it was more likely to keep out customers.'
'But when the door's open, nobody can see it, it's hidden on the other side. It's only when the door's shut that you see it from the street, only when we're closed, and that's when we need the protection. You call me superstitious? A common criminal will think twice about robbing a shop after he's seen a bloody handprint on the entrance. They chop off a thief s hands, you know. It carries a power, I tell you. If we had contrived it ourselves, if it were anything less than blood, it would mean nothing, protect nothing. But the mark of a dying man, made with his own blood by his own hand, it carries a power. Ask the stranger here. He could feel it. Couldn't you?'
'I felt it!' It was Tiro, standing behind me. Three pairs of eyes turned to watch him blush apple-red.
‘You're sure you won't sell him?' asked the old man, who suddenly started to wheeze.
'I told you already—’
'A power in it!' shrieked the old woman.
'Tell me: who saw the murder? There must have been gossip. People are in and out of your shop all day. If someone actually witnessed it, you would know.'
The old man abruptly stopped wheezing. He stared at me for a long moment, then looked at his wife. As far as I could see she only scowled back, but it may be that she made some sign imperceptible to my eyes, for when he turned back it seemed he had been given grudging permission to speak.
'There was one person… a woman. She lives in the tenement across the way. Her name is Polia. A young woman, a widow. Lives with her son, the little mute boy. It seems I recall another customer saying that Polia was talking to everyone about the murder right after it happened, how she had seen it with her own eyes, looking out of her window. Naturally, the next time they came into the shop I asked her about it. And do you know what? She wouldn't speak a word about it, turned as mute as the boy, except to say that I should never ask her again, and not to tell anyone anything that might…' He abruptly clamped his jaw shut with a guilty twitch.
'Tell me,' I said, picking through the dried figs to find a few worth eating, 'does the little mute boy like figs? Tiro, give the man a coin from my purse.'
Tiro, who had been carrying my bag across his shoulder, reached into it and pulled out a copper as. 'Oh, no, more than an as, Tiro. Give the man a sesterce, and let him keep the change. After all, I have an account for such expenses from your master.'
The old man accepted the coin and looked at it suspiciously. Beyond him I could see his wife, chopping away with an expression of grudging satisfaction.
'Such a quiet slave, and such fine manners. You're sure you wouldn't like to sell him?'
I only smiled and motioned to Tiro to follow. Before I stepped into the sunlight I turned back. 'If your son insisted on selling the only slave you had, why isn't he here to help you himself?'
As soon as the words were spoken, I knew the answer. I bit my lip, wishing that words once said could be unspoken.
The woman abruptly hurled the knife across the room, plunging it into the wall with a shudder. She threw her arms heavenward and flung herself face down across the counter. The old man bowed his head and wrung his hands. In the gloom of the dilapidated shop they seemed posed in an eerie tableau, frozen in a sudden eruption of grief that was almost terrifying, almost comic.
'The wars,' the old man muttered. 'Lost in the wars…'
I turned and put my arm around Tiro, who stood dumbfounded. Together we stole into the sunshine of the street.
10
The tenement house across the way was of fairly recent construction. The windowless walls racing the street had as yet been defaced with only a modest amount of electioneering slogans (elections having continued, though without much enthusiasm, under Sulla's dictatorship). More common were some choice selections of ribald graffiti, probably left, to judge from the content, by satisfied customers on their way home from the House of Swans. I saw Tiro twisting his head to catch one of the more obscene phrases, and clicked my tongue like a disapproving schoolmaster. But with one eye I scanned the litanies myself, curious to see if a certain name appeared; but Elena — she who had summoned Sextus Roscius — and whatever specific talents Elena might possess were not mentioned.
A brief flight of steps led up to the tenement door, which stood propped open in the morning heat. From a small, bare anteroom, two passageways led off to the left. One was a long, enclosed stairway up to the second floor. The other was a dark hallway that ran the length of the building, flanked by numerous cubicles covered over with ragged, unmatched draperies.
From the end of the hallway a tall, gaunt man sprang up from where he had been sitting on the floor and loped towards us, turning his head sidelong and rubbing his chin. He was the watchman. Every tenement has at least one, and sometimes in larger buildings one for every floor — an otherwise unemployed resident who collects a small fee from the others, or else from the landlord, to watch their belongings while they're out during the day, and to keep an eye on strangers and visitors. Sometimes a slave may be used for the duty, but this tenement hardly looked like the dwelling of slaveowners; besides, I saw at a glance that he wore the iron ring of a free Roman.
'Citizen,' he said, coming to an abrupt halt before us. He was very tall and gaunt, with a grizzled beard and a slightly wild look in his eyes.
'Citizen,' I said, 'I'm looking for a woman.' He smiled stupidly. 'Who isn't?' 'A woman named Polia.' 'Polia?'
'Yes. Upstairs, I think.'
'Polia?' he said again, rubbing his chin.
'A widow, with a young son. The boy is mute.'
The man shrugged, exaggerating the gesture. At the same time he slowly turned his right hand palm-up.
'Tiro,' I began, but Tiro was already ahead of me, reaching into the leather bag across his shoulder. He drew out a couple of copper asses and showed them to me. I nodded, but made a gesture that he should wait. Meanwhile the gaunt giant loomed over us, staring at Tiro's closed fist with unabashed greed.
'There is a woman named Polia who still lives here?' I said.