“Arcturus-I-”
“It doesn’t matter, Philo. Octavio here doesn’t like the color of my eyes, or the sound of my voice, or maybe the fact that I’ve found out some things about mines and money and property and murder that make his tunic a little too tight. Don’t worry, gentlemen. I’m almost done.”
Tired anger stretched my voice and made it sharp. “Take her home, Philo. With the girl. Secunda could use a little comforting. She’s been-comforted-before. And you, Octavio-you can start making odds on the time.”
I squeezed through the outer doors, pushed my way through the throng. The wind wasn’t blowing anymore. No birds were singing.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
Gwyna was where I’d left her, with Ligur and Quilla. We walked home. She told me what happened.
Materna died as she lived-without a gentle thought, without mercy, pain her only companion. Except this time it was her own.
Her heart beat fast enough to echo against the stone. She burned but couldn’t sweat, opened eyes that couldn’t see. Lost the power of voice, her massive body helpless, limbs convulsed and thrashing. Unconciousness a gift she probably didn’t deserve. Materna wasn’t merely murdered. She was tortured along the way.
“What about Sulpicia? Did she-”
“Sulpicia snuck a taste of Materna’s wine, but only a drink. Said it was too sweet.”
The light was weak and pale. Natta’s shop was closed. Silence followed us home. She sent the servants ahead of us and turned to me, her eyes roaming my face.
“Ardur-I’m glad she’s dead. She was an evil thing. Not even human.”
I took a deep breath, couldn’t find any air. “As human as evil always is. Human and living. Inside all of us.” I put a hand on her shoulder. “The curse on Aquae Sulis is still alive, Gwyna. It won’t be buried with Materna.”
She stared at me. “You know something.”
I looked past her. “Let’s just say I’ve figured out a few things.”
Her voice was the first soft thing I’d felt since morning. “Do you-do you need time by yourself?”
I held her fingers to my lips to kiss them. “I’ll be in as soon as I can.”
She stood on tiptoe to kiss my cheek, then hurried up the hill. I watched until she was a small white speck, opening a door, disappearing inside to safety.
I looked around. I was standing near a blackthorn tree-the same tree where a wagon, two people, and a dead man waited one night. I put my hand on the gnarled trunk. The bark was rough and harsh, like it needed to be. Like I needed to be. I closed my eyes.
Strychnos killed Materna, almost killed Sulpicia. In her dreams, Materna saw Faro. She was ordering a mask to be nailed into his skull.
Poison killed Calpurnius, too: aconitum. He thought he’d joined the oldest business in the world, but he couldn’t afford the buy-in price.
Aconitum could be bought for a whisper and a wink if you had enough money, and it was offered for sale with the bottles of piss and oil and the rough-cut wooden breasts. Everything was for sale in Aquae Sulis.
Poison killed Dewi, too. A simpleton everyone tolerated, and most liked, and somebody murdered.
I leaned away from the tree trunk and walked around it, careful not to step on the grasping, gnarled roots.
Dewi reminded me of Aeron, and how much he was like Hefin. Age-mates. Age-mates and their special bond. A bond of memory.
The crickets were starting, a comforting sound. The wind gusted through, cool against my face, while a knot of birds expanded and contracted, black against the darkening sky, until they chose a tree for the evening and alighted, taking shelter from the dark.
Memory. Memory played the starring role, in this and every act. The food of love and the goad of hate, and in Aquae Sulis it played both parts.
I wondered who would remember Sestius’s aunt, or Sulpicia’s husband. Old and querulous and sick, hard to live with, too harsh and stern to understand the pleasures of the young, dying slowly, hurried along, no prosperity in their deaths. Too many ghosts, too much memory. Blackmail made them live again. Bibax, the only one to profit. Cui bono, cui bono …
Everyone made something from the mines. Octavio, Philo, Grattius, Vitellius, Papirius, Secundus. The mine promised them all what they wanted: money, power, a temple, another bath. All of them lost, some more than they could bear.
But this was more than the bankruptcy of dreams. I was looking for curses, the cursed and the curser, the cursed man, a homo maledictus. A human being, full of desperation and hope, greed and desire, love and hate. Above all, love and hate.
No, Calpurnius, may the earth rest lightly upon you, in your foolishness and your greed. You were wrong. And you paid for it.
The wind blew harder, and dry leaves once more tumbled down the path into town. They would blow past the temple, where the face of the goddess gazed down from the pediment and waited for the final cleansing to begin.
It would be difficult. I needed a confession. A lot of the story was still guesswork. But I was a good storyteller.
I felt the tree trunk again, my fingers tracing the dry, harsh ridges. Time for another town meeting.
* * *
The stone was golden now, bouncing off the orange torchlight. Flickers fell on the water, looking like fires on the sea. The gift of the goddess was patient. It lapped against the sides of the pools, the rhythm of forever.
Grattius hunched in a corner. He’d lost weight, strictly from nerves. His eyes roamed, and his legs twitched at every shuffling footstep.
His matching duovir, Secundus, drooped against a wall. We were standing near the first healing pool, next to the room overlooking the spring. Moonlight splayed shadows on the floor, dancing and twisting with the torchlight. Secundus stood with his hands in his battered toga, staring at nothing. His daughter stared at me.
Papirius’s eyes flickered over the scene, lingering on no one, while the garnet robe he was wearing drank the light the way Prunella drank everything else. She was sitting on a stool her husband brought out for her. He stood in Papirius’s shadow, as he always did.
Sestius couldn’t quite figure out how he got there. His eyebrows formed a permanent tattoo of surprise against his white skin.
Vitellius stood with an arm around Sulpicia, who sat on another stool. She’d insisted on coming. Her eyes were a little dimmer, and the smile even lazier, and I had no doubt what she’d do as soon as she felt better. Drusius stood on her other side, an awkward third but maybe not so awkward, judging from what Sulpicia was smiling at.
Philo was looking at me, his face gray and suddenly old. Ligur and Draco stood between the rooms, closing off the circle.
It took all day, several meetings, and a lot of explanation-some real, some imagined-to set it up. I hoped it would work. I disliked the melodrama; the assembled cast of players was too Aeschylean, too deus ex machina. It wasn’t my style. But Aquae Sulis liked its theatricals.
“Not so long ago-less than nine days, in fact-I rode into this town and expected to find a quiet health resort. What I found was a dead man. Murdered, strangled, and propped in the spring.”
Grattius shuddered. No one else moved.
“You all played a part in why it happened, why other crimes happened before and after. Along with other people who can’t be here tonight-at least not physically.”
A small gust blew through the window. Prunella stifled a whimper.
“There was Calpurnius-junior priest, chief drain cleaner, and all-around greedy bastard. Poisoned with aconitum, if you remember-and even if you don’t. Of course, anybody with a little money and the right smile can buy aconitum outside this window. But you live here. You know the secrets of the marketplace. They’re about as secret as the graffiti in the public latrine.”