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     He gripped her shoulders and, looking deep into her eyes, said, "I climbed the three hundred and thirty-three stairs a man filled with hope, and descended them a man filled with new wisdom. From now on, dearest Ulrika, you will be my religion, my goddess, and I will worship you all the days of my life."

     He kissed her then, and finally stepped back, as if bringing himself back to the physical world. He looked around. "Who are all these people? What has happened here?"

     She told him about the little girl's astonishing cure.

     He arched his eyebrows. "Do you believe Rabbi Judah restored her legs?"

     "It does not matter what I think. When word of this reaches the city, there will be a stampede to this spot. Sebastianus, I feel responsible. I told Miriam to bring her husband here. And I told her that he wishes to be remembered. I handled it all wrong. I had not foreseen that this would happen. These people are all in danger and it is my fault. Sebastianus, my spiritual gift is to find sacred places and sacred people—I found a Venerable One!—and to lead people to them. But I must also do it responsibly, not in a way that will bring harm to others."

     "Do not worry, we will find a way to fix this."

     A short distance away, Primo scowled at what he had just overheard, and wondered how he was going to keep his master safe now. When word of what had happened here reached the city, there would be no containing the thousands flocking to this place. With his master insisting on firing it!

     And Quintus Publius about to depart, any day now, for his return to Babylon.

38

TO MY ESTEEMED QUINTUS PUBLIUS. In the name of the Senate and People of Rome, I greet you. Herewith is a report on the latest activities of my master, Sebastianus Gallus, in regards to his caravan and the goods he transports for Caesar."

     Primo was dictating in the privacy of his spartan military tent that had been hastily erected near Daniel's Castle. He paused to allow the secretary to write the words, dipping his pen in the ink and applying it to the papyrus. Although Primo had become proficient in several languages, he was dictating in Latin, for that was the language he shared with the ambassador from Rome.

     He continued: "We are still in Babylon, honored Quintus, but there is a very good reason. Please read this report before you consider arresting my master for treason."

     He had spent days worrying over what to tell Quintus Publius about Sebastianus's continued lingering in Babylon, but now he had a solution.

     Primo had once been a soldier with limited imagination, who had seen the world in black and white, unskilled at fabricating lies. Yet since their return from China, Primo had found that he was more adept at lying—diplomacy, Sebastianus would call it—than he had ever thought possible. For now he must think of a clever way of covering up the fact that they were still in Babylon because his master was in love.

     In his new way of thinking, going outside black and white, into areas of gray and brown and even red or green, Primo decided that the best move in this instance would be to dish the ambassador a fiction so outrageous that Publius would have no choice but to believe it!

     As Primo weighed his next words, he watched the finely shaped hand move across the papyrus, jotting perfect letters. The secretary wrote almost as quickly as Primo dictated. One of the best in Babylon, Primo had been told. He wondered what the man was going to think of his next words, how he was going to react. But surely the secretary had heard hundreds of strange confessions and declarations, perhaps some even more bizarre than what Primo was about to say. If the man was truly as professional as he comported himself, and if it was true what they said about the code of ethics that governed secretaries and lawyers, the man should not react at all.

     Primo knew that professional secretaries, licensed by the government and ruled by strong ethics—for otherwise they would have no clients—were paid not so much for their letter writing skills as for their silence. Whatever passed between client and secretary, whatever went into the correspondence and messages, remained there. Breaking such a confidence was punishable by death because, like lawyers, secretaries recited sworn oaths before receiving their medallions to practice—as was reflected in the title of their profession: from the Latin, secretus, which meant "secret."

     Primo resumed dictating, "Sebastianus Gallus is under a witch's spell," and the finely shaped hand kept writing with not the slightest hesitation. Mithras, Primo thought. I might be dictating a list of vegetables for all this man reacts! He continued: "She is a sorceress who claims, among many tricks, to communicate with the dead. She holds my master in thrall by professing to communicate with supernatural beings and therefore to foretell the future. You can imagine, my esteemed Quintus, what power she has over my highly superstitious master. It is this woman, named Ulrika—and take note that she is from the same tribe that has caused the Roman Empire, and more specifically General Vatinius, much grief in recent years—who has cast the evil spell over Sebastianus Gallus, making him stay in Babylon, holding back Caesar's treasure for her own selfish interests."

     Primo prayed that the story of bewitchment would divert Quintus from the charge of treason. Otherwise, the ambassador would have Sebastianus arrested, seize the caravan and, under Primo's leadership, send it off to Rome. And for a man of Sebastianus's standing in the field of merchant trading to have his caravan taken from him and his rights and privileges stripped, his family name sullied, would be the worst disgrace—not to mention what horrible fate awaited him in the arena.

     Primo wondered if he could tell Sebastianus about this untenable situation. The emperor himself had sworn Primo to secrecy, and Primo had always been a man true to his oath. But, of late, he had found his loyalties shifting. He had witnessed his master's bravery in China, had observed Sebastianus's integrity and honor at work. And hadn't Sebastianus himself managed to obtain their release from the emperor's "hospitality"?

     Primo scowled. He was used to wrestling men, not moral dilemmas.

     "Send for me at your convenience, esteemed Quintus," Primo concluded, "and I shall give you a more detailed report in person, at which time I am sure you will agree that my master is more a victim than a traitor. I am confident you will encourage Caesar to be lenient with him. Your servant, Primo." He thought for a moment and then, deciding that a touch of humility would not hurt, added, "Fidus."

     And the secretary smirked.

     ULRIKA GLANCED IN THE direction of Primo's tent, glowing against the night with lantern light. She knew he was entertaining a visitor from the city, a man of some importance judging by the heavily fringed robes he had arrived in, the tall cone-shaped hat, and the wooden box he carried, resembling those carried by lawyers. She wondered what business Sebastianus's steward had with a civilian.