Chapter Eighteen
The legate's house was in turmoil, packing cases lay strewn about his private quarters and the household slaves laboured to bed down every breakable item between layers of straw. The slaves, fearful of Flavia's wrath – she had a fierce temper when provoked and was not above having a slave flogged when the circumstances warranted it – handled the pottery and china with as much care as possible. Besides the breakables, Flavia had to make arrangements for the packing of the linen and personal items of furniture – all of which was being shipped back to Vespasian's house on the Quirinal in Rome. Flavia and Titus were to accompany him as far as the Gaulish coast and return home once the campaign was launched. By that time the witch-hunt for the surviving members of the Scribonianus conspiracy should have died down and some sort of normality would have returned to the social scene. And Rome was the best place for Titus since they must begin thinking about his education in the near future. Vespasian favoured a strictly vocational training in law and rhetoric and wanted Flavia to begin looking for a tutor as soon as possible. Through the tangle of packing cases and piles of straw weaved a maid-servant, trying to catch Flavia's eye.
'What is it?'
'Someone to see you, mistress. One of the soldiers,' she said with evident distaste.
'Who?'
'An optio.'
'Cato?'
'Yes, mistress, that's what he said his name was.'
'Very well. I suppose I could do with a little break from all this packing.'
A nearby slave raised his eyes heavenwards.
'Show the optio through to the study. I'll be there in a minute. Make him at home and offer the boy something to drink.'
'Yes, mistress.'
– =OO=OOO=OO-=
'I was just thinking about you,' Flavia said as she breezed into the study, wearing a light silk stola. The room, like most rooms in the legate's house, was heated by a hypercaust system and Cato was relishing the warmth it provided in the moments before Flavia's entrance.
'You're fortunate that those fools haven't packed up my study yet. Do sit down.'
Cato resumed his seat as Flavia wafted over to a large shelved cupboard with dozens of scrolls neatly stacked in sections. She paused a moment and fondly ran her hands over some of them before she addressed the optio.
'You're welcome to whatever you want, or at least whatever you can carry. You can take the Philippics – bombastic delivery but with flashes of wit – and the Georgics – fertile reading matter – and here's a few volumes of Livy. Would you like some poetry?'
'Yes, my lady.'
Nearly an hour later a pile of scrolls lay on the couch beside Cato and he was engaged in the heart-breaking task of deciding which of Flavia's offerings he would be able to fit into his marching pack. Flavia watched him thoughtfully as he mentally weighed up each book before deciding which pile to place it in.
'You were quite taken with Lavinia, weren't you?'
'My lady?' Cato looked up, scroll poised in hand.
'The slave girl I bought this morning.'
'Oh, her!'
'Oh, her, indeed. You're not fooling me, young Cato, I know the signs. The question is, what do you want to do about it?'
Cato stared back, mind reeling with shame at the transparency of his feelings and a desire to see Lavinia again, to stare into those emerald eyes.
'Well, maybe I was wrong then,' Flavia teased him. 'Maybe you don't want to see her again.'
'My lady! I… I…'
'Thought so,' laughed Flavia. 'Honestly, I can read you men like a book almost every time. Don't worry, Cato, I'm not going to stop you seeing her – far from it, but give the girl some time to settle into the household and then I'll see what I can arrange.'
'Yes, my lady… Thank you.'
'Now you'd better take those scrolls and leave. I'd love to talk but there's too much work still to be done. Another time, soon. And maybe Lavinia can join us?'
'Of course, my lady. I'd like that.'
'I bet you would!'
As she watched Cato's back disappear down the Via Praetoria Flavia smiled to herself. A lovely boy, she thought, and far too trusting. If she cultivated him carefully he might well be useful to her some day.
– =OO=OOO=OO-=
'So what is all this stuff?' asked Macro suspiciously as Cato handed over the scrolls, each one neatly encased and labelled.
'Essays and histories mostly'
'No poetry?'
'None, sir, as you ordered,' Cato replied. 'There's some pretty exciting material here-'
'Exciting? Look, I just want to learn enough to read. That's it, as far as I'm concerned – all right?'
'Yes, sir. If that's what you really want… Now then, sir, how have you been managing with the letters I showed you?'
Reaching under his bed, Macro brought out a wooden wax tablet and handed it over to his subordinate. Cato flipped it open and scanned the contents. To the left-hand side of each tablet were the letters of the alphabet that he had neatly inscribed on the wax-coated surface. Immediately to the right of this were the centurion's rough attempts at copying – straggling lines and curves that occasionally bore a passing resemblance to the original.
'It wasn't easy writing on my lap, you know,' explained Macro. 'Bloody thing kept sliding all over the place.'
'So I see. Well, it's a good start. Have you managed to remember what each one sounds like?'
'Of course.'
'Then would you mind going through them with me, sir? Just for practice. Then we'll try a few words.'
Macro ground his teeth. 'Don't you think I can do it?'
'I'm sure you can, sir. But practice makes perfect, as you keep telling me. Shall we?'
As Macro stumbled through the alphabet, Cato kept his comments to a minimum and all the while images of Lavinia trickled into his mind's eye, to be expelled with considerable reluctance. In the end, even Macro could see that the young man's attention was not fully engaged with the task at hand. Abruptly he snapped the tablets shut so that Cato nearly fell off his stool.
'What's on your mind, boy?'
'Sir?'
'Even I know I got some of those words wrong – and you're just sitting there nodding like a chicken. What's so bloody important that you can't concentrate on this?'
'Sir, it's nothing. Just a personal matter. It won't happen again. Shall we continue?'
'Not if your problem's going to get in the way.'
The lesson had become boring and Macro was not keen to continue. Moreover, the boy's evident reluctance to explain the cause of his distraction had provoked Macro's curiosity.
'Spit it out, lad!'
'Really, sir,' protested Cato. 'It's not important.'
'I'll be the judge of that. Speak. That's an order. I'm not having my men walk around like daydreamers. You youngsters spend all your time worrying about bullying and women. So which is it? Who's been having a go at you?'
'No-one, sir.'
'Narrows things down a bit then, doesn't it?' Macro winked salaciously. 'So who's the woman then? It better not be the legate's wife. Might as well write out a suicide note right now'
'No, sir! Not her,' Cato said, with a look of horror.
'Then who?' Macro demanded.
'A slave girl.'
'You want to get her in the sack, I take it?'
Cato stared at him for a moment and then nodded.
'So what's the problem? Offer her a few goodies and you're in. I've never known a slave woman who wasn't prepared to part her legs for the right gifts. What's she like?'
'Quite beautiful,' Cato replied softly.
'No, you idiot! I meant what does she like?'
'Oh, I see.' Cato blushed. 'I don't really know that much about her.'
'Well, find out. Ask her what she wants in exchange and you're away.'
'It isn't like that, sir. I feel something more than just lust.'
'Lust? Who's talking about lust? You want to screw her, right? So that's your objective. All you need now is deployment of the appropriate tactics to manoeuvre her into an advantageous position and then secure your conquest. Then it's just a question of mopping up.'
'Sir!' Cato, who thought he had become inured to the crude humour of the army, was caught off guard and blushed. 'It's not like that.'