34

Lucius had the good sense to keep his remarriage low-key. Silia and I were invited to the private ceremony, of course. So was Junia, but she didn't go.

Lucius and Poppaea greeted the guests in the formal hallway before the reception room itself where the ceremony would take place. The bridegroom was more gorgeously dressed — and wore more make-up — than the bride.

I'd thought long and hard about a wedding present; what, after all, can you give the man who literally has everything? Finally the problem had solved itself when I was offered an interesting piece of historical erotica, an Egyptian papyrus dating back to before the first Ptolemy and detailing no fewer than ninety-seven coital positions for couples and trios of the same and mixed sexes. Lucius was delighted.

'We'll give it to Chaeremon to translate, Titus,' he said.

'Do you think he's up to it?' I didn't mean academically: Chaeremon was another of Lucius's ex-tutors, a former professor at the University of Alexandria and an expert in Old Egyptian esoteric lore. He was in his eighties, and paralysed down one side.

'But that's the whole point, dear!' He giggled. 'The shock'll finish the old satyr.'

I gave Poppaea a piece of jewellery from the same source: an ornamental headdress made up of hundreds of thin gold plates. It had come, my agent told me, from the tomb of a queen who'd ruled before the Greeks took Troy. I thought she'd like it, but she didn't. In fact she was unwilling to touch it.

'Oh, don't be silly, Poppy! It's lovely!' Lucius kissed her on the cheek, then turned to me. 'She's terribly superstitious, didn't you know? She thinks the thing might have a curse on it. Don't you, petal?'

'It came from a grave. An Egyptian grave.' Poppaea was scowling at me. 'The Egyptians know about curses.'

'I shouldn't worry, my dear,' I said lightly. 'The man I bought it from is seventy-five, has four mistresses and owns the biggest house in Alexandria next to the palace. If there ever was a curse it's worn off long since.'

'Curses don't wear off. Ever.' She motioned to a slave-girl, who took the thing away and put it with the growing pile of other presents. 'Thank you for the thought, Petronius. It was very much…in character.'

I inclined my head and joined Silia who was already in the reception room.

'Well, that went down like a fart at a funeral,' I said.

'What did, dear?' She handed me a cup of wine.

'Poppaea's present. She hated it.'

Silia sniffed. 'It serves you right for trying to ingratiate yourself. You know she doesn't like you. You ought to have given her a nice necklace and saved yourself the trouble.'

'What trouble's that, Petronius?' It was Tigellinus. He was standing with his back to us talking to Marius Celsus the consul. I noticed that Celsus moved away pretty sharply as soon as Tiggy transferred his attention elsewhere and joined a tight knot of whispering purple-stripers in the corner.

'Oh, nothing serious,' I said blandly.

'Good.' He glanced briefly over his shoulder at the group in the corner and smiled, drawing his lips back from perfect white teeth. 'Silia, lover! You're looking good enough to eat, as usual.'

'Thank you, Tigellinus.' Silia was cool. 'I didn't know you included cannibalism among your other accomplishments.'

'Ouch.' Tigellinus winced and smiled. 'Straight in the balls. That's what I admire about you upper-class bitches. You've got the put-down to a fine art.'

'It does take practice, naturally,' Silia said. 'And a certain amount of style.'

'You see what I mean, Titus?' Tigellinus grinned at me. He was quite unperturbed. 'So Poppy didn't like your little present? What a shame. I could've told you if you'd asked me. The poor girl's even careful which sandal she puts on first when she gets out of bed in the mornings.' He mimed consternation. 'Oh, my, what have I said? And on this day of all days!'

'Perhaps the headdress was a bad choice.' I was more careful about antagonising the emperor's closest confidant than, obviously, Silia was. 'I knew the empress was superstitious, but not to that degree. The thing hasn't seen the inside of a tomb for a hundred years.'

'Oh, that wouldn't matter to Poppy. She's a sucker for the mysteries of the east. Not like Octavia. Now she is a strictly practical little madam.'

'Really?' Silia said frostily.

Tigellinus had raised his voice on Poppaea's predecessor's name; quite intentionally, because he looked round and smiled into the sudden hush. A heartbeat later the interrupted conversations around us resumed at a lower pitch, as if everyone were listening.

'Really,' he said.

'I wouldn't know anything about that.' I raised my own voice: it wouldn't do for Tigellinus to think I was frightened of the name. 'I've never met Octavia.'

He laughed. 'That makes sense. She wouldn't let you get within twenty yards. Me neither. Although' — he became ponderously confidential, and his arm went round Silia's shoulders — 'I could tell you some stories about that little ice-maiden you wouldn't believe!'

'I'm sure you could,' Silia said in her normal voice, removing the arm.

Tigellinus ignored her. His mouth was a bare inch from my ear. Behind him I could see at least four people watching us out of the corners of their eyes and not saying much themselves.

'The rumour is, all this virtuous Roman matron stuff's shit,' he murmured. 'Our sweet little Octavia's been dropping her pants in secret for months.'

'Really?' I raised my wine-cup so he couldn't see my expression. 'You're quite right, of course.'

He looked puzzled. 'What d'you mean, I'm quite right?'

'About my not believing your stories, my dear.'

Silia smiled. Tigellinus scowled.

'It's a fact,' he said. 'And guess who the lucky man is?'

'You, darling?'

I knew that baiting the oily-skinned bastard was stupid, but I couldn't help myself. He was trying to control his temper and not doing too well.

'I told you, Petronius, she's got no taste. She wouldn't let me near her honey-pot in a million years. This is the most unlikely candidate you could ever think of.'

'Amaze me.'

He grinned and glanced over his shoulder. The people around us — I could see at least a dozen whose names were prominent in politics and society — had given up the pretence and were frankly eavesdropping. 'No. No, I've said enough. You'll find out in time. And if you should want to try your luck, then you go ahead. Now the thaw's on and the pipe's cracked she may appreciate another plumber.'

Silia's knuckles were white around her wine cup, and I suspect she was within a hair's-breadth of throwing the contents into Tigellinus's face; but just then, luckily, old Aelius Tubero the high priest of Jupiter arrived and the marriage ceremony began.

Silia and I went home right after we'd thrown the nuts and the happy couple had gone off to enjoy their first night of properly-wedded bliss. In the safety of our litter we talked about what Tigellinus had said. Silia was upset: she knew Octavia through Junia Calvina, and although they weren't exactly friends they had a certain amount of respect for each other.

'I don't like it, Titus,' she said. 'I don't like it at all. That worm's up to something.'

'Do you mean Tigellinus or the emperor?'

'Does it matter? They're both the same anyway, nowadays.'

'You can add Poppaea, dear. She's pulling the strings. The whole thing's a total fabrication, obviously.'

'Obviously.' Silia sighed. 'Titus, that poor woman! They can't do this to her.'

'They can. They will.'

'But it's so unfair! She's never so much as looked at another man! Isn't divorce enough?'

'Not for Poppaea. She wants Octavia exiled or dead.' I stared out of the litter's uncovered window. The Palatine wasn't by any means the busiest part of Rome, but there were a few people — mostly party-goers — in the late-evening street. 'It may not work, even so. It isn't plausible enough, and Octavia's much too popular just to be got rid of. Especially by the likes of Poppaea.'

'Do you think that'll stop them? Really?'

I didn't answer, which was an answer in itself. Probably it wouldn't. Lucius might worry about his own popularity, but most Romans — high or low — were realists. Also with Poppaea and Tigellinus in league against him poor Lucius didn't stand a chance.

'Who's the man, do you think?' Silia said after a while.

Suddenly I felt tired, bone-tired.

'Jupiter knows. Who's unpopular currently? With Tigellinus and the emperor, I mean?'

'Most of the Senate, darling.'

'Even Tigellinus and Poppaea can't accuse Octavia of sleeping with most of the Senate. And Tigellinus mentioned one man.'

'Thrasea?' It was a good suggestion, and worrying enough. Thrasea Paetus had been a thorn in Lucius's side for years, largely because he gave the lie to the belief that all senators are hypocrites. Thrasea was his own man, and an honourable one at that; which was another thing about him Lucius disliked. Pretended goodness he understood and despised; the real article made him nervous. And when Lucius was nervous he was at his most dangerous.

'Possibly,' I said.

'I'm only glad Junia's brother and nephew are safe. They'd be prime candidates, and the shock would kill the poor girl.'

I nodded. Silia was right, I could see how Tigellinus could persuade Lucius to get rid of these two. Silanus and Torquatus, like Junia herself, had imperial blood in their veins, and they were the last of the family. However, Silanus was in Asia at present and Torquatus was only fourteen. Not even Lucius could cite them as the guilty parties, if he had any concern at all for credibility.

In fact it was none of these people. Tigellinus hadn't been joking; the man eventually accused of seducing Octavia was one of the most unlikely in Rome.

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