28

That wasn't going to be so easy. Appius Junius Silanus was a top-notch noble, consul three years back and a relative of Tiberius's through his mother. I didn't know the guy personally, but I knew of him. He was the perfect example of the dangers of inbreeding: a vain, fluff-brained dandy who fancied himself a politician but whose grasp of life's realities would've disgraced an average twelve-year-old. In other words, a natural tool for Sejanus.

My hope was that guys like that make the worst traitors; they don't last the pace, and when things get rough they go to pieces. If I could get Silanus alone and off his home ground I might just be able to scare him into doing something Sejanus would live to regret. The only problem was how. Sure, I could break into his house and face him with what I knew, but I'd be a fool to try because one shout out of place and I'd be on my way to a rock in the Cyclades, at best. No, the meeting had to be on my terms, another dark alleyway tête-å-tête; and that was going to be difficult, because social butterflies like Silanus were never alone. They never willingly went down alleyways, either, dark or otherwise. It might mean getting mud on their Cordovan leather sandals.

We said goodbye to the Ostians and went back to the flat. We were both starving: I don't know about Agron, but with me it was the unaccustomed fresh air and exercise. Perilla had gone to bed and so, for a wonder, had Bathyllus, but I did a bit of foraging and rousted us out a jug of wine and a plateful of bread and cheese. We ate while we discussed what Crispus had told me and how best to handle Silanus.

'Corvinus, don't rush into this, okay?' Agron advised. 'You need a lot more information about the guy first. His movements, his daily routine. There'll be something. He has to be vulnerable somewhere.'

'I could go to the Wart now. I've got enough to make him listen.' Sure. Who was I kidding? I didn't even sound convincing to myself. 'At least…'

'Yeah, I wouldn't put any bets on it either.' Agron speared a bit of cheese with his knife. 'Anyway, how do you get into Capri to do it? Pretend to be a seagull? Apply for a pass to Sejanus?'

I grunted. That was another problem, and Agron had given me the only two viable options. If Capri was a fortress Sejanus held the keys. I could have the whole thing worked out six ways from nothing with proof oozing out of its ears and it still wouldn't do me any good. No one crossed the channel from Surrentum to Tiberius's private island without his deputy's leave. That went for letters, too. And if I was fool enough to try busting in without permission — by taking a fishing boat over, say, and climbing the cliffs — I'd leave in an urn. Unless the rocks got me first.

'Maybe the Wart'll come back for the Apollinarian Games this time,' I said.

'Pigs might fly, too. Anyway, the Games don't start until we're into July, and by that time if you're right Tiberius'll be dead meat. Or Silanus will.' Agron frowned. 'Face it, Corvinus. If you want to stop the guy you'll have to do it from this end. And like I say to make that happen you'll need information.'

True, all of it. I chewed sadly on a roll and took a swallow of wine. 'So. You got any clever ideas?'

'Sure.'

'Really?'

If he noticed the sarcasm it didn't show. 'You're forgetting. I used to be a client of the Quinctilii.'

'I'm not forgetting.' Agron had served under Quinctilius Varus, the old villain who'd got himself massacred along with three of our legions in the Teutoburg, and then been taken up by Varus's sister. It was how we'd met in the first place. 'So what? Quinctilia's been dead for years and we're talking about the Silani here.'

'Yeah. But Quinctilia was a close friend of your Silanus's mother, and the households met quite often. I know a couple of the guy's slaves from way back. Give me a few days. Let me see what I can dig out.'

This I didn't like the sound of. I was remembering what had happened to Lippillus, and one friend damaged on my account over this business was enough. Still, we had to have the angle. And it looked like the only game in town.

'Okay,' I said. 'But go easy. No risks, right?'

He impaled the last piece of cheese. 'Corvinus,' he said, 'that is something you do not have to tell me.'

It took Agron four days. When Bathyllus let him in to the flat on the fifth evening he was grinning all over his face.

'Got the bastard,' he said.

'Yeah?' I was feeling pretty chirpy myself. It was a lovely evening and I'd left Perilla scribbling in the study and slipped out for a cup of wine at the local wineshop. I'd got talking to a guy who half an hour into the conversation turned out to be from Calatia, which is just down the road from Capua, and who had a cousin in Pergamum. It ought to've been a recipe for disaster but it wasn't. We ended up slagging off the Romans and the Roman upper classes in particular, and parted the best of friends.

'Yeah.' Agron sat down. 'He's seeing the wife of a senator who lives on the Viminal near Patrician Street.'

'Seeing as in "seeing"?'

'Definitely. Every evening. The affair seems to be hotting up, and the senator concerned is busy with committee work.'

'Handy.'

'That's what I thought. Understandably, Silanus doesn't come calling with a fanfare of trumpets. Just him, on foot, with a single slave. Very untypical, very low-key.'

'Uh huh.' It was perfect. 'How do we do it?'

Agron frowned. 'You sure you want this?'

'Sure I'm sure.'

'Okay. In that case we keep it nice and simple. Next time lover boy goes visiting I grab him and bring him here instead.'

I set down my wine cup. 'You do what?'

'Don't look at me like that.' He took one of the new season's grapes from the bowl in front of him and popped it into his mouth. 'It's the best way. I'll borrow two or three of the barge boys again and scare up a double litter with nice thick curtains. There'll be no hassle. None at all.'

'You want to bring Silanus here?' I was still staring at him.

'Why not? It's quiet, it's safe. What else do you want?

Jupiter! And Perilla accused me of having crazy ideas!

'Safe, hell!' I said. 'If he traces me back then we're in real trouble!'

'Come on, Corvinus!' Agron popped another grape. 'We gag and blindfold him and run him around a bit before and after. By the time you're ready for him the guy won't know which way's up, let alone what part of Rome he's in. Besides, this is the best you'll get.'

Yeah, well. It might work after all. It was certainly better than taking him somewhere even semi-public and risking being interrupted. 'What about the slave?'

'The Ostians can handle that side of it, don't worry. If he doesn't co-operate we tap him on the head and bring him with us in the same litter.'

'Appius Silanus share his litter with a slave?' I grinned. 'He's going to love that part.'

'The last thing he'll have to worry about is compromising his aristocratic principles. Believe me.'

'Okay,' I said. 'So let's do it.'

'Tomorrow?'

'As ever is.'

I'd got everything set up for our guest's arrival. Perilla and Bathyllus had been warned to stay well away, and I'd closed the window-shutters in case the view put any ideas into his head, immediate or retrospective. Plenty of lamps, though: I wanted to see how he looked when he answered my questions.

It was an hour before midnight when Agron brought him in. He steered the guy to a chair, sat him down firmly, and took off the gag and the mask. Silanus sat for a moment blinking in the lamplight like a parrot choosing between two swear words. Then he struggled to his feet.

Agron pushed him down. 'Easy,' he grunted.

'By the gods, I'll have you strangled for this, you wretches!' Well, he was gamer than I thought he'd be, even if he did sound like a character in a third-rate comedy. 'Let me go at once!'

'Sure,' Agron said. 'When we've finished.' He looked at me. 'You want to take over now?'

I'd been studying Silanus with interest. Late thirties, skinny, weak chin, watery eyes. He'd be short-sighted. I hadn't seen him around, and his face wasn't familiar from Paullus's drawings, either, so he hadn't been one of Vitellius's callers. I hoped we hadn't made a mistake. If Crispus had put one over on me after all I'd have the bastard's scrotum for a dice bag.

'Appius Junius Silanus?' I said. I didn't use my hick Campanian accent, and the patrician vowels came over loud and clear.

'Of course.' He was staring at my beard and long, bound hair. I could see him making a mental reassessment, wondering whether perhaps I might be worth his consideration after all. 'And who might you be?'

'The name's Marcus Corvinus.'

'Corvinus? Good grief, man, you're supposed to be…' He half-rose again, eyes wide, before Agron's hand stopped him.

'Yeah,' I said. 'Your pal Sejanus tried to set me up with a treason rap. Only I decided I wasn't going to play.'

'Sejanus is no friend of mine!'

I glanced sharply at Agron. Sure, it could've been bluster or an automatic denial, but he obviously didn't think so either; that had rung true. Shit. Maybe we had made a mistake after all.

'Is that so?' I said carefully.

'That is so. Sejanus was responsible, as you perhaps know, for my father's exile among many others. And if that is your reason for kidnapping me then whatever you're planning you can forget it. I'm no friend of Sejanus's, I don't know anything about your little feud with him and he would certainly not care whether I went missing or not. Now get your fellows to take me back where they found me please.'

'When we've had our talk.'

'Talk? What on earth do we have to talk about?'

Ah, well. In for a penny. 'Your plans to assassinate the emperor in forty days' time.'

I'd been watching his eyes, but I didn't need to look for any subtle signs of guilt this time. The guy went grey as an old wash-leather and collapsed into the chair like someone had sucked his bones out.

'What?' he said.

'You heard,' I said. 'You care to deny it, maybe?'

'Of course I deny it!' He licked his lips. 'The idea is preposterous! Why should I want to murder Tiberius?'

'I was hoping you'd tell me that yourself.'

'You're mad.' He glanced back at Agron. 'Both of you.'

'Oh, we're not mad. We're not wrong, either. Sejanus is going to cash in his winnings on the twenty-eighth of next month, and you're going to help him do it.'

'I've told you, I have nothing to do with Sejanus!'

There was something screwy here. I'd got him cold and he knew it: the date had hit him hard, and he was frightened; but I had a gut feeling that he was also telling the truth.

'Okay,' I said. 'So if not Sejanus then who are you working for?'

'No one! I don't know what you mean!'

A lie. I looked up at Agron. 'You got your knife handy, pal?' I said.

Silanus shrieked; at least he started to, but Agron whipped the gag across his open mouth and pulled it tight. The shriek turned into a gurgle, and above the gag Silanus watched me with terrified eyes.

Agron handed me his knife. I held it against the guy's cheek.

'Okay, sunshine,' I said. 'We won't kill you. We'll just carve little bits off until you decide to talk. You can choose to co-operate or not, but you only get one chance. Understand?'

The eyes blinked rapidly. Then, slowly, Silanus nodded.

'Take the gag off,' I said. Agron did. Silanus never moved. 'Right. So I'll ask you again. If you're not working for Sejanus then who are you working for?'

He passed his tongue over his lips.

'The young prince, of course,' he said. 'Gaius Caesar.'

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