Three

Crossing the Forum, her beaver fur drawn tight around her chin, Claudia hoped to Juno that her pinched, white face and chattering teeth would be attributed to the cold. What a mess. What an absolutely bloody awful mess. Oblivious to the fire-eaters that had drawn a crowd over by the Vulcanal, or the crush of hot-pie vendors pressing in around her, the captain’s words echoed in her ears.

You can trust old Moschus, missus.

Couldn’t you! You could trust the bastard to go straight to the Temple of Castor and Pollux after leaving her, so that by the time she arrived, it was to find the depository locked up for the night and the records showing all too clearly the sea dog’s mark where he’d redeemed five tokens for a thousand sesterces each. Claudia’s fists clenched. When I catch up with you, Moschus, those will be your ribs scattered over Neptune’s sandy soil from Naples to Messina. So help me, I shall personally break them off and drop them in the ocean one by one-and you can bloody watch me!

Meanwhile, there was Butico. Eight thousand plus thirty-two per cent interest? Her stomach churned, her limbs felt like jelly and her hands couldn’t stop shaking, so she exchanged a silver bracelet for a flagon of warm wine spiced with cinnamon, and pretty soon her teeth ceased to chatter. The Rostra, the splendid new orators’ platform at the end of the Forum, was eighty feet long, forty feet deep and forested with an assortment of marble, bronze and gilded heroes. Sheltered from the biting wind by the Record Office behind, Claudia leaned her back against the bronze grille of the balustrade and dangled her feet over the edge. Far below, a cosmopolitan sea swirled around the temples and basilicas, the fountains and the arches-revellers, hawkers, bankers and astrologers, dogs, mules, fortune-tellers and jugglers, even a string of roped ostriches.

No point in trying to negotiate with Butico, asking him if he’d accept wine in lieu of cash. She’d already made her bed by double-crossing him, she had to lie in it and the main thing now was to ensure she didn’t end up sharing it with two hulking great thugs. For the life of her, she couldn’t understand why she didn’t just sell this wretched business and be done with. It was why she’d married Gaius in the first place, wasn’t it? For the money?

Slowly, the scroll that was her past unravelled.

It revealed a young girl taking elocution lessons-and the identity of a noblewoman who’d died in the plague. Of that same girl exchanging marriage vows with a man nearly three times her own age. Signed, sealed and delivered, what more could a girl from the slums ask for? Son of a humble road builder and a self-made man himself, Gaius hadn’t noticed any shortfall in the social niceties. All that concerned him was that he had a beautiful, witty young wife to parade and, had Claudia died before him, no doubt he would have had her stuffed and mounted on his office wall. But of course she hadn’t. Instead, and with unaccustomed expedience, it was Gaius who’d whistled up the Ferryman to take that long ride across the River Styx. That had been fifteen months ago, shortly before the sixth anniversary of his wedding, and, to the horror of his blood relatives, he bequeathed his trophy widow the lot. Large house in Rome. Vineyards in Tuscany. Investments in housing, in shops, in numerous commercial enterprises.

Happy ending? Dream on.

Before his ashes were cool, the Guild of Wine Merchants were muscling in to take over his patch. They tried everything. Buying her out, bullying her out, cajoling, seducing, flattering, beseeching, and all to no avail. At first Claudia hung on out of stubbornness. Gaius might have been bald and fat and in the grip of terminal halitosis, but dammit, he’d worked his whole life to build up his network of trade. Those vultures should not be allowed to simply move in and pick the bones clean. She would be the one who decided what and when to sell. Gradually, though, she saw how profitable the wine business was. By hanging on to it, not only could she continue to live in the style to which she’d grown accustomed without dipping into her capital, it would be one in the eye for the Guild of Ghouls.

Only it wasn’t that simple. Normally fiercely competitive in the marketplace, the bastards put their differences aside and united. Anything to force Claudia Seferius out of business.

Over her dead body!

On the platform behind her, a living statue painted head to foot in white lime was posing motionless in imitation of the genuine articles lined up on their plinths. Small children tried lobbing pellets and stones to distract him, but the statue remained a study in muscular rigidity.

It wasn’t that Claudia was felonious by nature. She drained the last of the warm, spicy wine. Hand on her heart, she would not have ripped Butico off had her hand not been forced. To survive the cut-throat world that she’d inherited, she was having to meet dirty trick with dirty trick and her current strategy was to undercut the Guild with prices so low that buyers simply couldn’t say no. Seferius wine was synonymous with quality, so why not get the punters hooked, then gradually increase the price to market levels? So far, so good, and Claudia had a stack of purchasers lined up for the next vintage. Unfortunately, she was selling at such a thumping great loss that resources were currently stretched to breaking point. And now, of course, it was Saturnalia.

Below her dangling squirrel-lined boots, a cart delivering bricks locked wheels with another delivering cotton in the tight space in front of the sacred lotus tree. Within no time, fists and bales, insults and cobs were flying over the Forum as both drivers claimed right of way. Mules bucked in the harness. The donkey with the cotton cart brayed and kicked anyone who tried to intercede. Claudia lifted her gaze to the Palatine.

Saturnalia, when it was customary (compulsory) for merchants to cross the palms of their clients with silver. Five to six pounds in weight, to be exact. Apiece! Dear god, how was she supposed to find that kind of money with Butico’s shadow looming over her? Silver was the yardstick against which clients measured success, and if she didn’t deliver, they would smell a rat and default. The business would sink without trace.

The stench of conspiracy was all over this scam, but by heaven, she would not let the Guild win this battle ‘It’s funny,’ a melodious baritone murmured in her ear, ‘how nothing travels through the universe faster than a rumour.’

Claudia turned in time to see a pair of red patrician boots easing themselves over the grille, followed by a long patrician tunic encased in spotless white patrician toga. Terrific. That’s all I need. The Security Police.

‘I tend to think of rumours as fires,’ she said. ‘Ignore them and they fizzle out.’

‘Then I must have been a blacksmith in a previous life,’ he replied. ‘Or maybe a bathhouse stoker.’

He smelled of sandalwood, with just the faintest hint of the rosemary in which his clothes had been rinsed. The unmistakable scent of the hunter ‘What do you want, Orbilio?’

‘Who said I wanted anything?’

‘Then why are you attaching yourself to me like a rash?’

‘You could always try rubbing ointment all over me and see whether I vanish.’

The eyes might be twinkling, but make no mi stake. Petting a starved lion in the arena carried less risk.

‘Isn’t there a law against the harassment of grieving young widows?’ she asked, as he made himself comfortable on the stonework beside her.

‘Edict five-eight-three, sub-section twenty-two, paragraph six and a half,’ he said happily. ‘Provided the widows are grieving.’

‘Very funny.’

‘I thought so.’

Ah, yes. The more urbane, the more dangerous…

From the corner of her eye, she watched him comb his mop of dark, wavy hair with casual hands. Noted the crisp, dark hairs on the back of his forearm. And contrasted them with fifteen years of penniless exile.

‘So then.’ He folded his arms over his chest and leaned his back against the metal grille. His legs were long enough for his feet to rest on one of the gleaming bronze prows set in the wall of the Rostra, trophies from ships captured in Rome’s naval victory at Antium. ‘How’s business?’

Claudia’s gaze swung to the tall, gabled building to the east of the Rostra, with the letters SPQR over the door. Ambitious as he was cultured, determined as he was handsome, Marcus Cornelius Orbilio had his sights set on a seat in that building some day. The question was, how soon was that day? The more results he chalked up, the closer his maiden speech in the Senate-and let’s face it, a nice juicy fraud would close the distance considerably.

‘Senators Please Queue Respectfully.’

‘Excuse me?’

‘The letters,’ she said. ‘I was wondering what they stood for. “Small Profits, Quick Returns”? “Sleeping Politicians’ Quiet Recess”?’

‘I always thought it was “Sharks, Pimps, Quacks and Rogues”.’

‘Yes, but you’re biased. Half your family sits there.’

‘That’s slander,’ he protested. ‘My kinsmen are far too busy rogering their popsies to waste time on trivia like laws and foreign policy. Anyway.’ He brushed an imaginary speck from his toga. ‘You never did tell me how you’re coping, a lone woman in a pit of hungry tigers.’

‘If you mean the Guild, you’ve read them wrong. Underneath the stripes, they’re just a load of pussy cats. Did you know, they’ve invited me to join them?’

‘Can you smell something?’ he asked, twisting his head to look over his shoulder. ‘Only I thought I smelled a bull on the Rostra. One that hasn’t been house trained.’

‘Good heavens.’ Claudia pointed towards the sacred lotus tree lit by torches. ‘I do believe I see my best friend Antonia down there. Must dash, Marcus, so lovely to see you again.’ Skipping nimbly over the balustrade, Claudia ran across the platform and skipped down the steps without a backward glance. Strangely though, despite the shouts of the hawkers, the cries of the alms-seekers, the cracks of the bullwhips and the creaking of carts, the only sound she could hear was the echo of Orbilio’s words inside her head.

‘One day, Claudia Seferius.’ He hadn’t even bothered to unfold his arms or uncross his ankles from where they were resting on the bronze prow. ‘One day, you’ll realize that I’m the best friend you have.’

Come into my parlour, said the spider to the fly.

Pausing to let a chariot pass, Claudia laughed. Honestly, Marcus Cornelius. Do I look like I have wings?

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