LXXXIX

I limped to a stone border and edged myself painfully into a half-sitting position facing him. 'Couple of wrecks!'

Pertinax grimaced, eyeing up my own condition as he struggled to ease himself. 'What happens now, Falco?'

'One of us will think of something…'

He was in the shade. I was in the sun. If I moved to avoid it the fig tree would block my view of him. So I stayed.

He was the fidgety, hasty type; I had plenty of time. He fell silent watching me from that taut, narrow face.

'Your wife's garden!' I carolled, looking round. It was a small peristyle, full of muted sunlight and rich greenery. On one side of the colonnade, a worn stone seat with lion's paws. Low, sculptured hedges, with the faint scent of rosemary where I had crushed bushes as I found somewhere to perch myself. A thin trail of laburnum. And a small statue of an urchin pouring water -a ragamuffin in a patched tunic- who looked as if Helena might have chosen him herself.

Helena's garden. A good-tempered, mature little courtyard, as quiet and civilized as she was. 'This is a peaceful, private place for a talk,' I told him. 'And a good, private place for a man who doesn't exist anyway to die… Ah, don't worry. I promised your wife – your first wife – not to kill you.' I let him relax, then put iron in my voice: 'I'm just planning a series of hard, non-fatal blows that will persuade you staying alive is so painful you will finish off yourself!'

The priest had made a decent start of it. Better this way; some deaths need time.

He was on the ground, sideways to me, leaning on one hand. Almost no position was comfortable. He had to twist into the hasp of the wicked religious knife Gordianus had prodded into his ribs. He wanted to hold it firm. If he pulled it free, the rush of blood might bear his soul away. Some men would take the risk; I would have done.

I said, 'A military surgeon could safely get that out of you?' Then grinned, to let him know I would never let a surgeon into the house.

He was white. So was I, probably. Tension does that. He thought he was going to die. I knew he was.

My eyes drooped. I saw him move, hopefully. I opened my eyes again, and smiled at him.

'This is pointless, Falco.'

'Life is pointless?'

'Why do you want me dead?'

'You'll see.'

'Today was pointless,' Pertinax mused. 'Why the trick with the barmaid? I can repudiate the marriage as soon as I want-'

'Got to get out of here first, sir!'

He thought about the marriage bitterly, ignoring me. His old restless bad temper jerked behind those pale, turgid eyes. His face had grown gaunt with his obsessions – that sense of outrage, not at his own failure, but at the world's refusal to give him recognition. His was a soul inching into madness. But he was not mad yet. I judged him still capable of answering for his crimes.

'Did my wife arrange this?' He demanded, as if the sunshine of sudden understanding had flooded him.

'Your first wife? She has the brain’s, but is she that vindictive, sir?'

'Who knows what she would do!'

I knew. In any situation I could make a fair guess: look for the obvious, then look for the oddest deviation from it and there would be Helena. Helena, making her quaint choice appear to be the only course anyone with any culture and moral fibre could take. He had owned her for four years whilst she struggled to do her duty by them both – yet he did not know the first thing about that eccentric mixture he called his wife.

'Helena Justina wanted to help you. Even when she knew you were a traitor and a murderer-'

'Never,' he stated briefly. 'This was the one thing I asked her to do for me…' He watched me easing the bloodstained cloth around my ribs. 'We could help each other, Falco. Neither of us stands much chance alone.'

'Mine's a scratch on the surface. You're bleeding internally.'

Whether he was or not, the threat frightened him.

'Your wife's no fool,' I said, taking his mind off his terror of death. 'She told me, in Campania, "Every girl needs a husband."

'Oh she does!' exclaimed Pertinax. 'Did she tell you she picked up a pregnancy?' He said it as if he meant a heat rash she had caught on holiday.

'No,' I replied calmly. 'She never told me that.'

'My father found out while she was staying in his house.' Remembering how she had looked sometimes in Campania, that was allowable. Anyone who knew Helena's normal stamina should have realized without being told. Including me.

Although he was in the shade, Pertinax was sweating heavily; he blew out his cheeks. I suggested, 'I suppose it was your father's idea to use the situation; to rescue Helena's reputation – to offer a respectable name for her child?'

'I'm starting to think he wants a grandchild even more than he wants to do something for me!'

'Have you quarrelled with him?'

'Possibly,' he squeezed out.

'I saw him after you left Campania. I thought his attitude had changed.'

'If you must know, Falco, my father made it a condition of standing up for me that I should reestablish relations with Helena Justina – and when she rejected the favour he blamed me… He'll come round.'

'Did she ask for this favour?

'No!' he retorted in his most contemptuous tone.

'You surprise me!' I said softly. I let him settle, then put to him, 'This unlooked-for infant of hers must have a father somewhere.'

'You tell me! In fact I wish you would. If Helena Justina has slipped up with her father's driver it's irrelevant, but if she's involved with a man of quality I can put pressure on. You were her bodyguard; if you did the job properly you must know what pools she has been dandling her fingers in.'

I smiled faintly. 'You can assume, sir, that I do my job properly.'

The sunlit air was motionless in the small courtyard. Light gleamed broadly off the open-palmed leaves of the fig. Heat tingled a clump of scratchy lichen on the old stone seat and thrummed along the pierced wall where I sat.

'Ever see Helena Justina flirt with another man?'

'No one who got past me, sir.'

Pertinax spat with exasperation. 'The proud piece refuses to tell me – and you're no help!'

'What's it worth?'

'So you do know? Nothing,' he snarled abruptly. 'I'll find out for myself!'

'Thrash it out of her?' Pertinax made no answer. Something made him look at me more carefully. I asked softly, 'Does this man bother you?'

'Not in the least!' His defiance faded slightly. 'When I told her she was a fool not to take my offer she admitted she found it impossible to forget we had been married – but someone had a claim on her…'

I let out a long, low, suggestive whistle. 'That's tough! Some sly double-dealer with an eye on her bank box must have persuaded Helena Justina that he is in love with her.'

He stared at me, as though he could not decide whether I was being satirical.

My side was aching more than I could easily tolerate.

'Talking of well-stocked bank boxes, I have some news for you, Pertinax. Caprenius Marcellus had decided that placing his hopes in you is the short road to a long disillusionment. When you left without seeing him, he made other arrangements-'

'Arrangements? What arrangements?'

‘Same as you today; he got married.'

His first reaction was disbelief. Then he believed it. He was too crazed even to feel hurt; I could see him immediately planning ways to extricate himself. The busy thoughts of a madman were moving in his sick eyes; I interrupted relentlessly: ‘Marcellus was extremely fond of Helena. With her help you might have held him – but Marcellus had realized the truth. Oh, in many ways she will always be tied to you! The very high-mindedness you despise her for ensures that. She hated being divorced. But anyone who could offer Helena a refuge from her own sense of failure was bound to supersede you easily enough. Accept it,' I warned him steadily. 'You lost Helena Justina the way you failed at everything else you tried.' Before he could insult me in return I went on, 'I know why she rejected you. Marcellus knew.' I straightened my spine as I sat there, bracing myself against the hot pains in my side. He lay, half reclining in the damp shade against the far wall, refusing to ask me. I told him anyway.

'You think such a lot of yourself, Pertinax!' Whether I was making any impression on him or not, I had now convinced myself. The insults flowed much faster after that. 'You were useless – she soon did better once she was free of you. I expect you think you know her very well, but I doubt it! For instance, in all the years you were married to her, did you ever once discover that when a man has made Helena a happy woman, she cries in his arms?'

The truth came home.

'That's right,' I said. 'You lost her for the oldest reason in the world – she found a better man!'

Pertinax jerked with fury. As he started to come at me, the palm he was leaning on slipped and slid outwards. His bare arm scraped full length on the loose gravel path. I made no attempt to move. At the critical moment I had my eyes closed, but I heard the soft hiss of escaping air as the sacrificial dagger pierced his lung.

He died at once. So I knew that as he fell forwards the Chief Priest's knife had pierced his heart.

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