I told him the Chief Spy had been seriously hurt. It was supposed to be a secret but Momus already knew. I guessed he had also heard that Anacrites was supposed to be hidden away at the Temple of Aesculapius on Tiber Island—but maybe he had not yet found out that the victim was really laid up on the Aventine with Ma.

"Something funny's going on, Momus."

"What's new, Falco?"

"This attack is supposed to relate to intelligence work. Nobody even knows what Anacrites was investigating. I'm trying to track down his agents, or records of what he's been involved with—"

"You'll have a job." Momus enjoyed disheartening me. "Anacrites is like an Athenian vote machine."

"That's a bit subtle for me."

"You know; it's a gadget to prevent nobbling. When they used open jars fistfuls of votes used to go astray. So now the voters put balls in the top of a closed box; they wiggle down inside and then the election results pop out at the bottom. No fraud—and no fun, either. Trust the bloody Greeks."

"What's this to do with Anacrites?"

"People pile information into his brain and if he's in the right mood he farts out a report. In between, everything is locked up."

"Well it looks as if the next person he blows a report at could be Charon the ferryman."

"Oh dear, poor Charon!" sneered Momus, with the cheery expression of a man who was just thinking that if Anacrites had sailed away on the decrepit punt to Hades, he might immediately apply for Anacrites' job. Some state employees love to hear about a colleague's premature demise.

"Charon's going to be busy," I commented. "Villains have been cracking spies' heads all over the Esquiline. There was also a pleasant lad who used to do surveillance work."

"Do I know him, Falco?"

"Valentinus."

Momus let out a snarl of disgust. "Oh Jupiter! Dead? That's terrible. Valentinus who lived on the Esquiline? Oh no; he was class, Falco. He must have been the best snuffler Anacrites used."

"Well, he's not on the staff roll."

"Better sense. He stayed freelance. Self-employed. I used him myself sometimes."

"What for?"

"Oh ... tracking down runaways." The alleged overseer looked vague. I reckoned whatever Momus used Valentinus for would give me a queasy stomach. I decided not to know.

"Was he good?"

"The best. Straight, fast, decent to deal with, and accurate."

I sighed. More and more this sounded like a man I would have liked to share a drink with. I could have made friends with Valentinus last night at the dinner, if I had only realized. Then maybe if we had rolled out of the Palace together like cronies, events might have turned out differently for the freelance. Together we might have fought off his attackers. It could have saved his life.

Momus was eyeing me up. He knew I had an interest. "You going to sort this out, Falco?"

"It looks like a murky fishpond. Reckon I stand a chance?"

"No. You're a clown."

"Thanks, Momus."

"My pleasure."

"Don't enjoy yourself too much with the hard-hitting insults; I may prove you wrong."

"Virgins might stay chaste!"

I sighed. "Heard anything about any dirty goings-on in Baetica?"

"No. Baetica's all sunshine and fish-sauce."

"Know anything about the Society of Olive Oil Producers, then?"

"Load of old belchers who meet in the basement and plot how they can straighten out the world?"

"They didn't seem to be plotting last evening, just stuffing their faces. Oh, and most were trying to ignore a group of genuine Baetican visitors."

"That's them!" grinned Momus. "They pretend to love anything Hispanic—but only if it can be served on a dish." I gathered that the Society was officially deemed innocuous. As usual, Momus knew more about it than a slave overseer should. "Anacrites got himself voted into the club so he could keep an eye on them."

"Was political scheming likely?"

"Piddle! He just liked feeding at their well-filled manger."

"Well as anarchists they didn't look very adventurous."

"Of course not," scoffed Momus. "I haven't noticed the world being straightened out, have you?"

 

There was not much else Momus could tell me about Anacrites or Valentinus—or at least nothing he was prepared to reveal. But with his knowledge of the unfree workforce he did know which usher had been running the dinner for the Society. While I was at the Palace I looked out this man and talked to him.

He was a lugubrious slave called Helva. Like most palace types he looked oriental in origin and gave the impression he misunderstood whatever was being said to him, probably on purpose. He had an official job, but was trying to improve himself by sucking up to men of status; the Baetican Society members obviously saw him as a soft touch to be sneered at and put upon.

"Helva, who did the organizing for this exclusive club?"

"An informal committee." Unhelpful: clearly he could see my status did not call for an ingratiating style.

"Who was on it?"

"Whoever bothered to turn up when I insisted someone tell me what was wanted."

"Some names would help," I suggested pleasantly.

"Oh, Laeta and his deputies, then Quinctius Attractus—"

"Is he an overweight senator who likes holding court?"

"He has interests in Baetica and he's the big mover in the So-ciety.

"Is he Spanish by origin?"

"Not the slightest. Old patrician family."

"I should have known. I understood the Society's real links with Hispania are defunct and that members try to deter provincials from attending?"

"Most do. Attractus is more enlightened."

"You mean, he sees the Society as his personal platform for glory and he likes to suggest he can work wonders in Rome for any visitors from Spain? Is that why he hogs a private room?"

"Well unofficially. Other members annoy him by barging in."

"They think he's someone to annoy, do they?"

It looked to me as if Attractus, and possibly his Baetican friends, had been under observation—probably by both Anacrites and his agent. Was Anacrites suspicious of something they were up to? Did Attractus or the Baetican group want to wipe him out as a result? It looked all too obvious if they were the attackers. They surely must realize questions would be asked. Or was Attractus so arrogant he thought the attacks could be got away with?

Needing to think about that, I went back to my original question. "Who else organizes events?"

"Anacrites—"

"Anacrites? He never struck me as a dinner party planner! What was his role?"

"Be reasonable, Falco! He's a spy. What do you think his role is? On rare occasions when he exerts himself, he causes upsets. He really enjoys carping about the guests other members bring. 'If you knew what I know, you wouldn't mix with so-and-so . . .' All hints, of course; he never says why."

"Master of the nonspecific insult!"

"Then if ever I upset him he'll query the accounts for the previous party and accuse me of diddling them. The rest of the time he does nothing, or as little as possible."

"Did he have anything special to say about yesterday?"

"No. Only that he wanted space for himself and his guest in the private room."

"Why?"

"Usual reason: it was bound to offend Attractus."

"And the spy's guest was Valentinus?"

"No, it was the senator's son," said Helva. "The one who just came back from Corduba."

"Aelianus?" Helena's brother! Well that explained how Aelianus had wheedled his way in—on the tunic tail of the Chief Spy. Unhealthy news.

"I know the family—I didn't realize Anacrites and Aelianus were on such good terms."

"I don't suppose they are," Helva remarked cynically. "I expect one of them thought the other would do him some good—and

if you know Anacrites you can bet which way the benefit was supposed to flow!"