"No. He's a nob. He doesn't understand about organization. He wouldn't think of it."

"And would the girl be able to get in without Helva noticing that she wasn't you?"

"Helva's so shortsighted you have to get an inch from his nose before he can see who you are. Anyone who rattled a tambourine would sail straight in."

So there had been a set-up. It came as no surprise that the so-called "good girl from Hispalis" was not as good as she pretended. In my experience good girls never are.

Perella had nothing more to tell me. I was left with a loose end: unknown entertainers had deliberately muscled in and taken the usual dancer's place. They knew enough to use Helva's name in a convincing fake message. Knew it, or had been told what to say. Were they specifically booked by Attractus, or did he just accept that Helva had acquired them? And why? I would be asking the senator, but somehow I guessed in advance that tracing the lovely Diana and her two dark-skinned musicians would be next to impossible.

They could have been sent to the dinner by Anacrites. They could have been infiltrated by someone outside (a jealous would-be member of the dining club, perhaps?). Or they could have come of their own accord. They might have nothing at all to do with the attacks on Anacrites and Valentinus. Even though circumstances had made them look suspicious, they might simply be struggling performers who had failed to persuade Helva to give them an audition, and who then used their initiative.

But I told Perella she had been trounced by a very slick rival, and probably one who had had more than Spanish dancing in mind. Perella shoved a couple of new hairpins into her tumbling scarecrow coiffure, and gave me an unfathomable look. She threatened to "sort" the girl from Hispalis. She sounded as if she meant it too. I left her my address in case she had any success.

"By the way, Perella, if you do meet this girl be careful how you tangle with her. It looks as if she was involved in a killing that night—and in a nasty attack on the Chief Spy."

Perella went white. "Anacrites?"

As she stood staring I added, "You'd do best to avoid her. Finding this one is a job for an agent—and a good one at that."

"And you reckon you're up to it, Falco?" Perella asked dryly. I gave her my best smile.

 

I was not yet ready for another conversation with Laeta, so I escaped from the Palace, ran some domestic errands, then went home to Helena for lunch. Fried anchovies in a plain wine sauce. Unassuming but tasty.

Helena told me I had received a message of my own that morning. It was from Petronius. He had found out something useful: I went straight out after eating, taking Helena with me for the exercise, and also Nux in the vain hope that while the scruffy hound was careering around in circles we might lose her somewhere. Petro was at home, off duty. Helena went off with his wife while Nux and I found my old crony in the yard at the back, doing woodwork.

"This is for you, Falco. I hope you're grateful."

"What is it—a small coffin or a large brooch box?"

"Stop playing the fool. It's going to be a cradle." Nux jumped in to try it. Petro turfed her out again.

"It's going to be a good one then," I smiled. That was true. Petro enjoyed carpentry and was skilled at it. Always methodical and practical, he had a decent respect for wood. He was making a bed where eventually the sturdy unborn one who was already kicking me in the ribs every night would be safe; it had half-moon rockers, a knob to hang a rattle on, and a canopy over the pillow end. I felt touched.

"Yes, well; it's for the baby, so if your lousy behavior makes Helena Justina leave you, this cradle will have to go with her."

"I doubt it," I scoffed. "If she flits she'll leave the baby behind." Petronius looked horrified, so I carried on appalling him: "Helena only likes children when they are old enough to hold adult conversations. The bargain is, she'll carry my offspring and give it birth but only on condition I'm there to defend her from the midwife and that afterwards I bring it up myself until it's old enough to pay its own tavern bills."

Petronius gave me a piercing stare; then he laughed weakly. "You maniac! I thought you were serious..." He lost interest, which saved me having to disillusion him with the news that I meant what I said—and so did Helena. "Listen, Falco, I've come up with some evidence for you: the Second must want to redeem their reputation after missing all that stuff in Valentinus' apartment. They went back to the crime scene this morning and did a hands and knees creep."

I joined him in chuckling at the thought of his luckless colleagues enduring stones in the kneecap and backache. "Anything turn up?"

"Could be. They want to know if we think this is relevant—"

Petronius Longus placed a small item on his sawing bench. I blew the road dust off it, then sighed quietly. This was relevant enough to identify the attackers: it was a small golden arrow, as neat as a toy but dangerously sharp. On its tip was a rusty stain that was probably blood. Remembering the small leg wounds carried by both Anacrites and Valentinus, I guessed that both victims had been surprised by being shot in the calf from behind. The toy arrow would sting enough to bother them, then when they stooped to investigate they were rushed, grabbed, and run hard against a nearby wall.

Helena Justina had come out behind us, unnoticed. "Oh dear!" she exclaimed, ever one with the unwelcome insight. "I suppose that belonged to your mysterious Spanish dancer. Don't tell me it's just been found in a compromising position at the scene of a crime?"

Gloomily we confirmed it.

"Ah never mind, Marcus," Helena then chivvied me kindly. Cheer up, my love! You ought to have lots of fun with this—it

TWELVE

 

There was no chance of interviewing the girl from Hispalis. I didn't even know her name—or her alias. If she was sharp she would have left Rome. Smirking, Petronius Longus promised to place her description on his list of wanted suspects. He offered to subject her to a personal interrogation. I knew what that meant.

I told him not to exert himself; I would probe her secrets myself. Petronius, who believed that men with pregnant wives were bound to be looking for extra-domestic exercise, twinkled wisely and promised to inform me the minute the beauteous Diana came his way. At this point Helena said coldly that she would take herself home.

I went to see Quinctius Attractus.

When a case involves a senator, I always start at the top. I don't mean this was a step towards clearing up uncertainties. Not at all. Interviewing a member of Rome's revered patrician order was likely to introduce pure chaos of the kind that is believed by some philosophers to comprise the outermost limits of the eternally whirling universe: a vortex of limitless and fathomless darkness. In short, political ignorance, commercial deceit, and blatant lies.

looks as though somebody is setting you up against a beautiful female spy!"

Naturally I retorted that I was not in the mood for clichés— though I have to admit my heart took an uneasy lurch.

Even provincials among you will deduce that M. Didius Falco, the intrepid informer, had posed questions to senators before.

You'll spot this too: I went to see Quinctius Attractus to get any whirling vortex straight out of the way.

 

Once I had managed to impress the doorkeeper with my rank— well, once I had slipped him half a denarius—I was allowed to step inside away from a sharp April wind that was darting through the city streets. Attractus lived in an imposing house, groaning with art torn from more ancient and more refined civilizations than our own. Egyptian turquoise and enamel vied for space with Thracian gold and Etruscan bronze. Pentellic marble crowded his corridors. Forests of plinths bore up porphyries and alabasters. Racks bowed beneath uncatalogued rows of vases and craters, against which lolled unmounted wall plaques and fabulous old armor which must have been plundered from many famous battlefields.