I nudged Anacrites. "Who's that fellow?" He shrugged. "Probably a gate-crasher."

The dancer ended a set, twanging away an arrow for real. It hit young Aelianus, who squeaked as if it packed more force than her toy bow suggested. She then let off a shower, most of which found a mark, causing me to make a note that if anybody died later of a slow poison, I would know who to pull in for questioning. As she retired for a breather she indicated, with eyes full of sluttish promise, that Camillus Aelianus could keep his pretty arrow as a souvenir.

I slid upright, walked around Anacrites, and deliberately seated myself on Aelianus' couch, forcing the brat to salute me. "Oh you're here, Falco!" he said rudely. He was a thickset though physically undisciplined lad, with straight floppy hair and a permanent sneer. He had a younger brother who was both better looking and more likable. I wished it were Justinus here tonight.

I fingered the arrow as if Aelianus were a schoolboy with some illegal toy. "This is a dangerous memento. Better not let your parents find it in your bedroom; favors from performing artistes can be misconstrued." I liked to worry him with threats that I might blacken his name in the way he always tried to blacken mine. My reputation had never existed, but he would be standing for election to the Senate soon, and had something to lose.

He snapped the arrow in two: an impolite gesture, since the girl from Hispalis was still in the room, talking to her musicians. "She's nothing special." He sounded sober as well as bored. "She's relying on saucy eyes and a scanty outfit; her technique's very basic."

"That so?" I know a snake dancer who says people only watch for the dress—or lack of it. "So you're a connoisseur of Spanish choreography?"

"Anyone is, who has done a tour in the province." He shrugged offhandedly.

I smiled. He must have known his youthful experience in peaceful Baetica would not impress an imperial agent who had specialized in working at the Empire's trickiest boundaries. I had crossed them too, when a risk was needed. "So how did you enjoy Hispania?"

"Well enough." He did not want to have to talk to me.

"And now you're placing your expert knowledge at the disposal of the Society of Baetican Olive Oil Producers! Do you know the ones over there with Quinctius Attractus?"

"Slightly. I was friendly with the Annaeus lads in Corduba."

"What about the grandson of Licinius Rufius? He's here in Rome at the moment."

"I believe so." Aelianus was certainly not intending to discuss his friends. He could hardly wait to be rid of me.

"I gather he's out on the town tonight—I would have thought you would have been there."

"I'm here instead! Do you mind, Falco; I want to see the dancer."

"Nice girl," I lied. "I had a pleasant chat with her."

It misfired; "Of course; you must be going short," Aelianus suggested unpleasantly. "With my sister in her condition." How Helena and I lived was our own affair. I could have told him that sharing our bed with several months of unborn offspring had not impeded a healthy love life, but merely set greater challenges. "So now you're upsetting Helena by scurrying after entertainers. If anyone tells her maybe she will miscarry."

"She won't!" I snapped.

I had just spent six months trying to reassure Helena (who had in fact lost one child in pregnancy, though her brother may never have been told of it). Now it was hard work convincing her that she would give birth safely and survive the ordeal. She was terrified, and I was not much happier myself.

"Maybe she'll leave you!" he speculated eagerly. That had always been a possibility.

"I see you really have her interests at heart."

"Oh I'm happy to see her with you. I think when I stand for the Senate I'll make my election platform denouncing your relationship—I'll be a man of such traditional rectitude I even criticize my own sister—"

"You won't succeed," I told him. He might. Rome loves a pompous bastard.

Aelianus laughed. "No; you're probably right. My father would refuse to finance the election." Camillus Verus, father of my beloved and of this poisonous young ferret, always looked like an uncomplicated old buffer, but evidently Aelianus was sharp enough to realize that their parent loved Helena and understood that I did too; however much he regretted our relationship, the

senator knew he was stuck with it. I had a sneaky idea he was quite looking forward to having a grandchild too.

"Jupiter, you must be really gloating, Falco!" Helena's brother's bitterness was even worse than I had realized. "You've jumped up from nowhere and seized the only daughter of a patrician house—"

"Cobnuts. Your sister was glad to fly off her perch. She needed rescuing. Helena Justina did her duty and married a senator, but what happened? Pertinax was a disaster, a traitor to the state, who neglected and mistreated her. She was so miserable she divorced him. Is that what you want? Now she's with me, and she's happy."

"It's illegal!"

"A technicality."

"You could both be accused of adultery." "We regard ourselves as married." "Try that in the Censor's court."

"I would. No one will take us there. Your father knows Helena made her own choice, and she's with a man who adores her. There is no moral objection the senator can make."

Across the room the dancing girl with the limited technique shook out her waist-length hair. She seemed to know how to do that. I realized she had been watching us quarreling. It gave me an uneasy qualm.

To end the fight I stood up, preparing to return to my own couch. "So, Camillus Aelianus, what does bring you among the revered Society of Baetican Olive Oil Producers?"

The angry young man calmed down enough to boast: "Friends in high places. How did you get in, Falco?"

"Much better friends, in even more select positions," I told him crushingly.

 

Settling back the other side of Anacrites came almost as a relief. Before he tried to have me killed we had been able to work together. He was devious, but like me he had lived. He enjoyed a good wine, he was in control of his barber, and he had been known to crack the occasional joke against the Establishment. With an emperor who liked cost-cutting and hated too much security, Anacrites must be feeling beleaguered. He wanted me, for one, well out of his way. He had tried to discredit me, and he had planned to get me executed by a tricky foreign potentate. But even now, I knew where I was with him. Well, I knew it as much as you ever could with a spy.

"What's this, Falco? Is my young friend from the noble family pursuing vindictive claims against you?"

I said his young friend was about to get his nose pulled off. Anacrites and I resumed our usual hostility.

Gazing up, I fixed my eyes on a lamp. Burning with the clear, odorless flame of fine Baetican oil, it was in gleaming bronze and the shape of a flying phallus. Either this rude vessel was swinging more than it should, or the whole room had begun to maneuver in some swooning routine ... I decided I had reached my full capacity for Barcino red wine. At the same moment, as so often happens, a slave poured more into my cup. I sighed and settled down for a long night.

I must have had yet more drink later, though I cannot provide a catalogue. As a result, nothing of interest happened—not to me, anyway. Others no doubt threw themselves into risk and intrigue. Someone presumably made an assignation with the dancer from Hispalis. It seemed the kind of party where traditional customs would be observed.

I left when the atmosphere was still humming. Nobody had noticeably fallen out, and certainly at that stage there was nobody dead. All I recall of my final hour are some tricky moments trying to shoulder my amphora; it was half as high as me and immovable to a man in my condition. The young fellow in the oatmeal tunic from the other row of couches was also collecting his cloak; he seemed relatively sober, and helpfully suggested I roust out some more slaves to lug the cumbersome container home for me on a carrying pole. I suddenly saw the logic of this. We exchanged a laugh.