"I won't be digging for ore again. All I need to do is to apprehend Quadratus and haul him back to face a trial. But you're right. I'm not irreplaceable. Someone else can go."
Helena frowned. "You think anyone else will bungle it."
"I don't care."
"Of course you care. And I care too!"
Helena's passionate belief in justice was one of the reasons I first fell for her. Single-minded girls are always dangerous. A man can float along for years being cynical and flippant, then some fierce tyrant (who happens to have the advantages of a sweet mind, a delicious expression and a body that is crying out to be entwined with his) sneaks under his defenses; next thing he finds himself taking a stand on some issue he would once have crept away from, simply to impress the girl.
"I am about to be a father. That is my sole priority."
"Oh Didius Falco, you have so many priorities you need an abacus to count them. You always did. You always will."
"Wrong. You're going home, Helena—and I'm staying with you.
"Wrong yourself. You have to finish your work." She had made up her mind now. "I hate it, but that's the only way. You know I can't bear to see you nobly pretending not to fidget, while all the time you're in agony because the bastard has got away."
"I will not break my promise to you."
"I release you from it—temporarily. Marcus, I don't complain. You never pretended to be other than you are, and I never dreamed of reforming you. I love your persistence, though you know how hard it is for me just now... Go and find him, and arrest him. Then dear gods, Marcus—" There were tears she could not resist. "Please promise that as fast as you can you will come back to me."
Tomorrow was the Nones of May. I could still remember clearly that hot night last August in Palmyra which was probably when our baby was conceived. May was only six days old. The child might not be born until the end of the month. I told myself there was still just time to do it all. I told Helena, and hugged her. While she tried not to cry so much that I wouldn't endure it, I in turn kept her close against me so she would not see the gaunt expression on my own face.
I was starting to hate this garden. Helena must have stayed here when we went over to the Quinctius place, as if she was worried that just moving indoors might start the pains again and cause the birth to begin. Her anxiety only increased mine.
While I had been absent Aelia Annaea had kindly kept Helena company. She was still here. When Marius Optatus foolishly created a crisis by confessing that he thought I was now intending to ride after Quadratus, Aelia had quickly drawn him off the scene for a walk in the orchard while Helena tore me to shreds. Aelia seemed to be waiting around to give us the support of a friend when we reached our decision.
Now she walked back to us, leaving Marius. He mooned in the background, as if he had been given definite orders to wait. Aelia Annaea was quiet, but brisk. Owning a gold mine gives a woman distinct confidence. I liked her, perhaps almost as much as Helena did.
She drew up a folding chair, left from our polite afternoon with Claudia. Smiling, she surveyed our present mood. "So everything is settled."
I scowled unhappily. "Are you asking us, or telling us?"
Helena dried her eyes. "Careful, Aelia. Marcus hates bossy women."
"That must be why he lives with one!" Rich widows can be very provocative. I had suffered clients like this—before I learned to turn them down. She grinned at me. "Well I have come to offer suggestions, that is all."
Helena and I both gazed at Aelia; we must have looked pretty wan-faced.
"Marcus Didius has to find Tiberius." Even now from habit Aelia retained the informal use of his name. "Helena, if you intend returning to Rome, I think you should start out gently straightaway. I have been discussing this with Marius, and I'm going to talk to Claudia. Claudia is very unhappy at home. I think she would like to accept your kind invitation to visit Rome."
"I haven't actually asked her—"
"No, but I will! It will be hard to leave her grandparents so soon after her brother's death, but if she waits she'll never go. The excuse will be that she is accompanying you, Helena; you will obviously need help on the journey. So!" Aelia Annaea was direct and well organized. "While Falco goes after the fugitive, you can travel very slowly by road. I'm going to come with you myself as far as the Tarraconensis coast. Claudia will be with us too. We shall take my carriage, which is spacious and comfortable, and I will return in it afterwards. This fellow—" She indicated me— "can ride after us as soon as he is ready, then take you home by sea.
Helena looked troubled. "Marcus may have to attend a court case."
"No," I said. "If there's a court case it will be in Rome."
There were special arrangements for senators-elect. Quadratus would have to be taken back home. There were probably even more interesting arrangements when two different branches of government service had concerned themselves with the crimes. Those arrangements probably featured provisions for silencing me.
"So!" Aelia Annaea exclaimed again brightly. "What do you think?"
I took and kissed her hand. "We think you're wonderful."
"Thank you," said Helena, clearly very relieved. "Aelia, would you enjoy a visit to Rome yourself?"
Aelia Annaea looked a little mysterious. "No, I don't think so at the moment, Helena. I may be busy doing something here in Corduba." She proudly accepted credit for her solution to our own problem, then stood up again, presumably ready to take her leave of us. Since she had originally come with Claudia I asked, "Is Marius Optatus intending to arrange some transport for you?"
"I expect so."
"Would you like me to speak to him?"
"No, don't worry. Marius and I are on good terms."
She smiled. Even without the jewels which normally weighed her down, she was a fine young woman, the more so when she felt cheerful and pleased with herself. Her veil fell back; her hair was loose for the funeral and the softened effect made her look even more appealing. She turned away and walked back to Marius, a slim figure with a firm step.
I was intending to find Marmarides, to tell him that our ways must finally part, thank him, and settle up for the carriage. First, I finally persuaded Helena to go indoors. She rose, a little stiff from sitting so long, her shape thoroughly awkward nowadays. I walked with her, taking her slowly to her room. Then, while she was washing her face in a basin, I went to the shutter and quietly opened it. I whistled under my breath; Helena came to look out with me.
Marius Optatus and Aelia Annaea were standing together under an almond tree. They were fairly close, talking quietly. Aelia was probably explaining her scheme for taking Helena to the coast. She had removed her veil and was twirling it casually from one wrist. Marius held onto a bough above his head; he looked even more relaxed. From his attitude, I suspected Marius was harboring masculine plans.
He spoke. Aelia responded, perhaps rather pertly for she tilted up her chin. Then Marius slipped his free arm right around her waist and drew her to him while they kissed. It seemed a popular move with Aelia. And when Marius slowly let go of the almond bough to embrace her even more closely, it seemed that his love for the lady's gold mine might actually be slightly less important than the love he felt for her.
SIXTY-TWO
I told myself it was not going to be like the last time. Mines are simply places where ores are produced. In that respect they are no different from glass factories or pig farms. Or even olive groves. There was no reason for me to start sweating with terror simply because I had to visit one or two mines. Time was short. I would not be staying. A couple of questions to ascertain the location of Quadratus—whether he was there, or had already called there, or whether the local foreman had heard he was on his way. Then all I had to do was say a nice hello to him, present him with the evidence, extract his confession, and lead him off. Simple, really. I should be feeling confident.