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‘No, I didn’t.’ She lifted her face. ‘I never knew anything about this. I came here expecting Spicerius to be waiting for me, as rampant as a stag. I wished him well.’

Claudia rose to her feet and re-sheathed her dagger. ‘But you did bring him the face paint?’

‘Yes, yes.’ Agrippina became deeper enmeshed in her own lies. ‘Yes, that’s it! I wanted something to make him fight better. Dacius gave me a powder. I mixed it with my face paints, but when I saw Spicerius collapse, I panicked and poured it into his cup. I didn’t intend Murranus to take the blame.’

‘And the same with the two tablets?’ Claudia asked. ‘Dacius’s cure for impotence?’

‘It’s as you said.’

Claudia hid her disgust at this treacherous woman lying to save her own life. Agrippina sprang to her feet. Narcissus went to restrain her, but Claudia nodded her head.

‘If you want to go, you had best go.’

Claudia stepped aside. Agrippina brushed by her, almost running across the grass and back into the tavern.

‘Are you going to let her go?’ Narcissus asked.

Claudia ran her finger round her mouth. ‘I don’t think we have to do anything. Inside that tavern are two Dacians. Agrippina has convicted not only herself, but the man who controls her. What do you think, Valens? She’ll go back and tell him we know everything. I don’t think Dacius will like what he hears.’

Claudia stared up at the sky. ‘I think Agrippina is about to spend her last day on earth.’

‘I agree.’ Valens clambered to his feet, brushing the grass from his robe. ‘But with your permission,’ he sighed, ‘I would like to help matters along. I know a friendly police commander. I think I’ll go and tell him what I’ve learnt.’

‘They won’t have enough evidence to arrest Dacius.’

‘Oh,’ Valens’s old face creased into a smile, ‘I think Dacius will be dealt with in a different way. Spicerius had many friends. They will take care of him as he will take care of Agrippina. I shall simply help things along. Your uncle’s talked about Mercury the messenger.’ Claudia grinned as she followed Valens’s line of thought. ‘I’m going to tell Polybius everything that’s happened out here. By the time Murranus steps into the arena tomorrow, most of Rome will know.’

The sun blazed in the noonday sky. The heat was so oppressive the imperial engineers had fully stretched the great awning which protected the crowds in the amphitheatre; others worked hard on the pumps which sprayed the crowds with cool scented water. Claudia sat at the back of the imperial box and gazed through half-open eyes at Constantine and his family. They were all there — the Emperor, the Augusta Helena, Rufinus, Chrysis, whilst Gaius Tullius stood behind the imperial throne resplendent in his dress armour. Wives, friends, clients and hangers-on milled around. Servants hurried about with jugs and goblets of cold drinks and silver platters piled high with iced fruits. Rufinus’s wife was laughing; more akin to neighing, Claudia thought, like a mare on heat. The woman was leaning over the Empress’s throne, eager to share some titbit of gossip. Scribes and clerks were busy with rolls of parchment as they brought documents to the Emperor and his mother to read, study and seal. The imperial box on its central podium in the Flavian amphitheatre was rich with the smell of ink, parchment, perfume, melting wax and, of course, the ever-pervasive stench of blood from the gore-drenched sand below.

The specially imported soft sand, which glowed like gold dust, was now being turned, raked and sifted, the blood cleaned away, the fragments of human flesh piled into buckets of brine to be taken to the animal dens in the caverns deep below the amphitheatre. The roars and cries of these savage, hungry penned beasts could be heard echoing along the grim tunnels. There were not so many of them now. Most of the tigers, panthers, lions and bears had been killed in the morning slaughter. The tens of thousands of spectators seated in the steep tiers of the amphitheatre were now using the break in this ritual of blood to buy spiced meats, crushed fruit and iced melon water from the traders and hucksters who, sweating over their produce, went up and down the steps shouting the prices. Claudia had always resolved never to buy from them; Polybius had told her dreadful tales of how the meat, bread and fruit were heavily spiced and crushed to remove all sign of mould and decay.

People moved around the various sections, though they never wandered far from their seat. The sections were divided by high walls to denote the different classes of the city. At the bottom, on either side of the imperial box, the spectators were garbed in white togas and expensive tunics which marked them out as senators, knights, high-ranking officials, merchants and bankers. Above this border of white, like a dark, dirty, seething wave, ranged the greens, blues, yellows and browns of the lesser sort. The wealthy were not harassed by the traders. They had brought their own parasols, awnings and gold-fringed shades, as well as hampers and baskets of rich meats, soft bread and delicious wine. The spectators ignored the bloody mess of the arena, gaping instead at the imperial box, decorated with its gorgeous drapes. They strained to catch sight of the Emperor and his mother, distant figures garbed in purple-edged clothes and crowned with silver-tinted laurel wreaths, surrounded by the majesty and pomp of empire. They stared at the guards in their dress armour and ornately plumed helmets, breast plates gleaming in the sun, and, either side of the box, the standard bearers carrying the eagles and feather-tailed insignia of the legions, their holders dressed in the skins of panther, bear, lion and wolf. Above all, they watched for the imperial trumpeters with their gold-edged horns; these would be lifted to bray for silence when the Emperor decided the games should recommence.

The crowds shifted and surged, their excitement palpable. Their blood lust had been whetted, but now they were impatient for the crowing glory of the games: Murranus fighting for his life and honour. Claudia sucked on a piece of pomegranate as she gazed at the aristocracy of Rome. She quietly congratulated herself on what she had achieved the previous day. Valens had been correct. Agrippina had disappeared, whilst Dacius seemed to be very busy with his affairs. Rumour had it that he had slipped out of Rome that same evening, eager to take a ship to Syracuse to visit certain business partners.

Claudia had waited at the She-Asses tavern, hoping that Murranus would come, but her uncle whispered to her that Murranus was training secretly, preparing himself. Polybius sent Sorry to the gladiator school with a message, but all the boy brought back with him were the two words, ‘Remember me.’ Claudia had tried not to weep as she sat in the eating hall listening to Mercury the messenger regaling them all with the news that Spicerius had been murdered by his degenerate girlfriend, whilst Dacius might also have had a hand in it. Word had spread like fire amongst dry stubble. Polybius had used all his acquaintances along the stinking alleyways and streets of the slums to whisper the news. Sallust the Searcher had also helped, whilst Valens had visited old friends in the various garrisons around the city.

Claudia had cried herself to sleep, and long before dawn had been aroused by an imperial messenger with an invitation she couldn’t refuse: the Augusta required her presence in the imperial box at the beginning of the games staged to mark her glorious son’s birthday. Claudia had washed, dressed and hurried along the streets, one hand grasping her walking stick, the other the dagger in her belt. Even at this early hour, she noticed the placards and makeshift posters which announced not only the games and the odds on the various fighters but the scandalous news about Spicerius’s poisoning. Despite her own sorrows, Claudia realised that this news was not just an indication of the city’s infatuation with tittle-tattle and gossip; it also reflected the serious nature of the business of bets and wagers, of fortunes being gambled, of gold and silver exchanging hands.