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Authors: Jane Finnis

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Women Sleuths, #Historical, #FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General

A Bitter Chill (3 page)

BOOK: A Bitter Chill
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“Aurelia! Let me in! Aurelia! Let me in!”

So that at least wasn’t a dream. Someone was out there, yelling and knocking and presumably freezing in the snow. Still half asleep, I wondered who in Hades it could be. We get very few travellers arriving after dark in winter. And even fewer who know where to find my bedroom window at dead of night.

I came fully awake, flung off the blankets, and reached for my heavy wool cloak and warm sheepskin shoes. Lucius! It was my brother Lucius out there. I hadn’t seen him for three months, and it was typical of him to arrive at the least convenient time.

The hammering and calling were still going on. Well, if it was unpleasantly cold in here, it must be icy outside. “Hold on, Lucius!” I shouted. “I’m coming! Go round to the garden door!” There was a muffled answer, and the noise stopped. I picked up the candle I keep by my bed. It was about half burnt away, which meant there were six hours or so till dawn. I walked along the passage to the door that leads from our private wing into the garden. I put down the candle and shot the heavy bolt back. Lucius stood there, alone and covered with snow.

“Aurelia! Thank the gods!” He hurtled in, bringing a blast of cold air and snowflakes. I bolted the door again quickly, and gave him a big hug. We’ve always been close, because we’re twins.

“What time do you call this?” I grinned at him, stepping back as I realised I was getting covered in snow from his cloak. “Do you think we’re running some fancy Londinium wine-shop, with a door slave on duty all night long to let the late revellers in?”

“Terrible service at this mansio, Sis!” He laughed, his green eyes sparkling in the candle-light. “A man could freeze to death waiting for the lazy innkeeper to open up. I thought I was going to have to sleep in the stables.” He began to stamp the snow off his boots.

“Serves you right for arriving when all sensible folk are tucked up in bed. But it’s good to see you, Lucius. Really good. We were only saying today, it’ll be an extra special holiday, having you here with us.”

“I’m glad to be home, believe me. I’ve had a bad journey.”

“You must be mad, travelling in such foul weather in the dark. Couldn’t it wait till morning?”

“It’s a long story. Let’s go through into the kitchen where it’s warm.”

“Good idea. Wait though—what about your horse? Shall I wake one of the boys? Or have you seen to it?”

“I haven’t got one. I walked from Eburacum.”

“Now I know you’re mad! But come and get warm.”

He followed me along the corridor. “I didn’t want anyone to know I’d come here, and it’s no distance really, you can do it in four hours. It isn’t snowing there, at least it wasn’t when I left.” He sighed. “It probably is by now. The storm started when I was about five miles from here, and I just had to push on and get through as quickly as I could. It was quite bad. I’d a job to see my hand in front of my face, let alone the road under my feet. It’s a good thing I was coming home, on a road I know well.”

“You’ve walked
five miles
in this weather?”

“Not a carriage to be had,” he joked. “It’s why I’m so late.”

Our large kitchen never gets cold even in winter, because we keep one brazier going all night, damped down with turf, to make it easier to get hot food and drink ready in the morning. Sure enough, it was quite reasonably warm, and Lucius relaxed as he took in the familiar room, with the cooking hearths and store-cupboards, pots and pans hanging along one wall, the enormous scrubbed wooden table, and the fresh tangy scents of bunches of dried herbs hanging from the ceiling. He stripped off his travelling cloak, boots, and leggings. The thick wool tunic he was wearing underneath the cloak was damp, and he was shivering, chilled to the bone. I stirred the brazier into life, made a small fire on one of the cooking hearths, and put a bronze pan of wine on a tripod to heat.

He went to warm his hands over the brazier. “Is Albia at home? Or staying with Candidus?”

“At home, at least till after Saturnalia. Candidus will come here and have a few days with us.” I unlocked the cupboard where our precious spices were kept, and found a couple of cloves, which I dropped into the wine. I added a pinch of ginger and some honey and began to stir it, and a good rich smell wafted through the room. “She’ll be thrilled that you’ve arrived. We’ve both been looking forward to having you here for the holiday.”

“There’s something I want to tell you before she comes.”

A fierce voice called out from the hall, “What in the gods’ name is going on here? Oh,
Lucius!
” and Albia herself rushed in. He got another warm hug.

“I heard noises,” she explained, “and I thought it must be some of the slaves messing about in here. I might have known it was our wandering boy.” She looked him critically up and down. “You’ve gone thin. Don’t they feed you properly in Londinium?”

“Not as well as you would, Albia. But I’m fine, or will be when I’ve managed to get warm again. And you’re looking terrific. Being engaged to be married obviously agrees with you. How’s Candidus?”

She began to recount their latest doings, and I kept quiet, concentrating on stirring the wine. Eventually when there was a lull, I said, “Lucius, your bedroom will be as cold as ice. I mean literally—there’ll be ice on the inside of your window, like there is on mine. I’ll wake one of the slaves, to put a brazier in there. We’ve already nailed up your Saturnalia greenery, so it’ll feel like home.”

“I can only stay for tonight,” he said. “I shouldn’t even do that, but I’ll wait here till daylight, as the weather’s so bad. Then I must be off again. I’ve got to be back in Eburacum by noon, snow or no snow. So I’ll sleep in here, where it’s warm already. I just need a couple of good thick blankets.”

“Only tonight?” Albia asked. “But you’re coming back for the holiday?”

He shook his head sadly. “No, I’m not. I’ve got to lie low. I’m sorry,” he added, seeing our disappointed faces. “I was looking forward to it, but there’s been a change of plan. This is the only chance I have to see you at all, then I’m going invisible in the Eburacum area for a while, maybe a month or two.”

“Going invisible” meant he’d be on an undercover assignment. I opened my mouth to protest, but shut it again, because there was no point. We knew Lucius’ secret investigations often interfered with his personal plans, but we’d wanted so much to make this Saturnalia a real family occasion.

Albia, ever practical, broke the sombre silence. “Well, at least you’ve time to get warm and dry. Are you hungry?”

He laughed. “Does Caesar win all the chariot-races?”

She crossed over to one of the store-cupboards. “Bread and sausage all right? And a few olives?”

“Food for the gods! And are there any of Cook’s honey cakes?”

“I expect I can find some.”

“Then while you’re eating,” I said, “you can tell us what’s so important it stops you coming home for Saturnalia, but brings you into freezing cold Brigantia in a snowstorm. One of the usual reasons, I suppose—either you’re in trouble, or you want something. Or perhaps both?”

He nodded. “You know me too well, Sis. I’m afraid it’s trouble, and not just for me. Gods, I’m still frozen! Let me go and change into dry things, then I’ll tell you.”

He went off to his bedroom, where he always kept a good supply of clothes, even though he was hardly ever at home to wear them. Albia and I didn’t trouble to speculate about what his news might be. Lucius had been an agent for the Governor for years, and if his work was bringing us trouble, it wouldn’t be the first time. She put out a plate of food, while I lit some lamps and hung up the cloak and leggings my brother had left in a soggy heap on the floor.

Soon the three of us were sitting at the big pine table with steaming beakers of spiced wine, and Lucius was eating as if he hadn’t seen food for a month. I found I was hungry too and helped myself to a few black olives, while he got through a doorstep-sized hunk of bread thickly covered with sliced sausage. Finally I said, “Come on then, what’s this all about? What are you investigating in this part of the world? I thought you were permanently based down south these days. We all know you enjoy loitering about in Londinium, spending every afternoon at the baths and every evening in a tavern.”

He didn’t smile. “Londinium isn’t a good place for me just now. Titus has sent me up here.” Titus was Lucius’ immediate boss on the Governor’s staff. “There’s been some trouble, and before I go invisible, there’s something I have to tell you. I couldn’t risk a letter. I haven’t told anybody except Titus I’d be coming here, and if anyone asks, you haven’t seen me since I was home in September.” His green eyes flashed, giving him the look of a child who’s about to reveal some clever piece of mischief he’s just perpetrated. And suddenly it was as if we were all children again, sharing with each other the misdemeanours we could never tell the grown-ups. I found myself asking a familiar question.

“Lucius, what have you done?”

“Nothing.” His answering grin was familiar too, an absurd mixture of sheepishness and defiance.

“What sort of nothing?” That was the next question in the time-honoured sequence.

“Have some more wine.” He offered me the jug.

“Don’t change the subject.
What have you done?

“Well…I’ve been a bit of an idiot. I had an affair with the wife of somebody rather important in Londinium, and he found out.”

“Is that all?” I scoffed. “I thought that was what you young officers spent your whole lives doing. What’s so different this time?”

“This time, the man I’ve offended chose to make an issue of it. He complained to the Governor, and as a result I’ve been dismissed from government service.”

I couldn’t believe it. “Dismissed? For something like that? Surely there’s more to it?”

“No, not really. The woman’s husband is an imperial freedman, one of the Emperor’s hand-picked officials. He threatened to report the whole thing to Caesar if the Governor didn’t get rid of me. So he’s sent me back north in disgrace, with my tail between my legs.”

“You’re right, you have been an idiot!” I snapped.

“That’s putting it kindly,” Albia exclaimed. “So what happens now?”

Lucius began to laugh, and he laughed till tears filled his eyes. Albia and I sat staring at him, not knowing what to say or do. Our brother had lost his career as an investigator, the job he enjoyed and did supremely well. With it had gone his favoured position in official circles, his good name, his monthly pay—and all he could do was laugh?

Finally he spluttered into silence. “That’s exactly the reaction I was hoping for.” He drew a deep breath, and I thought he was going to start laughing once more, but he controlled it. “I’m sorry, but you should just see your faces! And you two know me better than anyone else in the world! Yet you believed me when I said I was in disgrace. That’s excellent!”

He was serious again. “My so-called dismissal and disgrace are only temporary. They’re a cover for the investigation I’m about to start on.”

I felt relief mixed with annoyance at his nonsense. “You rat,” I growled. Another of our childhood expressions.

“I know. I’m truly sorry, but I had to be sure my little tale of woe would work.” He cut himself more sausage. “The point is, the Governor’s been under pressure to dismiss me, but not because of anything I’ve done. So Titus invented a story that would give His Excellency a pretext for getting rid of me, and then we can use my sad fall from favour to help in an assignment here. Once I’ve completed that, I’ll be reinstated.”

I was puzzled. “The Governor’s been under pressure to dismiss you? But the Governor is the chief man in this whole province. Who has the power to bring that sort of pressure on him?”

“And why would they?” Albia added.

“As to who, it’s someone in the Imperial Palace in Rome, who’s got the ear of Caesar and wants to persuade him that I’m involved in a conspiracy, and you two are helping me. As to why…that someone is an old enemy of ours, who’s doing his best to get the whole Aurelius family branded as traitors and destroyed.”

“An enemy in Rome? We don’t
know
anybody in Rome,” Albia objected.

“We do now. The Shadow of Death is there.”

The mere mention of the name made me shiver. The Shadow of Death was the brilliant, devious rebel leader whose war-band almost destroyed us four years ago. We thought we’d seen the last of him. But now he was in Rome, at the very heart of the Empire, and he was still our enemy.

“The Shadow of Death.” I could hardly bear to say the words. “Has he acquired so much influence at Caesar’s court that he can really hurt us, so far away in Britannia?”

“I don’t know. I hope not. But he’s trying to, and that puts our Governor in a difficult position.” He sighed. “Things are bad down in Londinium. I hate to think what it’s like in Rome itself. Everyone’s running round in circles, afraid of their own shadow. The Emperor…. Listen, I know I can speak freely with you two, but it’s a luxury I don’t enjoy often, and what I’m going to say has to stay within these walls.”

“If you’re about to tell us,” I said, “that the Emperor Domitian is wrecking the government of the Empire because of his paranoia, that’s hardly a state secret.”

“You’re right, the mere fact itself is no secret. But people outside government circles haven’t any idea how serious things are. Domitian is getting more and more unstable with every month that passes.”

Albia poured him more wine. “Unstable? Mad, in plain Latin?”

“Not completely mad, but certainly obsessed with the idea of treason. He sees conspirators behind every screen, killers under every couch. I don’t suppose you get much palace gossip from Rome up here, so you won’t have heard what happened to the last Governor, Sallustius Lucullus.”

“The one that was in charge four years ago when we had all that trouble?” I reached for a honey cake. “He was recalled to Rome, and then…I suppose he got posted to another province. Or is he enjoying a well-earned retirement, living on the money he made in Britannia?”

“Neither.” Lucius got up and started pacing about the room. “Caesar had him executed.”

BOOK: A Bitter Chill
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