Arms of Nemesis (34 page)

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Authors: Steven Saylor

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Soon I felt better, though bolts of pain still shot through my head when I moved it too sharply. 'How soon will the opening of the cave be passable? Without serious risk of drowning, I mean?'

Alexandros glanced at the mouth of the cave, where already the foaming tide seemed to have ebbed. 'Not long now. There won't be clear beach beneath the opening for another few hours, but already you could make your way into the water and up to the path without danger.'

'Good. Whatever else happens, I must be there, at the arena. No matter how terrible. And I must find Eco.'

'The boy?' said Olympias. Apparently she had never cared enough to catch his name.

'Yes, the boy. My son. The one who casts such longing looks in your direction, Olympias.'

Alexandros wrinkled his brow disapprovingly. 'The mute boy,' Olympias explained to him. 'I told you about him, remember? But, Gordianus, what do you mean when you say you must find him? Where is he?'

'Last night, when we set out for Cumae, we followed the route we took with you. We were attacked, on the precipice that overlooks Lake Avernus.'

'By lemures?' whispered Alexandros.

'No, by something worse: living men. Two, I think, but I can't be certain. In the confusion Eco disappeared. Afterwards I went searching for him, but my head . . .'

I touched the tender spot and winced. The bleeding had stopped. Olympias studied the wound. 'Iaia will know what to do for this,' she said. 'But what about Eco?'

'Lost. I never found him, and then I lost consciousness. When I awoke I came here. If he's gone back to Gelina's villa, he may end up at the funeral games by himself. He's seen gladiators fight to the death before, but the massacre — whatever else happens, I must get back before it starts. I don't want Eco to see it alone. The old slaves, and Apollonius . . . and little Meto . . .'

'What are you talking about?' Alexandros looked at me, puzzled. 'Olympias, what does he mean by a massacre?'

She bit her lip and looked at me ruefully.

'You haven't told him?' I said.

Olympias gritted her teeth. Alexandros was alarmed. 'What do you mean by a massacre? What are you saying about Meto?'

'Doomed,' I answered. 'All of them, doomed to die. Every slave from the fields and the stables and the kitchens will be publicly slain to satisfy the good people of the Cup. Politics, Alexandros. Don't ask me to explain Roman politics to a Thracian slave, just take my word for it. For the crime of the true killer, whom he cannot find, Crassus intends to have every slave in the household put to death. Even Meto.' Today?'

'After the gladiator contests. Crassus's men have erected a wooden arena in the flatlands by Lake Lucrinus. It should be quite an event, the kind of thing people will talk about from here to Rome for a long time to come, even after Crassus defeats Spartacus and finally gets himself elected consul - and after that, who knows? Perhaps he'll manage to make himself dictator, like his mentor Sulla, and people will still talk about the day he put the slaves of Baiae in their place.'

Alexandros leaned back, aghast. 'Olympias, you never told me.'

'What would have been the point? You would only have fretted and brooded—'

'And perhaps he would have made some grand gesture by returning to Baiae to face Crassus's judgment himself?' I suggested. 'Is that why you didn't tell him, Olympias? Instead you let him think that he merely had to stay in hiding long enough for Crassus to leave, and then he might escape, and you never whispered a word about all the slaves fated to die in his place.'

'Not in his place, but alongside him!' said Olympias angrily. 'Do you think it makes any difference to Crassus whether he finds Alexandros or not? He
wants
to put the slaves to death — you said so yourself, just now, for politics, to put on a show. Better for Crassus if he never finds Alexandros — that way he can keep scaring people with stories of the murdering Thracian monster who ran off to join Spartacus.'

'What you say may be true now, Olympias, but was it so at the beginning, when Alexandros first fled to Iaia's house? What if you had turned him over to Crassus then? Would Crassus ever have concocted his scheme to avenge Lucius Licinius in such a terrible way? Do you feel no guilt for what you've done, hiding your lover and letting all the other slaves be slain? The old men and women, the children—'

'But Alexandros is innocent! He never murdered anyone!'

'So you say; so he tells you, perhaps. But how do you know, Olympias?
What
do you know?'

She drew back and sucked in a breath. The lovers exchanged an odd glance. 'You know as well as I that it makes no difference whether Alexandros is innocent or not,' she said. 'Guilty or innocent, Crassus will crucify him if he's caught.'

'Not if I could prove him innocent. If I could discover who
did
kill Lucius Licinius, if I could prove it—'

'Then — most especially then — would Crassus be certain to put Alexandros to death. And you as well.'

I shook my head and grimaced at the flash of pain across my forehead. 'You talk in riddles, like the Sibyl.'

Olympias looked at the mouth of the cave, where flashes of light were reflected from the churning water beyond. 'The tide has ebbed enough,' she said. 'It's time for us all to go up to the house to see Iaia.'

XXIII

Iaia made a great fuss over the wound on my head. She insisted on brewing a compound of foul-smelling herbs which she slathered onto the cut, then wrapped a long strip of linen around my head. She also gave me an amber-coloured infusion to drink, which I put to my lips with some trepidation, thinking of Dionysius.

'You seem to know a great deal about herbs and their uses,' I said, sniffing at the steam that rose from the cup.

'Yes, I do,' she said. 'Over the years, learning to make my own paints — to harvest and prepare the proper plants at the proper time of year — I came to know quite a lot about such things, not only which root might provide a splendid blue pigment, but which one might cure a wart.'

'Or kill a man?' I ventured.

She smiled thinly. 'Perhaps. The brew you're sipping now could possibly kill a man. But not in the concentration I've given you,' she added. 'It's mostly an extract of willow bark, mixed with just a touch of the stuff Homer called nepenthes, made from the Egyptian poppy. It will ease the pain in your head. Drink up.'

'The poet says nepenthes brings surcease to sorrow.' I gazed into the cup, searching for a glimpse of death in the swirling steam.

Iaia nodded. 'Which is why the queen of Egypt gave it to Helen to cure her melancholy.'

'Homer says also that it brings forgetfulness, Iaia, and what I have seen and learned I do not choose to forget.'

'The amount I've given you will not set you to dreaming, only ease the throbbing.' When I still hesitated, she frowned and shook her head in disappointment. 'Really, Gordianus, if we had wanted to do you harm, I imagine Alexandros could have done away with you down in the sea cave or on the steep hillside. Even now, I imagine, we could somehow manage to send you plummeting from this terrace onto the rocks below, if we were determined to do so; you would be swept out to sea and vanish forever.' She gazed at me intendy. 'I've come to trust you, Gordianus. I didn't trust you at first, I'll admit, but I do now. Won't you trust me?'

I looked into her eyes. She sat stiffly upright in a backless chair, dressed in a voluminous yellow stola. The sun had not yet risen above the roof of the house and the terrace was in shadow. Far below us, beyond the terrace wall, the sea pounded against the rocky coast. Olympias and Alexandros sat nearby, watching the two of us as if we were gladiators engaged in a duel.

I lifted the cup to my lips again, but set it down untouched. Iaia sighed. 'If you would only drink, the pain would vanish. You'll thank me for the gift.'

'Dionysius is beyond all pain, but I don't think he would be thankful if he could be here with us now.'

Her brow darkened. 'What do you insinuate, Gordianus?'

'You say you trust me, Iaia. Then at least admit to me what I already know. On the day when I came to see the Sibyl, I saw Dionysius following Olympias in secret. I think he knew about the sea cave and who was hidden there, or at least he guessed; that was why he insisted on telling the tale of Crassus hiding in the cave in Spain. I saw how you and Olympias reacted that night. Dionysius was very near to giving away your secret. The very next day, at the funeral feast, Dionysius was given poison in a cup. Tell me, Iaia, was it aconitum you used? That was my guess.'

She shrugged. 'What were the precise symptoms?' 'His tongue was aflame. He began to choke and convulse, then to vomit; his bowels were loosened. It all happened very fast.'

She nodded. 'I would say that you made an excellent guess. But I cannot say for sure. I did not poison the cup, and neither did Olympias.'

'Who did?'

'How can I say? I am not the Sibyl—'

'Only the vessel and the voice of the Sibyl.'

She pursed her lips and sucked at her teeth. Her face became gaunt, and she looked as old as her years. 'Sometimes, Gordianus. Sometimes. Do you really want to know the secrets behind the Sibyl? It is dangerous for any man to know them. Think of foolish Pentheus, torn apart by the Bacchae. Certain mysteries can be truly comprehended only by women; to a man, such knowledge is often quite useless, and it can be very dangerous.'

'Would it be any less dangerous if I didn't know? Unless some god decides to intervene, I begin to wonder if I shall ever get back to Rome alive.'

'Stubborn,' said Iaia, slowly shaking her head, 'very stubborn. I see that you will not be satisfied until you know everything.'

'It is my nature, Iaia. It is how the gods made me.'

'So I see. Where shall we begin?'

'With a simple question. Are you the Sibyl?'

She made a pained expression. 'I will try to answer, though I doubt you'll understand. No, I am not the Sibyl. No woman is. But there are those of us in whom the Sibyl sometimes manifests herself, just as the god manifests himself through the Sibyl. We are a circle of initiates. We maintain the temple, keep the hearth burning, explore the mysteries, pass on the secrets. Gelina is one of us. She is more dear to me than you can know, but she is too delicate a vessel to be used directly by the Sibyl; she has other duties. Olympias is also an initiate. She is as yet too young and inexperienced for the Sibyl to speak through her, but it will come to pass. There are others besides myself who act as vessels; some live here in Cumae, others come from as far as Puteoli and Neapolis and the far side of the Cup. Most are descendants of the Greek families who settled here even before Aeneas came; their understanding of these matters is passed on in the blood.'

'Iaia, I cannot deny that an interview with the Sibyl is a most wondrous thing, no matter whose form she takes. I wonder, for example, what it was that you burned on the fire before you took us into the Sibyl's cave. Could it be that the smoke had some effect on my senses?'

Iaia smiled faintly. 'You miss very little, Gordianus. True, certain herbs and roots, used in certain ways, are conducive to a full apprehension of the Sibyl's presence. The use of those substances is a part of the discipline which we learn and pass on.'

'In my own travels I've encountered such herbs, or heard of them. Ophiusa, thalassaegle, theangelis, gelotophyllis, mesa—'

She shook her head and grimaced. 'Ophiusa comes from distant Ethiopia, where they call it the snake plant; it is said to be as horrible to look at as the visions it conjures up. The Sibyl has no use for such horrors. Thalassaegle is likewise exotic and harsh; I hear it grows only along the river Indus. Alexander's men called it 'sea-glimmer' and found that it caused them to rave and suffer blinding visions. Theangelis I know of. It grows in the high places of Syria and Crete and in Persia; the Magi call it 'the gods' messenger' and drink it to divine the future. Gelotophyllis grows in Bacteria where the locals call it laughter-leaves; it merely intoxicates and brings no wisdom. Believe me, it was none of these that you inhaled.'

'What about the other I named, mesa? A kind of hemp, I understand, with a strong aroma—'

'You exasperate me, Gordianus. Will you waste time and breath merely to satisfy your idle curiosity?'

'You're right, Iaia. Then perhaps you can tell me why you placed that ugly statuette in my bed on my first night in the villa.'

She lowered her eyes. 'It was a test. Only an initiate could understand.'

'But whatever the test was, I passed it?'

'Yes.'

'And then you left another message, advising me to consult the Sibyl.' 'Yes.' 'But why?'

'The Sibyl was ready to guide you to Zeno's body.' 'Because the Sibyl thought I might assume that the same fate that befell Zeno had befallen Alexandros as well, and that his body had been consumed in the lake? That possibility did cross my mind; after all, two horses returned riderless to the stable. I might have returned and told Crassus as much, advising him to call off his search for Alexandros.' 'And why didn't you?'

'Because I had seen Dionysius following Olympias, and I had seen Olympias bringing an empty basket up from the sea cave. It occurred to me then that Alexandros was hidden here in Cumae. But tell me, Iaia, did you lead me to Zeno's body to throw me off the scent?'

Iaia spread her hands. 'One cannot always discern the Sibyl's methods; even when the god grants a supplicant's desires, he doesn't always use the means expected to accomplish his end. You might have assumed Alexandros was dead and proceeded from that assumption. Instead, here you sit, in the same house with Alexandros. Who can say this is not what the Sibyl intended, even if it is not what I expected?'

I nodded. 'You knew, then, of Zeno's fate, and where he could be found. Did Olympias know?'

'Yes.'

'And yet Olympias seemed genuinely shocked when we discovered Zeno's remains.'

'Olympias knew of Zeno's fate, but she had not seen his body, as I had. I never intended for her to see it; I intended for you to visit Lake Avernus without her. Instead she went with you, and in horror she cast his remains into the pit. I have no doubt that this, too, was the will of the god.'

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