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Authors: Judith Tarr

Household Gods (41 page)

BOOK: Household Gods
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S
EXTUS LONGINIUS IULUS CAME into the tavern one day not long after the beast show. He waited politely while Nicole took her latest batch of bread out of the oven. She nodded to him, not particularly surprised. He wasn't what she would call a regular, but he came in now and then, bought a cup of the middle-grade wine, and drank it slowly as if he actually savored the stuff. Sometimes she thought he came as much for the excuse to get out of the house as for the wine.
Today, however, he seemed oddly tense. He set a shiny brass
sestertius
in front of her and said, “Let me have a cup of Falernian, Umma. I'm going to be here for a while. Might as well start off with the best. I'll go back to the cheap stuff
later, when I've stopped caring what it tastes like.”
Nicole lifted her brows as she drew him a cup of Falernian. She'd never heard him sound so determined about anything.
It dawned on her slowly. Too slowly, if she wanted to be honest about it. She thrust a finger at him. “Don't tell me. Fabia Ursa's in labor.”
“She is that,” Longinius Iulus said. “Chased me out of the house, too. ‘No place for a man,' she said—you know how women do. ‘None of your business. Go get the midwife, go get my sister, go get my friends, and go away.' I knew I'd end up here, and you're right next door anyway, so I saved you for last.”
Frank had been at the hospital with Nicole when Kimberley and Justin were born. She'd been glad to have him there, holding her hand and coaching her through labor and birth. She hadn't known he'd fall for a blond bimbo before his son took his first step.
Carnuntum had no hospitals, as far as she could tell. Babies were born at home. And fathers were not welcome in what was obviously women's work. Female friends and relatives of the mother joined her instead to celebrate the new life. Nicole rather liked that, even if it left the father out of his own child's first hours. Being there at his children's births hadn't kept Frank from running off with the first big-busted babe who came along.
Another
sestertius
clanked down on the bar, startling Nicole back into the here-and-now. “More of the same,” Longinius Iulus said. “Then you'd better go on over. Julia can get me the rest of the way drunk.”
Nicole nodded. “All right. But why—?” she stopped.
Why
wasn't that hard, not when she let her brain run for once ahead of her mouth. Fabia Ursa had had two babies already, and lost them both. Her husband wouldn't have been worth much if he weren't worried.
Nicole thrust the coin back toward him. “This one's on me,” she said firmly. “Everything will be all right. You'll have yourself a fine daughter or son to be proud of.”
Longinius left the coin where it was, and gulped down the wine without seeming to taste it. He'd been keeping up a good front, but his face was paler than it might have been, and his hand shook as he set down the cup. “Fabia's been praying to Mother Isis. Pray the rest of the gods it helps.”
“It can't hurt,” Nicole said, which was true enough, if a little on the lame side.
Sextus Longinius Iulus nodded solemnly; the Falernian was hitting him hard. “Egyptians are the oldest people in the world. If their great goddess can't keep a mother safe, no god can. She's had practice, she has.”
“I hope it all goes well,” Nicole replied. That was also true. Whether Isis existed at all, let alone had any power to help Fabia Ursa … well, who knew? Liber and Libera had brought Nicole here, hadn't they? Maybe Isis would answer the woman's prayer.
She left Longinius deep in his third cup of wine—the cheaper stuff this time—with Julia to keep an eye on him and the children to help her, and went out across the alley to Fabia Ursa's house. Just as she reached the door, someone else came up beside her: a lean, determined-looking woman loaded down with a heavy leather sack and what looked more like an adult-sized potty chair without the pot than anything else Nicole could think of. After a moment, Nicole realized it had to be a birthing chair. She'd heard of such a thing somewhere, but she'd never seen one. Compared to the way she'd had to deliver her two, flat on her back with her feet in metal stirrups, the chair looked a hell of a lot more comfortable.
The woman noticed her glance, but misinterpreted it. “Good day to you, Umma,” she said, her voice civil but brisk. “Yes, this is the same chair you had for yours. It was made to last.”
“It certainly looks that way,” Nicole said. The midwife nodded with the barest hint of a smile. She wouldn't let Nicole take the bag or the chair, but did submit to having the door held open for her. Nicole had resigned herself to picking up the woman's name from context. She'd done that so often
by now, it no longer threatened to pitch her into a panic attack.
In all the time Nicole had been in Carnuntum, she hadn't ever gone into the living quarters of the tinker's house. Fabia Ursa had always come to the tavern with her store of gossip, or Nicole had stopped by the shop without going the rest of the way.
Today was no different. Nicole could see why it might make sense for Fabia Ursa to have her baby down below, in the much larger, lighter, and probably cleaner room. The shop had been cleared of much of its debris, the heaped pots pushed against the walls and the tools put away, probably in the box in the corner. In the cleared space, Fabia Ursa was walking with grim determination that Nicole well remembered from her own labor. It was supposed to help move things along. Whether it did or it didn't, it gave the pregnant woman something to do. When the contractions grew too strong, she'd settle into the birthing chair and get to work in earnest.
Fabia Ursa greeted Nicole with the quick flash of a smile, and said to the midwife, “Aemilia! I'm so glad you've come.”
Nicole sighed faintly. Ah, good. This wasn't as hard as usual.
Four or five other women were crowded into the shop, doing their best not to get in Fabia Ursa's way. Nicole recognized all but one as neighbors from houses along the street. Some were regulars in the tavern, one or two she'd seen coming and going about their daily business. The last, whom Nicole didn't know but Umma probably did, had Fabia Ursa's narrow, pointy face and her quick, birdlike mannerisms. That, then, would be the sister whom Longinius Iulus had said he was sent to fetch.
On the work counter, leaning against a dented copper kettle, stood a small painting of a smiling mother suckling a baby. At first glance, Nicole took it for an image of the Madonna and Child. But when she looked again, she saw
that the artist had thoughtfully labeled his work: ISIS ET OSIRIS.
Fury roared up in Nicole, startling her with its intensity. How dared these pagans steal this of all images that they might have stolen? There was nothing more sacred; and nothing, except the crucifix, more distinctively Christian.
As quickly as it had risen, the fury died. Hadn't Fabia Ursa's husband said something about how ancient the Egyptians were? They had to go back even further from this time than this time did from her own. And if that was so, who had borrowed the symbol from whom?
Well
, she thought with a flicker of amusement, and a slightly stronger flicker of annoyance. There she went, thinking pagans stole, but Christians borrowed. The part of her mind that found and marked fine details in legal documents wouldn't let go of the slip, or let her forget it, either.
Perspective was everything.
I am persistent. You are stubborn. He is a pigheaded fool
.
She blinked out of her musings to find Fabia Ursa talking to her. “We've got plenty of wine here, Umma,” the tinker's wife said. “We—” She paused; her face tightened. Nicole watched a contraction ripple across her belly beneath the tight-stretched tunic. When it was gone, she went on calmly enough, “We shouldn't need to go back to the tavern for more.”
“That depends on how bad the pains get,” one of the neighbors said. “When I delivered Cornelius—my firstborn, if you'll remember; he died when he was six, a fever took him off suddenly, but before that he was a fine strong boy—I was in labor two whole days and two nights, and come the third day—”
Nicole tuned her out, and hoped Fabia Ursa did, too. The horror stories were as familiar as the sight of the hugely pregnant woman pacing the floor. Eighteen hundred years and halfway around the world, and misery loved company just as much as it ever would.
But Aemilia wasn't having any of it. Her voice was sharp, cutting across the woman's babble. “Stop that, Antonina.
This is not Fabia's first delivery. She's done it twice before; she knows what to expect. Don't go upsetting her with your foolish chatter when she needs to keep her spirits up.”
Antonina glowered at the midwife, but she shut up. Nicole felt like applauding. The last thing Fabia Ursa needed to do at the moment was panic over her safety or the safety of her baby. Antonina didn't appear to care a bit about that, but she wasn't going to argue with Aemilia, either. The midwife looked as if she'd be bad news in a fight.
After an uncomfortable pause, Fabia Ursa's sister said, “May the gods grant good health to my new nephew or niece. It's hard, you know. Loving the little ones, knowing they'll be lucky to live past weaning. It's so easy to lose them—and so hard to help loving them regardless.”
The rest of the women in the room nodded, and echoed her sigh. From the looks of it, they'd all lost babies or young children. Some more than one—Fabia Ursa herself had lost two, hadn't she?
Nicole felt that sinking sensation again, the hollow in the pit of her stomach that went with culture shock. Back in Indiana, she'd known a woman whose son had had some sort of congenital heart trouble. He'd died before he was big enough, or strong enough, for the surgery that might have cured him. More than grief, she remembered anger, and a sense of betrayal. Babies weren't supposed to die. Doctors were supposed to be able to fix them. Death was for the old—and even they were kept from it as long as humanly or medically possible.
Nicole shivered in the odorous warmth of the shop. No wonder they made a spectacle of death here. Death was a commonplace thing, and death of children most common of all.
“Fabia Honorata,” Aemilia said, more gently than she'd spoken to Antonina, “we shouldn't talk about anything unfortunate here today. A birth is no place for words of ill omen.”
Fabia Ursa's sister blushed faintly. “Yes,” she said. “Yes, of course. What was I thinking?” She tugged at the neck of
her tunic as Nicole had seen Julia do now and then, bent her head and spat onto her breast. She was turning away the omen. No one grimaced or upbraided her for silly superstition. All the women looked on with deadly seriousness. Antonina and Fabia Ursa even imitated her.
Bad omens were as real and appalling here as hard-drive crashes or power failures were to Nicole. But she'd never have been so foolish as to think that snapping her fingers or spitting down her shirt would keep the gremlins away.
Somehow, she didn't think it would be too wise to say as much.
Nicole sighed. So many things she couldn't say. People here had very different notions from hers about what was self-evidently true. She didn't know exactly what they did to people whose ideas were too far from the norm, and she wasn't eager to find out. There hadn't been any place to run or hide, down on the floor of the amphitheater.
Fabia Ursa had paused in her pacing only long enough to avert the omen. She went back to it grimly, but not for long. Suddenly she staggered. Nicole, who happened to be closest to her, caught her arm. She was surprisingly heavy for a woman so slight.
She smiled at Nicole, a thin, tight smile. “Thank you, Umma,” she said a little faintly. And then, more clearly, she said, “I've done all the walking I'm going to do this time. So if you don't mind …” Still clinging to Nicole, leaning heavily on her, Fabia Ursa waddled over to the birthing chair and lowered herself into it. She sat for a moment, just breathing; Nicole, relieved of her weight, did much the same.
Fabia Ursa seemed to recover first. “Bring me some wine, somebody,” she said with imperiousness that Nicole had never heard from her before. “I'm not getting up from here until I do it with my baby in my arms.” She swept the room with a glare, as if challenging them all to argue with that.
Nobody even tried. “That's what we're here for, after all,” Aemilia said mildly. She shifted her leather sack till it lay in front of the birthing chair, just out of reach of Fabia Ursa's foot, and scanned the room. Her eye fell on a stool not far
from Nicole. She pointed with her chin. “Umma. Bring that over here, would you?”
Nicole nodded, and fetched the stool. Its legs were short. They set Aemilia's head considerably below Fabia Ursa's—just about at the level of her waist, in fact. The midwife measured the height and the distance, and nodded, satisfied. She bent slightly and burrowed in the sack, pulling out a jar of oil, strips of cloth rolled into a tidy bundle, several sponges, and a cushion. When she had arranged them around her within easy reach, she said, “Get me a bowl of water, someone, please.”
BOOK: Household Gods
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