TERRA
INCOGNITA
A Novel of the Roman Empire
RUTH DOWNIE
BLOOMSBURY
New York Berlin London
Table of Contents
TERRA INCOGNITA
A NOVEL
IN WHICH
our hero will be . . .
puzzled by
Felix—a silenced trumpeter
troubled by
Tilla—his housekeeper
a wagon driver
a carpenter
Lydia—the carpenter’s girlfriend
Thessalus—retiring medic to the Tenth Batavians
bedbugs
hindered by
Gambax—assistant medic to the Tenth Batavians
Ness—a domestic servant
challenged by
a baker’s wife
Decianus—prefect of the Tenth Batavians
Metellus—Decianus’s aide, assigned to “special duties”
Postumus—a centurion from the Twentieth Legion
Rianorix—a basket maker
distracted by
Dari—a waitress
assisted by
Albanus—a clerk
Ingenuus—a hospital bandager
Valens—a colleague
welcomed by
Catavignus—a local brewer
Susanna, who serves the best food in town
Veldicca—a single parent
a shopkeeper
several civilians with ailments
disdained by
Audax—a centurion with the Tenth Batavians
Trenus—a man from the north
the ladies of the bathhouse
several other civilians with ailments
endangered by
a mysterious rider
Festinus—a barber
a large number of locals
embarrassed by
Claudius Innocens—a trader
surprised by
Aemilia—Catavignus’s daughter
missed by
Lucius—his brother
Cassia—Lucius’s wife
their four (or five) children
Arria—his stepmother
not missed at all by
his two half sisters
Claudia—his former wife
ruled by
the emperor Hadrian
ignored by
the governor of Britannia
thanked by
nobody
Nec tecum possum vivere, nec sine te.
I can’t live with you—nor without you.
—Martial
H
E HAD NOT
expected to be afraid. He had been fasting for three days, and still the gods had not answered. The certainty had not come. But he had made a vow and he must keep it. Now, while he still had the strength.
He glanced around the empty house. He was sorry about that barrel of beer only half drunk. About the stock of baskets that were several weeks’ work, and that he might never now sell at market.
He had nothing else to regret. Perhaps, if the gods were kind, he would be drinking that beer at breakfast tomorrow with his honor restored. Or perhaps he would have joined his friends in the next world.
He would give the soldier a chance, of course. Make one final request for him to do as the law demanded. After that, both their fates would lie in the hands of the gods.
He closed the door of his house and tied it shut, perhaps for the last time. He walked across and checked that the water trough was full. The pony would be all right for three, perhaps four days. Somebody would probably steal her before then anyway.
He pulled the gate shut out of habit, although there was nothing to escape and little for any wandering animals to eat in there. Then he set off to walk to Coria, find that foreign bastard, and teach him the meaning of respect.
M
ANY MILES SOUTH
of Coria, Ruso gathered both reins in his left hand, reached down into the saddlebag, and took out the pie he had saved from last night. The secret of happiness, he reflected as he munched on the pie, was to enjoy simple pleasures. A good meal. A warm, dry goatskin tent shared with men who neither snored, passed excessive amounts of wind, nor imagined that he might want to stay awake listening to jokes. Or symptoms. Last night he had slept the sleep of a happy man.
Ruso had now been in Britannia for eight months, most of them winter. He had learned why the province’s only contribution to fashion was a thick cloak designed to keep out the rain. Rain was not a bad thing, of course, as his brother had reminded him on more than one occasion. But his brother was a farmer, and he was talking about proper rain: the sort that cascaded from the heavens to water the earth and fill the aqueducts and wash the drains. British rain was rarely that simple. For days on end, instead of falling, it simply hung around in the air like a wife waiting for you to notice she was sulking.
Still, with commendable optimism, the locals were planning to celebrate the arrival of summer in a few days’ time. And as if the gods had finally relented, the polished armor plates of the column stretching along the road before him glittered beneath a cheering spring sun.
Ruso wondered how the soldiers stationed up on the border would greet the arrival of men from the Twentieth Legion: men who were better trained, better equipped, and better paid. No doubt the officers would make fine speeches about their united mission to keep the Britons in order, leaving the quarrels to the lower ranks, and Ruso to patch up the losers.
In the meantime, though, he was not busy. Any man incapable of several days’ march had been left behind in Deva. The shining armor in front of him was protecting 170 healthy men at the peak of their physical prowess. Even the most resentful of local taxpayers would keep their weapons and their opinions hidden at the sight of a force this size, and it was hard to see how a soldier could acquire any injury worse than blisters by observing a steady pace along a straight road. Ruso suppressed a smile. For a few precious days of holiday, he was enjoying the anonymity of being a traveler instead of a military—