“No. Her father was King Vercingetorix.”
“She’s a Gallic
Marcellus nodded. “When she was a girl, she was brought to Rome in chains, and years later her father was paraded in Caesar’s Triumph and then executed.” He saw my look and added quickly, “That would never have happened to an Egyptian queen. Vercingetorix was the leader of the Gauls. A barbarian. My mother told me that when Gallia came here, she knew neither Latin nor Greek.”
“Then she isn’t twenty.”
“No. I should say more like thirty.”
My brother hesitated. “So then why did your uncle spare us from slavery?”
“Because your father was a Roman citizen, and you carry the blood of Alexander the Great.”
“Juba’s father wasn’t a Roman,” I pointed out.
“No. His ancestor was the warrior Massinissa. But my uncle must be thankful he didn’t make Juba a slave. Juba saved his life at Actium, and there were many days leading up to the battle when my uncle feared he would be defeated.”
Just as there had been many days leading up to the battle when my mother had thought Egypt could still be saved.
An uneasy silence settled over the room. Marcellus cleared his throat. “So I saw your sketch of Alexandria,” he said. “You are very talented.”
“You should see her other drawings,” Alexander added. “Show him your book of sketches, Selene.”
I crossed my arms over my chest.
“She has a leather book,” Alexander explained. “It’s not like anything you’ve ever seen. Go ahead. Get it,” he coaxed.
When Marcellus looked at me, I went to the chest in the corner of the room and took out my mother’s present. His eyes widened in the candlelight, and when he held the book in his hands, he asked in amazement, “What
“Calfskin,” Alexander said.
“All of it?” Marcellus turned the pages, and I don’t know what impressed him more, my sketches or what I had drawn them on. “I’ve never seen anything like this,” he admitted. “Where did this come from?”
“The library on the Acropolis in Pergamon,” my brother said.
“The greatest library in the world!”
“The
“Books,” Marcellus said wonderingly.
“There were two hundred thousand of them in Pergamon, and our father made a present of them all to our mother. She was reading them, one by one. A different book every night.” He looked at me, and I knew he was remembering our seventh birthday, when we had been allowed to choose anything we wanted from Pergamon’s library. My brother had chosen a book on horses, and I had chosen an empty book for sketches.
When I looked away, Marcellus said quietly, “Queen Kleopatra was a remarkable woman.”
“Yes,” Alexander said quietly.
Footsteps echoed in the hall, and Marcellus stood. “My mother,” he said, returning my book of sketches to me. The door of our chamber opened, and Octavia’s face appeared next to an oil lamp.
“Marcellus,” she said sharply. “What are you doing?”
“Going to sleep.” He grinned back at us, then kissed his mother on the cheek. “I’ll see you in the morning,” he promised us. When he was gone, Octavia set the oil lamp on a table.
Alexander and I lay back on our couches and waited to see what she was going to do. Despite the heat, I covered myself with a thin linen blanket. She came and sat at the edge of my couch. When I inhaled, I could smell her light scent of lavender. My mother had always worn jasmine.
“How was your day?” she asked kindly.
I shot a questioning look at Alexander. “Tiring,” I admitted.
“It will be even more tiring tomorrow,” she warned. “I would like to prepare you for my brother’s Triumph, though it will only be for one day.”
“I thought it was three.”
“Yes, but you will only be a part of it tomorrow. In the morning, clothes will be delivered to your chamber. You’ll be expected to put them on, then ride behind Caesar on a wooden float. There may be chains as well. But I will not allow them to cuff your necks. That is only for slaves.”
“And then?” Alexander asked steadily.
“You will return for the Feast of Triumph. It will be larger than what you have seen tonight. But you must be prepared to see things tomorrow. Things that will make you very upset.”
“Will they spit at us in the streets?” I whispered.
“I don’t know. The plebs are very angry. They believe what they’ve heard about your mother and father.”
“Such as?” I asked urgently.
Octavia’s shoulders tensed. “Such as your father wore a Greek chiton and put away his toga while in Egypt.”
I raised my chin. “That’s true.”
“What else do they believe?” Alexander asked.
“That Antony instructed that he be worshipped as Dionysus. That he crowned his head in ivy and carried a
I could see my father in his robes of red and gold, holding Dionysus’s stalk of fennel just as Octavia had described. “All of that is true.”
Octavia sat forward. “And did he really strike a Roman coin with your mother’s likeness?”
“Yes. Three years ago,” my brother replied. “What’s so terrible about a coin?”
When she didn’t answer, I asked sharply, “So is that all the Romans believe?”
She hesitated. “There were rumors of dinners on the Nile….”
“Of course,” Alexander said frankly. “Our mother and father had a club. The Society of Inimitable Livers.”
“And what did this society do?” she asked breathlessly.
“They had banquets on ships and discussed literature with philosophers from around the world.”
“Then they changed it to the Order of the Inseparable in Death,” I added, “when our father lost the Battle of Actium. Now all of that is gone,” I said. “Just like our mother and father.”
Octavia sat back and looked from my brother to me. She seemed to have trouble reconciling the Antony she had known as her husband with the Antony who had been our father. “So did … did your father spend a great deal of time with your mother?”
I realized what was happening and felt my cheeks warm. She had loved him.
Alexander answered quietly, “Yes.”
“Then he didn’t spend all of his time with his men?” It was me she was asking.
“No.” I was too ashamed to meet her gaze. “Are you glad that he’s gone now?”
“I would never wish death on anyone,” she said. “When he left me,” she admitted, “it was a great embarrassment. All of Rome knew I had been rejected.”
I tried to imagine how she must have felt, abandoned so publicly by my father. Antonia and Tonia, my half sisters, wouldn’t even have known him, since he had come to live with us permanently when they were just a few years old.
“My brother wanted him dead,” she confessed. “But I….” She hesitated, saying at last, “There wasn’t a woman in Rome who didn’t love your father.”
“They don’t love him now,” I remarked.
She stood up from my couch, then touched my cheek with the back of her palm. “Because they think he abandoned his people to become a Greek. But all of that is past,” she said tenderly. “What matters is tomorrow. Be brave,” she said, “and it will all end well.”
When she closed the door, leaving the oil lamp near Alexander’s couch, I turned to him and we watched each