He said nothing.
‘Oh, by all the gods! Audelia has been murdered and her hands and head cut off. Do you want the same thing happening to that little girl? Vain and self-important as she might have been, she was just a child. Spoiled by her parents and her nursemaid — that was obvious — but nothing to deserve a dreadful fate like that.’ She slammed the tray down on the table. ‘Tell him, Trullius! You can’t escape it now. This household is already implicated in this mystery. It’s obvious that the family will blame us when they know — and it won’t help you to start concealing things.’
Trullius reached out and poured himself another cupful from the jug. His one good hand was trembling as he raised it to his mouth but he wiped his lips against his sleeve and said, with violence, ‘Oh great Mars, woman, why did I listen to your pleas? Why did we ever have these people here? Of course we had no intimation at the time…’ He took another gulp. ‘It’s like this, citizen. My wife is quite convinced — though it is only hearsay and supposition on her part…’
‘Oh, get on with it,’ the woman said. ‘It’s Paulinus and Secunda, citizen. Their servant was a Druid. And there’s no supposition. They told me so themselves — although they claim they didn’t know she was a member of the sect until she came to trial.’
I stared at her. ‘ She? It was a maidservant?’
Priscilla pursed her lips. ‘Well, not exactly that. They don’t have what you and I would call a proper set of slaves. One or two labourers to run the farm, and some old crone who cleans the house for them, but otherwise they seem to do everything themselves, like common peasants. This was an outside wet nurse whom Paulinus employed.’
Trullius agreed. ‘Used her to suckle that afflicted girl of his — because the mother was so frail she could not feed the child herself. This woman seemed ideal — she was healthy, clean and strong, lived not far away, and had just finished suckling children of her own. She took the foster-infant in to live with her, for a while at least.’
I nodded. This was not an unusual arrangement in a Roman family. Many Roman mothers farm their children out to some healthy female who has ample milk to spare, in return for a small income and the certainty of good nutritious food — which of course the parents are anxious to provide, since their own offspring will benefit from it. Only the wealthy have a slave-nurse come to live with them, as Lavinia’s family had evidently done. ‘But this wet nurse proved to be a follower of the Druids?’
Priscilla laughed harshly. ‘Not just the wet nurse. The whole household was involved — the very house where the infant had been kept. The husband went off to the woods each day — supposedly collecting firewood to sell — but actually fighting on the rebel side and supplying them with food and information all the time.’
‘Though, whatever anyone may tell you to the contrary,’ Trullius said, ‘I am sure Paulinus had no idea of that. He was only anxious that his daughter should be fed, especially since the mother was getting feebler all the time — until, of course, eventually she died.’
His wife was making impatient noises now. ‘Well, tell him everything. Don’t stop the story now. Tell him how Paulinus kept up the arrangement for three years or more, until the child was weaned — though by that time it was clear that the thing was deaf and mute and there was no chance of it ever having a proper life. Couldn’t even sensibly be offered as a slave.’
I could feel some sympathy with Paulinus over this. A deaf person is regarded as a ‘hopeless maniac’ under Roman law — meaning that education is impossible — and therefore the person has no legal rights at all and cannot get married or inherit property. I said aloud, ‘It must have been difficult for Paulinus.’
Priscilla laughed again. ‘Indeed it was. He spent a fortune which he didn’t have, trying to find some sort of cure for it. And now tell me he wouldn’t be glad to earn some gold, spying for the Romans, if he got the chance. Though I for one would not blame him if he did. After what the Druids have been doing with their curses around here, they deserve their punishment.’
‘You think that he betrayed the wet nurse to the authorities?’ I said. If so, it opened up a whole new avenue of thought.
Trullius shook his head. ‘I’m quite certain he did nothing of the kind. I don’t believe he had it in him to be cruel to anyone. And Secunda is the same.’
Priscilla looked at him sharply. ‘She’s his second wife, of course, and they’ve not been married long. She’s very dutiful. Of course she would support him in anything he did. But Paulinus would do anything to save his child from threat, including betraying his grandmother, let alone the nurse. Though admittedly he kept her on in his employ right up to the night when they arrested her.’
‘The wet nurse was still with them?’ I was surprised at that. ‘Surely it is not the custom to retain the nurse, after the child has been weaned and gone back home again?’
Priscilla sighed, as if explaining to a simpleton. ‘But the child was deaf, of course. It could not be left, and no ordinary slave could cope with it, poor things. And Paulinus refused to do the obvious and have the child put down — she was the only reminder of his beloved wife, I heard him say. So he paid the former wet nurse to come in every day and take care of the girl.’ She glanced at Trullius. ‘My husband will not have it, but there must have been a cost, and everybody knows that household wasn’t rich. Yet now he’s suddenly got money in his purse, and is talking about buying a pair of live-in slaves. Don’t you think that is significant?’
Trullius was pouring yet another cup of wine. ‘Don’t listen to her, citizen. There’s nothing odd at all. Secunda brought him a small dowry when they wed, no doubt part of that was used to cover the expense. And it was sensible. The child had known the wet nurse all her life and was fond of her. They even managed to communicate, after a fashion — so Paulinus said — waving their hands about and drawing on a slate. I simply don’t believe that he’d betray the wet nurse to the law, whatever the reward. Especially since he knew what punishment they would inflict on her.’
I was appalled. ‘They threw her to the beasts?’
The two householders exchanged a glance at this, but it was Trullius who spoke. ‘It didn’t come to that. Paulinus did his best for them, I heard Audelia say. Bribed the guard to give them hemlock they could drink and die with dignity — both the wet nurse and her child and husband too.’ He rounded on his wife. ‘Would he have done that, woman, if he’d betrayed them first? It isn’t in his character. You say yourself he is a gentle man. And yet you think he’d do a thing like that? It makes no kind of sense.’
She tossed her head. ‘Even a good man knows his duty when it comes to Druids — and serve them right, I say. I don’t believe he’d let them suffer, if he could save them that, but after the atrocities that took place in the wood, he might have felt obliged to name them to the authorities. After all, he is a citizen, and related to an important family, even if he isn’t a wealthy man himself. And that is just the point. Here are the authorities offering a reward, and suddenly the wet nurse is arrested and arraigned, and those two, who never had a proper establishment before, are suddenly in the market for not one slave, but two.’
‘One who is mute, and the other a mere child. An untrained one at that, from what I glimpsed of him. Cheap bargains, both of them.’ He gulped down the contents of his cup. ‘Don’t be so stupid, wife! Secunda’s dowry would have paid for slaves like that a thousand times.’
I cut across the bickering. ‘Did you say they had not been married long?’
Trullius shook his head, and said, now with the careful diction of the slightly drunk, ‘Not very long at all, I understand. A month or so at most. I’m not sure exactly when. Paulinus told me he’d been looking for a wife to help him raise the girl, but most women would not take on such a burden all their lives. Then he met Secunda, who was longing for a child, and didn’t care what defects it might have. Not a wealthy marriage, but it has worked out very well. He is clearly fond of her, and she is fond of him.’
The woman snorted. ‘They were lucky then.’ She sobered suddenly. ‘Or perhaps he’s not. His first wife died and now Secunda clearly isn’t well.’
‘Yet she went to the slave-market?’ I said, thinking of the markets I have known myself — both as a purchaser and as a slave for sale. They are unpleasant places: the buyers prodding muscles and assessing teeth, the menfolk leering and pinching the females on display, amid the nauseating smell of fear and unwashed flesh. ‘Hardly a place for anybody frail.’
‘Wanted to see what her husband bought, I suppose,’ Trullius replied. He’d begun to wave the wine-cup in an emphatic way. ‘And when they’d finished shopping they didn’t have to walk. They had their cart to take them home again. They didn’t leave it here — I could hardly have a farm-cart in the court with Vestal Virgins here — Paulinus took it to a hiring-stables at the gate where they look after passing horses overnight. And before my wife has theories about that, I’m sure Audelia gave them money so they could pay for it! I know she’d slipped Secunda some