he hurried toward Olivia's private apartments, he wondered how many other of the household slaves Simones had approached, and what they had told him. He was most troubled that Valerios had seen him eat. The fiction he had offered might be acceptable to a slave, but there were others who would find other meaning in what he did, and that could easily lead to questions with dangerous answers and more dangerous repercussions. He set his jaw and knocked on Olivia's door, saying 'It's Niklos.'
She was watching him as he came into her quarters. 'More trouble? Of course there is more trouble,' she said for him when he hesitated.
'It might be worse,' Niklos hedged.
'Indeed it might,' she said sardonically. 'There might be an earthquake and the house could be on fire.'
'Olivia—'
She managed a rueful smile. 'But fortunately, we have only to deal with spies and enemies. Tell me.'
* * *
By the time the Guard arrived to search her house, Niklos had managed to hide most of the incriminating volumes Olivia had not been able to be rid of; there were a few Roman objects that might be considered suspect, but Olivia had said that disposing of all of them might be construed as more suspicious than the possession of one or two Roman items.
'We are here on the order of the Emperor and the Court Censor,' announced Captain Demitrios as he held out a scroll sealed in three places. 'Your scribe will read it to you.'
'My Greek is not so bad that I cannot muddle my way through your writ,' said Olivia as she accepted the document. 'You will watch me break the seals, Captain?'
Taken aback, Captain Demitrios exchanged glances with two of his men. 'If you like. Your sponsor should be here.'
Olivia regarded the Guard Captain evenly. 'My sponsor is General Belisarius. If one of you will go to his house and summon him, I am certain he will come.'
'General Belisarius,' repeated Captain Demitrios. 'He is your sponsor.'
'Yes. I turned over my villa outside Roma to him during his campaign and for that he has consented to be my sponsor.' She was reasonably certain that Captain Demitrios knew something of this, but she was willing to go through the ritual. 'If you would rather, I will send one of my slaves to fetch him.'
'He ought to be here,' said Captain Demitrios uncertainly. 'The General—'
Olivia clapped her hands loudly. 'Niklos!'
He responded at once, coming from the smaller of the reception rooms. 'My mistress?' He favored her with a full reverence that was not lost on the soldiers.
'These Guardsmen require that General Belisarius be here while they perform their duty. Will you ask him to join us. Perhaps, Captain, you will tell my majordomo what your errand is so that he may inform the General?' She did her best to keep the irony out of her voice, but did not succeed entirely. 'I will ask one of my two cooks to give you wine and something to eat while you wait, Captain.'
The Captain straightened up. 'We will have to stand guard around the house until the General arrives. We cannot act until he has read the orders. It would be best if you did not break the seals; leave that to General Belisarius.' He was clearly not satisfied with the arrangement but knew his duty.
'Just as you wish. My household is, naturally, at your disposal,' said Olivia as she stepped back from the armed men. 'Come with me, Niklos, and I will write a note to the General for you to deliver.'
Niklos heard the anger in her tone and he hastened after her, hoping she would contain herself until they were in private. 'My mistress,' he said as he opened the library to her, 'you have only to command me.'
As soon as the door was closed, Olivia turned her blazing eyes on Niklos. 'I am not allowed to authorize the searching of my own house! It is bad enough that they want to search it, but I cannot read the document! Hecate shrivel them, every one of them!'
'Hush,' Niklos warned her.
'Don't you—' She broke off. 'You're right,' she admitted after a moment. 'All right. Find me my ink tablet and something to write on. The mood I'm in, I'll settle for a torn rag.' She sat down, her shoulders still angular with rage. 'Hurry. I don't want the good Captain to get restive.'
'Will Belisarius come?' asked Niklos.
'I hope he will send a simple authorization, if that's possible. The whole thing is already intolerable.' She was working the ink cake, mixing a little water with the square block, rubbing it with a small oval section of ivory until she had enough to write with. She accepted the vellum Niklos handed her and began to write, forming the letters awkwardly since she was not entirely used to the Greek alphabet yet.
'I will tell him what's going on,' Niklos promised her.
'Including, no doubt, my state of mind,' she said, shaking her head slowly. 'Here. Take this. Make sure you show it to that oaf of a Captain.'
'I will,' Niklos told her, folding the vellum once and tucking it into his wide belt. He left promptly, winking at her before he closed the door.
Olivia sat alone among her shelves, a third of them empty now that the suspect texts had been removed. She forced herself to become calm. There had been other times over the centuries when she had faced worse than this, she reminded herself sternly, and she had been able to win free. She would do it again. If five centuries had taught her nothing else, she had learned a knack for survival. Much as she felt hampered by circumstances, she knew she