deliberately baiting Lycon.
'You're in charge!' Lycon snarled, turning on the Egyptian. 'You tell me what to do!' Perhaps he had held his bared blade a little too close to the strange priests throat, he thought afterward.
'I did warn you,' N'Sumu smiled. 'Lacerta! Your men! Here!'
The tribune had already stood scowling at the three men, trying to decide on a course of action that would not make him lose face again. The Imperial guard had seemed to materialize upon the scene of carnage an instant after the sauropithecus had disappeared.
N'Sumu pointed a long finger at the hunter's chest. 'Arrest this man. I will not tolerate insubordination!'
Lycon lunged for the Egyptian, but the hulking German guards were already reaching for him. Something-a rock or a mailed fist-crashed against the back of Lycon's skull, and he pitched headlong onto the bloodied pavement. An instant later he was jerked back onto his feet, to dangle like an unstrung puppet between a pair of the giant Northmen.
'I've waited for this, Greek!' sneered Lacerta. The tribune stepped close to drive a fist into the beastcatcher's belly. 'Tie him behind your horse!' the tribune shouted to the pair of men holding Lycon.
The Germans looked at one another, uncertain as to the precise intention of the order, but unwilling to become overly concerned about what some little Italian said-even an Italian with putative control over their lives. One guard shrugged; then both began to stride away toward the horse-holders beyond the circle of bodies.
'Wait a minute!' said Vonones, stepping toward the tribune swiftly enough that another of the guards pinioned him from behind. Caught like a cricket in a spiderweb, the Armenian continued to shout: 'That's not going to help anything! Without Lycon, we'll never catch the lizard-ape! Master N'Sumu, please tell them we need Lycon!'
'Shall we take the merchant as well?' Lacerta asked pleasantly.
'Not just yet,' said N'Sumu in fluting, silvery Greek. 'This one may yet prove useful to me-now that he knows the penalty for insubordination. Do with the beastcatcher as you please.'
Lacerta nodded, and the guards who had paused with Lycon between them now proceeded toward the horses again. 'We'll take him to the Amphitheater,' the tribune decided aloud. 'The Greek won't be lonely there, because we'll soon find a nice cell for his family as well. They can all discuss what our lord and god is going to choose to do with them when he hears about this latest slaughter.'
The breath caught in Vonones' throat. The German holding him spun the animal dealer around and pushed him, hard, in the opposite direction from the retreating guard troop. The crowd had thinned enough that Vonones had no one to grip to prevent him from falling over one of the corpses lying ten feet away.
Vonones staggered back to his feet, forcing down panic. He had to remain calm if he were to save himself, much less Lycon.
N'Sumu smiled at him like a hungry shark.
Chapter Twenty-two
It was probably mid-morning, but light in the cellars of the Flavian Amphitheater depended on lamps, not the sun.
They had talked a little after Lycon's family was brought in, dragged in, and locked two cells away so that eight feet and a double set of bars separated the beastcatcher from them. Zoe quieted the children almost immediately, however. She had long experience of her husband in his present state: the utter torpor that followed total immersion, mental as well as physical, in a project until he had nothing left to give. Every night after he had played for the blood-mad crowds in the arena, he had collapsed this way… and Zoe knew he had done the same more recently in the field after the days he survived but only just. She could forget about that, however, because she had not seen him as she saw him now…
Lycon rolled abruptly, bringing himself to full alertness though he still lay on the floor of the cell where he had been dropped. The concrete surface was slimy with various grades of filth, but the beastcatcher had been in worse places-and he had more important things on his mind, now, anyway.
A single-wick lamp sat beside Zoe, lighting the left half of her face which was suffused with enough concern for the whole. Lycon smiled mechanically, falsely-but the wish to reassure her was not false, and that counted for much at this juncture. 'I-' he tried to say, but he croaked instead with the phlegm clogging his mouth.
'Daddy's awake!' Perses squealed. 'He's
'We almost had that
Zoe heard the words, but she could not fathom her husband's meaning. There was no need for her to understand the story, of course: the real point of it was that something had gone wrong but that he was all right, lucid now and healthy enough to discuss events without screaming in pain. The way he lay, ostensibly relaxed now but at full length on the concrete, his torso lifted by his left elbow and flat palm, belied the impression he was trying to give of being in reasonable condition.
Aloud, Zoe said, 'Alexandros has been reciting the
'Are we going to leave now, Daddy?' Perses demanded.
'Not quite yet,' the beastcatcher said with the touch of wry humor that made the truth speakable, 'unless things are even worse than I think they are.' He reached out with the hand that had braced him on the floor and caught one of the bars. '
And if they let him out on his own feet instead of being dragged from the arena through the Gate of Death by his heels.
Lycon let his face shape itself into normal human lines from the mask into which it had drawn itself to hide the pain that might have accompanied movement. It hadn't been too bad, though it might be a while before he wanted to eat again, especially the sort of food he could expect to be offered here.
If Zoe and the kids were offered slops this time around, there were a lot of people who'd better pray Lycon
'Right, ah,' the beastcatcher repeated, remembering to smile at his family. The baby was still asleep, thank the gods, and Perses was clutching the side of his mother opposite his elder brother. Lycon did not reach toward them. Eight feet was too far for the gesture to be other than pathetic or absurd, and they didn't need either of those things. 'I'd like to hear you recite, Alexandros. Good way to pass the time, and good for you too.'
He licked his lips as he paused. They were dry and hot; he wondered if he'd picked up a fever,