slave's humility. The young tribune was drunk, unhappy, and unable to avenge himself. We thought he might have killed in frustration.'

'What did Clodius say in his own defense?'

'He said that he was ashamed of what he'd done to the slave at the banquet and had no reason to harm him further. If anything, he argued, Odo should have more resentment toward Clodius than Clodius toward him. Which of course made us think that perhaps Odo had attacked Clodius. The boy had no alibi. He'd left the wedding in disgrace and hadn't been seen the rest of the evening.'

I study Falco. He seems a fair but practical man. His decency has a foundation of iron. 'You cared for this slave?'

'I valued him at three hundred siliqua.'

'So you wanted the culprit punished?'

'I wanted the culprit to pay me for my loss.'

'What did Marcus decide?'

'Nothing, as usual.' Falco stops, realizing he has finally betrayed something useful. His glance shifts away as he remembers unhappy times.

'The praefectus was an indecisive man,' I clarify.

The centurion hesitates, weighing his loyalties, and then remembers how many are dead. 'The praefectus was… careful. We learned eventually that he'd made an early blunder as a junior tribune in campaign against brigands in Galatia. Later, he'd been unfairly caught up in the stink from the sexual scandal of a superior. He'd mismanaged a business of his father's. He'd learned caution, and it's but a short step from caution to fear.'

'I'm told he was bookish.'

'His library filled two carts. Not at all what we were accustomed to.'

'Galba, you mean.'

'The senior tribune could be rash, but decisive. The two had different styles.'

Different styles. A unit responds to a commander like a team to the rein, and so his personality becomes the personality of his men. Accordingly, it troubles soldiers whenever there's a switch, and it takes them a while to settle under the new hand. If they ever do. 'How well did they work together?'

'Awkwardly. The first time I saw Galba in the baths I counted twenty-one scars on the front of his body and none on his back. He had a chain or belt of rings-'

'I've heard of this chain.'

'Marcus, in contrast, had never seen real battle. It was even more uncomfortable after our commander's marriage to his inquisitive bride.'

'The men did not like Valeria, either?'

'They appreciated her beauty, even when it made the garrison restless with longing. But yes, she made us uneasy as well-even Lucinda was taken aback. Valeria roamed the fort like a decurion. She was curious about the natives and demanded that a kitchen maid teach her and the Roman slave woman the Celtic tongue. She absorbed it like a child, and asked about things that are no business of women.'

'What things?'

'Warfare. The mood of the men. The organization of the Petriana. Firing‹ a forge, straightening an arrow shaft, the sicknesses of soldiers. Her curiosity was boundless. Marcus couldn't silence her. He was embarrassed but confused by her, I think, and the men didn't like it. It was no secret that she was the reason for Marcus's command.'

'And Galba?'

'The quieter he was about his resentment, the plainer his frustration. He was the one man who knew how the fort worked, and everyone looked to him for instruction and direction. Even Marcus. Yet the Roman made a point of countermanding the Thracian to establish his own authority. We were a cavalry with two heads.'

I frown, recognizing the situation from problems I have investigated before. There is nothing more fatal than disunity of command. 'The duke did nothing?'

'He was stationed at Eburacum, and it took time for the situation to reach his ears. Then he was distracted by events on the Continent.'

He means the succession, which I will get to in my own good time. I want to get to the heart of matters before it. 'Did these difficulties affect the Petriana as a whole?'

Falco ponders. I am asking him not about individuals but about the performance of his unit, of the eagle standard to which all good soldiers give their ultimate loyalty.

'The strain made us too eager,' he suggests. 'None of us were happy with the situation, and all thirsted for change. There's opportunity in conflict. Some men fall in battle, but others rise. Careers demand a certain amount of chaos.'

Chaos. I've spent my own career trying to prevent what ambitious men long for. Men seed their own disasters. 'All this was in the background when you discussed the murder of Odo?'

'Yes. For Galba the murder was an opportunity.'

'To use against Clodius?'

He smiles thinly. 'Brassidias thought further ahead than that. He'd recovered the cattle of Braxus and, as a reward, took information from a Celtic spy-a man named Caratacus.'

'Caratacus!' That is the name of a Briton rebel from the earliest days of the Roman occupation. He was betrayed by his own people, taken to Rome in chains, and glibly talked his way out of his own execution.

'Your reaction was Marcus's own. The name has undoubted power, which is probably why the rogue chose it. It was an alias for a rather mysterious figure with experience in the empire. A deserter, a disowned aristocrat, an escaped felon-we weren't sure which. He'd set himself up as a chief in the north and sat in the highest councils of the Picts and Attacotti. It was he who told us the druids were rising again.'

'The druids?'

'Wise men and magicians of the Celts. They've always urged resistance to Roman occupation. We annihilated them in the initial conquest, but never entirely suppressed them in the north. We feared their reappearance.'

'Reappearance where?'

'The oak is their sacred tree. There was a grove well north of the Wall where they were supposed to be secretly gathering.'

'So Galba urged the attack on the grove that started all this trouble?'

'Galba was too clever to urge anything. He set the bait for Marcus and Clodius.'

'How?'

'This Caratacus said the druids were behind the attempted abduction of Valeria. When Marcus asked why, Galba explained that the priests might be bringing back human sacrifice. In olden days they'd put victims into gigantic figures made of wicker and set fire to the effigies, forecasting the fortune of battle by the writhing of the victims.'

I grimace. 'By the gods!'

'Galba told this, waited, and let young Clodius propose the attack.'

'But how could he know Clodius would do that?'

'It all went back to the murder of Odo. Galba had already argued that if we couldn't solve this mystery, we'd simply eliminate it by ridding ourselves of Clodius. He proposed we place the young tribune with another legion. While pretending this was an act of charity, he knew it would cripple the boy's career. No one cares about a dead slave, of course, but they do care about a Roman who can't hold his emotions in check. Who can't hold his wine, or keep from spilling beer. Clodius would have left the Petriana not so much with the stain of failure, from which any good Roman can recover, but with the stain of losing self control, from which recovery is impossible. Marcus wouldn't agree.'

'He was fond of the young tribune?'

'Hardly. The boy was a boob, in Britannia for a year's seasoning. The rumor was that his new wife interceded on Clodius's behalf.'

'You believe that?'

'Who knows? Certainly the whelp hung around her like a puppy.'

'A puppy, or a tomcat?'

Falco laughs at my joke, which is not meant as a joke.

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