doorway, was listening in the corridor.
“I think we did as well as could be expected,” continued Ruso, aware that he was supposed to be making a motivating speech and that he had no idea how to make one. “The patient’s made a good start. Now, as you all know, Doctor Thessalus is out sick. In the meantime the prefect has asked me to take over temporary responsibility for the medical service.” He let that sink in for a moment before adding, “I’m looking forward to working with you.” He suspected this sounded like the lie it was, and certainly it did not seem to inspire his audience. There were more murmurs of something that might or might not have been assent. It occurred to him that some of these men were the ones he had seen gambling in the ward that afternoon.
Finally Gambax made a show of clearing his throat and said, “You don’t have to worry, sir. You just leave everything to us.”
The murmurs were much more enthusiastic this time.
“Thank you, Gambax. Although if I were to leave everything to you, it wouldn’t be worth me being here, would it?”
Silence.
“So, can we establish who’s on duty at the moment?”
Three hands rose.
“Right,” said Ruso. “And which of you are patients?”
One hand rose. Realizing too late that he was alone, its owner cast around for support. Finally four hands were in the air.
“You can go back to your room. The rest of you are dismissed. Thanks again for your help this afternoon and I’ll see you when you’re next on the roster.”
When Ingenuus and the hangers-about had shuffled away, he was left with Gambax, one orderly, and a bandager. He delegated the bandager to apply fresh dressings, the orderly to finish sweeping the treatment room and begin tidying the wards, and Gambax to remain to talk about “how we’re going to get ready for the governor’s visit.”
Gambax did not look thrilled.
“Over a beer,” suggested Ruso.
Gambax looked marginally less disgruntled. He retrieved his cup from its hiding place behind a box of medical records.
“And I’d like one too,” Ruso pointed out.
His new deputy produced a flagon and another cup from behind the box. “There you are, sir,” he said, pouring the beer himself and handing it over. “You know, for a minute there I thought we weren’t going to get along.”
The beer, although possibly safer to drink than the local water, was as awful as Ruso had feared. The conversation was not much better. It seemed Gambax was loyal to Doctor Thessalus, whose regime seemed to have consisted of letting the men do whatever they wanted, and he resented having a legionary doctor imposed upon him. He had more sense than to try the “leave it all to us” line again, but instead managed to give all the appearance of cooperation while finding Ruso’s questions strangely difficult to answer. When Ruso had heard, “I wouldn’t know, sir. Doctor Thessalus deals with all that,” for the fifth time, he gave up and asked about Doctor Thessalus instead. It seemed that the doctor had been looking tired lately and had just taken some leave, but it hadn’t seemed to help.
Ruso said, “What’s the matter with him?”
“Hard to say, sir.”
“Try.”
“I think he’s just out of balance from overworking, sir.”
This was not a problem that was likely to trouble Gambax. “Any idea what treatment he was trying?”
Gambax shook his head. “Sorry, sir. There aren’t any records.”
Ruso, who usually dealt with his own minor ailments and never quite got around to writing up his own records either, was in no position to criticize. “Did you know he went to see the prefect today?”
Gambax looked blank.
“When did you last see him?”
“A couple of hours ago, sir. I took him some lunch. I thought he’d like to see a familiar face.”
“And how was he?”
“About the same, sir.”
Ruso gritted his teeth.
“But you go and see him if you want,” said Gambax, in a tone that suggested it would be a waste of time.
“I’ll take him something to cheer him up. What does he like?”
Gambax scratched his chin. “He’s quite fond of music, sir. Can you sing?”
“Not in a way that would make anyone feel better.” Nor did he have the time to round up anyone who could, although it might be a useful therapeutic approach later. Music was supposed to soothe sufferings of the mind, and it certainly sounded as though Thessalus was suffering. “Anything else? Favorite food? Wine?”
Gambax looked vacant.
“Never mind,” muttered Ruso. “I’ll work it out for myself.”
“Right-oh, sir. Anything else I can help you with? More beer?”
“No thanks,” he said, glancing into his cup. “One’s enough.”
“Very wise, sir,” agreed Gambax, standing to collect the cup and feigning surprise at the amount that remained inside. “Sorry, sir. Take your time. I don’t suppose you gentlemen in the legions get much practice at drinking beer, do you?”
“It’s not our first priority,” said Ruso, suspecting from the look in the assistant’s eye that this was some sort of challenge. Legionaries versus Batavians. As he tipped back his head to drain the cup he was vaguely aware of a knock and a door opening. When the room was the right way up again, he found his clerk gazing at him with barely concealed disapproval.
“Albanus.”
“Reporting for duty, sir.” Albanus cast a professional glance around the room and was clearly unimpressed.
Ruso turned to Gambax. “This is my clerk. He’s very good. Albanus, you’ll be able to give Gambax here a hand with the records.”
The two men eyed each other. Gambax looked as though he did not want any help and Albanus looked as though he had no intention of offering it.
“Perhaps,” said Ruso, breaking the silence, “You and I might have a word outside, Albanus?”
When they were standing outside by the twin-or possibly rival- gods, the clerk said, “Sorry, sir. But are you absolutely sure he wants me to help out?”
“Of course not,” said Ruso, “But I do. And there isn’t going to be much else here to keep you busy.”
Albanus glanced around him. Ruso followed his gaze. The ramparts at the end of the street were stout enough but somehow the unevenness of the limewashed daub that filled the wooden frames of the fort buildings, and the fact that the infirmary building was not the only one still topped with lumpy thatch instead of tiles, gave the fort an air of quaintness and vulnerability. As if the place had been put up by enthusiastic amateurs.
“Tell me, Albanus. Where exactly is Batavia?”
“It’s in the north of Gaul, sir.”
“These people are Gauls?” Ruso, who had spoken enough Gaulish to communicate with the farm servants at home only last summer, found that hard to believe.
“Not really, sir. They migrated to Gaul from Germania.”
That explained the accent.
“They’re supposed to be very tough men, sir. Used for the emperor’s bodyguards and good on difficult terrain-swimming across rivers fully armed and so on. I think it might have been Batavians who led the final assault when our people finished off the Druids.”
“Hm,” said Ruso, imagining Audax plunging into a river in pursuit of raving Druids and wondering whether Gambax would have been off sick that day.
“It’s rather remote up here, isn’t it, sir?” observed Albanus.