A miracle happened. The door opened and in walked a huge and familiar figure: Boniface. ‘My apologies, Your Serenities, I didn’t mean to-’ He broke off as he took in the scene.
‘Help me!’ Titus managed to croak.
Looking both astonished and concerned, Boniface raised his hand in a commanding gesture. Relief swept through Titus as the pressure on his neck eased.
‘Would someone please explain?’ said Boniface in puzzled tones.
‘This man was trying to kill me,’ said Valentinian sullenly.
‘It’s not true!’ cried Titus desperately. ‘You remember me from Africa, sir? I brought you a letter from Count Aetius.’
‘That’s right, so you did,’ said Boniface. He gestured to the slaves, who released Titus and stood aside. Turning to the Empress, he said placatingly, ‘Aelia, my dear, there must be some misunderstanding. I know this young man. He may have served the traitor Aetius, but. . a murderer? Surely not. In my youth I fought under his father against Radogast the Goth. A finer soldier than General Rufinus would be hard to find.’
‘It was you I came here to see, sir,’ declared Titus, gingerly feeling his neck. ‘I no longer serve Aetius. Look: the Empress holds in her hand my official discharge.’
‘Aelia?’ queried Boniface, his tone friendly yet holding a hint of reproof.
The Empress shrugged, conceding defeat. ‘Oh, very well,’ she said. ‘It’s probably best we let you deal with him. You’ll be doing us a service by taking him off our hands — we were beginning to find him a trifle tedious.’
‘So you’ve left Aetius,’ said Boniface, when he and Titus were ensconced in the Count’s own suite of rooms within the palace. He shot Titus a keen glance. ‘You may be interested to know that I received a letter from Aetius the other day, suggesting we hold a parley next year, at-’
‘-the fifth milestone from Ariminum,’ broke in Titus excitedly, ‘on the Aemilian Way.’
‘Now, how in the name of Jupiter did you know that?’ asked Boniface, visibly impressed.
‘Well, sir, it goes back to a meeting I had with one of your old soldiers, a disabled veteran called Proximo.’
He held back nothing, but told of his conversation with Proximo and the attempt on his life; the discussions with his father; the confrontation with Bishop Pertinax; the stormy meeting with Aetius; finally, his investigations from Ariminum. ‘It was those words, “His Philippi”,’ he finished, ‘that made me realize Aetius intends springing a trap.’
‘Well, thanks to you, I can start planning how to unspring it,’ said Boniface. ‘Proposing a parley near the Rubicon,’ he murmured reflectively. ‘Cunning. It shows he understands my fondness for historical conjunctions. A weakness, I admit — and one he was clever enough to exploit. I’m grateful to you, extremely grateful.’ He looked at Titus appraisingly. ‘So, young man, you wish to enter my service, you say. I’m flattered, of course. But after my — shall we say — less than distinguished record in Africa, I’m rather puzzled as to why you should wish to.’ And he gave a self-deprecating smile which Titus found oddly touching.
‘My father believes in you, sir. Let’s just say I trust his judgement.’
‘In that case, welcome aboard, Titus Valerius. Tomorrow we’ll swear you in as one of my
The five horsemen trailing Titus spurred their mounts from a plod to a walk — the speediest gait possible on the steep, eastward-facing foothills of the Apennini mountains. Titus smiled as he did likewise, welcoming the chance of a little excitement in what had looked to be an uneventful assignment. His horse, a pure-bred Libyan, had been supplied by Boniface from the palace stables. It came from tough, fast, tireless stock, and he was confident it could out-distance his pursuers. As far as he could tell at a distance of several hundred paces, their horses were chunky Parthians, sturdy and reliable, but not to be compared in speed and endurance to North African breeds.
Who were these men? wondered Titus. Their horses looked like Roman cavalry mounts, suggesting their riders were soldiers. Perhaps from a faction opposed to Boniface, who had seen Titus leave the palace? Brigands on stolen army horses? Brigandage was a growing problem: many peasants and workmen, driven to desperation by excessive tax demands, were leaving the fields and cities for the outlaw life.
Meanwhile, nothing could dampen Titus’ euphoria on this glorious late-autumn day. All his troubles seemed to be evaporating. The rift with his father was healed; Gaius was recovering his health and well-being in the bosom of his new German family; and the running of the Villa Fortunata was back on a sound footing. Titus was the father of a strong and healthy son. Lastly, thanks to Boniface, Placidia’s vendetta was over; and Titus had exchanged service with a self-seeking schemer, for honourable employment in the cause of Rome. Despite his elation however, he couldn’t stifle his sadness that Aetius, his lost leader, had proved to be an idol with feet of clay. But Titus had come to terms with changing that allegiance, and felt that his hard decision had been justified.
Boniface had entrusted him with the delivery of two messages, one each to the garrison commanders at Placentia and Luca.1 The first was to be given strict instructions (backed up by written orders from the Count) to allow Aetius free passage through Placentia on the way to his meeting with Boniface at the fifth milestone from Ariminum — whenever that should happen. The commander at Luca was to be handed a sealed letter from Boniface. The Count had emphasized to Titus that the contents were of vital importance, and must on no account be allowed to fall into the hands of a third party.
After completing the first part of his mission, Titus had stopped overnight at an inn in Placentia. The following morning he retraced his steps along the Aemilian Way for a dozen miles then, as instructed, turned to the right, off that broad and arrow-straight highway on to a side road leading to the village of Medesanum. He paused to consult a sketch-map which Boniface had had prepared for him. His route, north-south to Luca, struck obliquely across four rivers — the Tarus, the Parma, the Entia, the Secies2 — and the spurs dividing them, each spur higher than the last until the main crest of the Apennini was reached. On the far side of the watershed, in Etruria,3 the route then followed the valley (known as the Garfagnana) of the River Sercium, all the way to Luca.
Barring the Garfagnana, the route was, Boniface had warned him, a hard and testing one: rugged and remote, traversed only by mule tracks. But it was the most direct and quickest way to reach Luca from Placentia, and it was a matter of great urgency that the commander at Luca receive his missive as soon as possible. At the conclusion of his briefing, the Count had said in tones of resigned sadness, ‘Your role, Titus, is preferable to mine. To paraphrase Tacitus: yours to cross steep mountains, but at least they do not change; mine to deal with men, who are inconstant.’ Titus had no doubt that he was referring to the perfidy of Aetius, the ‘friend’ who had deceived and then betrayed him.
Boniface was right about the route being hard. It entailed a stiff climb of several miles and fifteen hundred feet, up hillsides clothed with trees and scrub, with cultivation giving place to pasture. At the ninth hour Titus reached Medesanum, a scatter of small stone houses grouped around a church and a
Instead of a conventional river flowing between banks, Titus encountered a wide plain of dazzling rocks and sand, with beyond it the huddle of buildings that was Fornovium. Was this the Tarus? he wondered in amazement. There was no bridge, but the few narrow rivulets winding through the bed looked easily fordable. As he was about to urge his horse forward, he was stopped by a shout from a shepherd tending his flock nearby. The shepherd, a tall mountaineer with kindly eyes, explained that those innocuous-looking
