grave.
He made no answer. I expected none.
He had been scanning the rescued crewmen, trying to hide his agitation because he could not see the one man we all knew he was looking for. His elegant, fair-skinned face revealed the moment when he decided not to approach Gordianus-an irascible elder senator, who would give him short shrift. I had the honour instead.
'Rather unfortunate! But it solves the problem of Crispus-'
'Crispus was not a problem!' My terse answer unsettled him.
'Falco, what's happened to Pertinax?'
'Feeding the Baian oysters, if it was up to you! Oh, don't worry; he should be safe on the
I ought to have known better.
When we all turned to the rail and looked for my old friend Laesus and his sturdy merchant ship, we discovered that the
LXXII
There were still pieces of wreckage to untangle from the trireme, and broken oars to pull in. Even then we ought to have caught up. But as we set off in pursuit, we ran into the regatta I had seen earlier as we first sailed towards the island. The
'Oh, for heaven's sake!' roared Gordianus. 'Pertinax must have overpowered Laesus somehow, and now he's making off!' A thought struck him. 'He's got Milo-'
'Never mind Milo,' I uttered in a hollow voice. 'He's got my nephew Larius!'
The trireme carried a sail, but it had been lowered for action so we lost precious minutes raising her mast again and setting the canvas aloft. Meanwhile, the merchantman was running for the end of the peninsula. The breeze which had carried us out to Capreae was still sending her along at a good five knots as she made for the headland. Then she turned in around the Amalfi coast, and we lost sight of her.
'How could he manage it?' Gordianus fretted.
'Well-placed friends!' I said grimly. 'Your ally and mine, the trustworthy Laesus, must have been in league with Pertinax from the start!'
'Falco, what do you mean?'
'I mean we're victims of a Calabrian clique. When I first met Laesus in Croton that was no coincidence; he must have been there to meet Pertinax. I thought he looked shocked when I said Pertinax had died! Once Laesus discovered what I was there for, I'm damn sure he tried to poison me. Then when Pertinax attacked your deputy at Colonna, I'll bet the
'But why?'
'They both come from Tarentum. They must have known each other long before Marcellus adopted Pertinax. Tarentum is the sort of crooked Calabrian town with unshakeable local loyalties.'
I remembered with a sinking feeling that Laesus had admitted he used to sail to Alexandria: Pertinax must have asked him here for his knowledge of the corn ships' annual run. Crispus was dead, but now Pertinax was on the loose with full knowledge of his colleague's plan to blackmail Rome. Pertinax, whose adopted father had filled him with ludicrous ideas of his own worth…
On the face of it, compared to a candidate with heavyweight talents like Crispus, Pertinax posed no threat to the Empire at all. But I happened to be more cynical. Think of Caligula and Nero: Rome has a habit of taking lunatic would-be emperors to its heart.
•
The magistrate Aemilius Rufus came up: more trouble.
'We'll soon overtake,' he boasted. Wrong as usual. We never caught the
There was no point in hurrying; they reefed our sail.
Then a marine yelled. The
'Falco, your brave young nephew has saved my steward!'
I muttered that Larius had never showed much sense.
We must have missed quite a party. When Milo saw Atius Pertinax grinning in triumph as he was greeted by the sea captain, the steward ran amok. In the process of being overcome he was beaten and roped up with fishing lines. Meanwhile, my nephew stood by looking innocent; the sea captain suggested to Pertinax keeping Larius as a hostage.
'Did he, by Jupiter! But how did you get in the water, Larius-and where is the ship?'
Larius assumed his expression of playful nonchalance. 'Oh, I could see the
'Then what happened?'
'What do you think? She sank.'
•
While my sister's boy was being treated like a hero, I discovered that when the
We rowed the
He had no success. Trust him.
I stayed in the port below the steep little town and bought a meal to revive Larius. Milo stuck to him too, with
