Partner at present. We were not yet that type of audit team. We intended to nail him; it was his hard luck. We wanted to start with a genuine high strike rate and a matching income for the Treasury, in order to prove to Vespasian and Titus that we were worth employing.
It would also alert the general population that being investigated by us was dangerous, so people on our list might like to reach an early settlement.
“So you own eleven gladiators,” Anacrites weighed in finally. “How do you acquire them, may I ask? Do you purchase them?”
A rare look of anxiety crossed Calliopus' face as he worked out that this question would precede one that asked where the purchase money came from. “Some.”
“Are they slaves?” continued Anacrites.
“Some.”
“Sold to you by their masters?”
“Yes.”
“In what circumstances?”
“They will normally be troublemakers who have offended the master or else he just thinks they look tough and decides to convert them to cash.”
‘You pay a lot for them?”
“Not often. But people always hope we will.”
“You also acquire foreign captives? Do you have to pay for them?”
“Yes; they belong to the state originally.”
“Are they regularly available?”
“In times of war.”
“That market could dry up if our new Emperor installs a glorious period of peace… Where will you look then?”
“Men come forward.”
“They choose this life?”
“Some people are desperate for money.”
“You pay them a lot?”
“I pay them nothing-only their bread.”
“Is that enough to hold them?”
“If they could not eat before. There is an initial enrolment fee paid to free men who volunteer.”
“How much?”
“Two thousand sesterces.”
Anacrites raised his eyebrows. “That's not much more than the Emperor pays poets who recite a good ode at a concert! Is it reasonable for men signing their lives away?”
“It's more than most have ever seen.”
“Not a large figure, however, in return for slavery and death. And when they join, they have to sign a contract?”
“They bind themselves to me.”
“For how long?”
“For ever. Unless they win the wooden sword and are made free. But once they have been successful, even those who win the biggest prizes tend to grow restless and rejoin.”
“On the same terms?”
“No; the recommissioning fee is six times the original.”
“Twelve thousand?”
“And of course they expect to garner more prizes; they believe themselves winners.”
“Well that won't be for ever!”
Calliopus smiled quietly. “No.”
Anacrites stretched himself: looking thoughtful. He conducted an unforced style of interview, making copious notes in a large, loose hand. His manner was calm, as if merely familiarizing himself with the local scenery. It was not what I had expected. Still, to become Chief Spy he must have been successful once.
Calliopus, we had already decided, had been advised by his accountant to co-operate where it was unavoidable, but never to volunteer anything. Once Anacrites had started him talking, a drawn-out pause threw him. “Of course I can see what you're after,” he burbled. “You wonder how I can afford to make these purchases, when I told the Censors most of my outgoings were long-term ones with no immediate returns.”
“Training your gladiators,” Anacrites agreed, making no comment on the guilty gush of extra information.
“It takes years!”
“During which time you have to pay for their board?”
“And provide trainers, doctors, armourers-“
“Then they may die on their first public outing.”
“Mine is a high-risk enterprise, yes.”
I leant forwards, interrupting. “I never met a businessman who didn't make that claim!”
Anacrites laughed, more with Calliopus than me, still winning his confidence. We were going to play this like nice fellows, implying that nothing the suspect said mattered. No tutting and head-shaking. Just smiles, pleasantries, sympathy with all his problems-then writing a report that would kick the poor victim to Hades.
“What do you do for capital?” 1 asked.
“I am paid for supplying men and beasts for the venatio. Plus, if we stage an actual fight, some prize money.”
“I thought the winning gladiator took the purse?”
“A lanista receives his own share.”
Much bigger than the fighter's, no doubt. “Enough for a villa with views to Neapolis? Well, no doubt that represents years of work.” Calliopus wanted to speak but I carried on regardless. We had him on the run. “Given that you have accrued your rewards over a long period, we did wonder whether when you prepared your return for the Census there might have been any other items of estate outside Rome, perhaps, or properties which you have owned for so long they slipped your memory-which were inadvertently omitted from your tax declaration?”
I had made it sound as though we knew something. Calliopus managed not to gulp. “I will look at the scrolls again to make quite sure-”
Falco Partner were both nodding at Calliopus (and preparing to take down his confession) when he was given an unexpected reprieve.
A hot, tousled slave with dung on his boots rushed into the room. For a moment he squirmed in embarrassment, unwilling to speak to Calliopus in our presence. Anacrites and I politely put our heads together, pretending to discuss our next move, whilst in fact we listened in.
We caught some mumbled words about something terrible having happened, and an urgent request for Calliopus to attend the menagerie. He cursed angrily. Then he jumped to his feet. For a moment he stared at us, debating what to say.
“We have a death.” His tone was curt; clearly he was annoyed about it. The loss, I deduced, would be expensive. “I need to investigate. You can come if you want.”
Anacrites, easily able to look off colour nowadays, said he would remain in the office; even a bad spy knows when to take a chance to search the premises. Then Calliopus informed me that whatever had happened had struck down his lion, Leonidas.
6
The menagerie was a long, low, roofed area. A series of big cages, the size of slave cubicules, ran along one side; from these came odd rustling sounds and suddenly a deep grunt from another large animal of some kind, maybe a bear. Opposite the cages were smaller pens with lower bars, mainly empty. At one end four uncaged