distance from the house. Even a six-year-old girl, if she was bright and capable, would work out what she had found; then, forbidden to trouble the kitchen staff, she might try to see if she could fill her pitcher here. The steps led to the head of a well shaft. When it went out of use, it must have been boarded over. Over the years, the boards had rotted. So when Gaia tried to move them or walk on them, some gave way and fell into the shaft. Gaia must have gone down with them.
I knelt at the edge. I leaned over too far, and a sharp rattle of stones frightened me; the edge was crumbling perilously. All I could see was darkness. I called out. Silence. She had drowned or been killed by the fall. Nux began to bark again, with that terrible sharp yowking noise. I gripped the dog and held her. I could feel under her warm rib cage that she was panting as fast as I. My heart was breaking.
“Gaia!” I yelled down the echoing shaft.
And then from the impenetrable darkness a faint whimper answered me.
LVI
I WAS STILL debating how to get help when a voice nearby cried my name.
“Aulus! Over here-quickly.”
My new partner might be a spoiled, surly senator’s son, but he knew how to stick with the most urgent job in hand. Alone of the crowd in the atrium he had bothered to follow me. I heard him curse as he crashed towards me through the bushes, snagging his tunic or scratching himself on thorns.
“Gently,” I warned in a low voice, before I turned back and called down, “Gaia! Don’t move. We’re here now.”
Aelianus had reached me. He took in the situation rapidly, pointed downwards with his index finger to ask if that was where the child was, then silently grimaced.
“We need help,” I groaned. “We need Petronius Longus. Only the vigiles are equipped for this. I want you to go and fetch them. I’ll stay with the child and try to keep her calm. Tell Petro the situation.” I was crouched back at the shaft, examining it. “Say this: The well looks deep; the child sounds a long way down; she is alive, but very weak. I reckon she has been down there over two days. Someone will have to go down to her. It looks a pig’s arse.”
“Very difficult?” interpreted Aelianus primly.
“We need ropes primarily, but also any other useful equipment the vigiles can come up with.”
“Lights,” he suggested
“Yes. Above all, we need the stuff fast.”
“Right.” He was moving off.
“Aulus, listen-I want you to go yourself. Don’t be sidetracked at the house.”
“I won’t go that way,” he said. “Leg me up. I’ll shin over this wall. Then I’ll be in the street and straight off.”
“Good thinking. You’re almost at the Fourth Cohort headquarters.” I started giving him directions while we tackled shunting him up and over the tall wall at the end of the property. He was no lightweight. Next time I chose a partner I would go for a thin, half-starved one.
“Jove! Falco, this job of yours seems to consist entirely of climbing into and out of places…”After a few groans and compaints he was off. I heard him thump down on the other side, then his footsteps at once ran off. He was certainly athletic. He must exercise somewhere, some rich boys’ gym with a high joining fee and a fitness instructor who looked like a Greek god slathered in dripping.
I should have known somebody else would not miss out on a crisis: Anacrites was the next to turn up. I showed him the layout, told him not to cause panic, and asked him to go back indoors and fetch torches.
“And ropes, surely, Falco.”
“If you can find any. Not much hope of it as a Flamen Dialis is forbidden to see anything that indicates binding. But ask the builders to bring out any wood they have that could be used for supports.”
He pottered off. Sometimes he was sensible. In an hour or two he might find me an oil lamp and a piece of string.
I sat down by the well, Nux fretting beside me; I began to talk in a reassuring voice to the invisible Gaia. “Don’t answer, sweetheart. I’m just talking to you so you know that I’m still here. People have gone to fetch equipment so we can lift you out.”
I was starting to wonder how we could do that. The more I viewed the situation, the more difficult it looked.
I heard the welcome voice of Petronius Longus on the far side of the wall just as Anacrites returned. It had seemed an age. Soon the vigiles were raising ladders. Anacrites shouted out to them, then he joined me. We were about two feet below ground level, on the last step. He had brought out a couple of flares, ready lit, and one short length of filthy rope that the builders had been using for some halfhearted purpose. Straightaway I tied one of the torches to the end of the rope and tried lowering it down the well. I had to stand, leaning forwards above the shaft. Anacrites lay out flat beside me, peering over into the murk.
“The side walls are in bad condition. Keep going,” he urged. The flickering light revealed only a small area. When the rope was all played out we still had not seen Gaia. “Not good news,” muttered Anacrites in a low voice to me. He sat up again, but he stayed there, ready for another go. His tunic was covered with dirt. Ma would have a good flap over that when he went home. Still, he could say he had been out with her rascal son.
Petronius had come up behind me, almost silently. He gave no greeting. He made no jokes. He walked to the far side, looking down from above us. He whistled once, very quietly to himself; then he stood still, assessing the problem. Some of his men lined up with him. Aelianus appeared too. He passed me more rope, which I knotted onto the torchline. I continued lowering it slowly while the others watched.
“Stop there,” ordered Anacrites, now flat on his face again.
I stayed my hand. He scrambled even nearer to the edge, leaning out as far as he dared. Petro muttered a warning. Aelianus bent to a crouch, ready to grab hold of Anacrites by his belt if he slipped. Anacrites shifted, splayed on the ground. Foolishly perhaps, he reached out across the shaft and supported himself against a side wall.
“I can see something.” I paid out a couple more inches of rope. “ Stop-you’ll hit her.”
“Pass it this side,” said Petro. I pulled the rope back up slightly and leaned over to give him the free end, keeping one hand on the taut length. When Petro had taken hold, I let go gently.
“Whoa-it’s swinging madly-wait! Right. More slack-yes, she’s there. She is not moving. The boarding has lodged, and she’s clinging on.”
“All right, Gaia-we can see you now!”
“No. Too late. The torch has gone out.”
Anacrites pushed off from his suspended position, and we hauled him back. He scrambled to his feet, white- faced. He looked around the group of us and shook his head. “It’s a miracle she stuck at that point-and that she has managed to stay there. One false move and the whole lot will slip down further. I couldn’t see how deep it goes.”
Petronius came to life.
“We have to try-is that agreed?” He did not, in fact, wait for an answer. He was going to make the best attempt, whatever anyone else felt. “Right, lads; this is a bearer-and-brattice job.” He was talking to his men. “We want anchor points for the ropes, and the head of the shaft will need lining too. I’m not sending anyone down there only to have the hero and the girl both swept away by shit and rubble from up top. Time we spend stabilizing the head of the shaft won’t be wasted.”
The problem was physical, logistic, a teamwork task. It was natural that the vigiles took over. They had the expertise for reaching inaccessible places in a hurry. They dealt with fires and with collapsed buildings. I had labored in a mine once, in Britain, but it had been surface worked. Even there, proper experts had designed and