“Are we in trouble, sir?”
“I don’t know,” said Ruso. “But somebody should be.”
Chapter 10
Ruso left Pera to worry, and seated himself on a wobbly stool in the office. He was aware of his every move being scrutinized by a hefty clerk who, despite being told to stand easy, still looked as though he were being squeezed into a small space on one of his own shelves.
Medical records, as Ruso had insisted to Pera and dozens like him over the years, were crucial. They told the next medic what you’d seen and done. They told
Like asking what that wooden box with “Sulio” chalked on the side was doing here.
“It’s his effects, sir. We’re waiting for someone to collect them.”
Ruso eyed the bloodstained writing tablet sticking out from a fold of cloth. “Did he write a last note?”
The man leaned forward and pulled it out. “Tucked into his belt, sir.”
Ruso had begun to read by the time the clerk added, “It’s a letter from his mother, sir.”
He had already skimmed far enough to know that the mother was praying for her son’s success and enclosing some lambskin to line his boots. He slapped it shut and handed it back. “If I’d known that, I wouldn’t have asked.”
He tried not to imagine the woman’s pleasure at receiving a reply. Eager for news, she would take it to someone who could read-perhaps the scribe to whom she had dictated this-and he would read out Geminus’s words informing her that her faraway son had been dead for several days.
“A waste of a life,” he said, feeling as though he should make some comment.
“Yes, sir.”
Still, Sulio’s mother was not his problem. The medical service was. The clerk was watching him: he must make a good show of inspecting the records.
“Right,” he said, wishing as he always did at this stage that his own clerk-who genuinely loved this sort of thing-were still in the army, instead of hanging around down in Verulamium while a local woman decided whether or not she wanted to marry him. “Show me what you’ve got here, will you?”
Moments later a set of extralong wooden tablets listing admissions was laid out before him on the desk. Running a finger down the entries, he noted the acceptance of a body into the mortuary some weeks ago:
“What can you tell me about the training regime here?”
This was clearly not a question the clerk was expecting. “You’d have to ask Centurion Geminus about that, sir.”
“I will. But first I’m asking you.”
“Well, it’s just … basic training, really. Drill and military pace, learning the commands, physical training … jumping and vaulting, that sort of thing.”
“I see.”
“Use and maintenance of weapons,” added the clerk, evidently keen to show that he had not forgotten.
“So-”
“Throwing missiles, sir. And swimming in the river.”
“So would you say it’s significantly different from your own training?”
“Running, sir. That’s another one. Plenty of running. Long-distance marches with full kit twice a week.”
“So nothing unusual?”
“I don’t think so, sir.”
“There seem to be a lot of training injuries.”
“It’s the recruits, sir,” said the clerk cryptically.
“The recruits?”
“They keep having accidents, sir.”
It might not be as ridiculous as it sounded. Hadrian’s promise of reinforcements had aroused fears amongst senior officers in Britannia that they would be fobbed off with all the idlers and troublemakers that none of the other legions wanted. The consequent pressure for hasty recruitment was bound to result in some bad choices. This bunch might be clumsy rather than cursed. Still, that did not explain either of the bodies in the mortuary.
He found the second death two sheets further on. The entry was dated the day before yesterday. The word
When he asked to see the postmortem report on Tadius, the clerk looked blank. “There isn’t one, sir. Dead on arrival.”
Ruso pointed to the register. “Whose signature is that?”
The clerk peered at it. “It’s hard to say, sir.”
“Where would I find the records for Tadius?”
Moments later the clerk was apologizing as he fumbled with the twine holding the postmortem report together. “I can’t understand how it got there without me seeing it, sir. They usually just leave everything in a heap on the desk for me to put away.”
On separating the pair of wax-coated leaves, Ruso was gratified to see a full set of neatly written notes covering both sides, dated the same day as the admission. His insistence on the value of record keeping had not been wasted. The hurried scrawl by the admission notice had belonged to Pera.
There was, of course, no mention of the nonsense about falling off the stretcher. It was a thorough report detailing the injuries he had seen just now: injuries sustained by a man who had died from a blow to the head following the sort of fight that should never have been permitted to take place on a training ground.
Pera had recorded the evidence, yet for some reason he had taken the matter no further himself and seemed desperate to keep Ruso out of it too.
Ruso closed the report, handed it back to the clerk for filing, and sighed. Eboracum should have been such a simple trip. If only Pera had come up with a good reason for silence, he would have been happy to collude with it, on the grounds that whatever they did, the man would still be dead. But Pera had not.
Meanwhile, the recruits seemed to believe that they were cursed. And the glum recruit with the broken wrist had been right: If the story reached Deva, he and his comrades would not get a warm welcome.
Ruso left the office deep in thought. He was not an investigator now. He could leave the business of Tadius’s death alone and decide it was someone else’s problem. But it involved the medical service, which was his responsibility, and what was the point of inspecting if he was not going to act on what he found?
Nodding to the statue of Aesculapius in the hospital entrance hall, he could not help wondering if the gods had noted his decision to avoid all the fuss and bother of Hadrian’s visit and decided to have some fun with him.
Chapter 11
As Ruso hurried down the hospital steps, the wind snatched at his cloak and spattered cold rain down his