
the edge of the Caelian Hill. It was a two-story structure, lowered over by the six-floor apartment blocks
more prevalent in the district. There was little to distinguish Headquarters from private houses elsewhere
in Rome. Its facade was bleak and completely windowless on the stuccoed lower story. The upper floor,
beyond the threat of graffiti and rubbing shoulders, had been sheathed in marble. The veneering was not
in particularly good repair. Missing chips revealed the tufa core. The windows were narrow and barred
horizontally. Most of the glazed sashes were swung open for ventilation despite the nip of a breeze to
which spring was coming late.
Originally, the lower story had been flanked on all sides by shops just as the neighboring apartment
blocks were. The shop doorways had been bricked up when the building was converted to its present
use almost eighty years before, during the reign of Commodus. Even at that distance in time, the windows
and doors could be deduced from shadows on the stucco caused by a moisture content in the bricks
differing from that of the surrounding stone.
The main entrance was off a closed court, not the street Perennius had been following. He paused on the
corner, sighed and cinched up his equipment belt. The agent was used to palaces, to great houses, to
headquarters of many sorts; but he had never felt comfortable in this one. It occurred to him that it was
because he had no real business there. There were Imperial agents and informers throughout Rome, and
no doubt the Emperor had as much need for them here as he did for them anywhere else in the Empire.
That was not a duty Perennius thought he could live with, however. On the borders or across them, the
agent could convince himself that he was working to preserve the Empire. When he was at the core of
that Empire, he saw that the rot, the waste and treachery and peculation, was as advanced as any
nightmare on the borders. What the dour agent was about to do to a finance clerk was a personal thing.
If Perennius permitted himself to know that a similar tale could be told of a thousand, a myriad,
highly-placed bureaucrats in the capital, he would also have had to know that nothing whatever Aulus
Perennius did would have any significant effect.
A pair of armed guards stood in the entrance alcove of the building. Their round shields, stacked against
javelins in opposite corners of the short passage, were marked with the blazons of a battalion of the
Palatine Foot. The Palatines were one of the elite formations the Emperor was forming as a central field
army. All the Empire's borders were so porous that there was no longer a prayer of dealing with hostile
thrusts before they penetrated to the cities and farmland of the interior. Because the Palatines were an
elite, it was all the more frustrating to Perennius that the younger of the guards had not bothered to wear
his body armor.
Both of the uniformed men straightened when they saw that Perennius and Gaius were not sauntering
toward the apartment block at the end of the court. The lower floors of that building seemed, from the
advertisements painted on the stucco, to have been converted into an inn and brothel. The guard who
called out to Perennius was the older of the pair, a man not far short of the agent's own forty years. "All
right, sir," the guard announced with no more than adequate politeness, "if you've got business here, you'll
have to state it to us."
"Get up on the wrong side of the bed this morning, straight-leg?" snapped Gaius in reaction to the tone.
The young man flopped back the edge of his cloak to display his chest insignia, medallions of silvered
bronze. Gaius had been an aide in the Bodyguard Horse before Perennius arranged his secondment to
the Bureau as a courier. The morning before, when they had reached Italy - and very nearly the limits of
friendly territory - the younger man had unpacked and donned his uniform trappings. That was harmless
enough in itself, a boastfulness understandable in an orphan from an Illyrian village no one had ever heard
of. What had sent a chill down Perennius' spine was the realization that Gaius had been carrying the gear
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