David Drake - Birds Of Prey

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CHAPTER ONE
The leader of the mob carried the head of a lion with six-inch fangs. It was on a stake just long enough
for him to wave it as a standard while he bawled a slogan back to his followers.
Aulus Perennius, a block and a half down the street, could not make out the words. It was only reflex,
anyway, that made him want to jot down the slogan in his mind, to freeze the faces of the mob's first rank
for a later report. Beside Perennius, Gaius reached under his cloak. "Romeisn't our assignment,"
Perennius said to the younger man. "What we do now is get out of the way. It'd peeve Navigatus no end
if I got trampled to death a couple blocks from Headquarters after he went to all this effort to call me
back toRome."
Perennius had spoken lightly, but he was muttering a curse that was more general than the immediate
situation as he stepped into an alcove. A barred door there served one of the larger units of the
apartment block. The common stairways to the third through sixth floors were open, but they were
already disgorging a rabble which would join the mob for entertainment. Gaius, Perennius' protege from
his homevillageofDoklea, slid into the doorway beside him.
Aulus Perennius was five feet nine inches tall, a touch above the median. He was a blocky, powerful man
with hands hard enough to be a stone mason's and a face as weathered as a field slave's. His tunic and
dark blue cloak were both of better quality than a laborer could have afforded, however. It did not
require the angular shape of a short sword beneath his cloak to give him a military appearance. Perennius
looked to be a forty-year-old soldier of Illyrian descent. That was what he would in fact have been, had
he not become an agent of the Bureau of Imperial Affairs ten years before.
Gaius was half the agent's age; taller, slimmer - a cheerful-looking youth, and that not only by contrast to
his dour companion. He too wore a sword, a cavalry spatha long enough to project beneath the hem of
his cloak.
Perennius stared at the mob. He knew that it was not the cause of the collapse of everything he had
spent his life trying to preserve. It was no more than a symptom of that collapse. The agent's expression
was nonetheless that of a man who had lived so closely with anger and death that they might now be his
only friends.
The bow shock of the mob was clearing the street ahead of it. Rain earlier that afternoon had left a slick
shimmer of mud and filth on the paving stones, since the sewer beneath was blocked. A sedan chair
came to grief as it tried to turn around. One of the bearers lost his footing and the whole rig came down
on him with a crash and a scream. The woman inside tumbled through the curtains and fouled her silk
tunics in the muck. "Dressed like a whore!" Perennius whispered savagely, but she was too old to owe
her success to that. No doubt she was an official's wife, tarted up just as his mistresses were.
Gaius started to go to her aid. The agent's hand stopped him. The woman stood on her own hefty legs
and screamed at her chairmen. An onlooker scooped up a handful of mud from the gutter and flung it at
her with a taunt in Aramaic. The woman cursed back in the same language, but there were more hands
dipping toward the gutter and the mob itself was closing fast. The woman gathered her skirts and darted
for the relatively dry surface of the covered sidewalk to make her escape.
Her servants followed her. Three of them snatched up their poles and strutted off with the chair. They
were in trouble enough for falling. Loss of the vehicle besides would invite a level of punishment worse
than anything they could expect at the hands of the mob. The fourth bearer limped along behind his
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fellows. He squeezed his right thigh with both hands as if to force out the pain of the bruise it had
received between a brace and the stone pavement.
Shops were closing abruptly. Like the upper-class woman, they were obvious targets for the mob that
would at other times comprise their clientele. The manager of the wineshop in the alcove next to
Perennius slammed down his shutter without even delaying long enough to tug in the cups chained to the
counter. His three patrons kept an eye on the approaching tumult as they slurped their mixtures of water
and powerful African wine. In a bread shop on the ground floor of the building across the street, a
lounger tried to snitch a roll. He squawked as the counterman caught his wrist and pinned his forearm to
the limestone counter with the iron-edged shutter. The hasp of the padlock within must have had enough
reach to close despite the impediment, because the loafer continued to scream even as the mob boiled
past him.
The counterman was almost certainly a slave, perhaps not even the person responsible to the absentee
owner for management of the shop. He had acted not from necessity or even from personal involvement.
In frustration and ah anger more general than the immediate impetus, he had lashed out against the closest
permissible target.
Perennius felt a rush of fellowship for the counterman as he watched the thief screaming. His palm
sweated on the worn bone hilt of his sword.
The mob streamed past with the ragged implacability of the tide on a strand. The front ranks were of
husky men who probably had a purpose. They were shouting, "Down with Baebrio!" The slogan meant
little to Perennius and perhaps less to the jeering multitude following those leaders. This was simply
entertainment for most of the crowd, the landless and jobless, the helpless and hopeless. They would
pour on, shouting and smashing, until a company of the Watch was mustered to block them. Perhaps by
that time, their numbers would have grown so that it was the Watch instead that scattered in a hail of
bricks and roof tiles. If the riot went that far, it would last a day or more before squadrons of imperial
cavalry arrived from Milan to wash the streets clear with blood.
Thugs with cudgels were running down the sidewalks like outriders, banging on doors and shutters.
Gaius and the agent were hidden by their dark cloaks and the shade of the pillar-supported sidewalk
covering. A thug who had just bellowed something back at his companions recoiled in surprise from the
alcove. He was young and burly, with a touch of Germanic pallor to his face. The cudgel that had halted
in surprise he now cocked back with a snarl and a curse. He did not know the pair of them or care about
them as men, but license faced control and reacted to it like acid on lime.
As the cudgel rose, Perennius grinned and spread his cloak with his left hand. His sword had been slung
centurion-fashion from the left side of his equipment belt. It was that sword rather than the
ball-pommeled dagger in the other scabbard that poised to respond to the club. But it was the grin that
froze the thug, not the twenty inches of bare steel in Perennius' hand. The fellow dropped his weapon and
rushed on.
"Let him go," Perennius ordered as Gaius lunged to catch the man. He was nothing but flotsam on a dirty
stream. Perennius, a cloaked figure in the shadows, would be forgotten by nightfall. The death the agent
had been so willing to offer would be forgotten also, until it came calling again in a tavern brawl or a
drunken misstep. The thug did not matter to the world, and to Perennius he was only the latest of the
hundreds who, for one reason or none, had considered killing him.
More interesting than that exchange was the head of the cat which was both banner and probable
occasion for the mob. The great canines winked like spear-points from the upper jaw. Perennius had
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seen cats as big, but he had never seen one similarly armed. The folk surging down the street past the
agent were inured to strangeness by the beast shows of the Circus, but this was to them also a unique
marvel, an omen like a cow which spoke or thunder from a clear sky. It was reason enough for riot; it,
and the barren wasteland of their lives.
Perennius felt the cat grin at him as it was swept past; but the feeling, of course, was nonsense.
Ten minutes after the head of the mob had passed, the street was empty enough that Gaius and
Perennius could walk against what had been the flow. The agent was weary from a journey of over a
thousand straight-line miles - and he had not traversed them in a straight line. He was used to being
weary. He was used to being delayed as well. Throughout the past six months, Perennius had been
delayed repeatedly because the draft transferring funds to his account in Antioch had not arrived.
The agent had made do because he was the sort of person who did make do. Perennius had never
learned patience, but he knew the value of restraint and the power of necessity. The banker in Antioch
had advanced some money and more information when he understood precisely what alternatives the
stocky Imperial agent was setting before him. The sum Perennius had set as the bottom line for both of
them to walk out of the room alive would not bankrupt the other, even if the "mistake" in Rome were
never cleared up.
The banker never seriously considered the possibility that Perennius was bluffing.
The mob had not done a great deal of damage, since its racket was warning enough for most potential
victims to drop their shutters or scamper out of the way. Half a dozen shopkeepers had dared a police
fine by spreading their merchandise out on the sidewalks in front of their alcoves. Anarchy had punished
them more condignly and suddenly than anything the law might have metered out. One old man moaned
in the remains of his trampled, looted woolen goods. His wife was chattering in Egyptian as she dabbed
blood from the pressure-cut in the fellow's scalp.
Perennius picked his way past them with more anger than sympathy. The Empire would work if
everyone obeyed its rules. No one knew better than the agent how great was the Empire's potential if it
would cling together, if its millions would accept what the Empire offered them in the knowledge that it
was more than they would get from chaos if each went his own way.
But no, Britain and Gaul separated, as if they could deal with the Franks better alone than if they waited
for the central army to handle the irruptions across the Rhine after it had blunted more pressing threats.
Generals and governors repeatedly tried to parlay their commands into the Imperial regalia. The attempts
guaranteed death for the usurpers, death for their rivals, and almost certainly death for the system over
which they squabbled and slew. On a lower level, the rabble, dissatisfied with unproductive sloth, rioted
in the streets in an apparent desire to smash the mechanism that fed it.
And shopkeepers defied ordinances aimed at keeping open the thoroughfares on which their business
depended. Well, let them lie in the street and moan. They'd made their choice.
Somewhere in the building toward which Aulus Perennius walked was a clerk who had made a similarly
bad decision. The clerk had siphoned off funds meant for secret intelligence of the Autarch of Palmyra;
intelligence that Perennius was risking his life to supply.
The Headquarters of the Bureau of Imperial Affairs, Western Division, was a converted town-house on
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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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when he arrived in Palmyra to deliver an urgent message to Perennius.
The situation between Gallienus, who styled himself Emperor of Rome, and Odenathus, who claimed
less but perhaps controlled more, was uncertain. The two were not friends . . . nor, at the moment, were
they clearly at swords' points. Perennius travelled as a spice trader, but that was only a veneer over his
claim to be a secret envoy from Postumus, Emperor of the Gauls. Given what the agent had learned in
those paired personae, there was very little doubt as to what the Palmyrenes would have done if Gaius'
vanity had unmasked the pair of them as agents of the central government.
Of what liked to think of itself as the central government, at any rate.
The older guard reacted about the way Perennius would have reacted had he been on entrance duty.
"Don't worry about how I slept, sonny," he said. "Let's just see your pass." The guard wore a shirt of iron
ring mail over his tunic. The metal had been browned, but the linen beneath his armpits bore smudges of
rust nonetheless. It was that problem of maintenance which led many men to prefer bronze armor or even
leather despite the greater strength of the iron.
Of course, a lot of them now were like the younger guard who wore no armor at all. Blazes! See how
comfortable they'd be the first time a Frank's spear slipped past the edge of their shields.
The agent reached into his wallet and brought out one of the flat tablets there. It was of four leaves of
thin board. The outer two acted as covers for the inner pair. "These are my orders," Perennius said,
holding out the diploma. "If they're forgeries, then I've made a hell of a long trip for nothing."
The older guard took the tablet. The wax seal had been broken. He held the document at an angle to the
light to see the impression more clearly. The guard's helmet quivered as his high forehead wrinkled
beneath it.
"You know," said the younger man as his partner opened the tablet, "just having a pass won't get you
farther than the hall. Now, it happens that the receiving clerk is a friend of ours. You understand that
everything's open and above-board inside, what with so many, let's say hands, around. But if I were to
tip him the wink as I sent you through, then it might save you, hell, maybe a day warming a bench in - "
"Maximus," the older guard said. He looked from the diploma to his companion. Perennius was smiling
at the corner of his eye.
" - a bench in the hall," Maximus continued, his conspirator's smile seguing into a quick frown at the
partner who was interrupting his spiel.
"Maximus, shut the fuck up!" the older man snarled. He thrust the open tablet toward his companion.
What was written on the enclosure was simple and standard. It named Perennius, described him in detail
which included his four major scars, and directed him to report to Headquarters - not further identified -
with all dispatch. As such, the document served both for orders and for a pass. There was nothing in the
written portion to frighten anyone who knew as little about Aulus Perennius as either of the guards could
be expected to know.
The tablet had been sealed with the general Bureau signet, a seated woman holding a small sheaf of
wheat. It was a hold-over from the days a century before when the organization had officially been the
Bureau of Grain Supply. The seal within, at the close of the brusk orders, was a personal one. It
impressed in the wax a low relief of a man gripping the steering oar of a ship. Though the guards might
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never have seen the seal in use before, they knew it for that of Marcus Optatius Navigatus. Navigatus
was head of the Bureau, formally the equal of a provincial fiscal officer in authority and informally more
powerful than most governors . . . because he directed men like Aulus Perennius.
Maximus got the point. The helmsman signet smothered his snarl into an engaging grin as he turned from
his partner back to the agent. "Hey, just a joke, sir," he said. "There's just about no traffic through here
anyway, except the morning levee and from the courier's entrance." He gestured with a quick flick of his
head. It was more of a nervous mannerism than a direction toward whichever other entrance to the
building he meant. "No harm done, hey?"
"There could have been," said Perennius.
The older guard closed the tablet carefully and offered it back to the agent. "Thank you, sir. Now, if - "
Perennius ignored him. His eyes forced Maximus back a step. The agent's hard voice continued. "It still
could be, son, couldn't it? Look at me, damn you!"
Gaius cleared his throat and laid a hand lightly on his superior's shoulder. He had seen the reaction
before, always in rear areas, always in response to someone's attempt to parlay petty authority into
injustice. The younger Illyrian knew that it would be to the advantage of everyone if he could calm his
protector before matters proceeded further.
For the moment, Perennius noticed Gaius as little as he did the older guard. Maximus squirmed as he
met the eyes of the shorter, older man. "Listen, you slimy little thief," the agent went on in a fierce
whisper, "If I ever again hear of you shaking down people on the business of this Bureau, I'll come for
you. Do you understand?"
Maximus nodded his head upward in affirmation.
"Do you understand?" Perennius shouted.
Gaius stepped between the two men. "Say yessir, you damned fool!" he snapped to the guard. "And you
better mean it, because he does. Aulus," he added, turning to Perennius, "you back off, he's not worth it."
"The gods know that's true," Perennius muttered. He gripped Gaius' shoulder for support and took a
shuddering breath.
"Yessir," said the guard. He could not believe what was happening. He had just enough intellectual
control to suppress the desire to grasp his sword hilt. This couldn't be happening!
Still touching Gaius, though the support needed was no longer physical, Perennius retrieved his orders
from the other guard. "Sorry," he said to the mail-clad man, "but if I don't cure him, who in blazes will?"
He thrust the diploma into his wallet and began to unbuckle his equipment belt. Gaius stepped back and
wiped his forehead with the inner hem of his cloak.
"Ah, that's right, sir," said the older guard as Perennius loosed his shoulder strap, then the waist buckle
itself. "We'll return your weapons to you when you leave."
"Sure, couldn't have me going berserk in Bureau Headquarters, could we?" said the agent with the only
smile among the four men. His wallet and purse were hung from a separate, much lighter belt. That saved
him the problem of unfastening the hook-mounted scabbards when he disarmed, or handing the sword
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and dagger over bare to be dulled when somebody inevitably dropped them.
"Ah, sir," the guard added tentatively, "the pass is for you alone."
Everyone paused. Perennius laughed abruptly. Maximus flinched away from the sound.
The agent was amused, however. He was not just going through some prelude to the murderous frenzy
about which he had joked. Perennius had intended to carry his protege in to see Navigatus. It would be
good for Gaius' career, especially if the emergency summons meant the Director might need Perennius'
gratitude. Under normal circumstances, the agent could have squared the guards easily enough and taken
Gaius into the building. He did not see any practical way of doing that now that he had thrown a wholly
unnecessary scene. The guards might be willing to compromise - Maximus looked both confused and
terrified - but Perennius' own sense of propriety would not permit him to openly proclaim himself an idiot.
"You know," the agent said as he gave his sword and dagger to the younger guard, "there's times that
even I think I've been on the job too long. The only problem is that when I go on leave, I get wound up
even tighter." He grinned and added, "Don't know what the cure is." But he did know, they all knew that
death was the cure for men in whom frustration and violence mounted higher and higher.
"Well, I'll wait out here," Gaius said. He was a good kid, prideful but not ambitious enough for his own
good. It had probably not occurred to him that he was missing the chance of a real career boost. "Or
look, there's a tavern right there - " he thumbed toward the end of the court. "Look me up when you're
done with your interview."
Perennius glanced first at the westering sun, then back to the younger man. Everybody in a cathouse this
close to Headquarters was probably an informer or a spy in addition to their other duties. Gaius was the
friendly sort who tended to be loose-lipped when he had a cup or two in him or was dipping his wick.
Perennius could not imagine that such talk would do any intrinsic harm, but it would get back to the
Bureau for sure and Internal Security would drop on the kid like an obelisk. "Look," the veteran agent
said, "why don't you head straight to the Transient Barracks and make sure they've assigned us decent
accommodations. There's a nice bath attached to the barracks. I'll meet you there, soon as I can - and
there's shops in the bathhouse, better wine than they'll serve around here."
Gaius shrugged. "Sure," he agreed. "I'll catch you there." The glance he cast over his shoulder as he
walked off was from concern over Perennius, not because the older man was manipulating him.
The agent took a deep breath. "Look," he said to Maximus in a calm, even friendly, tone, "if you wear
your body armor, you'll live longer. Whether or not that's a benefit to the Empire sort of depends on
whether you have sense enough to take good advice."
Maximus nodded stiffly, but there was no belief in his eyes - only fear of the result of giving the wrong
answer to a test that he did not begin to understand.
Perennius sighed. He looked at the older guard, the one with the mail shirt and the scar snaking up his
right arm to where the sleeve of his tunic hid it. The infantryman smiled back at the agent, The expression
was forced but perhaps it was the more notable for that. "Quintus Sestius Cotyla," he volunteered. "Third
Centurion of the Fourth Battalion, Palatine Foot."
"Tell him about it," Perennius said with a nod toward the younger guard. "When the shit comes down,
habits'll either save you or get your ass killed. For a soldier, walking around on duty without armor is a
damned bad habit. But blazes, I've got work to do, I guess."
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Sestius nodded. He rapped sharply on the door with a swagger stick. "Pass one," he called through the
triangular communication grate.
"The tribune doesn't object so long as our brightwork's polished," said Maximus unexpectedly. He held
a rigid brace with his eyes on the opposite building instead of on the man he was addressing.
The door groaned and began to swing inward. Perennius looked at the guard without anger. "Your
tribune," he said "may not have seen as many feet of intestine spilled as I have, sonny. But, like I say, it's
a problem that'll cure itself sooner or later." He stepped between the men into the short passageway that
led to the shabby elegance of the entrance hall.
The interior of the building was very dark by contrast to the sunlit street. Perennius nodded to the
functionary who had opened the door, but he did not notice that the fellow had raised a hand for
attention. "A moment, sir," the man said in a sharp voice as Perennius almost walked into the bar
separating the passage from the hall proper.
The hall was a pool of light which spilled through the large roof vent twenty feet above. The agent's eyes
adapted well enough to see by the scattered reflection that the man who spoke was too well dressed to
be simply a slave used as a doorkeeper. There was a shimmer of silk woven into the linen of his tunic.
"Your pass, sir," he said with his hand out. Beside him stirred the heavy-set man with a cudgel, the civilian
equivalent of the two uniformed men outside. Since the last time Perennius had been here, the Bureau had
added its own credentials check to duplicate that of the army. Clerks seated at desks filling the hall
glanced up at the diversion.
Perennius fingered out his diploma again and handed it to the doorman. "First," he said, "I need to see a
fellow named Zopyrion, Claudius Zopyrion, in one of the finance sections."
The doorman ignored what the agent was saying. He closed the document with a snap and a smile.
"Very good, Legate Perennius," he said in a bright voice. "The Director has requested that you be passed
through to him at once. His office is - "
"I know where the Director's office is," Perennius said quietly. He could feel muscles knotting together,
but he managed not to let his fists clench as they wanted to do. Rome always did this to him; it wasn't
fair. "First I need to see - "
"You can take care of your travel vouchers later, I'm sure, Legate," the functionary interrupted. His smile
was a caricature, now, warping itself into a sneer. "The Director says - "
"Read my lips!" the agent hissed. His voice did not carry to the assembled clerks, but the bruiser in the
passage straightened abruptly. "I said, I'll see Navigatus when I've finished my business with Zopyrion.
Now, if you want to tell me where to find the bastard, fine. Otherwise - " and his eyes measured the
bruiser with cool detachment before flicking back to the doorman - "I guess I'll go look for myself."
Unconquered Sun, Father of Life! He should never have come back.
"Upstairs," the doorman said. He slid aside a curtain behind him. There was a doorway, punched
through a frescoed wall when the house was converted. The plain wooden staircase might have been
original. "He's the head of Finance Two. Follow the corridor to the left."
"Thank you," Perennius said with a nod. He strode to the staircase.
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"I'll inform the Director that you're here, Legate," the doorman said in a distant voice. "No doubt he'll be
amused by your priorities."
"Wish to blazes his priorities amused me, buddy," the agent flung over his shoulder as he stamped
upward. He had replaced his orders in the wallet. Now he was taking out another, similar tablet.
CHAPTER TWO
When the building was a residence, its upper floor had been divided into small cubicles - slave quarters,
storage, and ladder-served additions to the shops and rental housing on the exterior of the lower floor.
The open peristyle court and the garden provided light wells for the rooms to the rear. The entrance hall,
though double height, was roofed except for the vent which served as a skylight and fed the pool beneath
it. The area at the top of the stairs was lighted and ventilated only by the outside windows.
Most of the partition walls had been knocked down during conversion. The windows were opened out
from their frames like vertical louvers to catch what breeze wandered through the maze of higher
buildings and surrounding hills. Even so, the atmosphere within was warm and stuffy. Perennius unpinned
his cloak and gripped it with his left hand. Even in the street, he had worn the garment mostly to keep his
weapons from being too obtrusive. The sword and dagger were legal for him but he preferred to avoid
the hassle of explanations.
A unit of forty or so clerks occupied the area to the left of the staircase. They sat on low stools in front
of desks which were boards slanted from pedestals with holes for ink pots. There was an aisle between
the desks and the enclosed main hall. Perennius followed the aisle in accordance with the doorkeeper's
instructions. The room was alive with noise. Most of the clerks read aloud the reports which they copied
or epitomized. Baskets of scrolls and tablets sat on the floor beside each desk. The din seemed to bother
neither the men who were working nor those who were talking with others at neighboring desks. Some of
the clerks worked and chatted simultaneously. Their fingers and pens followed lines of manuscript while
their tongues discussed the chariot races of the day before.
A supervisor almost walked into Perennius at the corner. "Yes sir?" the man said, startled into Greek.
"I need Claudius Zopyrion," the agent replied. He flashed the document in his hand so that the other man
could see the name of the addressee. Battle in closed ranks had made Perennius as facile at separating
information from noise as any of the gobbling clerks around him.
The supervisor gestured down the aisle in the direction from which he had come. Perennius edged
around the corner so that he could follow the pointing finger. A dozen cubicles remained along the
outside wall, though the partitions of most of the rooms which had faced the light wells had been removed
to seat more clerks. "Third office on the left," the supervisor said.
"Thanks," replied the agent. "And who's his boss? Zopyrion's?"
"Gnaeus Calgurrio," the other man said. He had begun to frown, but he did not ask the agent's business.
"Head of Finance. First office."
Perennius smiled his gratitude and walked off in the indicated direction. He could feel the bureaucrat's
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eyes follow him past the ranks of clerks.
The first office was double the width of the others in the row. As Perennius stepped past, he caught a
glimpse through the doorway of a plump, balding man reclining on a brocaded couch. Seated upright
between the couch and the door was a younger man with hard eyes and a face as ruthless in repose as
Perennius' own. Perfect, the agent thought. He had no immediate need for the department head and his
aide, however. Not until he had prepared things in the second office over.
Perennius slipped in the door and closed it before the cubicle's inhabitant could more than glance up
from the scroll in his hand. "Zopyrion?" the agent asked in a husky whisper.
"Herakles! Who are you?" the other demanded. Zopyrion was a short man with the cylindrical softness
that marked him as a eunuch more clearly than his smooth chin. Like his department head, Zopyrion had
a couch and window; but only one window and a couch with a frame of turned wood instead of the
filigree of his superior's.
The section head spoke Latin with a pronounced Carian accent. Perennius answered in that dialect,
though he was not fully fluent in it. The partitions separating the offices were thin, and the agent wanted
only Zopyrion to understand him at the moment. "I've got a letter from Simonides," the agent said,
preferring the sealed tablet in his hand. "He said for me to take back an answer."
There was a one-legged tablet near the head of the couch. It held writing instruments. "Simonides?" the
bureaucrat repeated as he took the document. He picked up a stylus with which to break the thread
which held the tablet closed. Concern had replaced the initial anger in his voice.
"Simonides of Antioch, the banker," Perennius said as he stepped closer. "You know, the one you used
to wash the - "
"Silence, by Herakles!" Zopyrion gasped. He too had slipped into his native Carian. That was a result of
confusion rather than a conscious desire for secrecy, however. He looked down at the document in his
hand.
It was a tablet of three waxed wooden leaves, hollowed to keep the writing from being flattened to
illegibility when they were closed. Zopyrion began to read the first page in a low sing-song, holding the
page by habit at a flat angle to the light so that shadows brought the wax impressions into relief. "
'Simonides, son of Eustachios, greets Sextus Claudius Zopyrion. I return herewith the draft by which you
ordered me to transfer two hundred gold solidi from Imperial accounts to your brother-in-law, Nelius
Juturnus. .. .' " The clerk looked up again in utter, abject terror at Perennius, who now stood beside him.
The agent's left hand rested on the table, covering the alabaster ink pot there. "Why in the name of
Fortune did he write this?" Zopyrion demanded.
The agent laughed. "Oh," he said, "maybe it was when I asked him which orifice he wanted to swallow
my sword through, hey? But take a look at the draft - " he tapped with his right forefinger the pair of
pages which were still closed. "You know, it seems to me your department head's seal is a bit fuzzy, like
somebody used a plaster copy instead of the original."
Zopyrion's eyes followed the tapping finger. As his head bent slightly, Perennius hit him behind the ear
with the base of the ink pot. It was an awkward, left-handed blow, but there was enough muscle behind
it to spill the clerk flaccidly onto the floor. The table went over on top of him with a crash.
Perennius set the stone pot down on its side carefully, so that there would be no additional noise. There
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摘要:

CHAPTER ONETheleaderofthemobcarriedtheheadofalionwithsix-inchfangs.Itwasonastakejustlongenoughforhimtowaveitasastandardwhilehebawledasloganbacktohisfollowers.AulusPerennius,ablockandahalfdownthestreet,couldnotmakeoutthewords.Itwasonlyreflex,anyway,thatmadehimwanttojotdownthesloganinhismind,tofreezet...

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