Caesar Dies - Talbot Mundy
The team tired first. It was its waning speed that wearied him at last.
The mania that owned him could not tolerate the anticlimax of declining
effort, so his mood changed. He became morose--indifferent. He reined
in, tossed the reins to an attendant and began to walk toward the tunnel
entrance, clothed as he was in nothing but the practise loin-cloth of a
gladiator.
A dozen senators implored him to wait and clothe himself. He would not
wait. He ordered them to bring his cloak and overtake him. Then he
observed Narcissus, standing near the horse-gate, waiting to summon his
trained gladiators for an exhibition:
"Not this time, Narcissus. Next time. Follow me." He waited for a
moment for Narcissus. That gave the substitute time to come down from
the box and go hurrying ahead into the tunnel-mouth; he went so fast
(for he knew the emperor's moods) that the attendants found it hard to
keep up; most of them were half a dozen paces in the rear. A senator
gave Commodus his cloak. He took Narcissus by the arm and strode ahead
into the tunnel, muttering, ignoring noisy protests from the senators,
who warned him that the guards were not yet there.
Then there was sudden silence; possibly a consequence of Caesar's mood,
or the reaction caused by chill and tunnel-darkness after sunlit sand.
Or it might have been the shadow of impending tragedy. A long scream
broke the silence, thrice repeated, horrible, like something from an
unseen world. Instantly Narcissus leaped ahead into the darkness,
weaponless but armed by nature with the muscles of a panther. Commodus
leaped after him; his mood reversed again. Now emulation had him; he
would not be beaten to a scene of action by a gladiator. He let his
cloak fall and a senator tripped over it.
There were no lamps. Something less than twilight, deepened here and
there by shadow, filled the tunnel. By a niche intended for a sentry
the attendants were standing helplessly around the body of a man who lay
with head and shoulders propped against the wall. Narcissus and
another, like knotted snakes, were writhing near by. There was a sound
of choking. Pavonius Nasor was silent. He appeared already dead.
"Pluto! Is there no light?" Commodus demanded. "What has happened?"
"They have killed your shadow, sire!"
"Who killed him?"
"Men who sprang out of the darkness suddenly."
"One man. Only one. I have him here. He lives yet, but he dies!"
Narcissus said.
He dragged a writhing body on the flagstones, holding it by one wrist.
"He was armed. I had to throttle him to save my liver from his knife.
I think I broke his neck. He is certainly dying," said Narcissus.
Some one had gone for a lamp and came along the tunnel with it.
"Let me look," said Commodus. "Here, give me that lamp!"
He looked first at Pavonius Nasor, who gazed back, at him with stupid,
passionless, already dimming eyes. A stream of blood was gushing from
below his left arm.
"Now the gods of heaven and hell, and all the strange gods that have no
resting place, and all the spirits of the air and earth and sea, defile
your spirit!" Commodus exploded. "Careless, irresponsible, ungrateful
fool! You have deprived me of my liberty! You let yourself be killed
like any sow under the butcher's knife, and dare to leave me shadowless?
Then die like carrion and rot unburied!"
He began to kick him, but the stricken man's lips moved. Commodus bent
down and tried to listen--tried again, mastered impatience and at last
stood upright, shaking both fists at the tunnel roof.
"Omnipotent Progenitor of Lightnings!" he exploded. "He says he should
have had stewed eels tonight!"
The watching senators mistook that for a cue to laugh. Their laughter
touched off all the magazines of Caesar's rage. He turned into a mania.
He tore at his own hair. He tore off his loin-cloth and stood naked.
He tried to kill Narcissus, because Narcissus was the nearest to him.
His crashing centurion's parade voice filled the tunnel.
"Dogs! Dogs' ullage! Vipers!" he yelled. "Who slew my shadow? Who did
it? This is a conspiracy! Who hatched it? Bring my tablets! Warn the
executioners! What is Commodus without his dummy? Vultures! Better
have killed me than that poor obliging fool! You cursed, stupid idiots!
You have killed my dummy! I must sit as he did and look on. I must
swallow stinking air of throne-rooms. I must watch sluggards fight--you
miserable, wanton imbeciles! It is Paulus you have killed! Do you
appreciate that? Jupiter, but I will make Rome pay for this! Who did
it? Who did it, I say?"
Rage blinded him. He did not see the choking wretch whose wrist
Narcissus twisted, until he struck at Narcissus again and, trying to
follow him, stumbled over the assassin.
"Who is this? Give me a sword, somebody! Is this the murderer? Bring
that lamp here!"
Bolder than the others, having recently been praised, the senator
Tullius brought the lamp and, kneeling, held it near the culprit's face.
The murderer was beyond speech, hardly breathing, with his eyes half-
bursting from the sockets and his tongue thrust forward through his
teeth because Narcissus' thumbs had almost strangled him.
"A Christian," said Tullius.
There was a note of quiet exultation in his voice. The privileges of
the Christians were a sore point with the majority of senators.
"A what?" demanded Commodus.
"A Christian. See--he has a cross and a fish engraved on bone and wears
it hung from his neck beneath his tunic. Besides, I think I recognize
the man. I think he is the one who waylaid Pertinax the other day and
spoke strange stuff about a whore on seven hills whose days are
numbered."
He had raised up the man's head by the hair. Commodus stamped on the
face with the flat of his sandal, crushing the head on the flagstones.
"Christian!" he shouted. "Is this Marcia's doing? Is this Marcia's
expedient to keep me out of the arena? Too long have I endured that
rabble! I will rid Rome of the brood! They kill the shadow--they shall
feel the substance!"
Suddenly he turned on his attendants--pointed at the murderer and his
victim:
"Throw those two into the sewer! Strip them--strip them now--let none
identify them. Seize those spineless fools who let the murder happen.
Tie them. You, Narcissus--march them back to the arena. Have them
thrown into the lions' cages. Stay there and see it done, then come and
tell me."
The courtiers backed away from him as far out of the circle of the
lamplight as the tunnel-wall would let them. He had snatched the lamp
from Tullius. He held it high.
"Two parts of me are dead; the shadow that was satisfied with eels for
supper and the immortal Paulus whom an empire worshiped. Remains me--the
third part--Commodus! You shall regret those two dead parts of me!"
He hurled the lighted lamp into the midst of them and smashed it, then,
in darkness, strode along the tunnel muttering and cursing as he went--
stark naked.
X. "ROME IS TOO MUCH RULED BY WOMEN!"
"He is in the bath," said Marcia. She and Galen were alone with
Pertinax, who looked splendid in his official toga. She was herself in
disarray. Her woman had tried to dress her hair on the way in the
litter; one long coil of it was tumbling on her shoulder. She looked
almost drunken.
"Where is Flavia Titiana?" she demanded.
"Out," said Pertinax and shut his lips. He never let himself discuss
his wife's activities. The peasant in him, and the orthodox grammarian,
preferred less scandalous subjects.
Marcia stared long at him, her liquid, lazy eyes, suggesting banked
fires in their depths, looking for signs of spirit that should rise to
the occasion. But Pertinax preferred to choose his own occasions.
"Commodus is in the bath," Marcia repeated. "He will stay there until
night comes. He is sulking. He has his tablets with him--writes and
writes, then scratches out. He has shown what he writes to nobody, but
he has sent for Livius."
"We should have killed that dog," said Pertinax, which brought a sudden
laugh from Galen.
"A dog's death never saved an empire," Galen volunteered. "If you had
murdered Livius the crisis would have come a few days sooner, that is
all."
"It is the crisis. It has come," said Marcia. "Commodus came storming
into my apartment, and I thought he meant to kill me with his own hands.
Usually I am not afraid of him. This time he turned my strength to
water. He yelled 'Christians!' at me, 'Christians! You and your
Christians!' He was unbathed. He was half-naked. He was sweaty from
his exercise. His hair was ruffled; he had torn out some of it. His
scowl was frightful--it was freezing."
"He is quite mad," Galen commented.
"I tried to make him understand this could not be a plot or I would
certainly have heard of it," Marcia went on with suppressed excitement.
"I said it was the madness of one fanatic, that nobody could foresee.
He wouldn't listen. He out-roared me. He even raised his fist to
strike. He swore it was another of my plans to keep him out of the
arena. I began to think it might be wiser to admit that. Even in his
worst moods he is sometimes softened by the thought that I take care of
him and love him enough to risk his anger. But not this time! He flew
into the worst passion I have ever seen. He returned to his first
obsession, that the Christians plotted it and that I knew all about it.
He swore he will butcher the Christians. He will rid Rome of them. He
says, since he can not play Paulus any longer he will out-play Nero."
"Where is Sextus?" Pertinax asked.
"Aye! Where is Sextus!"
Marcia glared at Galen.
"We have to thank you for Sextus! You persuaded Pertinax to shield
Sextus. Pertinax persuaded me."
"You did it!" Galen answered dryly. "It is what we do that matters.
Squealing like a pig under a gate won't remedy the matter. You foresaw
the crisis long ago. Sextus has been very useful to you. He has kept
you informed, so don't lower yourself by turning on him now. What is
the latest news about the other factions?"
Marcia restrained herself, biting her lip. She loved old Galen, but she
did not relish being told the whole responsibility was hers, although
she knew it.
"There is no news," she answered. "Nobody has heard a word about the
murder yet. Commodus has had the bodies thrown into the sewer. But
there are spies in the palace--"
"To say nothing of Bultius Livius," Pertinax added. He was clicking the
rings on his fingers--symptom of irresolution that made Marcia grit her
teeth.
"The other factions are watching one another," Marcia went on. "They are
irresolute because they have no leader near enough to Rome to strike
without warning. Why are you irresolute?" She looked so hard at
Pertinax that he got up and began to pace the floor. "Severus and his
troops are in Pannonia. Pescennius Niger is in Syria. Clodius Albinus
is in Britain. The senators are all so jealous and afraid for their own
skins that they are as likely as not to betray one another to Commodus
the minute they learn that a crisis exists. If they hear that Commodus
is writing out proscription lists they will vie with one another to
denounce their own pet enemies--including you--and me!" she added.
"There is one chance yet," said Pertinax. "Bultius Livius may have
enough wisdom to denounce the leaders of the other factions and to clear
us. None of the others would be grateful to him. That Carthaginian
Severus, for instance, is invariably spiteful to the men who do him
favors. Bultius Livius may see that to protect us is his safest course,
as well as best for Rome."
He had more to say, but Marcia's scorn interrupted him. Galen chuckled.
"Rome! He cares only for Bultius Livius. It is now or never,
Pertinax!"
Marcia's intense emotion made her appear icily indifferent, but she did
not deceive Galen, although Pertinax welcomed her calmness as excusing
unenthusiasm in herself.
"Marcia is right," said Galen. "It is now or never. Marcia ought to
know Commodus!"
"Know him?" she exploded. "I can tell you step by step what he will do!
He will come out of the bath and eat a light meal, but he will drink
nothing, for fear of poison. Presently he will be thirsty and lonely,
and will send for me; and whatever he feels, he will pretend he loves
me. When the raging fear is on him he will never drink from any one but
me. He will take a cup of wine from my hands, making me taste it first.
Then he will go alone into his own room, where only that child
Telamonion will dare to follow. Everything depends then on the child.
If the child should happen to amuse him he will turn sentimental and I
will dare to go in and talk to him. If not--"
Galen interrupted.
"Madness," he said, "resembles many other maladies, there being symptoms
frequently for many years before the slow fire bursts into a blaze.
Some die before the outbreak, being burned up by the generating process,
which is like a slow fire. But if they survive until the explosion, it
is more violent the longer it has been delayed. And in the case of
Commodus that means that other men will die. And women," he added,
looking straight at Marcia.
"If he even pretends he loves me--I am a woman," said Marcia. "I love
him in spite of his frenzies. If I only had myself to think of--"
"Think then!" Galen interrupted. "If you can't think for yourself, do
you expect to benefit the world by thinking?"
Marcia buried her face in her hands and lay face downward on the couch.
She was trembling in a struggle for self-mastery. Pertinax chewed at his
finger-nails, which were the everlasting subject of his proud wife's
indignation; he never kept his fine hands properly; the peasant in him
thought such refinements effeminate, unsoldierly. Cornificia, who could
have made him submit even to a manicure, understood him too well to
insist.
"Galen!" said Marcia, sitting up suddenly.
The old man blinked. He recognized decision sudden and irrevocable. He
clenched his fingers and his lower lip came forward by the fraction of
an inch.
"I must save my Christians. What do you know about poisons?" she
demanded.
"Less than many people," Galen answered. "I have studied antidotes. I
am a doctor. Those I poisoned thought as I did, that I gave them
something for their health. My methods have changed with experience.
Doctoring is like statesmanship--which is to say, groping in the dark
through mazes of misinformation."
"Know you a poison," asked Marcia, "that will not harm one who merely
tastes it, but will kill whoever drinks a quantity? Something without
flavor? Something colorless that can be mixed with wine? Know you a
safe poison, Galen?"
"Aye--irresolution!" Galen answered. "I will not be made a victim of
it. Who shall aspire to the throne if Commodus dies?"
"Pertinax!"
Pertinax looked startled, stroking his beard, uncrossing his knees.
"Then let Pertinax do his own work," said Galen. "Rome is full of
poisoners, but hasn't Pertinax a sword?"
"Aye. And it has been the emperor's until this minute," Pertinax said
grimly. "Galen tells us Commodus is mad. And I agree that Rome
deserves a better emperor. But whether I am fit to be that emperor is
something not yet clear to me. I doubt it. Whom the Fates select for
such a purpose, they compel, and he is unwise who resists them. I will
not resist. But let there be no doubt on this point: I will not slay
Commodus. I will not draw sword against the man to whom I owe my
fortune. I am not an ingrate. Sextus lives for his revenge. If you
should ask me I would answer, Sextus planned this murder in the tunnel
and the blow was meant for Commodus himself. I am inclined to deal with
Sextus firmly. It is not too late. There is a chance that Commodus,
deprived now of his opportunities to make himself a spectacle, may bend
his energies to government. Madman though he is, he is the emperor, and
if he is disposed now to govern well, with capable advisers, I would be
the last to turn on him."
"If he will be advised by you?" suggested Marcia, her accent tart with
sarcasm. "What will you advise him about Sextus?"
"There are plenty of ways of getting rid of Sextus without killing him,"
said Pertinax. "He is a young man needing outlets for his energy and
fuel for his pride. If he were sent to Parthia, in secret, as an agent
authorized to penetrate that country and report on military,
geographical and economic facts--"
"He would refuse to go!" said Galen. "And if made to go, he would
return! O Pertinax--!"
"Be quiet!" Pertinax retorted irritably. "I will not submit to being
lectured. I am Governor of Rome--though you are Galen the philosopher.
And I remember many of your adages this minute, as for instance: 'It is
he who acts who is responsible.' To kill an emperor is easy, Galen. To
replace him is as difficult as to fit a new head to a body. We have
talked a lot of treason, most of it nonsense. I have listened to too
much of it. I am as guilty as the others. But when it comes to slaying
Commodus and standing in his shoes--"
Marcia interrupted.
"By the great Twin Brethren, Pertinax! Who can be surprised that Flavia
Titiana seeks amusement in the arms of other men! Does Cornificia
endure such peasant talk? Or do you keep it to impose on us as a relief
from her more noble conversation? Dea Dia! Had I known how spineless
you can be I would have set my cap at Lucius Severus long ago. It may
be it is not too late."
She had him! She had pricked him in the one place where he could be
stirred to spitefulness. His whole face crimsoned suddenly.
"That Carthaginian!" He came and stood in front of her. "If you had
favored him you should have foregone my friendship, Marcia! Commodus is
bad enough. Severus would be ten times worse! Where Commodus is merely
crazy, Lucius Severus is a calculating, ice-cold monster of cruelty! He
has no emotions except those aroused by venom! He would tear out your
heart just as swiftly as mine! As for plotting with him, he would let
you do it all and then denounce you to the senate after he was on the
throne!"
"Either it must be Severus, or else you!" said Marcia. "Which is it to
be?"
Pertinax folded his arms.
"I would feel it my duty to preserve Rome from Severus. But you go too
fast. Our Commodus is on the throne--"
"And writes proscription lists!" said Marcia. "Who knows what names are
on the lists already? Who knows what Bultius Livius may have told him?
Who knows which of us will be alive tomorrow morning? Who knows what
Sextus is doing? If Sextus has heard of this crisis he will seize the
moment and either arouse the praetorian guard to mutiny or else reach
Commodus himself and slay him with his own hand! Sextus is a man! Are
you no more than Flavia Titiana's cuckold and Cornificia's plaything?"
"I am a Roman," Pertinax retorted angrily. "I think of Rome before
myself. You women only think of passion and ambition. Rome--city of a
thousand triumphs!" He turned away, pacing the floor again, knitting
his fingers behind him. "Pertinax would offer up himself if he might
bring back the Augustan days--if he might win the warfare that Tiberius
lost. One Pertinax is nothing in the life of Rome. One life, three-
quarters spent, is but a poor pledge to the gods--yet too much to be
thrown away in vain. The auguries are all mixed nowadays. I doubt
them. I mistrust the shaven priests who dole out answers in return for
minted money. I have knelt before the holy shrine of Vesta, but the
Virgins were as vague as the Egyptian who prophesied--"
He hesitated.
"What?" demanded Marcia.
"That I should serve Rome and receive ingratitude. What else does any
man receive who serves Rome? They who cheat her are the ones who
prosper!"
"Send for Cornificia," said Marcia. "She keeps your resolution. Let her
come and loose it!" Pertinax turned sharply on her.
"Flavia Titiana shall not suffer that indignity. Cornificia can not
enter this house."
But the mention of Cornificia's name wrought just as swift a change in
him as had the name of Lucius Severus. He began to bite his finger-
nails, then clenched his hands again behind him, Galen and Marcia
watching.
"You are the only one who can replace Commodus without drenching Rome in
blood," said Marcia, remembering a phrase of Cornificia's. And since
the words were Cornificia's, and stirred the chords of many memories,
they produced a sort of half-way resolution.
"It is now or never," Marcia said, goading him. But Pertinax shook his
head.
"I am not convinced, though I would do my best to save Rome from
Severus. Dioscuri!--do you realize, this plot to make me emperor is
known to not more than a dozen--"
"Therein safety lies," said Marcia. "Yourself included there can only
be a dozen traitors!"
"Rome is too much ruled by women! I will not kill Commodus, and I will
give him this one chance," said Pertinax. "I will protect him, unless
and until I shall discover proof that he intends to turn on you, or me,
or any of my friends."
"You may discover that too late!" said Marcia; but she seemed to
understand him and looked satisfied. "Come tonight to the palace--
Galen," she added, "come you also--and bring poison!"
Galen met her gaze and shut his lips tight.
"Galen," she said, "either you will do this or--I have been your friend.
Now be you mine! It is too risky to send one of my slaves to fetch a
poison. You are to come tonight and bring the poison with you.
Otherwise--you understand?"
"You are extremely comprehensible!" said Galen, pursing up his lips.
"You will obey?"
"I must," said Galen. But he did not say whether he would obey her or
his inclination. Pertinax, eyeing him doubtfully, seemed torn between
suspicion of him and respect for long-tried friendship.
"May we depend on you?" he asked. He laid a hand on Galen's shoulder,
bending over him.
"I am an old man," Galen answered. "In any event I have not long to
live. I will do my best--for you."
Pertinax nodded, but there was still a question in his mind. He bade
farewell to Marcia, turning his back toward Galen. Marcia whispered:
"Be a man now, Pertinax! If we should lose this main, we two can drink
the stuff that Galen brings."
"There was a falling star last night," said Pertinax. "Whose was it?"
Marcia studied his face a moment. Then:
"There will be a rising sun tomorrow!" she retorted. "Whose will it be?
Yours! Play the man!"
XI. GALEN
Galen's house was one he rented from a freedman of the emperor--a wise
means of retaining favor at the palace. Landlords having influence were
careful to protect good tenants. Furthermore, whoever rented, rather
than possessed, escaped more easily from persecution. Galen, like
Tyanan Apollonius, reduced his private needs, maintaining that
philosophy went hand in hand with medicine, but wealth with neither.
It was a pleasant little house, not far away from Cornificia's, within a
precinct that was rebuilt after all that part of Rome burned under
Nero's fascinated gaze. The street was crescent-shaped, not often
crowded, though a score of passages like wheel-spokes led to it; and to
the rear of Galen's house was a veritable maze of alleys. There were
two gates to the house: one wide, with decorated posts, that faced the
crescent street, where Galen's oldest slave sat on a stool and blinked
at passers-by; the other narrow, leading from a little high-walled
courtyard at the rear into an alley between stables in which milch-asses
were kept. That alley led into another where a dozen midwives had their
names and claims to excellency painted on the doors--an alley carefully
to be avoided, because women of that trade, like barbers, vied for
custom by disseminating gossip.
So Sextus used a passage running parallel to that one, leading between
workshops where the burial-urn makers' slaves engraved untruthful
epitaphs in baked clay or inlaid them on the marble tomb-slabs--to be
gilded presently with gold-leaf (since a gilded lie, though costlier, is
no worse than the same lie unadorned.)
He drummed a signal with his knuckles on the panel of a narrow door of
olive-wood, set deep into the wall under a projecting arch. An
overleaning tree increased the shadow, and a visitor could wait without
attracting notice. A slave nearly as old as Galen presently admitted
him into a paved yard in which a fish-pond had been built around an
ancient well. A few old fruit-trees grew against the wall, and there
were potted shrubs, but little evidence of gardening, most of Galen's
slaves being too old for that kind of work. There were a dozen of them
loafing in the yard; some were so fat that they wheezed, and some so
thin with age that they resembled skeletons. There was a rumor that the
fatness and the thinness were accounted for by Galen's fondness for
experiments. Old Galen had a hundred jealous rivals and they even said
he fed the dead slaves to the fish; but it was Roman custom to give no
man credit for humaneness if an unclean accusation could be made to
stick.