It was not yet dusk. The sun
shone on the bronze roof of the temple of Apollo,
making such a contrast to, and harmony with, marble
and the green of giant cypresses as only music can
suggest. The dying breeze stirred hardly a ripple
on the winding ponds, so marble columns, trees and
statuary were reflected amid shadows of the swans in
water tinted by the colors of the sinking sun.
There was a murmur of wind in the tops of the trees
and a stirring of linen-clad girls near the temple
entrance voices droning from the near-by
booths behind the shrubbery one flute,
like the plaint of Orpheus summoning Eurydice a
blossom-scented air and an enfolding mystery of silence.
Pertinax, the governor of Rome, had
merely hinted at Olympian desire, whereat some rich
Antiochenes, long privileged, had been ejected with
scant ceremony from a small marble pavilion on an islet,
formed by a branch of the River Ladón that had
been guided twenty years ago by Hadrian’s engineers
in curves of exquisitely studied beauty. From
between Corinthian columns was a view of nearly all
the temple precincts and of the lawns where revelers
would presently forget restraint. The first
night of the Daphne season usually was the wildest
night of all the year, but they began demurely, and
for the present there was the restraint of expectation.
Because there was yet snow on mountain-tops
and the balmy air would carry a suggestion of a chill
at sunset, there were cunningly wrought charcoal braziers
set near the gilded couches, grouped around a semicircular
low table so as to give each guest an unobstructed
view from the pavilion. Pertinax neither
guest nor host, but a god, as it were, who had arrived
and permitted the city of Antioch to ennoble itself
by paying his expenses stretched his long
length on the middle couch, with Galen the physician
on his right hand, Sextus on his left. Beyond
Galen lay Tarquinius Divius and Sulpicius Glabrio,
friends of Pertinax; and on Sextus’ left was
Norbanus, and beyond him Marcus Fabius a young tribune
on Pertinax’ staff. There was only one
couch unoccupied.
Galen was an older man than Pertinax,
who was already graying at the temples. Galen
had the wrinkled, smiling, shrewd face of an old philosopher
who understood the trick of making himself socially
prominent in order to pursue his calling unimpeded
by the bitter jealousies of rivals. He understood
all about charlatanry, mocked it in all its disguises
and knew how to defeat it with sarcastic wit.
He wore none of the distinguishing insignia that
practising physicians usually favored; the studied
plainness of his attire was a notable contrast to
the costly magnificence of Pertinax, whose double-purple-bordered
and fringed toga, beautifully woven linen and jeweled
ornaments seemed chosen to combine suggestions of
the many public offices he had succeeded to.
He was a tall, lean, handsome veteran
with naturally curly fair hair and a beard that, had
it been dark, would have made him look like an Assyrian.
There was a world of humor in his eyes, and an expression
on his weathered face of wonder at the ways of men an
almost comical confession of his own inferiority of
birth, combined with matter-of-fact ability to do
whatever called for strength, endurance and mere ordinary
common sense.
“You are almost ashamed of your
own good fortune,” Galen told him. “You
wear all that jewelry, and swagger like the youngest
tribune, to conceal your diffidence. Being honest,
you are naturally frugal; but you are ashamed of
your own honesty, so you imitate the court’s
extravagance and made up for it with little meannesses
that comfort your sense of extremes. The truth
is, Pertinax, you are a man with a boy’s enthusiasms,
a boy with a man’s experience.”
“You ought to know,” said
Pertinax. “You tutored Commodus. Whoever
could take a murderer at the age of twelve and keep
him from breaking the heart of a Marcus Aurelius knows
more about men and boys than I do.”
“Ah, but I failed,” said
Galen. “The young Commodus was like a nibbling
fish; you thought you had him, but he always took
the bait and left the hook. The wisdom I fed
to him fattened his wickedness. If I had known
then what I have learned from teaching Commodus and
others, not even Marcus Aurelius could have persuaded
me to undertake the task medical problem
though it was, and promotion though it was, and answer
though it was to all the doctors who denounced me
as a charlatan. I bought my fashionable practise
at the cost of knowing it was I who taught young Commodus
the technique of wickedness by revealing to him all
its sinuosities and how, and why, it floods a man’s
mind.”
“He was a beast in any case,” said Pertinax.
“Yes, but a baffled, blind beast. I removed
the bandage from his eyes.”
“He would have pulled it off himself.”
“I did it. I turned a
mere golden-haired savage into a criminal who knows
what he is doing.”
“Well, drink and forget it!”
said Pertinax. “I, too, have done things
that are best forgotten. We attain success by
learning from defeat, and we forget defeat in triumph.
I know of no triumph that did not blot out scores
of worse things than defeat. When I was in Britain
I subdued rebellion and restored the discipline of
mutinying legions. How? I am not such
a fool as to tell you all that happened! When
I was in Africa men called me a great proconsul.
So I was. They would welcome me back there,
if all I hear about the present man is true.
But do you suppose I did not fail in certain instances?
They praise me for the aqueducts I built, and for
the peace I left along the border. But I also
left dry bones, and sons of dead men who will teach
their grandsons how to hate the name of Rome!
I sent a hundred thousand slaves from Africa.
Sometimes, when I have dined unwisely and there is
no Galen near to freshen up my belly juices, I have
nightmares, in which men and women cry to me for water
that I took from them to pour into the cities.
I have learned this, Galen: Do one thing wisely
and you will commit ten follies. You are lucky
if you have but ten failures to detract from one success as
lucky as a man who has but ten mistresses to interfere
with his enjoyment of his wife!”
He spoke of mistresses because the
girls were coming down the temple steps to take part
in the sunset ceremony. The torches they carried
were unlighted yet; their figures, draped in linen,
looked almost super-humanly lovely in the deepening
twilight, and as they laid their garlands on the marble
altar near the temple steps and grouped themselves
again on either side of it their movements suggested
a phantasmagoria fading away into infinite distance,
as if all the universe were filled with women without
age or blemish. There began to be a scent of
incense in the air.
“We only imitate this kind of
thing in Rome,” said Pertinax. “A
larger scale, a coarser effect. What I find
thrilling is the sensation they contrive here of unseen
mysteries. Whereas ”
“There won’t be any mystery
left presently! They’ll strip your last
veil from imagination!” Sextus interrupted, laughing.
“Men say Hadrian tried to chasten this place,
but he only made them realize the artistic value of
an appearance of chastity, that can be thrown off.
Hark! The evening hymn.”
The torches suddenly were lighted
by attendant slaves. The stirring, shaken sistra
wrought a miracle of sound that set the nerves all
tingling as the high priest, followed by his boys with
swinging censers and the members of the priestly college,
four by four, came chanting down the temple steps.
To an accompanying pleading, sobbing note of flutes
the high priest laid an offering of fruit, milk, wine
and honey in the midst of the heaped-up garlands (for
Apollo was the god of all fertility as well as of
healing and war and flocks and oracles). Then
came the grand Homeric hymn to Glorious Apollo, men’s
and boys’ and women’s voices blending
in a surging pæan like an ocean’s music.
The last notes died away in distant
echoes. There was silence for a hundred breaths;
then music of flute and lyre and sistra as the priests
retreated up the temple steps followed by fanfare on
a dozen trumpets as the door swung to behind the priests.
Instantly, then, shouts of laughter torchlight
scattering the shadows amid gloom green
cypresses fire color splurging
on the bosom of the water babel of hundreds
of voices as the gay Antiochenes swarmed out from
behind the trees and a cheer, as the girls
by the altar threw their garments off and scampered
naked along the river-bank toward a bridge that joined
the temple island to the sloping lawns, where the
crowd ran to await them.
“Apollo having healed the world
of sin, we now do what we like!” said Sextus.
“Pertinax, I pledge you continence for this
one night! Good Galen, may Apollo’s wisdom
ooze from you like sweat; for all our sakes, be you
the arbiter of what we drink, lest drunkenness deprive
us of our reason! Comités, let us
eat like warriors one course, and then
discussion of tomorrow’s plan.”
“Your military service should
have taught you more respect for your seniors, as
well as how to eat and drink temperately,” said
Pertinax. “Will you teach your grandmother
to suck eggs? I was the first grammarian in
Rome before you were born and a tribune before you
felt down on your cheek. I am the governor of
Rome, my boy. Who are you, that you should lecture
me?”
“If you call that a lecture,
concede that I dared,” Sextus answered.
“I did not flatter you by coming here, or come
to flatter you. I came because my father tells
me you are a Roman beyond praise. I am a Roman.
I believe praise is worthless unless proven to the
hilt as for instance: I have come
to bare my thoughts to you, which is a bold compliment
in these days of treachery.”
“Keep your thoughts under cover,”
said Pertinax, glancing at the steward and the slaves
who were beginning to carry in the meal. But he
was evidently pleased, and Sextus’s next words
pleased him more:
“I am ready to do more than
think about you, I will follow where you lead except
into licentiousness!”
He lay on both elbows and stared at
the scene with disgust. Naked girls, against
a background of the torchlit water and the green and
purple gloom of cypresses, was nothing to complain
of; statuary, since it could not move, was not as
pleasing to the eye; but shrieks of idiotic laughter
and debauchery of beauty sickened him.
There came a series of sounds at the
pavilion entrance, where a litter was set down on
marble pavement and a eunuch’s shrill voice criticized
the slow unrolling of a carpet.
“What did I warn you?”
Norbanus whispered, laughing in Sextus’s ear.
Pertinax got to his feet, long-leggedly
statuesque, and strode toward the antechamber on his
right, whence presently he returned with a woman on
his arm, he stroking her hand as it rested on his.
He introduced Sextus and Norbanus; the others knew
her; Galen greeted her with a wrinkled grin that seemed
to imply confidence.
“Now that Cornificia has come,
not even Sextus need worry about our behavior!”
said Galen, and everybody except Sextus grinned.
It was notorious that Cornificia refined and restrained
Pertinax, whereas his lawful wife Flavia Titiana merely
drove him to extremes.
This Roman Aspasia had an almost Grecian
face, beneath a coiled extravagance of dark brown
hair. Her violet eyes were quietly intelligent;
her dress plain white and not elaborately fringed,
with hardly any jewelry. She cultivated modesty
and all the older graces that had grown unfashionable
since the Emperor Marcus Aurelius died. In all
ways, in fact, she was the opposite of Flavia Titiana it
was hard to tell whether from natural preference or
because the contrast to his wife’s extremes
of noisy gaiety and shameless license gave her a stronger
hold on Pertinax. Rome’s readiest slanderers
had nothing scandalous to tell of Cornificia, whereas
Flavia Titiana’s inconstancies were a by-word.
She refused to let Galen yield the
couch on Pertinax’s right hand but took the
vacant one at the end of the half-moon table, saying
she preferred it which was likely true
enough; it gave her a view of all the faces without
turning her head or appearing to stare.
For a long time there was merely desultory
conversation while the feast, restricted within moderate
proportions by request of Pertinax, was brought on.
There were eels, for which Daphne
was famous; alphests and callichthys; pompilos, a
purple fish, said to have been born from sea-foam at
the birth of Aphrodite; boops and bedradones; gray
mullet; cuttle-fish; tunny-fish and mussels.
Followed in their order pheasants, grouse, swan,
peacock and a large pig stuffed with larks and mincemeat.
Then there were sweetmeats of various kinds, and
a pudding invented in Persia, made with honey and
dates, with a sauce of frozen cream and strawberries.
By Galen’s order only seven sorts of wine were
served, so when the meal was done the guests were
neither drunk nor too well fed to carry on a conference.
No entertainers were provided.
Normally the space between the table and the front
of the pavilion would have been occupied by acrobats,
dancers and jugglers; but Pertinax dismissed even
the impudent women who came to lean elbows on the
marble railing and sing snatches of suggestive song.
He sent slaves to stand outside and keep the crowd
away, his lictor and his personal official bodyguard
being kept out of sight in a small stone house near
the pavilion kitchen at the rear among the trees,
in order not to arouse unwelcome comment. It
was known he was in Daphne; there was even a subdued
expectation in Antioch that his unannounced visit
portended the extortion of extra tribute. The
Emperor Commodus was known to be in his usual straits
for money. Given a sufficient flow of wine, the
sight of bodyguard and lictor might have been enough
to start a riot, the Antiochenes being prone to outbreak
when their passions were aroused by drink and women.
There was a long silence after Pertinax
had dismissed the steward. Galen’s old
personal attendant took charge of the amphora of snow-cooled
Falernian; he poured for each in turn and then retired
into a corner to be out of earshot, or at any rate
to emphasize that what he might hear would not concern
him. Pertinax strolled to the front of the pavilion
and looked out to make sure there were no eavesdroppers,
staring for a long time at the revelry that was warming
up into an orgy. They were dancing in rings
under the moon, their shadowy figures rendered weird
by smoky torchlight. Cornificia at last broke
on his reverie:
“You wish to join them, Pertinax?
That would dignify even our Roman Hercules to
say nothing of you!”
He shrugged his shoulders, but his eyes were glittering.
“If Marcia could govern Commodus
as you rule me, he would be safer on the throne!”
he answered, coming to sit upright on the couch beside
her. It was evident that he intended that speech
to release all tongues; he looked from face to face
expectantly, but no one spoke until Cornificia urged
him to protect himself against the night breeze.
He threw a purple-bordered cloak over his shoulders.
It became him; he looked so official in it, and
majestic, that even Sextus rebel that he
was against all modern trumpery forebore
to break the silence. It was Galen who spoke
next:
“Pertinax, if you might choose
an emperor, whom would you nominate? Remember:
He must be a soldier, used to the stench of marching
legions. None could govern Rome whose nose goes
up in the air at the smell of sweat and garlic.”
There was a murmur of approval.
Cornificia stroked the long, strong fingers of the
man she idolized. Sextus gave rein to his impulse
then, brushing aside Norbanus’ hand that warned
him to bide his time:
“Many more than I,” he
said, “are ready to throw in our lot with you,
Pertinax aye, unto death! You would
restore Rome’s honor. I believe my father
could persuade a hundred noblemen to take your part,
if you would lead. I can answer for five or
six men of wealth and influence, not reckoning a friend
or two who ”
“Why talk foolishness!”
said Pertinax. “The legions will elect
Commodus’ successor. They will sell Rome
to the highest bidder, probably; and though they
like me as a soldier they dislike my discipline.
I am the governor of Rome and still alive in spite
of it because even Commodus’ informers know
it would be silly to accuse me of intrigue.
Not even Commodus would listen to such talk.
I lead the gay life, for my own life’s sake.
All know me as a roisterer. I am said to have
no ambition other than to live life sensuously.”
Galen laughed.
“That may deceive Commodus,”
he said. “The thoughtful Romans know you
as a frugal governor, who stamped out plague and ”
“You did that,” said Pertinax.
“Who enabled me?”
“It was a simple thing to have
the tenements burned. Besides, it profited the
city new streets; and there was twice the
amount of tax on the new tenements they raised.
I, personally, made a handsome profit on the purchase
of a few burned houses.”
“And as the governor who broke the famine,”
Galen continued.
“That was simple enough, but
you may as well thank Cornificia. She found out
through the women who the men were who were holding
corn for speculation. All I did was to hand
their names to Commodus; he confiscated all the corn
and sold it at a handsome profit to himself,
since it had cost him nothing!”
“While we sit here and cackle
like Asian birds, Commodus renames Rome the City of
Commodus and still lives!” Sextus grumbled.
“Nor can he be easily got rid
of,” remarked Daedalus the tribune. “He
goes to and fro from the palace through underground
tunnels. Men sleep in his room who are all involved
with him in cruelties and infamy, so they guard him
carefully. Besides, whoever tried to murder him
would probably kill Paulus by mistake! The praetorian
guard is contented, being well paid and permitted
all sorts of privileges. Who can get past the
praetorian guard?”
“Any one!” said Pertinax.
“The point is not, who shall kill Commodus?
But who shall be raised in his place? There are
thirty thousand ways to kill a man. Ask Galen!”
Old Galen laughed at that.
“As many ways as there are stars
in heaven; but the stars have their say in the matter!
None can kill a man until his destiny says yes to
it. Not even a doctor,” he added, chuckling.
“Otherwise the doctors would have killed me
long ago with jealousy! A man dies when his inner
man grows sick and weary of him. Then a pin-prick
does it, or a sudden terror. Until that time
comes you may break his skull, and do not more than
spoil his temper! As a philosopher I have learned
two things: respect many, but trust few.
But as a doctor I have learned only one thing for
certain: that no man actually dies until his
soul is tired of him.”
“Whose soul should grow sick
sooner than that of Commodus?” asked Sextus.
“Not if his soul is evil and
delights in evil as his does!” Galen
retorted. “If he should turn virtuous,
then perhaps, yes. But in that case we should
wish him to live, although his soul would prefer the
contrary and leave him to die by the first form of
death that should appear in spite of all
the doctors and the guards and tasters of the royal
food.”
“Some one should convert him
then!” said Sextus. “Cornificia,
can’t Marcia make a Christian of him; Christians
pretend to oppose all the infamies he practises.
It would be a merry joke to have a Christian emperor,
who died because his soul was sick of him! It
would be a choice jest he being the one
who has encouraged Christianity by reversing all Marcus
Aurelius’ wise precautions against their seditious
blasphemy!”
“You speak fanatically, but
you have touched the heart of the problem,”
said Cornificia. “It is Marcia who makes
life possible for Commodus Marcia and
her Christians. They help Marcia protect him
because he is the only emperor who never persecuted
them, and because Marcia sees to it that they are
free to meet together without having even to bribe
the police. There is only one way to get rid
of Commodus: Persuade Marcia that her own life
is in danger from him, and that she will have a full
voice in nominating his successor.”
“Probably true,” remarked
Pertinax. “Whom would she nominate?
That is the point.”
“It would be simpler to kill
Marcia,” said Daedalus. “Thereafter
let things take their course. Without Marcia
to protect him ”
“No man knows much,” Galen
interrupted. “Marcia’s soul may be
all the soul Commodus has! If she should grow
sick of him !”
“She grew sick long ago,”
said Cornificia. “But she is forever thinking
of her Christians and knows no other way to protect
them than to make Commodus love her. Ugh!
It is like the story of Andromeda. Who is to
act Perseus?”
(In the fable, Andromeda had to be
chained to a cliff to be devoured by a monster, in
order to save her people from the anger of the god
Poseidon. Perseus slew the monster.)
“There are thirty thousand ways
of killing,” Pertinax repeated, “but if
we kill one monster, four or five others will fight
for his place, unless, like Perseus, we have the head
of a Medusa with which to freeze them into stone!
There is no substitute for Commodus in sight.
The only man whose face would freeze all rivals is
Severus the Carthaginian!”
“We are none of us blind,” said Cornificia.
“You mean me? I am too
old,” answered Pertinax. “I don’t
like tyranny, and people know it. It is something
they should not know. An old man may be all
very well when he has reigned for twenty years and
men are used to him, and he used to the task, as was
Augustus; but an old man new to the throne lacks
energy. And besides, they would never endure a
man whose father was a charcoal-seller, as mine was.
I have made my way in life by looking at facts and
refusing to deceive myself; with the exception of
that, I have no especial wisdom, nor any unusual ability.”
“If wisdom were all that is
needed,” said Sextus, “we should put good
Galen on the throne!”
“He is too old and wise to let
you try to do it!” Galen answered. “But
you spoke about the head of a Medusa, Pertinax, and
mentioned Lucius Septimius Severus. He commands
three legions at Caruntum in Pannonia. (Roughly
speaking, the S.W. portion of modern Hungary whose
frontiers were then occupied by very warlike tribes.)
If there is one man living who can freeze men’s
blood by scowling at them, it is he! And he is
not as old as you are.”
“I have thought of him only
to hate him,” said Pertinax. “He
would not follow me, nor I him. He is one of
three men who would fight for the throne if somebody
slew Commodus, although he would not run the risk of
slaying him himself, and he would betray us if we should
take him into confidence. I know him well.
He is a lawyer and a Carthaginian. He would
never ask for the nomination; he is too crafty.
He would say his legions nominated him against his
will and that to have disobeyed them would have laid
him open to the punishment for treason. (This is what
Severus actually did, later on, after Pertinax’s
death.) The other two are Pescennius Niger, who commands
the legions in Syria, and Clodius Albinus who commands
in Britain. We must find a man who can forestall
all three of them by winning, first, the praetorian
guard, and then the senate and the Romans by dint
of sound reforms and justice.”
“You are he! Rome trusts
you. So does the senate,” said Cornificia.
“Marcia trusts me. The praetorian guard
trusts her. If I can persuade Marcia that her
life is in danger from Commodus ”
“But how?” Daedalus interrupted.
“We can take the praetorian
guard by surprise,” Cornificia went on, ignoring
him. “They can be tricked into declaring
for the man whom Marcia’s friends nominate.
Having once declared for him they will be too proud
of having made an emperor, and too unwilling to seem
vacillating, to reverse themselves in any man’s
favor, even though he should command six legions.
The senate will gladly accept one who has governed
Rome as frugally as Pertinax has done. If the
senate confirms the nominee of the praetorian guard,
the Roman populace will do the rest by acclamation.
Then, three months of upright government deification
by the senate ”
Pertinax laughed explosively an
honest, chesty laugh, unqualified by any subtleties,
suggesting a trace of the peasantry from which he
sprang. It made Cornificia wince.
“Can you imagine me a god?” he asked.
“I can imagine you an emperor,”
said Sextus. “It is true; you have no
following among the legions just at present.
But I make one, and there are plenty of energetic
men who think as I do. My friend Norbanus here
will follow me. My father ”
Noises near the open window interrupted
him. An argument seemed to be going on between
the slaves whom Pertinax had set to keep the roisterers
away and some one who demanded admission. Near
at hand was a woman’s voice, shrilling and scolding.
Then another voice Scylax, the slave who
had ridden the red mare. Pertinax strode to the
window again and leaned out. Cornificia whispered
to Galen:
“If the truth were known, he
is afraid of Flavia Titiana. As a wife she is
bad enough, but as an empress ”
Galen nodded.
“If you love your Pertinax,”
he answered, “keep him off the throne!
He has too many scruples.”
She frowned, having few, which were
firm and entirely devoted to Pertinax’ fortune.
“Love him? I would give
him up to see him deified!” she whispered; and
again Galen nodded, deeply understanding.
“That is because you have never
had children,” he assured her, smiling.
“You mother Pertinax, who is more than twice
your age just as Marcia has mothered that
monster Commodus until her heart is breaking.”
“But I thought you were Pertinax’ friend?”
“So I am.”
“And his urgent adviser to ”
“Yes, so I was. I have
changed my opinion; only the maniacs never do that.
Pertinax would make a splendid minister for Lucius
Severus; and the two of them could bring back the
Augustan days. Persuade him to it. He must
forget he hates him.”
“Let him come!” said the
voice of Pertinax. He was still leaning out,
with one hand on a marble pillar, much more interested
in the moonlit view of revelry than in the altercation
between slaves. He strolled back and stood smiling
at Cornificia, his handsome face expressing satisfaction
but a rather humorous amusement at his inability to
understand her altogether.
“Are you like all other women?”
he asked. “I just saw a naked woman stab
a man with her hairpin and kick his corpse into the
shrubbery before the breath was out of it!”
“Galen has deserted you,”
said Cornificia. The murder was uninteresting;
nobody made any comment.
“Not he!” Pertinax answered,
and went and sat on Galen’s couch. “You
find me not man enough for the senate to make a god
of me is that it, Galen?”
“Too much of a man to be an
emperor,” said Galen, smiling amid wrinkles.
“By observing a man’s virtues one may infer
what his faults are. You would try to rule the
empire honestly, which is impossible. A more
dishonest man would let it rule itself and claim the
credit, whereas you would give the praise to others,
who would shoulder off the work and all the blame
on to you. An empire is like a human body, which
heals itself if the head will let it. Too many
heads a conference of doctors and
the patient dies! One doctor, doing nothing with
an air of confidence, and the patient gets well!
There, I have told you more than all the senate knows!”
Came Scylax, out of breath, less menial
than most men’s slaves, his head and shoulders
upright and the hand that held a letter thrust well
forward as if what he had to do were more important
than the way he did it.
“This came,” he said,
standing beside Sextus’ couch. “Cadmus
brought it, running all the way from Antioch.”
His hand was trembling; evidently
Cadmus had by some means learned the contents of the
letter and had told.
“I and Cadmus ” he said, and
then hesitated.
“What?”
“ are faithful, no matter what happens.”
Scylax stood erect with closed lips.
Sextus broke the seal, merely glancing at Pertinax,
taking permission for granted. He frowned as
he read, bit his lip, his face growing crimson and
white alternately. When he had mastered himself
he handed the letter to Pertinax.
“I always supposed you protected
my father,” he said, struggling to appear calm.
But his eyes gave the story away grieved,
mortified, indignant. Scylax offered him his
arm to lean on. Norbanus, setting both hands
on his shoulders from behind, obliged him to sit down.
“Calm!” Norbanus whispered,
“Calm! Your friends are your friends.
What has happened?”
Pertinax read the letter and passed
it to Cornificia, then paced the floor with hands
behind him.
“Is that fellow to be trusted?”
he asked with a jerk of his head toward Scylax.
He seemed nearly as upset as Sextus was.
Sextus nodded, not trusting himself
to speak, knowing that if he did he would insult a
man who might be guiltless in spite of appearances.
“Commodus commanded me to visit
Antioch, as he said, for a rest,” said Pertinax.
“The public excuse was, that I should look into
the possibility of holding the Olympic games here.
Strangely enough, I suspected nothing. He has
been flatteringly friendly of late. Those whom
I requested him to spare, he spared, even though their
names were on his proscription list and I had not
better excuse than that they had done no wrong!
The day before I left I brought a list to him of names
that I commended to his favor your father’s
name among them, Sextus.”
Pertinax turned his back again and
strode toward the window, where he stood like a statue
framed in the luminous gloom. The only part of
him that moved was his long fingers, weaving together
behind him until the knuckles cracked.
Cornificia, subduing her contralto
voice, read the letter aloud:
“To Nimius Secundus Sextus,
son of Galienus Maximus, the freedman Rufus Glabrio
sends humble greeting.
“May the gods give solace and
preserve you. Notwithstanding all your noble
father’s piety his respect for elders
and superiors he was accused of treason
and of blasphemy toward the emperor, by whose orders
he was seized yesterday and beheaded the same day.
The estates have already been seized. It is
said they will be sold to Asinus Sejanus, who
is probably the source of the accusation against your
father.
“I and three other freedmen
made our escape and will attempt to reach Tarentum,
where we will await instructions from you. Titus,
the son of the freedman Paulinus, will convey this
letter to Brundisium and thence by boat to Dyrrachium,
whence he will send it by post in the charge of a
Jew whom he says he can trust.
“It is a certainty that orders
will go forth to seize yourself, since the estates
in Antioch are known to be of great value. Therefore,
we your true friends and devoted servants, urge you
to make all speed in escaping. Stay not to make
provision for yourself, but travel without encumbrances.
Hide! Hasten!
“We commend this letter to you
as a sure proof that we ourselves are to be trusted,
since, if it should fall into the hands of an informer
by the way, our lives undoubtedly would pay the forfeit.
We have not much money, but enough for the expenses
of a journey to a foreign land. The place where
we will hide near Tarentum is known to you. In
deep anxiety, and not without such sacrifices to the
gods and to the manes of your noble ancestors as means
permit, we will await your coming.” Rufus
Glabrio “Freedman of the illustrious Galienus
Maximus.”
Pertinax turned from the window.
“The Jews have a saying,” he said, “that
who keepeth his mouth and his tongue, keepeth his soul
from trouble. Often I warned Maximus that he
was too free with his speech. He counted too
much on my protection. Now it remains to be seen
whether Commodus has not proscribed me!”
Sextus and Norbanus stood together,
Scylax behind them, Norbanus whispering; plainly
enough Norbanus was urging patience discretion
deliberate thought, whereas Sextus could hardly think
at all for anger that reddened his eyes.
“What can I do for you?
What can I do?” wondered Pertinax.
Then Cornificia was on her feet.
“There is nothing nothing
you can do!” she insisted. She avoided
Galen’s eyes; the old philosopher was watching
her as if she were the subject of some new experiment.
“Let Commodus learn as much as that Sextus
was here in this pavilion and ”
Sextus interrupted, very proudly:
“I will not endanger my friends.
Who will lend me a dagger? This toy that I wear
is too short and not sharp. You may forget me,
Pertinax. My slaves will bury me. But play
you the man and save Rome!”
Then the tribune spoke up. He
was younger than all of them.
“Sextus is right. They
will know he was here. They will probably torture
his slaves and learn about that letter that has reached
him. If he runs and hides, we shall all be accused
of having helped him to escape; whereas ”
“What?” Galen asked him as he hesitated.
“If he dies by his own hand,
he will not only save all his slaves from the torture
but remove the suspicion from us and we will still
be free to mature our ”
“Cowardice!” Norbanus finished the sentence
for him.
“Aye, some of us would hardly
feel like noble Romans!” Pertinax said grimly.
“Possibly I can protect you, Sextus. Let
us think of some great favor you can do the emperor,
providing an excuse for me to interfere. I might
even take you to Rome with me and ”
Galen laughed, and Cornificia drew
in her breath, bit her lip.
“Why do you laugh, Galen?”
Pertinax strode over to him and stood staring.
“Because,” said Galen,
“I know so little after all. I cannot tell
a beast’s blood from a man’s. Our
Commodus would kill you with all the more peculiar
enjoyment because he has flattered you so often publicly
and called you ‘father Pertinax.’
He poisoned his own father; why not you? They
will tell him you have frequently befriended Sextus.
They will show him Sextus’ father’s name
on that list of names that you commended to his favor.
Do you follow me?”
“By Jupiter, not I!” said Pertinax.
“He is sure to learn about this
letter that has come.” said Galen. “If
you, in fearful loyalty to Commodus, should instantly
attempt to make a prisoner of Sextus; if, escaping,
he is killed, and you bear witness that
would please Commodus almost as much as to see gladiators
killed in the arena. If you wept over the death
of Sextus, that would please him even more.
He would enjoy your feelings. Do you remember
how he picked two gladiators who were brothers twins
they were and when the slayer of his twin-brother
saluted, Commodus got down into the arena and kissed
him? You yourself must announce to him the news
of Sextus’ death, and he will kiss you also!”
“Vale!” remarked Sextus. “I
die willingly enough.”
“You are dead already,”
Galen answered. “Didn’t Pertinax
see some one’s body kicked into the bushes?”
There was silence. They all
glanced at one another. Only Galen, sipping
at his wine, seemed philosophically calm.
“I personally should not be
an eye-witness,” Galen remarked. “I
am a doctor, whose certificate of death not even Commodus
would doubt. In the dark I might recognize Sextus’
garments, even though I could not see his features.
And ” he added pointedly “neither
I nor any one can tell a beast’s blood from
a man’s.”
“Daedalus!” said Pertinax
with sudden resolution. “Get my purse.
My slave has it. Sextus shall not go empty-handed.”