Sorbanus brought the skewbald stallion.
Not far away a group of women danced around a dozen
drunken men, who sang uproariously. Seen against
the background of purple and dark-green gloom, with
crimson torchlight flaring on the quiet water and
the moon descending behind trees beyond them, they
were mystically beautiful seemed not to
belong to earth, any more than the pan-pipe music
did.
“Ride into their midst!”
Norbanus urged, pointing. “Tickle the stallion
thus.”
The Cappadocian lashed out savagely.
“Here is a bottle of goat’s
blood. I will bring weapons, and I will join
you as soon as possible after I have made sure that
the temple priests, and all Daphne, are positive about
your death. Now mount and ride!”
Sextus swung on to the stallion’s
back as if a catapult had thrown him. Until then
he had let others do the ordering; he had preferred
to let them take their own precautions, form their
own plans and subject himself to any course they wished,
after which he should be free to face his destiny
and fight it without feeling he had handicapped his
friends by wilfulness. He had not even issued
a direct command to Scylax, his own slave. That
was characteristic of him. Nor was it at his
suggestion that Norbanus volunteered to share his outlawry.
But it was also characteristic that he made no gesture
of dissent; he accepted Norbanus’ loyalty with
a quiet smile that rather scorned words as unnecessary.
Now he drove his heels into the Cappadocian
with vigor, for the die was cast. The stallion,
impatient of new mastery, reared and plunged, snorted,
came back on the bit in an attempt to get it in his
teeth, and bolted straight for the group of roisterers,
who scattered away, men swearing, women screaming.
Throwing back his weight against the reins, he brought
the stallion to a plunging, snorting, wheeling halt
in the midst of men and women a terrifying
monster blowing clouds of mist out of his nostrils!
As they ran he let the brute rear pulled
him over rolled from under him, and lay
still, with goat’s blood from the broken bottle
splashed around his face and seeming to flow from his
mouth. One woman stooped to look, groped for
a purse or anything of value, screamed and ran.
“Sextus!” she yelled.
“Sextus who was dining in the white pavilion!”
Sextus crawled among the oleanders.
Presently Norbanus came, hurrying out of gloom, accompanied
by Cadmus, the slave who had brought from Antioch
the letter that came from Rome. They were dragging
a body between them. They laid it down exactly
where Sextus had fallen from the horse. There
was a sickening thwack as Cadmus made the face unrecognizable.
Then came the lanky, hurrying figure of Pertinax
leading a group of people, Cornificia among them Galen
last.
Sextus lay still until all their backs
were toward him. Then he crept out of the oleanders
and walked along the river-bank in no haste, masking
his face with a fold of his toga. He chose a
path that wound amid the shrubbery, where marble satyrs
grinned in colored lantern light. He had to
avoid couples here and there. A woman followed
him, laying a hand on his arm; he struck her, and
she ran off, screaming for her bully.
Presently he reached the winding track
that led toward the high-road, with the gloom of cypresses
on either hand and, beyond that, the glow of the lights
in the caterers’ booths. He was as safe
now as if he were fifty miles away; none noticed
him except the beggars at the bridges, who exposed
maimed limbs and whined for charity. A leper,
banking on his only stock in trade the
dread men had of his affliction cursed
him.
“You waste breath,” said
Sextus and passed on. He was smiling to himself sardonically.
“Lepers live by threats ” he
thought.
No more than any leper now could he
expect protection from society beyond what he could
force society to yield. He had no name, for he
was dead; that thought amused him. Suddenly
it dawned on him how safe he was, since none in Antioch
would dare to question the word of Pertinax, backed
by Galen and all the witnesses whom Pertinax would
be sure to summon. He remembered then to protect
the honest freedmen who had sent him warning strode
to a fire near a caterer’s booth and burned the
letter, stared at by the slaves who warmed their shins
around the embers.
One of those might have recognized
him, in spite of the toga drawn over his face.
“If any one should ask which
way Maternus went, say I have gone home,”
he commanded, and strode away into the gloom.
He wondered why he had chosen the
name Maternus. Not even his remotest ancestor
had borne it, yet it came to his lips as naturally,
instantly, as if it were his own by right. But
as he walked away it came to mind that ten, or possibly
twelve, nights ago he and his friends had all been
talking of a highwayman Maternus, who had robbed
the caravans on the mountain road from Tarsus.
For the moment that thought scared him. Should
he change the name? The slaves by the embers
had stared; they showed him respect, but there was
a distinct sensation mingled with it hardly
to be wondered at! Where was it he heard who
told him that Maternus had been caught?
He could not remember.
It dawned on him how difficult it
is to decide what to do when the old familiar conditions
and the expectations on which we habitually base decisions
are all suddenly stripped away. He understood
now how a general in the field can fail when suddenly
confronted with the unknown. Shall he do this,
or do that? There was not a habit or a circumstance
to guide him. He must choose, the while the
gods looked on and laughed!
Maternus. It was a strange
name to adopt, and yet he liked the sound of it, nor
would it pass out of his mind. He tried to think
of other names, but either they had all been borne
by slaves, and were distasteful, or else by famous
men or by his friends, whom he did not propose to
wrong; he only had to imagine his case reversed to
realize how bitterly he would resent it if an outlawed
man should take his own name and make it notorious.
Yet he perceived that notoriety would
be his only refuge, paradox though that might be.
As a mere fugitive, anonymous and having no more object
than to live and avoid recognition, he would soon reach
the end of his tether; there was little mercy in
the world for men without a home or means. Whether
recognized or not, he would become like a hunted animal
might, in fact, end as a slave unless he
should prefer to prove his identity and submit to
Commodus’s executioners. Suicide would
be preferable to that; but it seemed almost as if
the gods themselves had vetoed self-destruction by
providing that roisterer’s corpse at the critical
moment and putting the plan for its use into Galen’s
wise old head.
He must take the field like Spartacus
of old; but he must have a goal more definite and
more attainable than Spartacus had had. He must
avoid the mistake that weakened Spartacus, of accepting
for the sake of numbers any ally who might offer himself.
He would have nothing whatever to do with the rabble
of runaway slaves, whose only guiding impulse would
be loot and license, although he knew how easy it would
be to raise such an army if he should choose to do
it. Out of any hundred outlaws in the records
of a hundred years, some ninety-nine had come to grief
through the increasing numbers of their following and
lack of discipline; he could think of a dozen who
had been betrayed by paid informers of the government,
posing as friendly brigands.
And besides, he had no intention of
adopting brigandry as a profession, though he realized
that he must make a reputation as a brigand if he
hoped to be anything else than a helpless fugitive.
As a rebel against Commodus it might be possible
to raise a good-sized army in a month or two, but
that would only serve to bring the Roman armies out
of camp, led by generals eager for cheap victories.
He must be too resourceful to be taken by police too
insignificant to tempt the legions out of camp.
Brigandry was as distasteful to him and as far beneath
his dignity as the pursuit of brigands was beneath
the dignity of any of those Roman generals who owed
their rank to Commodus. For them, as for himself,
the pettiness of brigandry led nowhither. Only
one object appealed to them fame and its
perquisites. Only one object appealed to himself:
to redeem his estates and to avenge his father.
That could be accomplished only by the death of Commodus:
He laughed, as he thought of himself pitted alone
against Commodus the deified, mad monster who could
marshal the resources of the Roman empire!
Such thoughts filled his mind until
he reached the lonely cross-road, where the narrower,
tree-lined road to Daphne met the great main highway
leading northward over the mountains. There was
the usual row of gibbets reared on rising ground against
the sky by way of grim reminder to slaves and other
would-be outlaws that the arm of Rome was long, not
merciful. Five of the gibbets were vacant, except
for an arm on one of them, that swayed in the wind
as it hung by a cord from the wrist. The sixth
had a man on it dead.
Scylax, who was waiting for him, rode
out of the gloom on the mare, leading the Cappadocian,
and reined in near the gibbet, not quite sure yet
who it was who strode toward him. Scared by the
stench, the horses became difficult to manage.
The leading-rein passed around one of the gibbets.
Sextus ran forward to help. The Cappadocian broke
the rein and Scylax galloped after him.
So Sextus stood alone beside the rough-hewn
tree-trunk, to which was tied the body of a man who
had been dead, perhaps, since sunset. He had
not been torn yet by the vultures. Morbid curiosity a
fellow feeling for a victim, as the man might well
be, of the same injustice that had made an outlaw
of himself impelled Sextus to step closer.
He could not see the face, which was drooped forward;
but there was a parchment, held spread on a stick,
like a sail on a spar, suspended from the man’s
neck by a string. He snatched it off and held
it toward the moon, now low on the horizon.
There were only two words, smeared with red paint
by a forefinger, underneath the official letters S.P.Q.R.:
“Maternus-Latro.”
He began to wonder who Maternus
might have been, and how he took the first step that
had led to crucifixion. It was hard to believe
that any man would run that risk unless impelled to
it by some injustice that had changed pride into savagery
or else shot off all opportunity for decent living.
The cruelty of the form of execution hardly troubled
him; the possible injustice of it stirred him to
his depths. He felt a sort of superstitious
reverence for the victim, increased by the strange
coincidence that he had made use, without previous
reflection, of Maternus’ name.
Presently he saw Norbanus riding the
horse that he himself had ridden that afternoon from
Antioch to Daphne, followed on a mule by Cadmus, the
slave who had brought the letter which had pulled the
trigger that set the catapults of destiny in motion.
Making a wide circuit, they helped Scylax catch the
Cappadocian.
Norbanus came cantering back.
He was dressed for the road in a brown woolen tunic
contributed by some one in Pertinax’ suite.
He shook a bag of money.
“Cornificia was generous,”
he said. “Old Pertinax thought he had done
well enough by you. She cried shame on him and
threatened to send for her jewelry. So he borrowed
money from the priests. You are as dead as that.”
He looked up at the tortured body of the robber.
“What name will you take? We had better
begin to get used to it.”
“It is written here,”
said Sextus, showing him the parchment. But the
moon had gone down in a smother of silvery cloud; Norbanus
could not see to read. “I am Maternus-Latro.”
“I was told they had crucified that fellow.”
“This is Maternus.
Being dead, he will hardly grudge me the use of his
name! However, I will pay him for it. He
shall have fair burial. Help me down with him.”
Norbanus beckoned to the slaves, who
tied the horses to a near-by tree. They sought
in the dark for a hole that would do for a grave, since
they had no burying tools, stumbling on a limestone
slab at last, that lay amid rank weeds near a tomb
hollowed out of the rock that had been rifled, very
likely, centuries ago. They lowered the already
stiffened body into it, with a coin in its fingers
for Charon’s ferry-fare across the Styx, then
set the heavy slab in place, all four of them using
their utmost strength.
Then Sextus, having poured a little
water from his hollowed hands on to the slab, because
he had no oil, and having murmured fragments of a
ritual as old as Rome, bidding the gods of earth and
air and the unseen re-absorb into themselves what
man no longer could perceive or cherish or destroy,
turned to the two slaves.
“Scylax,” he said, “Cadmus he
who was your master is as dead as that man we have
buried. I am not Sextus, son of Maximus.
I fare forth like a dead man on an unknown road,
now being without honor on the lips of men.
Nor have I any claim on you, being now an outlaw, whom
the law would crucify if ill-luck should betray my
feet. Nor can I set you free, since all my household
doubtless is already confiscated; ye belong by law
to whomsoever Commodus may have appointed to receive
my goods. Do then at your own risk, of your
own will, what seems good to you.”
Being slaves, they knelt. He bade them rise.
“We follow you,” said Scylax, Cadmus murmuring
assent.
“Then the night bear witness!”
Sextus turned toward the row of gibbets, pointing
at them. “That is the risk we take together.
If we escape that, you shall not go unrewarded from
the fortune I redeem. Norbanus, you accept my
leadership?”
Norbanus chuckled.
“I insist on it!” he answered.
He, too, pointed at the row of gibbets. “To
be frightened will provide us with no armor against
destiny! There was little I had to lose; lo,
I have left that for the mice to nibble! Let
us see what destiny can do to bold men! Lead
on, Sextus!”