That night it rained. The wind
blew yelling squalls along the streets. At intervals
the din of hail on cobble-stones and roofs became a
stinging sea of sound. The wavering oil lanterns
died out one by one and left the streets in darkness
in which now and then a slave-borne litter labored
like a boat caught spreading too much sail. The
overloaded sewers backed up and made pools of foulness,
difficult to ford. Along the Tiber banks there
was panic where the river-boats were plunging and
breaking adrift on the rising flood and miserable,
drenched slaves labored with the bales of merchandize,
hauling the threatened stuff to higher ground.
But the noisiest, dismalest place
was the palace, the heart of all Rome, where the rain
and hail dinned down on marble. There was havoc
in the clumps of ornamental trees crashing
of pots blown down from balconies thunder
of rent awnings and the splashing of countless cataracts
where overloaded gutters spilled their surplus on
mosaic pavement fifty or a hundred feet below.
No light showed, saving at the guard-house by the
main gate, where a group of sentries shrugged themselves
against the wall ill-tempered, shivering,
alert. However mutinous a Roman army, or a legion,
or a guard might be, its individuals were loyal to
the routine work of military duty.
A decurion stepped out beneath a splashing
arch, the lamplight gleaming on his wetted bronze
and crimson.
“Narcissus? Yes, I recognize
you. Who is this?” Narcissus and Sextus
were shrouded in loose, hooded cloaks of raw wool,
under which they hugged a change of footgear.
Sextus had his face well covered. Narcissus
pushed him forward under the guard-room arch, out of
the rain.
“This is a man from Antioch,
whom Cæsar told me to present to him,” he said.
“I know him well. His names is Marius.”
“I have no orders to admit a
man of that name.” Narcissus waxed confidential.
“Do you wish to get both of
us into trouble?” he asked. “You
know Caesar’s way. He said bring him and
forgot, I suppose, to tell his secretary to write
the order for admission. Tonight he will remember
my speaking to him about this expert with a javelin,
and if I have to tell him ”
“Speak with the centurion.”
The decurion beckoned them into the
guard-house, where a fire burned in a bronze tripod,
casting a warm glow on walls hung with shields and
weapons. A centurion, munching oily seed and
wiping his mouth with the back of his hand, came out
of an inner office. He was not the type that
had made Roman arms invincible. He lacked the
self-reliant dignity of an old campaigner, substituting
for it self-assertiveness and flashy manners.
He was annoyed because he could not get the seed out
of his mouth with his finger in time to look aristocratic.
“What now, Narcissus?
By Bacchus, no! No irregularities tonight!
The very gods themselves are imitating Caesar’s
ill-humor! Who is it you have brought?”
Narcissus beckoned the centurion toward
the corner, between fire and wall, where he could
whisper without risk of being overheard.
“Marcia told me to bring this
man tonight in hope of making Cæsar change his mood.
He is a javelin-thrower an expert.”
“Has he a javelin under the
cloak?” the centurion asked suspiciously.
“He is unarmed, of course. Do you take
us for madmen?”
“All Rome is mad tonight,”
said the centurion, “or I wouldn’t be arguing
with a gladiator! Tell me what you know.
A sentry said you saw the death of Pavonius Nasor.
All the sentries who were in the tunnel at the time
are under lock and key, and I expect to be ordered
to have the poor devils killed to silence them.
And now Bultius Livius have you heard
about it?”
“I have heard Cæsar sent for him.”
“Well, if Cæsar has sent for
this friend of yours, he had better first made sacrifices
to his gods and pray for something better than befell
poor Livius! Yourself too! They say Livius
is being racked doubtless to make him tell
more than he knows. I smell panic in the air.
With all these palace slaves coming and going you
can’t check rumor and I’ll wager there
is already an exodus from Rome. Gods! What
a night for travel! Morning will see the country
roads all choked with the conveyances of bogged up
senators! Let us pray this friend of yours may
soften Caesar’s mood. Where is his admission
paper?”
“As I told the decurion, I have none.”
“That settles it then; he can’t
enter. No risks not when I know the
mood our Commodus is in! The commander might
take the responsibility, but not I.”
“Where is he?” asked Narcissus.
“Where any lucky fellow is on
such a night in bed. I wouldn’t
dare to send for him for less than riots, mutiny and
all Rome burning! Let your man wait here.
Go you into the palace and get a written permit for
him.”
But nothing was more probable than
that such a permit would be unobtainable.
Sextus stepped into the firelight,
pulling back the hood to let the centurion see his
face.
“By Mars’ red plume!
Are you the man they call Maternus?”
Sextus retorted with a challenge:
“Now will you send for your commander?
He knows me well.”
“Dioscuri! Doubtless!
Probably you robbed him of his purse! By Romulus
and Remus, what is happening to Rome? That falling
star last night portended, did it, that a highwayman
should dare to try to enter Caesar’s palace!
Ho there, decurion! Bring four men!”
The decurion clanked in. His men surrounded
Sextus at a gesture.
“I ought to put you both in
cells,” said the centurion. “But
you shall have a chance to justify yourself, Narcissus.
Go on in. Bring Caesar’s written order
to release this man Maternus if you
can!”
Narcissus, like all gladiators, had
been trained in facial control lest an antagonist
should be forewarned by his expression. Nevertheless,
he was hard put to it to hide the fear that seized
him. He supposed not even Marcia would dare
openly to come to Sextus’ rescue.
“That man is my only friend,”
he said. “Let me have word with him first.”
“Not one word!”
The centurion made a gesture with
his head. The guards took Sextus by the arms
and marched him out into the night, he knowing better
than to waste energy or arouse anger by resisting.
“Then I will go to the commander!
I go straight to him,” Narcissus stammered.
“Idiot! Don’t you know that Marcia
protects Maternus? Otherwise, how should
an outlaw whose face is so well known that you recognized
him instantly how should he dare to approach
the palace?”
The centurion touched his forehead.
“Mad, I daresay! Go on
in. Get Marcia’s protection for him.
Bring me her command in writing! Wait, though let
me look at you.”
He made Narcissus throw his heavy
cloak off, clean his legs and change into his other
foot-gear. Then he examined his costume.
“Even on a night like this they’d
punish me for letting a man pass who wasn’t
dressed right. Let me see, you’re not free
yet; you don’t have to wear a toga. I
spend half my days teaching clodhoppers how to fold
hired togas properly behind the neck. It’s
the only way you can tell a slave from a citizen these
days! The praetorian guard ought to be recruited
from the tailors’ shops! Lace up your sandal
properly. Now any weapons underneath
that tunic?”
Sullenly Narcissus held his arms up
and submitted to be searched. He usually came
and went unchallenged, being known as one of Caesar’s
favorites, but the centurion’s suspicions were
aroused. They were almost confirmed a moment
later. The decurion returned and laid a long,
lean dagger on the table.
“Taken from the prisoner,”
he reported. “It was hidden beneath his
tunic. He looks desperate enough to kill himself,
so I left two men to keep an eye on him.”
The centurion scratched his chin again,
his mouth half-open.
“Whom do you propose to visit
in the palace?” he demanded.
“Marcia,” said Narcissus.
The centurion turned to the decurion.
“Go you with him. Hand
him over to the hall-attendants. Bid them pass
him from hand to hand into Marcia’s presence.
Don’t return until you have word he has reached
her.”
To all intents and purposes a prisoner,
Narcissus was marched along the mosaic pavement of
a bronze-roofed colonnade, whose marble columns flanked
the approach to the palace steps. Drenched guards,
posted near the eaves where water splashed on them
clanged their shields in darkness as the decurion
passed; there was not a square yard of the palace
grounds unwatched.
There was a halt beside the little
marble pavilion near the palace steps, where the decurion
turned Narcissus over to an attendant in palace uniform,
but no comment; the palace was too used to seeing
favorites of one day in disgrace the next.
Within the palace there was draughtily
lighted gloom, a sensation of dread and mysterious
restlessness. The bronze doors leading to the
emperor’s apartments were shut and guards posted
outside them who demanded extremely definite reasons
for admitting any one; even when the centurion’s
message was delivered some one had to be sent in first
to find out whether Marcia was willing, and for nearly
half an hour Narcissus waited, biting his lip with
impatience.
When he was sent for at last, and
accompanied in, he found Marcia, Pertinax and Galen
seated unattended in the gorgeous, quiet anteroom
next to the emperor’s bedchamber. The outer
storm was hardly audible through the window-shutters,
but there was an atmosphere of impending climax, like
the hush and rumble that precedes eruptions.
Marcia nodded and dismissed the attendant
who had brought Narcissus. There was a strained
look about her eyes, a tightening at the corners of
the mouth. Her voice was almost hoarse:
“What is it? You bring
bad news, Narcissus! What has happened?”
“Sextus has been arrested by the main gate guard!”
Galen came out of a reverie.
Pertinax bit at his nails and looked startled; worry
had made him look as old as Galen, but his shoulders
were erect and he was very splendid in his jeweled
full dress. None spoke; they waited on Marcia,
who turned the news over in her mind a minute.
“When? Why?” she asked at last.
“He proposed I should smuggle
him in, that he might be of service to you.
He was stormy-minded. He said Rome may need a
determined man tonight. But the centurion of
the guard recognized him knew he is Maternus.
He refused to summon the commander. Sextus is
locked in a cell, and there is no knowing what the
guards may do to him. They may try to make him
talk. Please write and order him released.”
“Yes, order him released,” said Pertinax.
But Marcia’s strained lips flickered with the
vestige of a smile.
“A determined man!” she
said, her eyes on Pertinax. “By morning
a determined man might give his own commands.
Sextus is safe where he is. Let him stay there
until you have power to release him! Go and wait
in the outer room, Narcissus!”
Narcissus had no alternative.
Though he could sense the climax with the marrow
of his bones, he did not dare to disobey. He
might have rushed into the emperor’s bedroom
to denounce the whole conspiracy and offer himself
as bodyguard in the emergency. That might have
won Commodus’ gratitude; it might have opened
up a way for liberating Sextus. But there was
irresolution in the air. And besides, he knew
that Sextus would reckon it a treason to himself to
be made beholden for his life to Commodus, nor would
he forgive betrayal of his friends, Pertinax, and
Marcia and Galen.
So Narcissus, who cared only for Sextus,
reckoning no other man on earth his friend, went and
sat beyond the curtains in the smaller, outer room,
straining his ears to catch the conversation and wondering
what tragedy the gods might have in store. As
gladiator his philosophy was mixed of fatalism, cynical
irreverence, a semi-military instinct of obedience,
short-sightedness and self-will. He reckoned
Marcia no better than himself because she, too, was
born in slavery and Pertinax not vastly
better than himself because he was a charcoal-burner’s
son. But it did not enter his head just then
that he might be capable of making history.
Marcia well understood him.
Knowing that he could not escape to confer with the
slaves in the corridor, because the door leading to
the corridor from the smaller anteroom was locked,
she was at no pains to prevent his overhearing anything.
He could be dealt with either way, at her convenience;
a reward might seal his lips, or she could have him
killed the instant that his usefulness was ended, which
was possibly not yet.
“Sextus,” she said, “must
be dealt with. Pertinax, you are the one who
should attend to it. As governor of Rome you
can ”
“He is thoroughly faithful,”
said Pertinax. “He has been very useful
to us.”
“Yes,” said Marcia, “but
usefulness has limits. Time comes when wine
jars need resealing, else the wine spills. Galen,
go in and see the emperor.”
Galen shook his head.
“He is a sick man,” said Marcia.
“I think he has a fever.”
Galen shook his head again.
“I will not have it said I poisoned him.”
“Nonsense! Who knows that you mixed any
poison?”
“Sextus, for one,” Galen answered.
“Dea dia! There
you are!” said Marcia. “I tell you,
Pertinax, your Sextus may prove to be another Livius!
He has been as ubiquitous as the plague. He
knows everything. What if he should turn around
and secure himself and his estates by telling Commodus
all he knows? It was you who trusted Livius.
Do you never learn by your mistakes?”
“We don’t know yet what
Livius has told,” said Pertinax. “If
he had been tortured but he was not.
Commodus slew him with his own hand. I know
that is true; it was told me by the steward of the
bedchamber, who saw it, and who helped to dispose
of the body. Commodus swore that such a creeping
spy as Livius, who could be true to nobody but scribbled,
scribbled, scribbled in a journal all the scandal he
could learn in order to betray anybody when it suited
him, was unfit to live. I take that for a sign
that Commodus has had a change of heart. It was
a manly thing to slay that wretch.”
“He will have a change of governors
of Rome before the day dawns!” Marcia retorted.
“If it weren’t that he might change his
mistress at the same time ”
“You would betray me eh?”
Pertinax smiled at her tolerantly.
“No,” said Marcia, “I
would let you have your own way and be executed!
You deserve it, Pertinax.” Pertinax stood
up and paced the floor with hands behind him.
“I will have my own way.
I will have it, Marcia!” he said, calmly, coming
to a stand in front of her. “He who plots
against his emperor may meet the like fate!
If Commodus has no designs against me, then I harbor
none against him. I am not sure I am fitted to
be Cæsar. I have none to rally to me, to rely
on, except the praetorian guard, which is a two-horned
weapon; they could turn on me as easily and put a
man of their own choosing on the throne. And
furthermore, I don’t wish to be Cæsar.
Glabrio, for instance, is a better man than I am for
the task. I will only consent to your desperate
course, for the sake of Rome, if you can prove to
me that Commodus designs a wholesale massacre.
And even so, if your name and Galen’s and mine
are not on his proscription list if he
only intends, that is, to punish Christians and weaken
the faction of that Carthaginian Severus, I will observe
my oath of loyalty. I will counsel moderation
but ”
“You are less than half a man
without your mistress!” Marcia exploded.
“Don’t stand trying to impress me with
your dignity. I don’t believe in it!
I will send for Cornificia.”
“No, no!” Pertinax showed
instant resolution. “Cornificia shall not
be dragged in. The responsibility is yours and
mine. Let us not lessen our dignity by involving
an innocent woman.”
For a moment that made Marcia breathless.
She was staggered by his innocence, not his assertion
of Cornificia’s bemused by the man’s
ability to believe what he chose to believe, as if
Cornificia had not been the very first who plotted
to make him Cæsar. Cornificia more than any
one had contrived to suggest to the praetorian guard
that their interest might best be served some day
by befriending Pertinax; she more than any one had
disarmed Commodus’ suspicion by complaining to
him about Pertinax’ lack of self-assertiveness,
which had become Commodus’ chief reason for
not mistrusting him. By pretending to report
to Commodus the private doings of Pertinax and a number
of other important people, Cornificia had undermined
Commodus’ faith in his secret informers who
might else have been dangerous.
“Your Cornificia,” Marcia
began then changed her mind. Disillusionment
would do no good. She must play on the man’s
illusion that he was the master of his own will.
“Very well,” she went on, “Yours
be the decision! No woman can decide such issues.
We are all in your hands Cornificia and
Galen all of us aye, and Rome,
too and even Sextus and his friends.
But you will never have another such opportunity.
It is tonight or never, Pertinax!”
He winced. He was about to speak,
but something interrupted him. The great door
carved with cupids leading to the emperor’s bedchamber
opened inch by inch and Telamonion came out, closing
it softly behind him.
“Cæsar sleeps,” said
the child, “and the wind blew out the lamp.
He was very cross. It is dark. It is cold
and lonely in there.”
In his hand he held a sheet of parchment,
covered with writing and creased from his attempts
to make a parchment helmet, “Show me,”
he said, holding out the sheet to Marcia.
She took him on her knee and began
reading what was written, putting him down when he
tugged at the parchment to make her show him how to
fold it. She found him another sheet to play
with and told him to take it to Pertinax who was a
soldier and knew more about helmets. Then she
went on reading, clutching at the sheet so tightly
that her nails blanched white under the dye.
“Pertinax!” she said,
shaking the parchment, speaking in a strained voice,
“this is his final list! He has copied
the names from his tablets. Whose name do you
guess comes first?”
Pertinax was playing with Telamonion
and did not look at her.
“Severus!” he answered,
morbid jealousy, amounting to obsession, stirring
that cynical hope in him.
“Severus isn’t mentioned.
The first six names are in this order: Galen,
Marcia, Cornificia, Pertinax, Narcissus, Sextus alias
Maternus. Do you realize what that means?
It is now or never! Why has he put Galen first,
I wonder?”
Galen did not appear startled.
His interest was philosophical impersonal.
“I should be first. I
am guiltiest. I taught him in his youth,”
he remarked, smiling thinly. “I taught
him how to loose the beast that lives in him, not
intending that, of course, but it is what we do that
counts. I should come first! The state
would have been better for the death of many a man
whom I cured; but I did not cure Commodus, I revealed
him to himself, and he fell in love with himself and ”
“Now will you poison him?” said Marcia.
“No,” said Galen. “Let him
kill me. It is better.”
“Gods! Has Rome no iron
left? You, Pertinax!” said Marcia, “Go
in and kill him!”
Pertinax stood up and stared at her.
The child Telamonion pressed close to him holding
his righthand, gazing at Marcia.
“Telamonion, go in and play
with Narcissus,” said Marcia. She pointed
at the curtains and the child obeyed.
“Go in and kill him, Pertinax!”
Marcia shook the list of names, then stood still
suddenly, like a woman frozen, ash-white under the
carmine on her cheeks.
There came a voice from the emperor’s
bedroom, more like the roar of an angry beast than
human speech:
“Marcia! Do you hear me,
Marcia? By all Olympus Marcia!”
She opened the door. The inner
room was in darkness. There came a gust of chill
wet wind that made all the curtains flutter and there
was a comfortless noise of cataracts of rain downpouring
from the over-loaded gutters on to marble balconies.
Then the emperor’s voice again:
“Is that you, Marcia?
You leave your Commodus to die of thirst! I parch I
have a fever bring my wine-cup!”
“At once, Commodus.”
She glanced at the golden cup on an
onyx table. On a stand beside it was an unpierced
wine jar set in an enormous bowl of snow. She
looked at Pertinax and shrugged her shoulders,
possibly because the wind blew through the opened
door. She glanced at Galen.
“If you have a fever, shouldn’t I bring
Galen?”
“No!” roared Commodus.
“The man might poison me! Bring me the
cup, and you fill it yourself! Make haste before
I die of thirst! Then bring me another lamp
and dose the shutters! No slaves I
can’t bear the sight of them!”
“Instantly, Commodus.
I am coming with it now. Only wait while I pierce
the amphora.”
She closed the door and looked swiftly
once again at Pertinax. He frowned over the list
of names and did not look at her. She walked
straight up to Galen.
“Give me!” she demanded,
holding out her hand. He drew a little parchment
package from his bosom and she clutched it, saying
nothing. Galen was the one who spoke:
“Responsibility is his who orders.
May the gods see that it falls where it belongs.”
She took no notice of his speech but
stood for a moment untying the strings of the package,
frowning to herself, then bit the string through and,
clutching the little package in her fist, took a gilded
tool from beside the snow-bowl and pierced the seal
of the amphora. Then she put the poison in the
bottom of the golden cup and poured the wine with
difficulty, since the jar was heavy, but Pertinax,
who watched intently, made no movement to assist.
She stirred the wine with one of her long hair-pins.
“Marcia!” roared Commodus.
“I am coming now.”
She went into the bedroom, leaving
the door not quite closed behind her. Pertinax
began to stare at Galen critically. Galen blinked
at him. Commodus’ voice came very distinctly
from the inner room:
“Taste first, Marcia!
Olympus! I can’t see you in the dark.
Come close. Are your lips wet? Let me
feel them!”
“I drank a whole mouthful, Commodus.
How hot your hand is! Feel feel the
cup you can feel with your finger how much
I have tasted. I broke the seal of a fresh jar
of Falernian.”
“Some of your Christians might have tampered
with it!”
“No, no, Commodus. That
jar has been in the cellar since before you were born
and the seal was intact. I washed the cup myself.”
“Well, taste again. Sit
here on the bed where I can feel your heart-beats.”
Presently he gave a gasp and belched,
as always after he had swallowed a whole cupful at
one draught.
“Now close the shutters and
bolt them on the inside; there might be some of your
Christians lurking on the balcony.”
“In this storm, Commodus? And there are
guards on duty.”
“Close them, I say! Who
trusts the guards! Did they guard the tunnel?
I will rid Rome of all Christians tomorrow! Aye,
and of many another reptile! They have robbed
me of my fun in the arena I will find another
way to interest myself! Now bring me a fresh
lamp in here, and set the tablets by the bed.”
She came out, shutting the door behind
her, then stood listening. She did not tremble.
Her wrist was red where Commodus had held it.
“How long?” she whispered, looking at
Galen.
“Only a very little time,” he answered.
“How much did you drink?”
She put her hand to her stomach, as if pain had stabbed
her.
“Drink pure wine,” said Galen. “Swiftly.
Drink a lot of it.”
She went to the amphora. Before
she could reach it there came a roar like a furious
beast’s from the bedroom.
“I am poisoned! Marcia!
Marcia! My belly burns! I am on fire inside!
I faint! Marcia! Marcia!” Then
groans and a great creaking of the bed.
Marcia she was trembling
now drank wine, and Pertinax began to pace
the floor.
“You, Galen, you had better go in to him,”
said Marcia.
“If I do go, I must heal him,” Galen answered.
The groans in the bedroom ceased.
The shouts began again terrific imprecations curses
hurled at Marcia the struggles of a strong
man in the throes of cramp and, at last,
the sound of vomiting.
“If he vomits he will not die!”
Marcia exclaimed. Galen nodded. He appeared
immensely satisfied expectant.
“Galen, have you will
that poison kill him?” Marcia demanded.
“No,” said Galen.
“Pertinax must kill him. I promised I
would do my best for Pertinax. Behold your opportunity!”
Pertinax strode toward him, clutching
at a dagger underneath his tunic.
“Kill me if you wish,”
said Galen, “but if you have any resolution you
had better do first what you wanted me to do.
And you will need me afterward.”
Commodus was vomiting and in the pauses
roaring like a mad beast. Marcia seized Pertinax
by the arm. “I have done my part,”
she said. “Now nerve yourself! Go
in now and finish it!”
“He may die yet. Let us wait and see,”
said Pertinax.
A howl rising to a scream terror
and anger mingled came from the bedroom;
then again the noise of vomiting and the creaking
of the bed as Commodus writhed in the spasms of cramp.
“He will feel better presently,” said
Galen.
“If so, you die first!
You have betrayed us all!” Pertinax shook off
Marcia and scowled at Galen, raising his right arm
as if about to strike the old man. “False
to your emperor! False to us!”
“And quite willing to die, if
first I may see you play the man!” said Galen,
blinking up at him.
“Hush!” exclaimed Marcia.
“Listen! Gods! He is up off the
bed! He will be in here in a minute! Pertinax!”
Alarm subsided. They could hear
the thud and creak as Commodus threw himself back
on the bed then writhing again and groans
of agony. Between the spasms Commodus began to
frame connected sentences:
“Guards! Your emperor
is being murdered! Rescue your Commodus!”
“He is recovering,” said Galen.
“Give me your dagger!”
said Marcia and clutched at Pertinax’ tunic,
feeling for it.
But she was not even strong enough
to resist the half-contemptuous shrug with which Pertinax
thrust her away.
“You disgust me. There
is neither dignity nor decency in this,” he
muttered. “Nothing but evil can come of
it.”
“Whose was the star that fell?” asked
Galen.
There came more noise from the bedroom.
Commodus seemed to be trying to get to his feet again.
Marcia ran toward the smaller anteroom and dragged
the curtains back.
“Narcissus!”
He came out, carrying Telamonion. The child
lay asleep in his arms.
“Go and put that child down.
Now earn your freedom go in and kill the
emperor! He has poisoned himself, and he thinks
we did it. Give him your dagger, Pertinax!”
“I am only a slave,” Narcissus
answered. “It is not right that a slave
should kill an emperor.”
Marcia seized the gladiator by the
shoulders, scanned his face, saw what she looked for
and bargained for it instantly.
“Your freedom! Manumission
and a hundred thousand sesterces!”
“In writing!” said Narcissus.
“Dog!” growled Pertinax. “Go
in and do as you are told!”
But Narcissus only grinned at him and squared his
shoulders.
“Death means little to a gladiator,” he
remarked.
“Leave him to me!” ordered Marcia.
“Go and sit down at that table,
Pertinax. Take pen and parchment. Now
then what do you want in writing?
Make haste!”
“Freedom you may
keep your money I shall not wait to receive
it. Freedom for me and for Sextus and for all
of Sextus’ friends and freedmen. An order
releasing Sextus from the guard-house instantly.
Permission to leave Rome and Italy by any route we
choose.”
“Write, Pertinax!” said Marcia.
Narcissus glanced at Galen.
“Galen,” he said, “is one of Sextus’
friends, so set his name down.”
“Never mind me,” said Galen. “They
will need me.”
Marcia stood over Pertinax, watching
him write. She snatched the document and sanded
it, then watched him write the order to the guard,
releasing Sextus.
“There!” she exclaimed.
“You have your price. Go in and kill him!
Give him your dagger, Pertinax.”
“I hoped for heroism, not expecting
it,” said Galen. “I expected cunning.
Is it absent, too? If he should use a dagger many
men have heard me say that Cæsar has a tendency to
apoplexy ”
“Strangle him!” commanded Marcia.
She thrust the palms of her hands
against Narcissus’ back and pushed him toward
the bedroom door, now almost at the end of her reserves
of self-control. Her mouth trembled.
She was fighting against hysteria.
“Light! Lamp! Guards!”
roared Commodus, and again the ebony-posted bed creaked
under him. Narcissus stepped into the darkened
room. He left the door open, to have light to
do his work by, but Marcia closed it, clinging to
the gilded satyr’s head that served for knob
with both hands, her lips drawn tight against her
teeth, her whole face tortured with anticipation.
“It is better that a gladiator
did it,” remarked Pertinax, attempting to look
calm. “I never killed a man. As general,
and as governor of Rome, as consul and proconsul,
I have spared whom I might. Some had to die
but my own hands are clean.”
There came an awful sound of struggle
from the inner room. A monstrous roar was shut
off suddenly, half-finished, smothered under bedclothes.
Then the bed-frame cracked under the strain of Titans
fighting cracked creaked and
utter silence fell. It lasted several minutes.
Then the door opened and Narcissus came striding out.
“He was strong,” he remarked. “Look
at this.”
He bared his arm and showed where
Commodus had gripped him; the lithe muscle looked
as if it had been gripped in an iron vise. He
chafed it, wincing with pain.
“Go in and observe that I have
taken nothing. Don’t be afraid,”
he added scornfully. “He fought like the
god that he was, but he died ”
“Of apoplexy,” Galen interrupted.
“That is to say, of a surging of blood to the
brain and a cerebral rupture. It is fortunate
you have a doctor on the scene who knew of his liability
to ”
“We must go and see,”
said Marcia. “Come with me, Pertinax.
Then we must tidy the bed and make haste and summon
the officers of the praetorian guard. Let them
hear Galen say he died of apoplexy.”
She picked up a lamp from the table
and Pertinax moved to follow her, but Narcissus stepped
in his way.
“Ave, Cæsar!” he said, throwing up his
right hand.
“You may go,” said Pertinax.
“Go in silence. Not a word to a soul in
the corridors. Leave Rome. Leave Italy.
Take Sextus with you.”
“You will let him go?”
asked Marcia. “Pertinax, what will become
of you? Send to the guard at the gate and command
them to seize him! Sextus and Narcissus ”
“Have my promise!” he
retorted. “If the fates intend me to be
Cæsar, it shall not be said I slew the men who set
me on the throne.”
“You are Cæsar,” she
answered. “How long will you last?
All omens favored you the murder in the
tunnel now this storm, like a veil to act
behind, and ”
“And last night a falling star!”
said Galen. “Give me parchment. I
will write the cause of death. Then let me go
too, or else kill me. I am no more use.
This is the second time that I have failed to serve
the world by tutoring a Cæsar. Commodus the
hero, and now you the ”
“Silence!” Marcia commanded.
“Or even Pertinax may rise above his scruples!
Write a death certificate at once, and go your way
and follow Sextus!”