Medicus
decent carpenters. I'm thinking of having a proper dining room set made."
    "For that house?"
    "No. I told you, that one's supposed to have been flattened weeks ago. I mean in my new rooms. The ones I'll get when they promote me to CMO."
    "So he's definitely not coming back?" Ruso was aware that no one expected the hot springs of Aquae Sulis to rejuvenate the present chief medical officer, but so far there had been no official word of his retirement.
    "He's bound to go before long," said Valens. "I'll save him the bother of trailing back up here and have his things sent on."
    "And you think they're promoting you to CMO?"
    "Why not?"
    "Because they might choose me."
    "Bollocks."
    "I've got combat experience."
    "But you don't know anybody yet, Ruso. Anyway, you don't need the money like I do."
    "No?"
    "I thought you were supposed to inherit from your father. Aren't you the oldest son?"
    "There were a lot of expenses," said Ruso. "You know what funerals are like."
    "Didn't he have land in Gaul?"
    "My brother's looking after it. The farm has a lot of people to support."
    "Giddyup!" The driver gave one of the beasts a flick with his stick and the cart lurched forward. They followed its creaking progress up the slope.
    "What you need," said Valens suddenly, "is a rich widow."
    Ruso noted this suggestion to add to his list of things he didn't need at all. He had no intention of explaining to Valens that what he did need was either the CMO's salary or a collection of lucrative private patients and some peace and quiet to get on with his writing. Now that he was living in a backwater with no earthquakes or family members or ex-wife to distract him, he hoped to complete the work he had already started and abandoned several times. G. Petreius Ruso's Concise Guide to Military First Aid would be detailed enough to be useful in the field, and short enough to be copied onto very small scrolls that would fit into a soldier's pack. The copying would be expensive, but once those copies had been sold, there would be a double profit—one in cash, and one, he felt sure, in lives and limbs saved. What he didn't need was Valens making helpful suggestions, or worse still, taking up the idea himself.
    "Did I tell you," Valens continued, bringing Ruso back to the subject at hand, "I'm thinking of proposing to the second spear's daughter?"
    "Is she a rich widow?"
    "Gods, no. She's sixteen. Rather attractive, actually, considering what her father looks like."
    Whatever the second spear looked like, he must have been on centurion's pay for some years before he had been promoted to a command in the top cohort. He would be a wealthy man.
    "Only child, I suppose?" ventured Ruso.
    Valens grinned. "Divorce has turned you sadly cynical, my friend."
    "Not divorce," said Ruso. "Marriage."

9
    R USO LAY IN the darkness and listened to the scurry of the mice in the dining room, and then to the patter of the dog. There followed some skidding and squeaking and a crash, then a long silence. It was finally broken by the wail of third watch being blown, and the creak of his bed as he rolled over and vowed to move out of this madhouse as soon as he could afford it.
    By the time he woke again, Valens had gone on duty. The house was quiet. As soon as he had breakfasted and bathed (there would be no time later), he would be able to make some progress with his writing.
    Ruso wandered into the kitchen and picked up half a loaf of bread and a chunk of cheese that had been left out on the kitchen table. There were, he observed with relief, no mouse droppings on the table this morning. Then he glanced across at the little box on the windowsill and saw that the pile Valens was collecting had grown considerably. Abandoning the idea of food, Ruso strode back to his room, pulled on his overtunic, and went across to the hospital to see his private patient.
    The girl was still asleep. He did not wake her. Valens would check on her during ward rounds.
    The words CLOSED FOR IMPROVEMENTS

Similar Books

Seal Team Seven

Keith Douglass

Killing Gifts

Deborah Woodworth

Plan B

SJD Peterson

Bone Deep

Randy Wayne White

Saddle Sore

Bonnie Bryant

Sweet Memories

Lavyrle Spencer

All Wounds

Dina James

A Simple Song

Melody Carlson