invented there. The Eastâs roots went deep down into antiquity, into a time long before Roma itself ever was, and one needed to keep a wary eye out in any dealings with its citizens.
So Menandros was just trying to collect evidence of Roman silliness, yes. Using bar-Heap to beat the prices down for him, he went from booth to booth, gathering up the merchandise. He acquired instructions for fashioning a ring of power that would permit one to get whatever one asks from anybody, or to calm the anger of masters and kings. He bought a charm to induce wakefulness, and another to bring on sleep. He got a lengthy scroll that offered a whole catalog of mighty mysteries, and gleefully read from it to them: ââYou will see the doors thrown open, and seven virgins coming from deep within, dressed in linengarments, and with the faces of asps. They are called the Fates of Heaven and wield golden wands. When you see them, greet them in this mannerâââ He found a spell that necromancers could use to keep skulls from speaking out of turn while their owners were using them in the casting of spells; he found one that would summon the Headless One who had created earth and heaven, the mighty Osoronnophris, and conjure Him to expel demons from a suffererâs body; he found one that would bring back lost or stolen property; he went back to the first booth and bought the infallible love potion, for a fraction of the original asking price; and, finally, picked up one that would cause oneâs fellow drinkers at a drinking party to think that they had grown the snouts of apes.
At last, well satisfied with his purchases, Menandros said he was willing to move on. At the far end of the hall, beyond the territory of the peddlers of spells, they paused at the domain of the soothsayers and augurs. âFor a copper or two,â Faustus told the Greek, âthey will look at the palm of your hand, or the pattern of lines on your forehead, and tell you your future. For a higher price they will examine the entrails of chickens or the liver of a sheep, and tell you your true future. Or even the future of the Empire itself.â
Menandros looked astonished. âThe future of the Empire? Common diviners in a public marketplace offer prophecies of a sort like that? Iâd think only the Imperial augurs would deal in such news, and only for the Emperorâs ear.â
âThe Imperial augurs provide more reliable information, I suppose,â said Faustus. âBut this is Roma, where everything is for sale to anyone.â He looked down the row and saw the one who had claimed new knowledge of the Sibylline prophecies and foretold the imminent end of the Empireâan old man, unmistakably Roman, not a Greek or any other kind of foreigner, with faded blue eyes and a lengthy, wispy white beard. âOver there is one of the most audacious of our seers, for instance,â Faustus said, pointing. âFor a fee he will tell you that our time of Empire is nearly over, that a year is coming soon when the seven planets will meet at Capricorn and the entire universe will be consumed by fire.â
âThe great ekpyrosis, â Menandros said. âWe have the same prophecy. What does he base his calculations on, I wonder?â
âWhat does it matter?â cried Maximilianus, in a burst of sudden unconcealed rage. âIt is all foolishness!â
âPerhaps so,â Faustus said gently. And, to Menandros, whose curiosity about the old man and his apocalyptic predictions still was apparent: âIt has something to do with the old tale of King Romulus and the twelve eagles that passed overhead on the day he and his brother Remus fought over the proper location for the city of Roma.â
âThey were twelve vultures, I thought,â said bar-Heap.
Faustus shook his head. âNo. Eagles, they were. And the prophecy of the Sibyl is that Roma will endure for twelve Great Years of a hundred years
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