poor as stony earth, but strong for a lad, willing to work, to fight, walking barefoot through a cold, wet autumn, the north wind behind them bringing winter, all the way to the Sarantine military camp, to offer their services assoldiers to a distant Emperor in the unimaginable City, long, long ago.
âPetrus, stay and dine with me?â
Night. A western sea breeze cooling the room through the open windows over the courtyard below. The sound of falling water drifted up from the fountains, and from farther away came the susurration of wind in the leaves of the trees in the Imperial gardens.
Two men stood in a room in the Traversite Palace. One was an Emperor, the other had made him so. In the larger, more formal Attenine Palace, a little way across the gardens, Apius lay in state in the Porphyry Room, coins on his eyes, a golden sun disk clasped between folded hands: payment and passport for his journey.
âI cannot, Uncle. I have promises to be kept.â
âTonight? Where?â
âAmong the factions. The Blues were very useful today.â
âAh. The Blues. And their most favoured actress? Was she very useful?â The old soldierâs voice was sly now. âOr is she to be useful later this evening?â
Petrus looked unabashed. âAliana? A fine dancer, and I always laugh during her comic turns upon the stage.â He grinned, the round, smooth face free of guile.
The Emperorâs gaze was shrewd, undeceived. After a moment he said, quietly, âLove is dangerous, nephew.â
The younger manâs expression changed. He was silent a moment, by one of the doorways. Eventually he nodded his head. âIt can be. I know that. Do you ⦠disapprove?â
It was a well-timed question. How could his uncleâs disapproval attach to anything he did tonight? After the events of the day?
Valerius shook his head. âNot really. You will move into the Imperial Precinct? One of the palaces?â There were six of them scattered on these grounds. They were all his now. He would have to learn to know them.
Petrus nodded. âOf course, if you honour me so. But not until after the Mourning Rites and the Investiture, and the Hippodrome ceremony in your honour.â
âYou will bring her here with you?â
Petrusâs expression, directly confronted, was equally direct. âOnly if you approve.â
The Emperor said, âAre there not laws? Someone said something, I recall. An actress â¦?â
âYou are the source and fount of all laws in Sarantium now, Uncle. Laws may be changed.â
Valerius sighed. âWe need to talk further on this. And about the holders of office. Gesius. Adrastus. Hilarinusâ I donât trust him. I never did.â
âHe is gone, then. And Adrastus must also be, I fear. Gesius ⦠is more complex. You know he spoke for you in the Senate?â
âYou said. Did it matter?â
âProbably not, but if he had spoken for Adrastusâ
unlikely as that may soundâit might have made things ⦠uglier.â
âYou trust him?â
The Emperor watched his nephewâs deceptively bland, round face as the younger man thought. Petrus wasnât a soldier. He didnât look like a courtier. He carried himself, more than anything else, Valerius decided, like an academician of the old pagan Schools. There was ambition there, however. Enormous ambition. There was, in fact, an Empireâs worth of it. He had cause to know, being where he was.
Petrus gestured, his soft hands spreading a little apart. âTruthfully? Iâm not certain. I said it was complex.
We will, indeed, have to talk further. But tonight you are allowed an evening of leisure, and I may permit myself the same, with your leave. I took the liberty of commanding ale for you, Uncle. It is on the sideboard beside the wine. Have I your gracious leave to depart?â
Valerius didnât really want him to go, but what was he
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