half ago. He was about thirty-five years older than she is, which made him roughly the age of Homer. And he was the severe type, against all so-called luxuries like clothes and jewelry, and of course couldnât give her what she wantedâand wants all the time. Sheâs about as lonely as Messalina. Donât you dare feel sorry for her.â
âYou thinkââ
âI think she hired Bibax to conveniently remove an unwanted husband who stood in the way of some fun. Though why she chose Vitellius as a lover is beyond me. Maybe heâs bigger and better than he looks, if she can ever get him off a boyâs back end. Oh, donât look so shocked, Arcturus. Women talk about all kinds of thingsâjust like men.â
âIâm almost afraid to ask, but ⦠anything else?â
She leaned forward. âThereâs more about Sulpicia. I watched her after what Flavia told me. She didnât bring a slave with her, which was odd. I thought perhaps she had to sell them or something, but she was wearing a beautiful necklaceâgold and amethyst, absolutely stunningâso that didnât make sense. Well, when we were dressing in the apodyterium, Sulpicia left for a few minutes, heading back to the frigidarium. I thought it might be because she saw someone she knew, but it wasnât.â
Gwyna squeezed my knee. âShe threw it in.â
âThrew what in? Where?â
âArdur, arenât you paying attention? The necklace. She walked to the frigidarium, to where those three big windows overlooking the spring are, and she threw it in.â
âShe threw the necklace into the Sacred Spring?â
Gwyna nodded triumphantly. âYes. Donât you see?â
I scratched my ear. âIâm afraid I donât. Lots of people throw all kinds of things in there.â
âBut she didnât want to. I could see it in her face. Whatâs more, she just dropped it, so it landed on the side of the reservoir, and not in the water.â
âSo you thinkââ
âI think Sulpicia is being blackmailed, and someone at the temple is involved.â She leaned back and smiled at me as if Iâd thought of it.
âIf sheâs being blackmailedââ
âOther people are, too. Even though Bibax is deadââ
âHe had a partner. Or partners. Maybe thatâs where Ultor comes in. Disgruntled associate not scoring enough of the take. Or maybe someone discovered the goddessâs magic was just a curse-writer with a lucrative side business.â
I looked at her. âGwynaâI thought I saw you throw something in the spring.â
She reddened. âIâm not being blackmailed, if thatâs what youâre worried about. When I saw what Sulpicia was doing, IâI went to join her.â
âWhat did you throw?â
She avoided my eyes. âItâs not important.â
I let it get away. âWas there anything else? This informationâyour ideas. Theyâre invaluable.â
Her face flushed, and she leaned forward and squeezed my knee again. âIâm glad. I want to be useful to you. Be part of what you do.â
I met her eyes. She reddened, looked away.
âThere was something else. What was it? Oh, yesâthe mineâthe haunted mine.â
âYou talked about it?â
âVibia likes ghost stories, and Aquae Sulis is full of them. Someone mentioned that the baths are haunted, too.â
âBy whom?â
âA boyâhe died about three years ago. Heâs supposed to haunt one of the baths on the eastern end. Flavia told the story and pointed out the boyâs grandmother. Old woman, no money. Still comes every day. Her grandson was accused of stealing some bathing clothes. He was the town simpleton, I guess, and couldnât defend himself. She still swears heâs innocent.â Gwyna shivered. âItâs a sad storyâand frightening,
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