The Song of the Gladiator

The Song of the Gladiator by Paul Doherty Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Song of the Gladiator by Paul Doherty Read Free Book Online
Authors: Paul Doherty
entered, fumbling in the agreed place for the oil lamp and packet of sulphur matches. After a great deal of scraping, the lamp was lit. She put it in the lantern horn, took off her hat, placed this at the top of the steps and carefully climbed down into the silent musty darkness.
    Every time she visited the catacombs, she thought how much she hated the place. She wasn’t afraid of demons or ghosts; it was just the oppressive silence, the walls closing in. She reached the bottom; the tunnel here was about two yards wide, the ceiling well above her head, the floor of beaten earth sure under her feet. She walked carefully, holding the lantern out, her walking cane tapping the ground, echoing like a drum-beat. She turned a corner and entered the Christian burial place. Here, on ledges in the wall, protected by a thin coating of makeshift plaster, lay the Christian dead. Most had died naturally; others were the victims of persecution: strangled, decapitated, or in some cases just the pathetic remains of what had been left after they had been thrown to the wild beasts in the amphitheatre. Roughly carved inscriptions as well as Christian graffiti covered the walls, some with the usual Chi and Rho , a cross, or prayers to St Peter and St Paul. Claudia knew these signs by heart; they were her guide to which tunnel to follow, which passageway to enter. At last she reached the tomb of Philomena, ‘Virgin and Martyr’, so the graffiti proclaimed, and sat down on a marble bench stolen from the cemetery above. This was a junction of three tunnels, a safe place, where Claudia and Sylvester could hear anyone who approached and so take another way out.
    Claudia put her stick carefully against the marble seat and waited. She checked the lantern; there was plenty of oil in the container and the wick was strong. She leaned against the cold stone, dabbing the sweat from her face, and wondered what Sylvester wanted. He had told her about some meeting out at the Villa Pulchra that she would have to go to; the Empress Helena would need her. Claudia was more worried about Murranus. She wondered if Rufinus the banker could throw any light on the attempt on Spicerius.
    At last she heard a sound, a clatter, the usual sign whenever Sylvester approached. She cupped her hand to her mouth, whistled sharply and then waited for the three whistles in reply. She breathed a sigh of relief: Sylvester was here. A shadow moved down one of the tunnels, and the silver-haired priest, his lean, tired face wreathed in a smile, emerged from the darkness. They exchanged the kiss of peace. Sylvester sat down next to Claudia and, opening a napkin, shared the bread and figs he had brought, as well as the small flask of wine.
    ‘Why do we meet here?’ Claudia asked between mouthfuls. ‘The danger has passed.’
    ‘The danger is never past, Claudia, there is always danger. We Christians are tolerated, not approved; we have only begun the journey.’ Sylvester took a piece of cheese and broke it in his hands. ‘There’s also danger for you, Claudia. You spy for the Bishop of Rome, but you also spy for the Empress.’
    ‘I never have, never would, betray either.’
    ‘One day you might. Choices have to be made, crossroads reached. Your father would have approved of what you are doing.’
    ‘My father is dead.’
    ‘He was one of us.’
    ‘Whether he was one of you or not, he would still have hunted down and killed the man who raped his daughter and murdered his son.’ Claudia turned on the marble bench, still half listening for any sound from the tunnels. ‘I don’t come to you, Sylvester, because I love you or your faith. If you remember, I came to you for help, and you promised you would find that man.’ Claudia tried to keep the pleading out of her voice. ‘The assassin with the purple chalice tattooed on his wrist.’
    ‘Claudia, we are helping you. Your assailant had a purple chalice tattoo, the mark of those who follow the rites of Dionysius, the

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