Four for a Boy

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Book: Four for a Boy by Mary Reed, Eric Mayer Read Free Book Online
Authors: Mary Reed, Eric Mayer
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective, Mystery
my patients? And what’s this about you working for him anyway? Is it better than serving that doddering emperor of ours, or worse?”
    John glimpsed Felix’s grin, hastily banished by a frown.
    “My position in the Prefect’s office is temporary, I hope,” Felix replied. “As for Justin, he may be old and ill now, but he was once a mere excubitor like myself. He rose to his position by his own abilities. He deserves to be spoken about with respect for that if for nothing else.”
    Gaius looked unconvinced. “A nice speech. Looking to rise yourself, are you? Justin may have been a man of some ability once, but he’s fading away by all accounts. Can’t even find his own boots in the morning, or so they say. I suppose it won’t be long before you’ll be coming around asking me where the emperor’s boots are!”
    John, standing by the door, glanced down the corridor behind him. A hum of conversation, interrupted now and then by muted cries of pain, wafted along between its narrow plastered walls.
    The hospice smelt of crowded humanity, sickness, and herbs, overlaid with the acrid, metallic tang emanating from the brazier at the far end of the corridor. He wondered if it was used to heat cauterizing irons.
    The thought turned his attention to the surgery. Bare, whitewashed walls reflected such light as filtered in through a single window from a sky the color of a fresh bruise. Apart from the table and a low stool it was unfurnished. Scattered dark patches on the table told their own tale, as did the bloodied bronze scalpels in the bowl Gaius had just set down.
    “What’s more, Felix,” the physician was saying, “it would be very helpful if next time you’re guarding Justin you could suggest that he occasionally authorize funds be diverted from paying for dancing girls for all those palace banquets or some such frippery into our meager coffers. We’re full to the very doors and still people arrive for help.”
    Felix snorted. “Do I look like the quaestor to you? Or perhaps a Lord Chamberlain, that I would venture to speak to the emperor in such a fashion? Why would you think Justin takes financial advice from his guards?”
    “They’d give better counsel than his dead wife, for a start! Oh yes, it’s no good scowling, it’s all over the city that the emperor talks to her shade. She should counsel him about stopping the street violence. It was bad enough when the Blues and Greens fought each other. At least the Greens could give a good account of themselves and so kept the Blues in check. Now they maim and murder at will.”
    “Not if the Prefect can help it.”
    “He puts on a good show. He can’t burn every Blue in the city though. You think the judges won’t release any he arrests? There isn’t a magistrate who hasn’t been bought by Justinian. But it isn’t just the damned Blues keeping us busy. Most days we can depend on someone arriving with his scalp hanging half off. Hair caught in a winch at the docks or some other bizarre mishap you’d wager was impossible if you hadn’t seen the results. Others break their heads open brawling in the gutters. It never ends. We send one patient out, more or less patched up, and two more are sitting on the doorstep waiting to come in.”
    Gaius took a breath and glanced curiously at John. “You haven’t introduced your friend.”
    “Not a friend. A slave who’s working with me. John is his name.”
    “I see.”
    Looking at the physician John noticed his eyes seemed fever bright. He’d had an extra cup of wine, he guessed, and no wonder, given his work.
    “Mind you, it’s not just beggars coughing up blood,” Gaius was saying, “or needing broken bones set or some such common repairs. No, the entire city is on edge. We’re seeing a lot more patients with knife wounds of late and that’s a sure sign of it, in my experience. People start drinking too so their humors are worse. Then they get argumentative and soon the blades come out. You should have

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