Last Act in Palmyra

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Authors: Lindsey Davis
Siq to collect our ox-cart from the caravanserai in secret, then dash for freedom. ‘We’ll pack!’ I volunteered eagerly. Helena had jumped up and was already doing it. ‘So this is goodbye, Musa!’
    â€˜Oh no,’ replied the priest, with an earnest expression. ‘I was told to stay with you. If you leave Petra, I shall have to come.’
    I patted his shoulder. We had no time to waste in argument. ‘If we’re being asked to leave, no doubt somebody forgot to countermand your orders.’ He was unimpressed with this reasoning. I didn’t believe it myself. If my corns had been in The Brother’s boots, I too would have made sure an underling followed us to the Nabataean borders and put us firmly on board ship. ‘Well, it’s your decision.’
    Helena was used to me acquiring eccentric travel companions, but looked as if this one had stretched her tolerance. Grinning unconvincingly, I tried to reassure her: ‘He won’t come with us far; he’ll miss his mountains.’
    Helena smiled wearily. ‘Don’t worry. I’m quite used to handling men I could do without!’
    *   *   *
    With as much dignity as we could muster we allowed ourselves to be marched out of Petra. From shadows among the rocks, dark figures watched us leave. The odd camel did us the honour of spitting after us disparagingly.
    Once we stopped. Musa spoke almost crossly to the armed escort. They didn’t like waiting, but he darted into a house and came back with a small baggage roll. Equipped with Nabataean underwear and toothpicks, presumably, we were hurried on.
    By then night had fallen, so our journey took place by the light of flares. Their pallid flames flickered eerily on the lower carvings of the rock tombs, sending long shadows up the sandstone. Columns and pediments were glimpsed, then quickly lost. Square-topped doorways assumed a menacing air, their openings like mysterious black cave mouths. We were on foot. We let the Nabataeans carry our baggage across the city, but when we reached the narrow gorge through the mountains it was clear we were being sent on alone – almost. Musa definitely intended to stick all the way. To reach the outside world, I had to grapple with our baggage while Helena lit our way with a flaming brand. As she strode ahead of us in high annoyance, she looked like some devastating sibyl leading the way down a cleft into Hades.
    â€˜Lucky I hadn’t spent my inheritance on a lifetime’s supply of bales of silk and incense jars!’ muttered Helena, loud enough for Musa to hear. I knew she had been looking forward to what ought to have been an unrivalled chance to make luxury purchases. If her mother was as efficient as mine, she had come with a three-scroll shopping list.
    â€˜I’ll buy you a pair of Indian pearl earrings,’ I tried offering to her stately back.
    â€˜Oh thanks! That should overcome my disappointment…’ Helena knew the pearls would probably never materialise.
    We stumbled down the rocky path between cliffs that now craned together in complete blackness overhead. If we stopped, occasional tumbling stones were all that broke the silence of the Siq. We kept going.
    I was now feeling mild despair. I always like to accomplish my tasks for the Emperor with dispatch, but even by my economical standards spending barely one day in Petra was not a good basis for briefing His Caesarship on the usual dire subjects (topography, fortifications, economics, social mores, political stability and mental state of the populace). I could just about manage to tell him the market price of radishes – information Vespasian probably knew from other sources, and not much use for helping a war council decide whether to invade.
    Without hard information to offer, my chances of screwing a fee from the Palace must be slim. Besides, if Anacrites had sent me here in the hope that it would be a terminal

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