Read The Saint's Mistress Online
Authors: Kathryn Bashaar
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Romance, #Historical Fiction, #Historical Romance
Miriam had placed around my neck so longer ago, for good luck.
Adeo raised his right arm, and his toga draped impressively. He surveyed his audience and
began, “Cicero on wisdom.” He paused again, as his father had taught him. Good so far, good,
good, I thought, leaning forward and biting the inside of my lip.
He went on, his forehead wrinkled appropriately in a thoughtful frown. He spoke slowly and
clearly, his boyish soprano audible in the highest tiers. “If the souls which we have are eternal
and divine, we must conclude that, the more we let them have their head in natural activity, that
is, in reasoning and in the quest for knowledge, and the less they are caught up in the vices and
errors of mankind, the easier it will be for them to ascend and return to heaven.” He lowered his
arm so that his elbow bent at waist level, again showing a smooth toga drape, and bowed his
head slightly.
“Bravo!” Aurelius burst out, and began clapping wildly. I noticed his eyes filled with tears,
and I felt a lump in my throat myself. I clapped until my hands hurt, and blew my little boy a
kiss, which he did not see. He strode from the stage with the folds of the unfamiliar toga swirling
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around his skinny legs. How I loved him at that moment, with his glossy cap of curly hair like
his father’s, and his square chin and full lips which suddenly reminded me of my brother Tito.
“He’ll win,” Aurelius assured me, still clapping. “He should definitely win. Oh, he did
excellently, excellently,” and he folded me into a hug.
A restless murmur ran up the tiers as anxious parents and friends awaited the announcement
of the awards. Aurelius grabbed my hand and we tensed and leaned further and further forward
as the awards were announced for the bigger boys.
“Finally,” the moderator announced, “in the 8-to-10-year-old category, this year’s
declamation prize goes to Adeodonatus Augustinus, for his fine delivery of Cicero.”
Aurelius leaped to his feet and banged his massive hands together over and over, stomping his
feet, and finally whistling through his teeth. His face radiated joy and pride as he looked over at
me. “I knew he would do it! Oh, Leona, he’ll outshine me in every way! Our boy’s star will rise
higher than I could ever dream for myself.”
Most of the crowd had already streamed out of the theater by the time we found Adeo and
collected him to head out.
His father wrapped him in a fierce hug first, lifting him off the ground. “You did better than I
could have dreamed of at your age!” He put Adeo down and held him by the shoulders at arm’s
length. “Have I ever told you how proud I am of you?” he asked.
“Thank you, father,” Adeo replied formally, as if the donning of the toga had stripped him of
his North African warmth and transformed him into a different person, more formal and
dignified.
“We’re proud of you,” I said softly and gave my newly-dignified son a quick hug.
“Get that blasted blanket off now,” Aurelius ordered, “and let’s go out and celebrate. Is the
Goat’s Head still your favorite tavern?”
Adeo’s eyes lit up. “Yes.”
“Fried squid?” his father asked knowingly.
“Yes!” Adeo began to flail at the folds of the toga, in his hurry to shed the heavy woolen
garment. “I’m roasting in this,” he admitted. I helped him unwrap it and folded the voluminous
material over my arm as best I could.
“This thing weights a ton,” I complained. “Can’t we drop it off at home before we go to the
Goat’s Head?”
“Yes,” Aurelius replied. “Actually, I wanted to stop to visit Amicus anyway. Quintus let me
know he’s sick.”
“Amicus is sick? What’s wrong?”
Aurelius shrugged. “Probably some foul bug he picked up in Rome or at sea.” Amicus,
Nebridius and Quintus had just returned from a trip to Rome. Amicus and Quintus had received
imperial commissions through their patrons, and Nebridius had tagged along just for fun. I knew
that Aurelius had mixed emotions: he would have loved to see Rome and he envied his friends
their powerful patrons and imperial commissions, but he had a dread of the sea. I doubted he
would ever set foot on a boat. It was irrelevant anyway: we lacked the funds to finance the trips
ourselves, and, in the absence of any work that Aurelius could do for him in Rome, it was not
even worth asking Urbanus to finance the trip. We had not seen our friends since their return to
Carthage.
“All right, home, then say hi to Amicus, then Goat’s Head!” Aurelius said, clapping Adeo on
the back.
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Amicus’ sister and widowed mother had come to Carthage to stay with him now that he had
an imperial commission. The commission provided enough income for a house and servants, and
we were shown to Amicus’ tiled sitting room by a quiet teenage girl with the brand of a runaway
on her forehead. I wondered that Amicus would consent to have a slave who had already tried to
run away once.
Our friend lay on a bronze-legged couch covered with an embroidered cushion. Quintus
reclined on a similar couch nearby, a cup of wine in his hand.
“Adeo won the declamation prize for his age group!” Aurelius announced before we were
even halfway across the floor.
“Prizes already at such a young age!” Amicus exclaimed. “What did you recite?”
“Cicero,” Adeo told him, smiling .
“Let’s hear it then.”
Adeo recited his piece, minus the heavy toga, but with the arm gestures and pauses at all the
right places again.
“Bravo!” Amicus cheered.
“You’ll soon outshine your father,” Quintus agreed.
Aurelius beamed. “That’s exactly what I said.” He turned to Amicus with concern. “Quintus
said you were sick.”
“I haven’t felt well since we set sail from Ostia,” Amicus admitted. “I feel weak and my chest
hurts when I breathe. The doctor says to rest and breathe vapors of rosemary. That’s what you
smell.” I did notice the astringent scent of rosemary slicing the air of the room.
“And is it helping?”
“Not yet.” Amicus coughed, and I could see by the folds of pain in his face that his chest was
hurting him very badly. “Aurelius, sit,” he said. “We have other news for you. Good news, but
news that I don’t think you’ll like hearing at first.”
Quintus glanced at Amicus out of the corners of his eyes, then his gazed skittered towards
Aurelius.
Aurelius frowned and gestured for his friend to continue.
“We’ve become Christians, all of us: Quintus, Nebridius and I.”
“You can’t be serious.”
“I am. We are to be baptized Good Friday next, all three of us together.”
Aurelius flushed. “But, we always agreed that Christianity was just a bunch of hocus-pocus.
It’s Mani that offers a scientific explanation of the world.”
Quintus gestured with his cup and the slave girl poured him some more wine. “Aurelius,” he
said, “stop and think for a second: how is the story of the Five descending to the realm of
Darkness to rescue the First Man any less fabulous than Christ’s resurrection?"
“It’s completely different! Amicus, Quintus, you know what these Christians are: they’re
women and slaves who believe that relics of the True Cross can heal leprosy, and the bones of
their saints can bring sight to the blind.”
“Anything is possible with the power of God,” Quintus replied.
“But can you explain how that happens?”
“Can you explain how the particles of light are entrapped and then released?” Quintus shot
back.
“No, but Faustus can.” Faustus was a renowned scholar and speaker, the most famous of
Manichean priests. “He’ll be in Carthage later this summer to debate Christians and conduct
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seminars,” Aurelius went on. “He’ll explain the origin of the universe and the path to goodness
scientifically, not all wrapped up in magic like your Jesus.”
Quintus took a long sip and wine and smacked his lips. “Aurelius, you had better open your
eyes. The Empire has become Christian. Anyone who wants to get ahead should do the same.”
“I thought we were scholars. I thought we were seekers of truth before we were seekers of
power. Didn’t we agree to that one night, or was I so drunk that I’m remembering wrong?”
Aurelius’ voice was rising.
“Aurelius is right,” Amicus said to Quintus. “He shouldn’t pretend to accept the Lord just
because it would help his career. It would be a grave sin to convert just to gain political
advantage.” He paused to cough, and then continued, “No, Aurelius, you’re right. You should
follow your conscience. God will know if you try to deceive Him or use Him to advance your
career. We’ll pray every day for you to see the light.”
“I’ll pray, too,” Aurelius answered. “But, I’ll also come back to you with answers once I’ve
spoken with Faustus. Then we’ll see who converts – or deconverts.”
“We will,” Amicus admitted.
The serving girl refilled Quintus’s wine cup again. I whispered to Amicus, “Why did you buy
a runaway?”
“To free her,” Amicus answered. “She had run away not once, but twice and the penalty this
second time was to be amputation of a foot. I bought her from her master to save her from that
fate and she now works for me for a small wage.”
“Aren’t you afraid she’ll run away on you, too?”
“Not really. She’s grateful and I treat her well. But, if she should want to leave, then she’s
free to do that. Christ came to bring a new age, when the last shall be first,” he added, with a nod
towards Aurelius. “He leaves us no room to mistreat others. He was clear: do unto other as you
would have them do unto you.”
“Cicero says almost exactly the same,” Aurelius grumbled, “and he says it without all the
mystery and magic – oh, not to mention virgin birth.”
“No more unlikely than the half-fish, half-bird Prince of Darkness,” Amicus replied.
Adeo sat silently, his wide eyes shifting from one speaker to the other. Clearly, he was the
night’s only winner; neither Mani nor Christ would win a convert this night.
Aurelius railed the whole way home that night about his friends’ conversions. Poor Adeo’s
triumph was nearly forgotten in the complaints about mysteries and suspicious healings, about
cynical conversions and proliferating splinters of Christ’s cross. “That thing would have to be
100 feet high to account for all the pieces of it that have been miraculously discovered and put in
gold boxes on altars,” Aurelius complained. “Adeo, you spoke well tonight, but be sure that you
always speak truth. Don’t be taken in by claims that can’t be proven. The other word for
‘miracle’ is ‘lie.’”
Later that night, though, after lovemaking had drained his tense peevishness, I lay with
my head nestled in his shoulder and he stroked my back lightly. “Did you think Amicus looked
bad?” he asked me.
“It looked like it hurt him pretty bad when he coughed.”
“His color was bad and he was thin.”
“It’s probably nothing,” I said. “A chill he caught in Italy or at sea. After a few more days’
rest, he’ll be fine.”
Aurelius shook his head. “I think I’ll go see him again tomorrow.”
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Amicus was worse when Aurelius looked in on him the next day: blue-lipped, coughing
almost constantly, too weak to sit up on his couch. Aurelius began stopping in every day after
school, and every day Amicus was bluer and weaker. I went one afternoon about a week after the
declamation contest.
My nemesis, Quintus, met me at the door with the branded servant girl. “He’s taken a turn for
the worse,” Quintus told me. “We’ve sent for a priest.”
“Will the priest be able to cure him?” I shared Aurelius’ doubts about amulets and miracles,
but, I thought that since the Christians were growing so powerful, perhaps their priests had
special magic.
“With God all things are possible, but we shouldn’t get our hopes too high for this life. The
priest is coming to baptize him.”
Amicus had taken to his bed in the past few days, and we crossed the courtyard to the sleeping
wing of his large house, the branded servant girl following us like a shadow.
I felt shaken when I saw him. His face was grayish, and he lay on his bed gasping for air like
a fish out of water. From across the room, I could hear the wet rasping of his breath. I went to the
bed and took his hand. “Amicus?”
He opened his eyes and smiled at me, too weak to speak. I squeezed his hand and he squeezed
back, faintly, then exploded into helpless coughing.
I felt tears coming to my eyes. It was clear that he would be dead before nightfall. “Quintus,
could someone be sent for Aurelius?”
Quintus snapped his fingers at the servant girl and gave her directions to Aurelius’ school.
She scurried out.
“Where is that priest?” Quintus fretted.
“I thought he had to be immersed in the font to be baptized,” I said.
“Illness near death is an emergency. He can be baptized in his bed with a small amount of
water and oil,” Quintus told me. “Our God is merciful,” he added piously, “to those who truly