<SPAN name="chap0102"></SPAN>
<h3> II. </h3>
<h3> WORDS. </h3>
<p>Three days had passed since the awful news from the shore of Lake
Trasimenus had plunged Rome into horror and despair. Every hour had
brought in stragglers: horse, foot, fugitives from the country-side,
each bearing his tale of slaughter. Crowds gathered at the gates,
swarming about every newcomer, vociferous for his story, and then
cursing and threatening the teller because it was what they knew it
must be.</p>
<p>In the atrium of Titus Manlius Torquatus, on the brow of the Palatine,
overlooking the New Way, was gathered a company of three: the aged
master of the house, a type of the Roman of better days, and a worthy
descendant of that Torquatus who had won the name; his son Caius, the
youth who had been with Sergius in the Forum; and Lucius Sergius
himself. All were silent and serious.</p>
<p>The elder Torquatus sat by a square fountain ornamented with bronze
dolphins, that lay in the middle of the mosaic paving of the apartment.
The walls were painted half yellow, half red, after the manner of Magna
Grascia, while around them were ranged the statues of the Manlian
nobles. The roof was supported in the Tuscan fashion by four beams
crossing each other at right angles, and including between them the
open space above the fountain.</p>
<p>It was the old man who spoke first.</p>
<p>"Do not think, my Lucius, but that I see the justice of your prayer, or
that I wish otherwise than that Marcia should wind wool about your
doorposts. Still there is much to be said for delay. Surely these
days are not auspicious ones for marriages, and surely better will
come. You have my pledge, as had my dead friend Marcus Marcius in the
matter of her name. Do you think it was nothing for me to call a
daughter other than Manlia—and for a plebeian house at that? Yet she
is Marcia. Doubt not that I will keep this word as well."</p>
<p>"Aye, but, father," persisted Sergius, "is it not something that she
should be mine to protect in time of peril?"</p>
<p>"And who so able to protect as Lucius," put in Caius, with an admiring
glance, for Caius Torquatus was six years younger than his friend, and
admired him with all the devotion of a younger man.</p>
<p>"Has it come that our house cannot protect its women?" cried the elder
Torquatus. "What more shameful than that our daughter should be
carried thus across a Sergian threshold—going like a slave to her
master!" He spoke proudly and sternly. Then, turning to Sergius, he
went on more gently: "Were you to remain in the city, my son, there
might be more force in what you claim; but you will go out with one of
the new legions that they will doubtless raise, and you will believe an
old man who says that it is not well for a soldier in the field to have
a young wife at home."</p>
<p>Sergius flushed and was silent, lest his answer should savour of pride
or disrespect toward an elder.</p>
<p>Suddenly they became conscious of a commotion in the street. Shrill
cries were borne to their ears, and, a moment later, blows fell upon
the outer door, followed by the grinding noise as it turned upon its
pivots. A freedman burst into the atrium.</p>
<p>Titus Torquatus rose from his seat, and half raised his staff as if to
punish the unceremonious intrusion. Then he noted the excitement under
which the man seemed to be labouring, and stood stern and silent to
learn what news could warrant such a breach of decorum.</p>
<p>"It is Maharbal, they say—" and the speaker's voice came almost in
gasps—"Maharbal and the Numidians—"</p>
<p>"Not at the gates!" cried both young men, springing to their feet; but
the other shook his head and went on:—</p>
<p>"No, not that—not <i>yet</i>, but he has cut up four thousand cavalry in
Umbria with Caius Centenius. The consul had sent them from Gaul—"</p>
<p>"Be silent!" commanded the elder Torquatus. "Surely I hear the public
crier in the street. Is he not summoning the Senate? Velo," he said,
turning to the freedman; "you are pardoned for your intrusion. Go,
now, and bear orders from me to arm my household, and that my clients
and freedmen wait upon me in the morning. It is possible that the
Republic may call for every man; and though I fear Titus Manlius
Torquatus cannot strike the blows he struck in Sicily, yet even <i>his</i>
sword might avail to pierce light armour; and he is happy in that he
can give those to the State whose muscles shall suffice to drive the
point through heavy buckler and breastplate."</p>
<p>"Shall it be permitted that I attend you to the Senate House?" asked
Caius.</p>
<p>His father inclined his head, and, donning the togas which slaves had
brought, they hurried into the street, hardly noting that Sergius had
reseated himself and was gazing absently down into the water, counting
the ripples that spread from where each threadlike stream fell from its
dolphin-mouth source.</p>
<p>He did not know how long he had sat thus, nor was he, perhaps,
altogether conscious of his motive in failing to pay the aged senator
the honour of accompanying him, at least so far as the gates of the
Temple of Concord. Sounds came to his ears from the apartments above:
the trampling of feet and bustle of preparation that told of Velo's
delivery of his patron's commands. Then a woman's laugh rang through
the passage that led back to the garden of the peristyle.</p>
<p>Sergius rose and turned, just as a girl sprang out into the atrium,
looking back with a laughing challenge to some one who seemed to pursue
her, but who hesitated to issue from the protecting darkness.</p>
<p>"What do you fear, Minutia," she cried. "My father and Caius have
gone, and there is no one—oh!"</p>
<p>Suddenly she became conscious of Sergius' presence, and her olive
cheeks flushed to a rich crimson. Then she faced him with an air of
pretty defiance and went on:—</p>
<p>"No one here but Lucius Sergius Fidenas, who should have business
elsewhere."</p>
<p>Sergius said nothing, but continued to stand with eyes fixed
thoughtfully upon her face.</p>
<p>Her figure was tall, slender, and very graceful, her hair and eyes were
dark, and her features delicate and perfectly moulded. Over all was
now an expression of hoydenish mirth that bespoke the complete
forgetfulness of serious things that only comes to young girls. His
attentive silence seemed at last to disturb her. An annoyed look drove
the smile from her lips, and, with an almost imperceptible side motion
of her small head, she went on:—</p>
<p>"Surely Lucius Sergius Fidenas has not allowed my father to go to the
Senate House with only Caius to attend him! Lucius respects my father
too much for that—and too disinterestedly. It is an even more serious
omission than his failure to attend the consul at Trasimenus—"</p>
<p>Sergius' eyes blazed at the taunt, and, struggling with the answer that
rose to his lips, he said nothing for fear he might say too much.</p>
<p>The girl watched him closely. Her mirth returned a little at the sight
of his confusion, and, with her mirth, came something of mercy.</p>
<p>"Oh, to be sure, his wound. I almost forgot that. Tell me, my brave
Lucius, did the Gauls bite hard when they caught you in the woods and
drove you and my brave uncle to Tanes? How funny for naked Gauls to
ambush Roman legionaries and chase them home! Father has not spoken to
Uncle Cneus since. He says it was his duty to have remained on the
field, and I suppose he thinks it was yours, too, instead of running
away like a fox to be shut up in his hole."</p>
<p>Sergius had recovered his composure now, but his brow was clouded.</p>
<p>"You are as cruel as ever, Marcia," he said. "And yet I know you have
heard that it was the men of my maniple who carried me away, senseless
from the blow of a dead man."</p>
<p>"Oh, you <i>did</i> kill him. I remember now," she resumed, with some
display of interest. "You had run him through, had you not? and he
just let his big sword drop on your head. I got Caius to show me about
it, and I was the Gaul. Caius did not stab me, but I let the stick
fall pretty hard, and Caius had a sore head for two days. I meant it
for you, because you are trying to make an old woman of me when I am
hardly a girl."</p>
<p>"Marcia—" began Lucius; but she raised her hand warningly and went
on:—</p>
<p>"Do you want me to tell you why my father will not let you marry me
now? There are two reasons. One because I don't want him to, and
another because he thinks you must do something great to wipe out the
stain of a Roman centurion's even being <i>carried</i> away before the
Gauls."</p>
<p>"That will be an easy task, judging by the news we receive each day. I
wish I felt as certain of the safety of the Republic as I am that my
honour shall be satisfactorily vindicated."</p>
<p>He spoke bitterly, but she went on without taking note of his meaning.</p>
<p>"These are auspicious words, my Lucius. You will regain your honour;
father will once more receive you into his favour, and, by that time, I
shall doubtless be old enough to marry,—perhaps too old,—but, no, I
must not wait so long as that. Perhaps I shall have married some one
else by the time you are worthy of my favour."</p>
<p>"More probably I shall have ceased to care for the favour of living men
and women."</p>
<p>"Truly? And you think you will have to die? Perhaps you will be a
Decius Mus, and stand on the javelin and wear the Cincture Gabinus; and
then I shall mourn for you and hang so many garlands on your tomb that
all the shades of your friends will be mad with jealousy—"</p>
<p>"Marcia, is it possible for you to be serious?"</p>
<p>He was pale with suppressed passion, and, as he spoke, he stepped
forward and laid his hand upon her wrist.</p>
<p>She sprang back and half raised a light staff she carried, while her
face flushed crimson.</p>
<p>"I will be more serious than will please you," she said, "if you please
me as little as you do now. Learn, I am not your wife that you should
seek to restrain me, and it is quite possible that I never shall be."</p>
<p>"You speak truly," he said; "it is quite possible that no woman shall
be a new mother to the house of Fidenas—that our name shall die in me.
So be it; and may the gods only avert the evils that threaten the
Republic, nor look upon one of the race of the Trojan Segestes as an
unworthy offering."</p>
<p>Bending his head in respectful salutation, he turned toward the
entrance hall.</p>
<p>Marcia stood silent beside the fountain, and her face clouded with
thought. The sound of her lover's footsteps grew fainter and fainter.
She started forward as if to follow him. Then she stopped and
listened. The noise of the street had drowned their echoes; the door
had creaked twice on its pivots. He was gone. Then she called,
"Lucius!" but there was no answer. Her eyes drooped with a little
frown of regret, but in a moment she turned away laughing.</p>
<p>"Never mind. He cannot do anything very desperate yet, and I will
treat him better next time—perhaps."</p>
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