<SPAN name="chap0112"></SPAN>
<h3> XII. </h3>
<h3> BRAWLINGS. </h3>
<p>More sick at heart, as he grew stronger in body, Sergius returned from
the final voting in the Field of Mars. For some reason the popular
party, sated with triumph, had permitted the election, as praetors, of
good men who had experience in military affairs; perhaps that these
might, together with Paullus, make surer the victory that was to
redound to the honour of the darling of the mob and proclaim to all the
Roman world the superiority of the butcher, Varro, over Fabius, the
well-fathered.</p>
<p>As Sergius was borne along toward the Palatine district, he found the
streets crowded with a populace he had hardly known to exist in the
city. Down from the lofty tenements of the Aicus, up from the slums of
the Suburra, the Gate of the Three Folds, and the Etruscan Street they
poured, drunk with joy and with hatred of all men who wore white togas
and had money to lend or lands to till. At each corner a denser throng
was gathered around jugglers, tumblers, wrestlers that writhed over the
road-way, actors who danced Etruscan pantomimes and carried their
make-up in little bags slung around their necks, singers of medleys,
and would-be popular poets who spouted coarse epigrams and ribald
satires levelled at the thieving, the effeminate, the adulterous
patricians who thought to rule Rome and had named an Aemilius Paullus
to stand beside and check the generous, the fearless, the incorruptible
Varro. Threatening looks and words were cast at Sergius and the
company of freedmen and clients that surrounded him, until he was not
ill-pleased to see the escort of another noble issue from a side street
and beat its way to where the exhausted bearers had set down the
tribune's litter, pausing to gain breath before attempting to push on
farther. When, however, he recognized in the sturdy old man who strode
along in the midst of the new company, no more distant acquaintance
than the father of Marcia, he was conscious of a strong revulsion.
Better the continued buffeting with an obstreperous mob than the
embarrassments he foresaw in such a rencontre; but it was too late to
avoid it: the interests and perils of the two parties were too nearly
identical, and he heard the gruff voice of his old friend crying out:—</p>
<p>"Back, exercisers of the whip! Back, colonizers of chains! To the
cross with you all! Is this Animula or Rome, where rude clowns do not
recognize their betters?" Then, for the first time, perceiving
Sergius: "Greeting to you, my Lucius! May the gods favour you better
than they have the Republic this day."</p>
<p>At that moment, a big, hulking fellow thrust himself forward in the
path of the advancing patrician and hiccoughed out:—</p>
<p>"May you meet with a plague, master! Truly there are to be no betters
or worsers in Rome—now that the noble Varro is consul and—"</p>
<p>The staff of Torquatus felled him to the ground, where he lay
shuddering and drawing up his legs, while a yell of rage and menace
broke from the crowd. Scarcely changing a line in his grim face, the
old man calmly trussed the folds of his toga about his left arm, freed
his right more fully, and drew a stylus of such size as to suggest a
dagger much more than an instrument for writing: such a weapon as was
born of the election brawls of earlier days, innocent under the law,
yet equally efficient as pen or sword.</p>
<p>Daunted at his aspect, the foremost assailants held back.</p>
<p>"Are there not more vinegar drinkers that wish to learn from an old
Roman the manners of old Rome?" asked Torquatus, sneeringly.</p>
<p>How the fight, once begun, would have ended seemed hardly uncertain,
for the crowd filled all the neighbouring streets: half were drunk, and
nearly half were provided with arms of some sort, many of them such as
were warranted by no pretext of law, save the knowledge that Varro was
consul, and the belief that he would protect his adherents in whatever
breach might please them. The dangerous front of Torquatus and his
company might have sufficed to check those who would have to lead a
rush, but they, unfortunately, had the least to say on the subject of
giving battle. Already the mobs, pouring in from the side streets at
the first scent of a brawl, were pushing the forlorn hope, all
unwilling, to its fate; three or four had already gone down with broken
heads, and a freedman of Torquatus had been stabbed in the side, when,
above the tumult, rose a voice crying:—</p>
<p>"Make way for the Consul, Paullus! Way! way!"</p>
<p>The matter, truly, was becoming serious, thought the outskirts of the
mob—all of them who could hear the shout. A brush with the fiercest,
the most hated, the most hating aristocrat that had been borne behind
the fasces for many a year, would mean punishment with a heavy hand.
The pressure was at once relieved, and though those in front saw no
sign of consul or lictor—saw only Sergius who had descended from his
litter and was leading his company in a vigorous attack—yet they were,
for the most part, only too glad to escape from the glaring eyes of
Titus Manlius and the broad sweep of his weapon. The old man was
puffing hard from the unwonted exertion when Sergius reached his side
through the fast-scattering assailants.</p>
<p>"The gods have punished my blasphemy with kindness," began Torquatus,
"in sending my Lord Paullus in such timely fashion."</p>
<p>"Say, rather, my father, in sending his name into the mind of one
Lucius Sergius," said Sergius, laughing.</p>
<p>For a moment the other frowned with a puzzled look; then his face
cleared, with as close an approach to a smile as it could wear.</p>
<p>"And our rescue is not due to the consul, then?" he asked, still slow
to fully grasp the ruse.</p>
<p>"To the consul's name and to the favouring cunning of Mercury," said
Sergius, bowing.</p>
<p>"Truly, you should command," exclaimed Torquatus. "A general so ready
in craft as you are might hope to match the African—and, by the gods!
no one else seems able to. Come, let us go on to my house."</p>
<p>Though harshly said, and in tones that one less acquainted with the
speaker might well have mistaken for sarcasm, Sergius knew that the
compliment was genuine. The aged patrician had turned and strode away,
as he finished speaking, and etiquette left to the younger man no
choice but to pay to the elder the reverence of his escort. That he
had asked what he might well have looked for as a matter of course, was
something of a condescension, according to the strict ceremoniousness
of the ancient usage; therefore Sergius hurried on and overtook him,
offering his litter, at which the other sniffed contemptuously.</p>
<p>"May the gods grant me to lie at rest by the Appian Way, before I
require such feet!" Then, as his sharp eyes noted the flush upon
Sergius' face, he added: "Fever, wounds, and death may pardon
effeminacy; and, truly, I would beg you to accompany me as you came,
were it not that a climb up the Palatine should bring new health to one
who could run ten miles with a broken shoulder. Believe me, my friend,
the dictator thought better of you than he spoke, and would have
regretted the axe. Jupiter grant that it be yours to justify his
opinion!"</p>
<p>No stimulant could have given such strength to the convalescent as did
these words, and from such a source. The dictator had not condemned,
then; he had even spoken well of him. The knowledge of it put to
flight the embarrassment he had felt when he realized that he was going
perforce to Marcia's house—perhaps into her presence; and he found
himself standing straighter and stepping out with longer and bolder
strides.</p>
<p>"Good words are better than bad ones for a good man," mused Torquatus,
wagging his head sententiously, and darting at his companion a
comprehensive glance, behind which lurked a grim smile. "If women
could ever learn as much, they might govern us the more readily—which
the gods forefend! as I doubt not they will."</p>
<p>Then the company halted. It was many months since Sergius had stood
before that door, and he could not, without grave discourtesy, refuse
the invitation to enter. Well, what mattered it? Marcia cared
nothing; why should he? Then, too, the stimulus of the dictator's
approval was still upon him, as the warning cry of the porter bade
those nearest stand back while the door swung out. Most of the party
took their leave here, but several followed into the atrium for adieus
more appropriate to their station.</p>
<p>At last all had departed save Sergius, who, having given orders that
his attendants should await him in the street, passed on into the
peristyle with his host.</p>
<p>There, beside the fountain, spinning, as he had so often seen her—as
he had seen her through all the days and nights of the campaign—sat
the lady Marcia. Two of her maidens were assisting: one who glanced up
at Sergius and smiled tauntingly; and another who turned her face away,
and seemed to be trying to hide it in the close inspection of a great
bunch of fleece. But both the forwardness of the one and the
bashfulness of the other were wasted upon the visitor. As a matter of
fact, he was so lost in wonder at his courage and self-control as to be
well past observing the idiosyncrasies of slaves; and, if his own
attitude was acceptable, even to himself, his admiration for that of
his hostess amounted to absolute bitterness. That she, a mere girl,
should rise and come forward with so conventional yet friendly a
greeting, that neither her lip should tremble nor her cheek flush, was
little short of intolerable. Nevertheless it helped to brace his own
resolves yet more firmly. Such poise, after all that had been between
them, could have its source only in the most absolute indifference.</p>
<p>"Health to the noble Lucius! Let him believe that there is no one of
his friends who thanks the gods more fervently for his recovery."</p>
<p>On its face the speech was cordial—much too cordial for love that has
quarrelled; therefore he bent his head and answered:—</p>
<p>"Were it not impiety, the noble Lucius would thank his well-wisher for
her words, more, even, than he thanks the gods for his recovery."</p>
<p>"Ah!" she replied lightly, "then he must scatter his thanks yet more
broadly, for there cannot be a defenceless woman in Rome who does not
rejoice that so brave a defender is spared to the State."</p>
<p>Sarcasm for sarcasm, he thought bitterly, but he answered as
carelessly:—</p>
<p>"In that case, I shall not bear my thanks beyond the gods; for if my
health be no greater care to you than to all the white stoles in the
city, I think I can measure its value."</p>
<p>An expression of almost infantile surprise and reproach crossed her
features.</p>
<p>"You are either very forgetful or very ungrateful," she said. "If
Venus has healed so faithful a votary, surely mortal women have not
been lacking in their sympathy; nor, if report tells truly, has the
noble Lucius been lacking in gratitude—until now."</p>
<p>That shaft struck home, and, for a moment, Sergius could find no
answer. He could only remember the episode of the girl who had come to
him, and wonder which one of his household could have borne treacherous
word to Marcia of his weakness and his discomfiture. Meanwhile she had
turned carelessly and dismissed her women, and one had gone, throwing
back laughing glances, the other, with her face still buried in the
wool with which she had filled her arms.</p>
<p>Torquatus had been standing near, somewhat puzzled by what he felt to
be a battle of words between his daughter and his guest, but a battle
whose plans of attack or defence he found himself at a loss to fathom.
Feeling at last that it was incumbent upon him as host to break in upon
badinage that bade fair to become embarrassing, he spoke briefly of his
encounter with the mob and of Lucius' timely aid and clever ruse.
Marcia listened closely, nodding her head from time to time, but her
colour had deepened and her hand was clenched tight when the story was
finished.</p>
<p>"Who will be safe in Rome, father!" she burst out. "The rabble elect
their magistrates, and the magistrates, in return, let them do as they
please. When it comes to attacking you; a consular—a Manlius! We
must sleep no more in our houses unless the household be in arms and on
guard."</p>
<p>Sergius gazed in astonishment. A Marcia spoke whom he had never known;
but the old man smiled grimly.</p>
<p>"It is the blood," he said. "She is truly 'Manlia,' though called,
against custom, for my dead Marcius. When Claudians change the toga
for the paludamentum, and Ogulnians cease to babble of Greek
philosophy, then shall a Manlian be lacking in the spirit of our
order—ay, and in the courage to act."</p>
<p>Marcia did not seem to hear his words. Her brows were drawn together
in what Sergius considered a very pretty frown. She turned toward him.</p>
<p>"They have gotten their butcher for consul," she went on; "now let him
lead them. How long before they will be begging for the swords they
have despised! Let them alone! Let Hannibal work his will; then we
shall stand forth, like the exiled Camillus, to defend a Rome purged of
its black blood—a Rome worth defending—"</p>
<p>But Sergius had recovered from his surprise, and his face was serious,
as he interrupted the torrent of words.</p>
<p>"Patrician and plebeian must stand or fall together, my Marcia," he
said quietly. "It is the Republic that we shall defend, and defend the
more bravely because it is, in a way, defenceless. If a time of
madness come upon a parent, do we not guard her the more tenderly who
cannot guard herself?—ay, and even against the foolish acts she may
herself attempt?"</p>
<p>"And you—you—a Sergius, will serve under this Varro?" she exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Truly," he said bowing, "I am a Roman, and the barbarians are in
Italy. When they are gone, I will fight Varro on the rostra, in the
Senate. Perhaps I shall even lead my clients to drag him, stabbed,
from his house."</p>
<p>She was gazing at him with great, round eyes in which the contempt and
anger began to give place to a softer look—a look which no man might
hope quite to interpret; then she threw her head to one side and
laughed, but the laugh was short and nervous.</p>
<p>"I congratulate your eloquence and patriotism, as I sympathize with
your unpropitious gallantry. May Venus make happy your next pursuit of
a pretty slave."</p>
<p>Again she laughed, and this time her laugh was unfeignedly malicious.
Sergius flushed crimson; Torquatus looked scandalized and stern; but
before either could answer, she was gone.</p>
<p>"You will return to the army, then?" said the old man, hurriedly and as
if to cover his annoyance. "How soon will your strength be sufficient?"</p>
<p>"I shall set out to-night," said Sergius. The flush had gone from his
face, and he was very pale, while his voice sounded as if from far
away. "By so doing I shall journey by easier stages, and shall avoid
accompanying the consul; nor will he reach the camp before me."</p>
<p>"There is talk of new levies," said Torquatus, vaguely.</p>
<p>"Yes, and there will be fighting soon."</p>
<p>"Flaminius fought."</p>
<p>"May Jupiter avert the omen! and you will forgive me, my father, if I
bid you a too hasty farewell? I had not determined to go so soon—but
it is best. And there is preparation to be made."</p>
<p>Torquatus followed him silently to the door, and watched the light of
his torches till it died out below the hill; then he shook his head
with a puzzled, sad expression.</p>
<p>"Yes, truly," he said; "let the omen be lacking."</p>
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