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Quo Vadis
CHAPTER LVI
Henryk Sienkiewicz
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       _ THE sun had lowered toward its setting, and seemed to dissolve in
       the red of the evening. The spectacle was finished. Crowds were
       leaving the amphitheatre and pouring out to the city through the
       passages called vomitoria. Only Augustians delayed; they were
       waiting for the stream of people to pass. They had all left their
       seats and assembled at the podium, in which Caesar appeared
       again to hear praises. Though the spectators had not spared
       plaudits at the end of the song, Nero was not satisfied; he had
       looked for enthusiasm touching on frenzy. In vain did hymns of
       praise sound in his ears; in vain did vestals kiss his "divine" hand,
       and while doing so Rubria bent till her reddish hair touched his
       breast. Nero was not satisfied, and could not hide the fact. He was
       astonished and also disturbed because Petronius was silent. Some
       flattering and pointed word from his mouth would have been a
       great consolation at that moment. Unable at last to restrain
       himself, Caesar beckoned to the arbiter.
       "Speak," said he, when Petronius entered the podium.
       "I am silent," answered Petronius, coldly, "for I cannot find words.
       Thou hast surpassed thyself."
       "So it seemed to me too; but still this people --"
       "Canst thou expect mongrels to appreciate poetry?"
       "But thou too hast noticed that they have not thanked me as I
       deserve."
       "Because thou hast chosen a bad moment."
       "How?"
       "When men's brains are filled with the odor of blood, they cannot
       listen attentively."
       "Ah, those Christians!" replied Nero, clenching his fists. "They
       burned Rome, and injure me now in addition. What new
       punishment shall I invent for them?"
       Petronius saw that he had taken the wrong road, that his words had
       produced an effect the very opposite of what he intended; so, to
       turn Caesar's mind in another direction, he bent toward him and
       whispered, --
       "Thy song is marvellous, but I will make one remark: in the fourth
       line of the third strophe the metre leaves something to be desired."
       Nero, blushing with shame, as if caught in a disgraceful deed, had
       fear in his look, and answered in a whisper also, --
       "Thou seest everything. I know. I will re-write that. But no one
       else noticed it, I think. And do thou, for the love of the gods,
       mention it to no one, -- if life is dear to thee."
       To this Petronius answered, as if in an outburst of vexation and
       anger, --
       "Condemn me to death, O divinity, if I deceive thee; but thou wilt
       not terrify me, for the gods know best of all if I fear death."
       And while speaking he looked straight into Caesar's eyes, who
       answered after a while, --
       "Be not angry; thou knowest that I love thee."
       "A bad sign!" thought Petronius.
       "I wanted to invite thee to-day to a feast," continued Nero, "but I
       prefer to shut myself in and polish that cursed line in the third
       strophe. Besides thee Seneca may have noticed it, and perhaps
       Secundus Carinas did; but I will rid myself of them quickly."
       Then he summoned Seneca, and declared that with Acratus and
       Secundus Carinas, he sent him to the Italian and all other
       provinces for money, which he commanded him to obtain from
       cities, villages, famous temples, -- in a word, from every place
       where it was possible to find money, or from which they could
       force it. But Seneca, who saw that Caesar was confiding to him a
       work of plunder, sacrilege, and robbery, refused straightway.
       "I must go to the country, lord," said he, "and await death, for I am
       old and my nerves are sick."
       Seneca's Iberian nerves were stronger than Chilos; they were not
       sick, perhaps, but in general his health was bad, for he seemed like
       a shadow, and recently his hair had grown white altogether.
       Nero, too, when he looked at him, thought that he would not have
       to wait long for the man's death, and answered, --
       "I will not expose thee to a journey if thou art ill, but through
       affection I wish to keep thee near me. Instead of going to the
       country, then, thou wilt stay in thy own house, and not leave it."
       Then he laughed, and said, "If I send Acratus and Carinas by
       themselves, it, will be like sending wolves for sheep. Whom shall I
       set above them?"
       "Me, lord," said Domitius Afer.
       "No! I have no wish to draw on Rome the wrath of Mercury, whom
       ye would put to shame with your villainy. I need some stoic like
       Seneca, or like my new friend, the philosopher Chilo."
       Then he looked around, and asked, --
       "But what has happened to Chilo?"
       Chilo, who had recovered in the open air and returned to the
       amphitheatre for Caesar's song, pushed up, and said, --
       "I am here, O Radiant Offspring of the sun and moon. I was ill, but
       thy song has restored me."
       "I will send thee to Achaea," said Nero. "Thou must know to a
       copper how much there is in each temple there."
       "Do so, O Zeus, and the gods will give thee such tribute as they
       have never given any one."
       "I would, but I do not like to prevent thee from seeing the games."
       "Baal!" said Chilo.
       The Augustians, delighted that Caesar had regained humor, fell to
       laughing, and exclaimed, --
       "No, lord, deprive not this valiant Greek of a sight of the games."
       "But preserve sue, O lord, from the sight of these noisy geese of
       the Capitol, whose brains put together would not fill a nutshell,"
       retorted Chilo. "O firstborn of Apollo, I am writing a Greek hymn
       in thy honor, and I wish to spend a few days in the temple of the
       Muses to implore inspiration."
       "Oh, no!" exclaimed Nero. "It is thy wish to escape future games.
       Nothing will come of that!"
       "I swear to thee, lord, that I am writing a hymn."
       "Then thou wilt write it at night. Beg inspiration of Diana, who, by
       the way, is a sister of Apollo."
       Chilo dropped his head and looked with malice on those present,
       who began to laugh again. Caesar, turning to Senecio and Suilius
       Nerulinus, said, --
       "Imagine, of the Christians appointed for to-day we have been able
       to finish hardly half!"
       At this old Aquilus Regulus, who had great knowledge of
       everything touching the amphitheatre, thought a while, and said, --
       "Spectacles in which people appear sine armis et sine arte last
       almost as long and are less entertaining."
       "I will command to give them weapons," answered Nero.
       But the superstitious Vestinius was roused from meditation at
       once, and asked in a mysterious voice, --
       "Have ye noticed that when dying they see something? They look
       up, and die as it were without pain. I am sure that they see
       something."
       He raised his eyes then to the opening of the amphitheatre, over
       which night had begun to extend its velarium dotted with stars. But
       others answered with laughter and jesting suppositions as to what
       the Christians could see at the moment of death. Meanwhile
       Caesar gave a signal to the slave torch-bearers, and left the Circus;
       after him followed vestals, senators, dignitaries, and Augustians.
       The night was clear and warm. Before the Circus were moving
       throngs of people, curious to witness the departure of Caesar; but
       in some way they were gloomy and silent. Here and there applause
       was heard, but it ceased quickly. From the spoliarium creaking
       carts bore away the bloody remnants of Christians.
       Petronius and Vinicius passed over their road in silence. Only
       when near his villa did Petronius inquire, --
       "Hast thou thought of what I told thee?" "I have," answered
       Vinicius.
       "Dost believe that for me too this is a question of the highest
       importance? I must liberate her in spite of Caesar and Tigellinus.
       This is a kind of battle in which I have undertaken to conquer, a
       kind of play in which I wish to win, even at the cost of my life.
       This day has confirmed me still more in my plan."
       "May Christ reward thee."
       "Thou wilt see."
       Thus conversing, they stopped at the door of the villa and
       descended from the litter. At that moment a dark figure
       approached them, and asked, --
       "Is the noble Vinicius here?"
       "He is," answered the tribune. "What is thy wish?"
       "I am Nazarius, the son of Miriam. I come from the prison, and
       bring tidings of Lygia."
       Vinicius placed his hand on the young man's shoulder and looked
       into his eyes by the torchlight, without power to speak a word, but
       Nazarius divined the question which was dying on his lips, and
       replied, --
       "She is living yet. Ursus sent me to say that she prays in her fever,
       and repeats thy name."
       "Praise be to Christ, who has power to restore her to me," said
       Vinicius. He conducted Nazarius to the library, and after a while
       Petronius came in to hear their conversation.
       "Sickness saved her from shame, for executioners are timid," said
       the youth. "Ursus and Glaucus the physician watch over her night
       and day."
       "Are the guards the same?"
       "They are, and she is in their chamber. All the prisoners in the
       lower dungeon died of fever, or were stifled from foul air."
       "Who art thou?" inquired Petronins.
       "The noble Vinicius knows me. I am the son of that widow with
       whom Lygia lodged."
       "And a Christian?"
       The youth looked with inquiring glance at Vinicius, but, seeing
       him in prayer, he raised his head, and answered, --
       "I am."
       "How canst thou enter the prison freely?"
       "I hired myself to carry out corpses; I did so to assist my brethren
       and bring them news from the city."
       Petronius looked more attentively at the comely face of the youth,
       his blue eyes, and dark, abundant hair.
       "From what country art thou, youth?" asked he.
       "I am a Galilean, lord."
       "Wouldst thou like to see Lygia free?"
       The youth raised his eyes. "Yes, even had I to die afterwards."
       Then Vinicius ceased to pray, and said, --
       "Tell the guards to place her in a coffin as if she were dead. Thou
       wilt find assistants to bear her out in the night with thee. Near the
       'Putrid Pits' will be people with a litter waiting for you; to them ye
       will give the coffin. Promise the guards from me as much gold as
       each can carry in his mantle."
       While speaking, his face lost its usual torpor, and in him was
       roused the soldier to whom hope had restored his former energy.
       Nazarius was flushed with delight, and, raising his hands, he
       exclaimed,
       "May Christ give her health, for she will be free."
       "Dost thou think that the guards will consent?" inquired Petronius.
       "They, lord? Yes, if they know that punishment and torture will
       not touch them."
       "The guards would consent to her flight; all the more will they let
       us bear her out as a corpse," said Vinicius.
       "There is a man, it is true," said Nazarius, "who burns with red-hot
       iron to see if the bodies which we carry out are dead. But he will
       take even a few sestertia not to touch the face of the dead with
       iron. For one aureus he will touch the coffin, not the body."
       "Tell him that he will get a cap full of aurei," said Petronius. "But
       canst thou find reliable assistants?"
       "I can find men who would sell their own wives and children for
       money."
       "Where wilt thou find them?"
       "In the prison itself or in the city. Once the guards are paid, they
       will admit whomever I like."
       "In that case take me as a hired servant," said Vinicius.
       But Petronius opposed this most earnestly. "The pretorians might
       recognize thee even in disguise, and all would be lost. Go neither
       to the prison nor the 'Putrid Pits.' All, including Caesar and
       Tigellinus, should be convinced that she died; otherwise they will
       order immediate pursuit. We can lull suspicion only in this way:
       When she is taken to the Alban Hills or farther, to Sicily, we shall
       be in Rome. A week or two later thou wilt fall ill, and summon
       Nero's physician; he will tell thee to go to the mountains. Thou and
       she will meet, and afterward --"
       Here he thought a while; then, waving his hand, he said, --
       "Other times may come."
       "May Christ have mercy on her," said Vinicius. "Thou art speaking
       of Sicily, while she is sick and may die."
       "Let us keep her nearer Rome at first. The air alone will restore
       her, if only we snatch her from the dungeon. Hast thou no manager
       in the mountains whom thou canst trust?"
       "I have," replied Vinicius, hurriedly. "Near Corioli is a reliable
       man who carried me in his arms when I was a child, and who loves
       me yet."
       "Write to him to come to-morrow," said Petronius, handing
       Vinicius tablets. "I will send a courier at once."
       He called the chief of the atrium then, and gave the needful orders.
       A few minutes later, a mounted slave was coursing in the night
       toward Corioli.
       "It would please me were Ursus to accompany her," said Vinicius.
       "I should be more at rest."
       "Lord," said Nazarius, "that is a man of superhuman strength; he
       can break gratings and follow her. There is one window above a
       steep, high rock where no guard is placed. I will take Ursus a rope;
       the rest he will do himself."
       "By Hercules!" said Petronius, "let him tear himself out as he
       pleases, but not at the same time with her, and not two or three
       days later, for they would follow him and discover her
       hiding-place. By Hercules! do ye wish to destroy yourselves and
       her? I forbid you to name Corioli to him, or I wash my hands."
       Both recognized the justice of these words, and were silent.
       Nazarius took leave, promising to come the next morning at
       daybreak.
       He hoped to finish that night with the guards, but wished first to
       run in to see his mother, who in that uncertain and dreadful time
       had no rest for a moment thinking of her son. After some thought
       he had determined not to seek an assistant in the city, but to find
       and bribe one from among his fellow corpse-bearers. When going,
       he stopped, and, taking Vinicius aside, whispered, --
       "I will not mention our plan to any one, not even to my mother, but
       the Apostle Peter promised to come from the amphitheatre to our
       house; I will tell him everything."
       "Here thou canst speak openly," replied Vinicius. "The Apostle
       was in the amphitheatre with the people of Petronius. But I will go
       with you myself."
       He gave command to bring him a slave's mantle, and they passed
       out. Pctronius sighed deeply.
       "I wished her to die of that fever," thought he, "since that would
       have been less terrible for Vinicius. But now I am ready to offer a
       golden tripod to Esculapius for her health. Ah! Ahenobarbus, thou
       hast the wish to turn a lover's pain into a spectacle; thou, Augusta,
       wert jealous of the maiden's beauty, and wouldst devour her alive
       because thy Ruflus has perished. Thou, Tigellinus, wouldst destroy
       her to spite me! We shall see. I tell you that your eyes will not
       behold her on the arena, for she will either die her own death, or I
       shall wrest her from you as from the jaws of dogs, and wrest her in
       such fashion that ye shall not know it; and as often afterward as I
       look at you I shall think, These are the fools whom Caius Petronius
       outwitted."
       And, self-satisfied, he passed to the triclinium, where he sat down
       to supper with Eunice. During the meal a lector read to them the
       Idyls of Theocritus. Out of doors the wind brought clouds from the
       direction of Soracte, and a sudden storm broke the silence of the
       calm summer night. From time to time thunder reverberated on the
       seven hills, while they, reclining near each other at the table,
       listened to the bucolic poet, who in the singing Done dialect
       celebrated the loves of shepherds. Later on, with minds at rest,
       they prepared for sweet slumber.
       But before this Vinicius returned. Petronius heard of his coming,
       and went to meet him.
       "Well? Have ye fixed anything new?" inquired he. "Has Nazarius
       gone to the prison?"
       "He has," answered the young man, arranging his hair, wet from
       the rain. "Nazarius went to arrange with the guards, and I have
       seen Peter, who commanded me to pray and believe."
       "That is well. If all goes favorably, we can bear her away
       to-morrow night."
       "My manager must be here at daybreak with men."
       "The road is a short one. Now go to rest."
       But Vinicius knelt in his cubiculum and prayed.
       At sunrise Niger, the manager, arrived from Corioli, bringing with
       him, at the order of Vinicius, mules, a litter, and four trusty men
       selected among slaves from Britain, whom, to save appearances,
       he had left at an inn in the
       Subura. Vinicius, who had watched all night, went to meet him.
       Niger, moved at sight of his youthful master, kissed his hands and
       eyes, saying, --
       "My dear, thou art ill, or else suffering has sucked the blood from
       thy face, for hardly did I know thee at first."
       Vinicius took him to the interior colonnade, and there admitted
       him to the secret. Niger listened with fixed attention, and on his
       dry, sunburnt face great emotion was evident; this he did not even
       try to master.
       "Then she is a Christian?" exclaimed Niger; and he looked
       inquiringly into the face of Vinicius, who divined evidently what
       the gaze of the countryman was asking, since he answered, --
       "I too am a Christian."
       Tears glistened in Niger's eyes that moment. He was silent for a
       while; then, raising his hands, he said, --
       "I thank Thee, O Christ, for having taken the beam from eyes
       which are the dearest on earth to me."
       Then he embraced the head of Vinicius, and, weeping from
       happiness, fell to kissing his forehead. A moment later, Petronius
       appeared, bringing Nazarius.
       "Good news!" cried he, while still at a distance.
       Indeed, the news was good. First, Glaucus the physician
       guaranteed Lygia's life, though she had the same prison fever of
       which, in the Tullianum and other dungeons, hundreds of people
       were dying daily. As to the guards and the man who tried corpses
       with red-hot iron, there was not the least difficulty. Attys, the
       assistant, was satisfied also.
       "We made openings in the coffin to let the sick woman breathe,"
       said Nazarius. "The only danger is that she may groan or speak as
       we pass the pretorians. But she is very weak, and is lying with
       closed eyes since early morning. Besides, Glaucus will give her a
       sleeping draught prepared by himself from drugs brought by me
       purposely from the city. The cover will not be nailed to the coffin;
       ye will raise it easily and take the patient to the litter. We will
       place in the coffin a long bag of sand, which ye will provide."
       Vinicius, while hearing these words, was as pale as linen; but he
       listened with such attention that he seemed to divine at a glance
       what Nazarius had to say.
       "Will they carry out other bodies from the prison?" inquired
       Petronius.
       "About twenty died last night, and before evening more will be
       dead," said the youth. "We must go with a whole company, but we
       will delay and drop into the rear. At the first corner my comrade
       will get lame purposely. In that way we shall remain behind the
       others considerably. Ye will wait for us at the small temple of
       Libitina. May God give a night as dark as possible!"
       "He will," said Niger. "Last evening was bright, and then a sudden
       storm came. To-day the sky is clear, but since morning it is sultry.
       Every night now there will be wind and rain."
       "Will ye go without torches?" inquired Vinicius.
       "The torches are carried only in advance. In every event, be near
       the temple of Libitina at dark, though usually we carry out the
       corpses only just before midnight."
       They stopped. Nothing was to be heard save the hurried breathing
       of Vinicius. Petronius turned to him, --
       "I said yesterday that it would be best were we both to stay at
       home, but now I see that I could not stay. Were it a question of
       flight, there would be need of the greatest caution; but since she
       will be borne out as a corpse, it seems that not the least suspicion
       will enter the head of any one."
       "True, true!" answered Vinicius. "I must be there. I will take her
       from the coffin myself."
       "Once she is in my house at Corioli, I answer for her," said Niger.
       Conversation stopped here. Niger returned to his men at the inn.
       Nazarius took a purse of gold under his tunic and went to the
       prison. For Vinicius began a day filled with alarm, excitement,
       disquiet, and hope.
       "The undertaking ought to succeed, for it is well planned," said
       Petronius. "It was impossible to plan better. Thou must feign
       suffering, and wear a dark toga. Do not desert the amphitheatre.
       Let people see thee. All is so fixed that there cannot be failure. But
       -- art thou perfectly sure of thy manager?"
       "He is a Christian," replied Vinicius.
       Petronius looked at him with amazement, then shrugged his
       shoulders, and said, as if in soliloquy, --
       "By Pollux! how it spreads, and commands people's souls. Under
       such terror as the present, men would renounce straightway all the
       gods of Rome, Greece, and Egypt. Still, this is wonderful! By
       Pollux! if I believed that anything depended on our gods, I would
       sacrifice six white bullocks to each of them, and twelve to
       Capitoline Jove. Spare no promises to thy Christ."
       "I have given Him my soul," said Vinicius.
       And they parted. Petronius returned to his cubiculum; but Vinicius
       went to look from a distance at the prison, and thence betook
       himself to the slope of the Vatican hill, -- to that hut of the
       quarryman where he had received baptism from the hands of the
       Apostle. It seemed to him that Christ would hear him more readily
       there than in any other place; so when he found it, he threw
       himself on the ground and exerted all the strength of his suffering
       soul in prayer f or mercy, and so forgot himself that he
       remembered not where he was or what he was doing. In the
       afternoon he was roused by the sound of trumpets which came
       from the direction of Nero's Circus. He went out of the hut, and
       gazed around with eyes which were as if just opened from sleep.
       It was hot; the stillness was broken at intervals by the sound of
       brass and continually by the ceaseless noise of grasshoppers. The
       air had become sultry, the sky was still clear over the city, but near
       the Sabine Hills dark clouds were gathering at the edge of the
       horizon.
       Vinicius went home. Petronius was waiting for him in the atrium.
       "I have been on the Palatine," said he. "I showed myself there
       purposely, and even sat down at dice. There is a feast at the house
       of Anicius this evening; I promised to go, but only after midnight,
       saying that I must sleep before that hour. In fact I shall be there,
       and it would be well wert thou to go also."
       "Are there no tidings from Niger or Nazarius?" inquired Vinicius.
       "No; we shall see them only at midnight. Hast noticed that a storm
       is threatening?"
       "Yes."
       "To-morrow there is to be an exhibition of crucified Christians, but
       perhaps rain will prevent it."
       Then he drew nearer and said, touching his nephew's shoulder, --
       "But thou wilt not see her on the cross; thou wilt see her only in
       Corioli. By Castor! I would not give the moment in which we free
       her for all the gems in Rome. The evening is near."
       In truth the evening was near, and darkness began to encircle the
       city earlier than usual because clouds covered the whole horizon.
       With the corming of night heavy rain fell, which turned into
       steam on the stones warmed by the heat of the day, and filled the
       streets of the city with mist. After that came a lull, then brief
       violent showers.
       "Let us hurry!" said Vinicius at last; "they may carry bodies from
       the prison earlier because of the storm."
       "It is time!" said Petronius.
       And taking Gallic mantles with hoods, they passed through the
       garden door to the street. Petronius had armed himself with a short
       Roman knife called sicca, which he took always during night trips.
       The city was empty because of the storm. From time to time
       lightning rent the clouds, illuminating with its glare the fresh walls
       of houses newly built or in process of building and the wet
       flag-stones with which the streets were paved. At last a flash came,
       when they saw, after a rather long road, the mound on which stood
       the small temple of Libitina, and at the foot of the mound a group
       of mules and horses.
       "Niger!" called Vinicius, in a low voice.
       "I am here, lord," said a voice in the rain.
       "Is everything ready?"
       "It is. We were here at dark. But hide yourselves under the
       rampart, or ye will be drenched. What a storm! Hail will fall, I
       think."
       In fact Niger's fear was justified, for soon hail began to fall, at first
       fine, then larger and more frequent. The air grew cold at once.
       While standing under the rampart, sheltered from the wind and icy
       missiles, they conversed in low voices.
       "Even should some one see us," said Niger, "there will be no
       suspicion; we look like people waiting for the storm to pass. But I
       fear that they may not bring the bodies out till morning."
       "The hail-storm will not last," said Petronius. "We must wait even
       till daybreak."
       They waited, listening to hear the sound of the procession. The
       hail-storm passed. but immediately after a shower began to roar.
       At times the wind rose, and brought from the 'Putrid Pits" a
       dreadful odor of decaying bodies, buried near the surface and
       carelessly.
       "I see a light through the mist," said Niger, -- "one, two, three, --
       those are torches. See that the mules do not snort," said he, turning
       to the men.
       "They are coming!" said Petronius.
       The lights were growing more and more distinct. After a time it
       was possible to see torches under the quivering flames.
       Niger made the sign of the cross, and began to pray. Meanwhile
       the gloomy procession drew nearer, and halted at last in front of
       the temple of Libitina. Petronius, Vinicius, and Niger pressed up to
       the rampart in silence, not knowing why the halt was made. But
       the men had stopped only to cover their mouths and faces with
       cloths to ward off the stifling stench which at the edge of the
       "Putrid Pits" was simply unendurable; then they raised the biers
       with coffins and moved on. Only one coffin stopped before the
       temple. Vinicius sprang toward it, and after him Petronius, Niger,
       and two British slaves with the litter.
       But before they had reached it in the darkness, the voice of
       Nazarius was heard, full of pain, --
       "Lord, they took her with Ursus to the Esquiline prison. We are
       carrying another body! They removed her before midnight."
       Petronius, when he had returned home, was gloomy as a storm,
       and did not even try to console Vinicius. He understood that to free
       Lygia from the Esquiline dungeons was not to be dreamed of. He
       divined that very likely she had been taken from the Tullianum so
       as not to die of fever and escape the amphitheatre assigned to her.
       But for this very reason she was watched and guarded more
       carefully than others. From the bottom of his soul Petronius was
       sorry for her and Vinicius, but he was wounded also by the thought
       that for the first time in life he had not succeeded, and for the first
       time was beaten in a struggle.
       "Fortune seems to desert me," said he to himself, "but the gods are
       mistaken if they think that I will accept such a life as his, for
       example."
       Here he turned toward Vinicius, who looked at him with staring
       eyes. "What is the matter? Thou hast a fever," said Petronius.
       But Vinicius answered with a certain strange, broken, halting
       voice, like that of a sick child, -- "But I believe that He -- can
       restore her to me."
       Above the city the last thunders of the storm had ceased. _