Understanding lit his eyes. Whatever he said, she suspected it ran along the lines of, “Of course, you’ve come all the way from Palmyra to see the games and here one of my slaves has injured you so you’ve been too ill to go, … .
By gestures and signs, he made it clear that tomorrow they would go to the games. Margo bit down on her frustration and acquiesced. Meanwhile, there was the problem of Achilles. She didn’t like having a slave. He hovered . Everywhere she turned, there he was. If she’d given permission, he’d have dressed and undressed her, even bathed her. Fortunately, the villa had its own private bath which Margo was able to use in complete privacy, barring the door when Achilles tried to follow her in.
Let ’em think I’m an eccentric provincial, she groused.
Whatever Margo’s host and slave thought, the heated bath was extraordinary. She didn’t want to leave. Ooh, a person could get used to this ….
She lazed in the heated pool of water half the day, just soaking away aches and bruises and scrubbing every inch of herself clean. Then she ate an equally lazy lunch in the courtyard garden, listening to the tinkling splash of fountains and wishing Malcolm were here. Tomorrow, she told herself. Tomorrow she would find that opportunity to escape her host’s clutches.
Unfortunately, her host had other ideas.
Margo didn’t walk to the Circus.
She was carried there, in a sedan chair supported by long poles. Perched on the shoulders of four sweating slaves, the chair carried Margo well above the heads of the surrounding crowd She felt ridiculous, conspicuous, and foolish. And utterly helpless to climb down and get away. Another sedan chair a few paces behind carried Quintus Flaminius.