Love, Eternally

chapter 5




In the ensuing month, Gigi caught only glimpses of Magnus and, thankfully, saw nothing of Honorius. She recalled Magnus’s words about the emperor’s menagerie of slaves, and she desperately hoped Honorius had forgotten all about her, turning his crazy mind to other things. But, despite everything, she sensed he wasn’t finished with her yet.

As for Magnus, she had not forgotten their stolen moment in the vegetable garden, and she hoped he hadn’t either. She thought of him day and night, although her actual dreams of him came in frustratingly brief snatches. Frightening nightmares of Honorius superseded all else.

Unfortunately, Gigi’s stint outside had ended weeks ago and she was now back on kitchen duty full time. At least Silvia had upgraded her to dishwashing, while insisting she take long breaks to concentrate on speaking Latin with the staff. All the slaves helped out, giggling when she made some gross linguistic error, but otherwise they were very patient in their efforts. With her fluency in French, and being surrounded by Latin at every turn, she picked up the language more quickly and easily than she’d imagined.

Her stomach still churned as she confronted the sheer insanity of all she’d experienced since her appearance in the baptistery. Gnawing at a ragged cuticle, she looked around the miserable kitchen, determined to escape. But how could she get past the imperial guards stationed all over the city walls, always on the alert for trouble from without, or from unruly slaves within?

Vana, the slave girl with the brand on her forehead, had angrily confided to Gigi that she once tried to run off, but she’d been caught escaping on a skiff from Ravenna’s port. Wanting to make an example of her, Honorius had ordered her savagely whipped and then gang raped by several of his soldiers, while he watched and stroked himself.

Gigi was horrified, but Vana wasn’t done with her story. The last step in her punishment was the gruesome branding. Honorius himself had pressed the white-hot iron to her forehead, marking her forever with the letter “F,” for fugitivus. Vana had fainted at the moment of contact from the indescribable pain, but was revived with vinegar held to her nose, the jolt of it mixing with the reek of her own, seared flesh. After Honorius’s men took turns on her again, she’d begged for death’s release. The emperor had only laughed at her pleading, saying she was young and still had much life in her, and, besides, he was not one to waste a good scullion maid.

Gigi shuddered at the recollection and went back to her scrubbing, afraid Honorius wouldn’t need any kind of excuse with her; he’d just punish her whenever he got around to it.

Silvia bustled into the kitchen and pulled Gigi aside. “You work well, better even than most of the girls,” she conceded. “But you were not born to it — that much is obvious — which makes your diligence and lack of complaint all the more surprising.” Silvia rummaged in her apron. “Plus, you stood your ground before Emperor Honorius. That was a dangerous, stupid thing to do, but one you survived, which is also surprising.”

Gigi found herself shivering at the truth in her words. Where was Silvia going with this?

“Were you anyone else,” Silvia continued, “your fate would have been much harsher than being sent to work with us, which gives us all pause to wonder why. Perhaps it is because a senator favors you,” she shrugged, “perhaps not, but I think one day you shall find your rightful place, and at that time, you may remember us kindly. Therefore,” Silvia pulled a stick from her apron, “we have decided to give you back a portion of that which was taken from you.”

Gigi gasped when she saw the stick had holes. “Is this … ? Oh!”

“It is a nay.” Silvia handed it to Gigi. “It is very well made. Old Berenice carved it herself in the spare time I afforded her.”

Gigi smiled at Berenice, then turned the object over. Six holes were drilled at regular intervals, but it had no mouthpiece other than an open end. It was a reed flute.

She had her music back! Tears of joy welled and spilled down her cheeks as she hugged everyone in the kitchen. She thanked them all, then put her new instrument to her lips.

Holding the nay in front of her, Gigi blew across the top, but it sounded hollow. A couple of the girls giggled; Berenice pursed her lips.

“Come on, you did this all the time with beer bottles in college,” Gigi muttered in English.

Adjusting her angle and blowing lightly across the opening, she managed a stronger, full-bodied, and richer note. She decided to attempt scales, and a stream of notes spilled out, mellow, similar to a panpipe’s, yet slightly rough and off-key in the lower register. But after having been so long denied her music, to Gigi the precious gift seemed to emit tones more beautiful than anything she’d ever played.

Excited, Gigi grinned at the women, then tested her recall, performing the simple “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star,” as she learned her notes and continued to adjust her breathing technique. Her audience clapped and giggled, then kept time with the melody as she played the song a second time.

Gigi blinked back more tears, loving each of them for their kindness and knowing one day she would have to leave them behind. Despite the awful risks, she had to find a way to escape. If, or when, Honorius remembered her, she knew he would make her suffer the same fate still haunting Vana — or something even worse.

• • •

As the days lengthened and the evenings grew warm and dry, Gigi found a few moments for herself now and then. With Silvia’s permission — and before every ounce of strength had been sapped from her body — she hurried through the palace grounds to a place well away from the main buildings, a refuge secreted behind overgrown hedges and rock walls, a small, rundown garden. There, she could think and try to plan an escape while playing her music, surrounded by birds singing their quiet evening songs.

At the entry, Gigi glanced around to make sure she was alone, then ducked inside. Taking a breath of the peppery-sweet air, she walked on the graveled path bordered by carpets of thyme and mounds of budding lavender, riotous tangles of pink roses, and stalks of proud iris. Soon, the gravel grew sparse, shot through with weeds. She passed walls overhung with trailing vines, the route to the innermost sanctuary.

The sound of bubbling water soothed and enticed, before Gigi reached the garden’s jewel: a small pond encircled by marble columns. A thin rivulet of water cascaded over the emerald-colored stones, splashing onto the base of a painted statue, a lovely nude. The figure’s blue eyes were surrounded by lushly rendered eyelashes, and her fingers lazily pushed into yellow curls atop her head. Gigi still wasn’t used to the effect of paint on marble, but had to admit it was strangely beautiful; the figure looked more alive than cold, white stone.

As Gigi sat on a bench, listening to the water and birds, she recalled the weekend she and Yves had spent in Aix-en-Provence, a town filled with fountains and small, secret gardens. Yves. She sighed and wondered at her thoughts, the memory of their times together distant and growing dimmer with each day. She closed her eyes, coaxing a vision of Aix again: rows of plane trees hugging the main boulevard, branches twisting to the sky, flowers everywhere, a multitude of little shops.

A bird twittered nearby and she tried to find it among a tangle of bushes, but couldn’t. She let her gaze roam over the garden, pretty as a jewel box, even overgrown as it was. Would Yves have liked it here? Probably not, she decided, recalling how, by the end of the weekend he’d seemed anxious to get back to the coast. Sailing on a gusty day, salt spray hitting his face, was more his style.

It was how she’d first met him at the Vieux-Port in Marseille. She was going to solo-sail over to Cassis in a rented, twenty-five-foot sailboat, and he’d been very happy to fill her in on the many beautiful inlets and dicey moorages along the way. He was still there when she returned hours later, and helped her to dock and secure her boat. Afterward, she’d had dinner with him at a nice restaurant, which led to an exchange of phone numbers and several months of dating.

But he didn’t exist, wasn’t even born yet. And besides, when he touched her, she hadn’t felt any semblance of the power she felt in the presence of …

Magnus. She closed her eyes, remembering the way his tunic clung to his powerful shoulders, remembering his muscled arms and passionate gaze … but then a nagging thought sprang to mind, something that had been bothering her for days. She hadn’t seen or spoken to him in a long while, several weeks at least. What was going on? She thought of what he’d said about Honorius having many female slaves and wondered if Magnus had his own diversions as well. For all she knew, he already had a wife. The thought so bothered Gigi she’d confided it to Vana.

Huge mistake! In an off-handed attempt to comfort her, Vana said she’d heard Magnus had never taken a wife, despite his advancing age, which was several years over thirty. And besides, Gigi shouldn’t have any hope in that regard, because the senatorial class was forbidden to marry slaves of the Empire. Vana cautioned Gigi to keep her guard up and her body to herself, for, if he were truly as interested as he seemed, Magnus might be persuaded to purchase her, and that would be wonderful, wouldn’t it?

Would it? No! Gigi’s heart sank and she looked at the statue, a solitary woman, like her. This garden must have been built for her, whoever she was, but it was neglected now, perhaps even forgotten. Like her.

How ironic she wished the same for herself — neglect and forgetfulness on the part of Honorius — yet dreaded the notion she was getting the same from Magnus. Her mind spun, a jumble of doubt and hope and foreboding. She swallowed hard, her thoughts dark. Was she simply an amusement for both men, something to use in a game of one-upmanship?

Gigi gazed at the sky, seeking answers, but found none. The light was fading, sunset approached. She took her flute from a pocket in her apron. Having slightly retooled the holes to produce a more perfect pitch, she blew and the sounds floated out, an original tune she’d been working on. Soft, lonely, sad. No “Minute Waltz,” no “Just Wave Hello,” nothing lively or light. She didn’t have the heart for it.

At these moments she remembered all she had lost: her family, friends, her career, everything she’d once called her life, but, most especially, her freedom.

She’d once used the word lightly, telling people she reveled in it, her independent lifestyle just the ticket for happiness, but she hadn’t understood what it truly meant, not until she’d ended up here. Vana’s story haunted her, the scars, both physical and mental, horrible beyond words. Here, Vana and Gigi and all the other slaves weren’t even considered human, let alone allowed to harbor any hope for freedom. They were things, subject to the will of whoever was in charge, with the constant threat of abuse or death at the whim of the owner a never-ending torment. Her quest for independence in that other cushy existence as Gigi Perrin, Ms. Superstar, now seemed silly and selfish, far removed from reality and not important at all. She realized she’d give anything simply to be back with her family and friends.

She lowered her flute and wiped a tear. “Mom, Dad,” she whispered, “I wish I could see you again, even just for five minutes, so I could tell you I love you and explain.”

No, stop thinking about … everything, she scolded herself, taking several deep breaths to calm her raw emotions. Just stop.

Then something moved on the path. She held her breath, listening. What had she heard? Gravel crunching? Her heart thumped madly and she stood, ready to bolt. Had Honorius found her? She waited, but the birds continued their singing undisturbed. After a minute, Gigi closed her eyes and slowly exhaled, willing herself to calm down, sure her imagination was playing tricks.

No, she heard it again — footsteps — someone was coming.

She shot up, ready to run.

“Wait!”

She recognized the voice and spun to face Magnus. “Oh, it’s you!” she said, her heart still drumming.

Silent, he stood only a few feet away. She tried to gather her thoughts, the prickle of unease on her skin.

“You should be more mindful of your surroundings,” he finally said.

“But I … this is the only place where I can be by myself.”

“None of us is ever alone within the palace grounds, or even within Ravenna, for that matter. You must always be mindful the guards are watching.”

“I know, but Silvia said it’s okay.”

“But the sound of your music travels a fair distance. That is how I found you. It could lead others, even Honorius, to this place.”

“Oh, that’s not good. I try not to play too loud.” She glanced at the gravel path winding toward the garden’s entry. “I’m hoping he’s forgotten all about me.”

“I doubt it,” Magnus smiled, “but let us hope to the gods it is so, as he has much to occupy him.” He hesitated. “Your music was beautiful, but sad. You have a great talent, Gigiperrin.”

“Thank you, Senator. But, uh, call me Gigi. My family name is Perrin. I mentioned it once. My full name is Geneviève.”

He looked into her eyes. “An enchanting name … Geneviève.”

The way he said her name was beguiling, so different with his charming, lilting pronunciation that she longed to hear him say it once more. But she reminded herself to take care. After all, she really didn’t know him.

“I shall try to call you Gigi,” he went on, “however, please accept my apology in case I lapse, for I always think of you as Gigiperrin, because it was how I first heard your name.”

She liked the notion he was always thinking of her. “I couldn’t speak the language at all then,” she said. “I couldn’t fully explain.”

“You have made great strides in a very short time. May I ask a favor? Would you play a bit more, for me? Something less gloomy, perhaps, but keep it quiet.” He smiled.

What should she play? She decided on a classic, “Moon River.” Dreamy, hopeful, not gloomy, and she could play it low. Gigi put her flute to her lips and blew softly, keeping her sights on the walkway, on the pond, on anything but him.

By the time she finished, dusk had settled in, and Gigi knew she needed to return to the kitchen. Hazarding a glance in Magnus’s direction, she saw him sitting on the bench, elbow to knee, gaze unfocused.

For a startled moment, she sensed vulnerability about him, as if his spirit were wounded, not whole. He seemed lost and profoundly sad, not only because of his distracted stare, but also in the way he held himself, a captive of his thoughts, his mind a prisoner of some distant memory.

What had happened to him? What was he thinking about?

She hesitated a second longer. “I have to get back, Senator.”

He came back to himself and looked up at her. “Ah, I know, and I shall be brief. First, please, call me Magnus. I do not know whence you hail, but here, within the Empire, we do not, as a rule, call each other by our titles, lofty or otherwise.”

“Not even a slave?”

“Gigi, you are no slave to me. I believe you have come from more noble stock. Furthermore, yours is a mystery I wish to pursue, to satisfy my personal curiosity. As you are aware, I have watched you closely over the weeks since you appeared in the baptistery.”

Gigi started at his emphasis on the word “appeared.” Had he seen something? Is that why he was staring so hard when she first noticed him?

“Many things are beyond my power of reasoning,” he continued, “but for that alone I do not denounce. I use events I cannot understand to study and learn, instead of condemning outright, but all that is not why I sought to be with you this evening. Alaric and his Visigoths are in Noricum, in the Alpine foothills, grazing their livestock and drinking beer,” he smiled, perhaps a little wistfully, “and all the while hatching plans of attack. I must go there and try to stop this advance with words, as Honorius refuses to meet them in battle. I shall be gone a fortnight, at the least.”

“Oh.” Gigi racked her brains, trying to figure out what he was driving at. He had seen her appear, but he was not jumping to conclusions. Fine. So, what was this about the Visigoths? Was Italy about to be invaded?

Magnus rose to stand beside her. “When I first saw you, it was an odd thing, though perhaps not unique in history, and it is something I cannot dismiss. And I can assure you others at court wish to find out more about you as well, even if they seem to have forgotten for the moment.” His expression grew serious. “Should you sense the emperor’s renewed interest, or be given some misguided demand, should you fear there is no one to stay Honorius’s hand, then you must go, take your ring — ”

“What?” He knows about my ring?

He reached out, but hesitated when she pulled back.

“No,” she said, devastated.

He reached again, but she blocked his hand, ready to defend her only, her dearest possession.

“No, Senator, don’t.”

“Fear not, Gigi.”

His touch was as gentle as his voice, but she was still too upset to let down her guard.

“My intentions are honorable.” He ran his finger under the chain around her neck, drawing out the ring. “I will not take it,” his gaze was level, his arm dropping to his side, “for it is yours, and most holy in my eyes.”

His words chased away her fears. The sun’s last rays found their way through the tangled tree limbs, lighting his face with glimmering bits of gold. Captivated, she watched his lips move, her mind overtaken with the memory of how she’d wanted to kiss him, on that other, faraway day in the kitchen garden.

“Gigi, you carry with you Victoria, Goddess of Victory. She favors you and has watched over you until now. I am sure she will continue to do so.” He hesitated. “I am part of a delegation that departs on the morrow, but you will not be left without a friend in Ravenna. I will have my people looking out for you, but should you have any trouble go to Placidia — Honorius’s sister.”

“Placidia? Galla Placidia?” Gigi said, refocusing on his words and recalling the name from the hotel concierge. “She’s his sister?”

He nodded. “Although she is as yet quite young, she is strong and principled, nothing like Honorius. She will shield you from him, if need be. Show no one this ring but her. She knows it well, for I, er, I described it to her, and she will understand by this token that I have pledged you my protection.”

Gigi gazed at the ring and worried at his words, suddenly fearful of being left alone.

He enclosed her palm around it, his hand lingering on hers. “I shall carry the sound of your music with me,” he released her, placing his hand over his heart, “here, but will you remember what I have told you? Will you promise to do it?”

Gigi swallowed hard, not wanting to entrust her safety to a ring and a sister, hoping she would never have to take that step. “But I don’t trust … can’t trust anyone like I trust you,” she blurted out. “Take me with you, or buy my freedom. I will pay you back.”

She stopped speaking when he touched his finger to her lips. There were so many things he could say, so many words she longed to hear: Do not worry … I won’t leave you … come away with me …

He withdrew his hand, but continued to gaze into her eyes. “I cannot stay. Neither can I take you with me, however appealing it might be. Besides, Honorius will never willingly let you go, so you must be very careful not to remind him of your presence. I have a duty to the Empire that surpasses all else. But someday, if the Fates should will it, we may meet here again, and then we might — with your permission — use this garden as it was meant to be used. I believe Great Venus herself,” he nodded toward the statue, “will be pleased with the honor we bring to it, for she has never seen its destiny fulfilled, so far as I know.”

Venus? Goddess of love? Gigi glanced at the statue and blushed deeply.

She was painfully aware of his nearness, his skin’s delicious scent: the warmth of incense and spiced wine.

Magnus touched her arm, the contact pure electricity, and she hoped — no, she knew — he was about to kiss her.

She closed her eyes, the sweet, searing pain of anticipation tightening around her heart.

“Vale, Gigiperrin.” His voice was husky and low.

Her eyes flew open. Vale? Farewell?

Stepping back, he bowed and she wanted to reach out to stop him. He gave her a last look, then turned and walked away.

“No,” she whispered, shivering, suddenly feeling empty, and she longed for the promise of his warm embrace. She watched him until he was out of sight, then continued to watch, hoping for his return, until dusk gave way to night. She swallowed the bitter taste of the aborted kiss, trying to convince herself he was right — now was not the time — but someday, maybe someday.

And she remembered her first impression after his visit to her cell; he was truly the antithesis of the one who’d put her there — he was a man of honor.

She sank onto the bench, her body aching, longing for what hadn’t happened. “Vade in pace,” she whispered to the air. Go in peace.

But she felt no peace. Gripping the ring, she looked up at the first stars winking through the trees. What had just happened? What exactly did he want?

What do I want?

With a ragged sigh, she rose and left the garden, thinking of Magnus, barely remembering Yves, excited, guilty, her emotions a jumble. She could see their faces, but Yves was indistinct, unfocused, whereas Magnus was all too clear, etched into her mind, and she recalled the way he walked, imagined his body, gleaming skin and all muscle.

Gigi sighed again, thinking of how disturbing her dreams were going to be that night.