A magical account of Caesar's Rome through his wife's eyes
Calpurnia's Dream
sábado, 21 de noviembre de 2015
viernes, 20 de noviembre de 2015
Chapter
IX
All
my anxiety, my lord, suddenly vanished.... Unexpectedly, I felt some
feeble footsteps within the gloom of that small room in which I used
to spend my time when there were no visits. Though only a good number
of nundina
had
gone by, my thoughts and pulse still kept me awaiting like that
evening among that mist of incense, myrrh, ritually-burnt leaves and
that emerald, sapphire purple-like glow .It was not just gem
twinkling but some kind of weird energy which could change according
to each colour shade.
I
knew -I could not tell how – that there was some energizing force
which was making different kinds of life flow throughout my solid
body. Some kind of fluid, mild, ravishing force melting with that
other, acquamarine-hued, rich, coming from that abyss-like widely
stretching look which surged up from the golden--woven braided
tide....Which made me blush and grow pale at the same time when the
vision of your harmonious imposing presence let itself in within the
dark. I do not know if there were any words... Your thin hair sprang
up among my startled fingers while your full lips and aquiline nose
were getting hold of my belly and chest.... Later on, I still felt
that force pervading all over my wet, fulfilled wide-opened body. I
was quite aware of those pines which had been carefully laid under
the mattress, noticing your deep but restless breathing between my
breasts. Might you have also felt it, that immense look like some
kind of bright blue-grey fog which had gone through myself while your
solid virility was mercilessly devouring my belly, fecundating it?
You had probably noticed how my heartbeat sped up....
-My
lord ….
Why
did I feel hurried to ask you?
– You
once told me that.... Long ago you travelled to a sanctuary on the
Western end of the Roman Sea… didn’t you?
In
the gloom your transparent eyes – why on earth should they remind
me of those I remembered having seen only a few days before?- watched
me as they used to in front of any of your subordinated ones. Then
some shade of perplexity pervaded them among those wrinkles which had
turned deeper. You smiled.
–....Yes,
my little Calpurnia, yes... Just arrived in Hispania….
Yes,
I remembered that you had just lost Cornelia, your long-missed wife
–..
I made an offering to divine Alexandros...
I
watched you in amazement: despite your position – first as “Flamen
Dialis”
then as a Pontifex
–
I knew well that, privately, you did not worship anything beyond
your ambition or self–confidence
– ....my
deepest, most tearing teardrops, the same I shed when my former wife
died without leaving any heir for Gens
Iulia as
I had been despoiled of the first tenderness any man could feel for a
woman or my mother who, also deprived of a partner a long time
before, had accepted the loss of her right to love her son tenderly
in order to take on the role which would have corresponded to a
paterfamilias
Even
in the dark I could perceive that the sparkle in your eyes was
shivering. You kissed the hand that had touched that wet
parchment-like cheek. I could feel you swallow and then your slow,
heavy breath. For the first time after that non-confarreatio
wedding,
I felt driven to cradle you into comfort, caress that scarce ashy
hair on your head, kiss those tracks on your beautiful wide forehead…
My lord, the hero, the god who had paraded in cheering roaring along
Via
Sacra
…A vulnerable man, grown tender, searching for being consoled
within my body. Yes, though neither Marcia nor Portia nor Cornelia
had told me openly, I well knew that all those nights before
returning to Domus
Publica you
had slept in another house on Palatine Hill, something of which even
the small vestals had been aware. Despite all that, the deep
humiliation which I had sometimes experienced for not being able to
keep you loyal to my bed by means of a higher capacity of seduction
or a son who would perpetuate your family, I could still feel that
caress through my womb, possessed by all your being….
–I
offered him my pride, Calpurnia. Can you understand it? No, you
didn’t know me as a young man… This Gaius you’ve got in front,
ageing and humanized, is so distant from that one Cornelia Cinna saw,
Aurelia bred up and faced Lucio Cornelio Sulla himself… Sulla….
Thanks to him and his supposed ….clemency?
I
saw some twinkling irony in your smile
–He
was there, in the temple which had been first devoted to Carthaginian
Solar God and later on to Herakles, trying to vent my hopelessness
for not being able to match this idea that I had of myself with the
meaning of that divinized young Macedonian, perhaps of the same age
as I was at that time of my arrival there. …. Sulla…. After all,
I had to… Who knows if I still have to owe him all that I have
achieved so far. A great Roman, whether we may like it or not. He
didn’t have an Aurelia who could have shaped him as a man since
childhood. Only his shattered dignitas,
that of a patrician who was deprived of his heritage, thanks to a
sick, mentally-ill ferocious father who, rumour has it, was abandoned
by his wife and a child, a bit younger than Lucius Cornelius, though,
according to the official version, she died. Notwithstanding all, I
envy his cunning, military cleverness, that hidden sensitivity few
know about. Yes, I have come to know all that through my mother, you
can imagine. …. ……
There
came a big silence: those acquamarine-coloured pupils were burning
–Very
near the location of Herakles’ temple, in Gades, a short time later
I heard a strange story, told by an elderly man who was a relative of
that other Lucius Cornelius, our good old friend Balbus, and had
lived in Rome for many years. He revealed me that Sulla and his
dictatorship were thought to have been turned to ashes a long , long
time before. At least that was what Aurelia told me. And I am
entrusting this to you as you have proved yourself to be a faithful
virtuous wife and I know that I may have begotten a child inside you
tonight. I can see it in your swollen breasts, full of fertility….
That good old man told me about it while we were sailing along the
big sea channel between both islands: on one of them Balbus is having
his Neapolis
built, the new city with which all these long-time rich, Romanized
Carthaginians want to compete with Romans. All those beautiful domi
, built with that variety of local stone: porous, plucked away from
the sea, shell-decked… That golden-reddish ochre, sunbathed by that
dazzling light, purely white and bluish, surpasses any comparison to
our Palatinus.
It’s something beyond tangible real things. I’d really love to
take you there , my Calpurnia… Even any insula
like the one where I used to live and grew up here in Subura
looks
like transfigured, as if it did not shelter the sordidness their
Roman sisters contain. Something that, in fact, is a real thing.
There are neither insulae
nor
vici
like
ours, overcrowded and insecure. All the new city enjoys such
cleanness, security and prosperity that Rome itself would envy them.
Although, frankly speaking, I missed that deep pine perfume which
seems to merge within sea breeze from Ostia, so different from Gades’
piercing salty air, melted with dazzling sunlight…Ah, excuse me,
Calpurnia, for this digression…. Are you sleeping?
I
sat up, watching you with curiosity. Nevertheless, my eyes are dark,
so they don’ t sparkle like yours in the dark.
–….
As I was telling you, on the opposite side of the channel there’s
the island where Phoenician Gadeira used to stand, nowadays full of
rundown buildings, brimming with mould and flocks of seagulls flying
for vermin carcasses among the ruins … There are also huge
vineyards with which it is said that many locals trade and even
exchange varieties with vine-growers from Campania or any other
Italic or even Greek region. It’s a heavy wine, they say. As you
can imagine, I have never tasted it. On the shore of this island you
can find the temples which, initially devoted to Phoenician deities,
were later conveniently Romanized, being dedicated to gods who could
remind us of those who preceded them. For instance, that one which
first was consecrated to Baal and then to Kronos and … here is the
point I wanted to reach: there was another one which had been erected
to worship Great Mother Goddess Astarte or only Ishtar, goddess of
the moon, sexuality and fertility. Nowadays it is devoted to Venus
Marina.
I still have it before my eyes, standing on the shore, a twin image
of any great temple here in Rome, except for the stone with which it
was built, that bright ochre rock. That good old man whispered in my
ears. It seems that I can still be watching him now, growing pale
through his intensely sun-browned skin…. In Rome he had had the
chance of getting contacts who even introduced him into the exclusive
circle of the Caecili
Metelli,
something that made it easy for him to have an outgoing relationship
with Sulla which led to a long-lasting friendship. Something
startling, you may think, for someone like our Sulla. That rapport
continued when this gentleman went back to Gades and, as far as I
know, even succeeded in having some fruitful vine trading with Lucius
Cornelius, related to the vines which surrounded his villa
in
Cumae….Something that his own daughter seems to have continued with
incredible cleverness. Well, this good old man told me that, about
fifteen years before, Lucius Cornelius himself, after getting away
from Rome, had begged this good man that he could lodge him in his
Gades house. He was alone except for a slave who kept the moustache
and hair in the arvernus
fashion-
long, thick, whitened….and whose face was abnormally flushed –
perhaps due to some kind of skin disease or drinking habits. In it
you could make out his eyes, as pale and exceptional as his master’s.
Obviously, Sulla had left his family in a safe place away from Rome
but had considered it more secure to stay away from them. What
startled his friend was that his hospitality wouldn’t last long as
Lucius Cornelius ‘ plan was to be led to Venus
Marina
temple a few days later and remain there for a long time, perhaps
the rest of his life. No wonder. She was the goddess to whom he had
dedicated Pompeii.
Why
should silence and darkness be so heavy around us?
–You
can imagine this man’s reaction. And also mine. Sulla, devoted to
Venus’ priesthood, serfdom or whatever name you may call that! He
had not even been initiated to perform that task, cloistered there
inside for a lifetime. The Sulla we know so well emerged back,
menacing, demanding him to keep silent: if anyone should wish any
more information about his identity, his host would restrict himself
to inform that this stranger was just a common Roman, this man who,
days later, would get across the channel without any intention of
returning to civilized Roman world so as to devote his life to living
on fish, vines, and those bread loaves that are baked by the priests
who live there, besides the fruits of the orchards around the
temples. Anyway, nobody would recognize him before leaving the new
town. That huge straw hat hid his golden crimson hair and pale,
burning-iced eyes which made him outstand alongside with his whitest
skin, concealed by the toga
or
mantle ....Calpurnia! You’re trembling!
I
feared that fever might get hold of me, like that day, driving me to
unveil certain things which I would have never brought out into
light. I covered myself with the furs that you had just brought from
Gaul. They felt hairy, mellow, smooth....
–No,
my lord.... Just go on....
–You
are burning, my child.... Maybe I should have left you alone
tonight…. But I want you that much, my wife....
A
fugacious desire-tinged outburst of pride triggered my heartbeat. I
hungered for driving your beautiful wide hand to my hardened breasts
and riding you among wailing and yelling pants, shamelessly....
However, I knew that I wanted to go on listening, so I restrained
myself, feeling my muscles loosened.
–Go
on. Perhaps tomorrow you may have no time. It is so scarce, the time
which we can share this way, together....
However,
your silence still remained. I was alarmed. No, I had no reason to
feel uneasy.
–Calpurnia....
Even if it’s you...it puzzles me, to reveal this to you here... You
know I trust you. You understand the importance of this issue. If
Sulla had decided to shut himself there forever... why should he have
returned to Rome later? As no doubt it was Sulla who saved my life.
Nevertheless, my mother was shocked when he saw him again. The only
thing that still remained about him was the look in his eyes... and
his pride. As for the rest, he had nothing in common with those
Apollo-like busts that you may have seen at Cornelia’s .
That
stealing manly beauty whose portraits I had seen at Cumae sprung
within my thoughts.
– Except
for his cleverness and ruthlessness. It is easy to imagine that I had
no intention to disclose anything, not even to my nearest
collaborators. You know that I have no close friends and this is an
advantage in this point. As for my cousin, I thought that the best
thing for him was to continue believing in what all of us had
traditionally held as a truth....
–What
about Cornelia? Do you think that…?
–-Who
knows! Anyway, she didn’t have a close tender rapport to her father
as to share such a secret. Maybe she does not even know anything
about it. However, I am well informed about her trade affairs in
Gades, when she gets sprouts and wines from the vineyards growing in
the old island in exchange for those sent from Cumae. What on earth
might Cornelia’s wines have? She is said to have made an immense
sum of money. I’m deeply pleased for her: her father wasn’t
generous to her at least in the early times. But… how would someone
like Sulla bear living secluded there, within that cave hidden by
Venus temple?…Yes, old Astarte temple was subterranean, according
to ancient patterns. You should consider that non-Roman peoples
thought that goddesses of fertility ought to be worshipped within the
womb of the earth, which they used to symbolize.
–Don’t
you think that it might be an initial measure of caution so that he
could later secretly flee and meet his troops far from Rome, as he
certainly did?
–True,
that was what my good friend from Gades thought when, a long time
later, he knew that Sulla had arrived in Italy in order to join
Pompeius and help him fight Marius. After his amazement, there came
his painful disappointment at Sulla’s subsequent proscriptions and
all that bloodshed during his dictatorship and, later on, his
perplexity at the fact that Lucius Cornelius himself would decide to
give up power and be a privatus
again.
His friend form Gades was one of those who were shocked by the way
Sulla ended his life in Cumae at such an early age. It is obvious
that he never happened to find out how much the Dictator’s
physical appearance had changed. But all his previous ideas were
reversed a few days before I arrived from Herakles’ temple. In the
atrium
of
his domus
.An
upright figure, masked with a large sun-outworn straw hat and a
reddish, fair and grey-streaked beard that happened to be
shoulder-length, like his long braided hair… and those pale
piercing eyes which were no longer cold or pitiless. He told him that
he knew of my stay there and agreed that his amicus
gaditanus
should share that long-kept secret with me as I was “the
heir to the one who has most deeply touched my heart, more than any
of my wives….”
Deeply influenced by retirement, loneliness, meditation and all that
makes these men different from those who lead a social life, he did
not react at his friend’s exultant happiness after his initial
puzzled, even paralysing panic…. In spite of his friend’s attempt
to embrace him warmly and offer his hospitality, he silently left the
domus,
perhaps in order to return to the other island, alien to
civilization… Calpurnia…. Calpurnia!!! Why should I have
consented on telling you all this? No, this can’t have been fitting
for my seed to root inside you…You badly need serenity. … No
appalling stories….
This
time you did really frighten me. I felt icy within my bones in spite
of that thick fur cover… Your arms had held me closely, cradling me
onto your chest… No, never before had I had you this way: it was a
brand new man, this which you were offering me, my lord. So far from
that one who once married the daughter of Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus,
a well-off man, in order to strengthen your alliance to one of the
most influential men in Rome. This that I had in front was just a
tender husband. Sincere, his wife’s confidante…. Like so many
other couples in which initial love had counted as much as other
reasons to sign a marriage deal .I then even thought that all those
ladies who had enjoyed your manhood were no more than fictitious
blurred shadows begotten by envy and my own lack of self-confidence.
Even Servilia herself….
–Was
he as misshaped as when you first met him?
–That
was what I wondered, seeing him covered with his hat and beard.
However , he looked as straight as usual and the skin which could be
seen though his braids and beard still remained extremely white. His
hair was still vigorous though his natural reddish-golden was growing
grey-streaked. Who knows… maybe he … whoever might be…still
alive. But , as you can imagine, incredibly elderly. Nevertheless, I
never had the idea of venturing into the old town to meet him. When
he decided to go and visit his friend , it was due to the fact that
he was really sure that I would keep his secret and never make any
attempt to contact him. And, should he be still alive, I would not
betray his trust. He was…or is…a patrician, like us, you know….
Calpurnia… In the name of all the Gods!!! …. What’s this…???
Some
sticky, hot thick flux was running down my thighs, invading your hand
whereas I felt myself falling into some kind of fainting, too weak to
get scared of that unexpected violent menses, triggered by my sexual
excitement and by what had just been disclosed by you, aborting that
which had been carefully arranged for months, rendering me to that
initial state of abashment, frustration, sterility and self-hatred.
Those who I had thought to be generated by slander and psychical
unbalance again looked like clear-cut realities hovering above me.
Yet we still did not know anything about that female ruler from the
East…
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