Tabula Rasa
A Crime Novel of the Roman Empire
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- $20.99
Publisher Description
The medicus Ruso and his wife Tilla are back in the borderlands of Britannia, this time helping to tend the builders of Hadrian's Great Wall. Having been forced to move off their land, the Britons are distinctly on edge and are still smarting from the failure of a recent rebellion that claimed many lives.
Then Ruso's recently arrived clerk, Candidus, goes missing. A native boy thinks he sees a body being hidden inside the wall's half-finished stonework, and a worrying rumor begins to spread. When the soldiers ransack the nearby farms looking for Candidus, Tilla's tentative friendship with a local family turns to anger and disappointment. It's clear that the sacred rites to bless her marriage to Ruso will have to wait. Tensions only increase when Branan, the family's youngest son, also vanishes. He was last seen in the company of a lone and unidentified soldier who claimed he was taking the boy to see Tilla.
As Ruso and Tilla try to solve the mystery of the two disappearances-while at the same time struggling to keep the peace between the Britons and the Romans-an intricate scheme involving slavery, changed identities, and fur trappers emerges, and it becomes imperative that Ruso find Branan before it's too late.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Downie's sixth whodunit set in second-century Britannia (after 2013's Semper Fidelis) immediately transports the reader to another time and place with an evocative description of work on Hadrian's Wall in the midst of an unrelenting rainstorm ("It was easy to believe that the rain threw itself at you personally; hard not to feel persecuted and aggrieved when it found its way into your boots no matter how much grease you slathered on them"). When Candidus, Roman medico Gaius Ruso's new clerk, goes missing, Ruso uses his many connections he's rumored to be personally acquainted with Emperor Hadrian, and is married to a local, Tilla, whose relatives view him, understandably, with distrust to find out what happened to Candidus. While the mystery itself isn't one of the author's more gripping, the book plausibly depicts life in Roman Britain and tensions between the occupiers and the occupied.