denverlibrary.org - Denver Public Library Online
My eCart | My eAccount |Sign In 
Search 
 for:  in    Advanced search... 

Downloadable Media Guided Tour

Home > Content Details

Click image to view full cover
One Virgin Too Many
Marcus Didius Falco Mystery Series, Book 11
by 
Lindsey Davis
  
Average rating: 
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Subject(s):  Fiction
Mystery
Language(s):  English
Awards:  Romantic Times Career Achievement Award Nominee
Romantic Times BOOKreviews Magazine
Recommend this title to a friend! Click here.

Format Information

Adobe PDF eBook Add to eCart
Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   1616 KB
ISBN:   9780759560321
Release date:   May 23, 2001

Description

Marcus Didius Falco is a cynical, hard-boiled investigator from the rough end of Rome. He does a bit of everything, from political investigating to art-fraud work. But he never seems to make enough money to move his family out of a seedy tenement. But fresh from his adventure in Two for the Lions in North Africa, he finds new respectability. His efforts are rewarded when he is appointed to a post in the religious hierarchy of government cults and becomes keeper of the city's sacred geese. Now Falco wants nothing more than to spend time relaxing at home. But all too soon he finds himself caught up in the murder of a member of one of the sacred brotherhoods and the disappearance of the most likely new candidate for the Order of Vestal Virgins.Lindsey Davis's look at the complexities of Roman society and attitudes has rarely been so impressively on display as in this engrossing historical mystery.

If you like this title, you might also like...

Two for the Lions
Two for the Lions
by Lindsey Davis

Venus in Copper
Venus in Copper
by Lindsey Davis

Excerpts

From the book...
I

I had just come home after telling my favorite sister that her husband had been eaten by a lion. I was in no mood for greeting a new client.

Some informers might welcome any chance to flourish their schedule of charges. I wanted silence, darkness, oblivion. Not much hope, since we were on the Aventine Hill, in the noisiest hour of a warm May evening, with all Rome opening up for commerce and connivance. Well, if I couldn't expect peace, at least I deserved a drink. But the child was waiting for me outside my apartment halfway down Fountain Court, and as soon as I spotted her on the balcony I guessed that refreshments would have to wait.

My girlfriend, Helena, was always suspicious of anything too pretty that arrived in a very short tunic. Had she made the would-be customer wait outside? Or had the smart little girl taken one look at our apartment and refused to venture indoors? She was probably linked to the luxurious carrying chair with a Medusa boss on its smoothly painted half door that was parked below the balcony. Our meager home might strike her as highly undesirable. I hated it myself.

On what passed for a portico, she had found herself the stool that I used for watching the world go by. As I came up the worn steps from the alley, my first acquaintance was with a pair of petite, well-manicured white feet in gold-strapped sandals, kicking disconsolately against the balcony rail. With the thought of Maia's four children, frightened and tearful, still burning my memory, that was all the acquaintance I wanted. I had too many problems of my own.

Even so, I noticed that the little person on my stool had qualities I would once have welcomed in a client. She was female. She looked attractive, confident, clean, and well dressed. She appeared to be good for a fat fee too. A profusion of bangles was clamped on her plump arms. Green glass beads with glinting spacers tangled in the four-color braid on the neck of her finely woven tunic. Adept boudoir maids must have helped to arrange the circle of dark curls around her face and to position the gold net that pegged them in place. If she was showing a lot of leg below the tunic, that was because it was such a short tunic. She handled her smooth emerald stole with unflustered ease when it slid off her shoulders. She looked as if she assumed she could handle me as easily.

There was one problem. My ideal client, assuming Helena Justina permitted me to assist such a person nowadays, would be a pert widow aged somewhere between seventeen and twenty. I placed this little gem in a far less dangerous bracket. She was only five or six.

I leaned on the balcony newel post, a rotting timber the landlord should have replaced years ago. When I spoke my voice sounded weary even to me. "Hello, princess. Can't you find the door porter to let you in?" She stared at me scornfully, aware that grimy plebeian apartments did not possess slaves to welcome visitors. "When your family tutor starts to teach you about rhetoric, you will discover that that was a feeble attempt at irony. Can I help you?"

"I was told an informer lives here." Her accent said she was upper class. I had worked that out. I tried not to let it prejudice me. Well, not too much. "If you are Falco, I want to consult you." It came out clear and surprisingly assured. Chin up and self-confident, the prospective client had the bright address of a star trapeze artiste. She knew what she wanted and expected to be listened to.

"Sorry, I am not available for hire.

 

About the Author

Lindsey Davis was born in Birmingham, England. After taking an English degree at Oxford and working for the civil service for 13 years, she "ran away to be a writer." Starting with historical romances, Lindsey struggled to make ends meet until she came up with the idea for Marcus Didius Falco, a PI working in Rome at the end of the first century. She will be the British guest of honor at the Left Coast Crime Conference in Anchorage, Alaska in February 2001.

Digital Rights Information

Adobe PDF eBook
Copy:  not allowed
Print:  not allowed
 
© 2009 Denver Public Library. Powered by OverDrive® Digital Library Reserve™
Privacy Policy | Support | Help
IMPORTANT NOTICE ABOUT COPYRIGHTED MATERIALS