![]() As tough as he would like to imagine himself, he cannot ignore their situation and thus, reluctantly, finds himself pursuing the truth of what is happening to them and why. Ruso tries his best to be hard-headed and practical, but he is moved by the plight of a British slave girl, Tilla, and by the other bar girls working in the local brothel, several of whom have started to disappear, later to be found dead. He has to share accommodations with the charming, womanising Valens, in a relationship faintly reminiscent of Hawkeye and Trapper John in MASH. ![]() Sun is in short supply in Britain, as is warmth, comfortable lodgings, and good food. Now, in the hope of restoring his fortunes, he is an army surgeon in that furthest-flung western colony of Rome, Britain, in Deva (present-day Chester) to be precise and missing sunny Africa, where the worst he had to deal with was the odd scorpion. Ruso's wife divorced him, apparently on the grounds of lack of ambition, and he was left largely penniless and with his father's estate to rescue from bankruptcy. But he forgot to hang around for his reward, so the rescue was put down to divine intervention. A few years before the book opens, he managed to save the emperor Trajan from a collapsed building after an earthquake in Alexandria. ![]() ![]() Gaius Petreius Ruso is a good doctor and a poor politician. Downie, Ruth - 'Medicus: A Novel of the Roman Empire' ![]()
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