Time to Depart explained

Time to Depart
Author:Lindsey Davis
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Series:Marcus Didius Falco
Genre:Historical mystery crime novel
Publisher:Century
Release Date:1995
Media Type:Print (hardback and paperback)
Pages:384 pp
Isbn:0-71-265931-5
Oclc:227274023
Preceded By:Last Act in Palmyra
Followed By:A Dying Light in Corduba

Time to Depart is a 1995 historical mystery crime novel by Lindsey Davis and the seventh book of the Marcus Didius Falco Mysteries series. Set in Rome during AD 72, the novel stars Marcus Didius Falco, an informer and imperial agent. The title refers to the law which stated that no Roman citizen who had been sentenced to death might be arrested, even after the verdict, until he has been given time to depart, the idea being that for a Roman citizen to choose exile outside the boundaries of the Empire would have been a fate worse than death itself.

Plot summary

Falco's closest friend, Petronius Longus, has finally caught one of the leading criminals in Rome, Balbinus Pius. But a quirk in Roman law allows a convicted felon, even a murderer, time to depart before the sentence is carried out. Balbinus' departure has left a vacuum in the underworld of Rome, and there is a crowd of criminals trying desperately to fill the void. Their first step is to engineer a robbery that reverberates throughout the city.

Falco is again called upon by the Emperor Vespasian to supply answers, as quietly and quickly as possible. A couple of murders, a kidnapping or two, and more suspects than Falco cares to count takes him, and his patrician girlfriend Helena Justina, to places a family shouldn't have to go.

Characters

High Society

Low Society (Fountain Court)

Law and Order

Other Citizens

Major themes

Allusions/references to actual history, geography and current science

Release details

External links