And so it was.
The morning of their seizure, eight years before,they had been carried to the Tower, where Gratus proposed to put them out of the way. He had chosen the Tower for the purpose as more immediately in his own keeping, and cell VI. because, first, it could be better lost than any other; and, secondly, it was infected with leprosy; for these prisoners were not merely to be put in a safe place, but in a place to die.They were, accordingly, taken down by slaves in the night-time, when there were no witnesses of the deed;then, in completion of the savage task, the same slaves walled up the door, after which they were themselves separated, and sent away never to be heard of more.To save accusation, and, in the event of discovery, to leave himself such justification as might be allowed in a distinction between the infliction of a punishment and the commission of a double murder, Gratus preferred sinking his victims where natural death was certain, though slow. That they might linger along,he selected a convict who had been made blind and tongueless, and sank him in the only connecting cell,there to serve them with food and drink. Under no circumstances could the poor wretch tell the tale or identify either the prisoners or their doomsman. So,with a cunning partly due to Messala, the Roman,under color of punishing a brood of assassins, smoothed a path to confiscation of the estate of the Hurs, of which no portion ever reached the imperial coffers.