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8''Search The Seven Hills'' aka ''The Quirinal Hill Affair'' is a HistoricalDetectiveFiction novel by Creator/BarbaraHambly set in Ancient Rome during the last years of Trajan's reign.
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10Marcus Caius Silanus is a young Roman aristocrat disowned by his abusive father for studying philosophy. He is hanging around his old stomping grounds on the Quirinal Hill to catch a glimpse of his childhood friend and love who he has heard has been betrothed to another man - and sees her kidnapped by a clutch of nasty-looking characters, one of whom drops a small fish charm, which a horrified Marcus identifies as a symbol of the outlawed Christian cult. He knows he must rescue his love, Tertullia Vara, ''quickly'' before she is raped in an orgy or sacrificed to the Christians' god. Marcus enlists the aid of a reclusive old patrician nobleman, an expert in Eastern cults, and his household of intelligent and assertive slaves in a frantic 'search of the Seven Hills' of Rome that takes him from the (literal) underworld of weird alien cults to the even more corrupt upper levels of Roman society.
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12!!Examples
13* AbusiveParents: Or rather parent, Marcus' father abuses his wife, his children and his slaves and eventually dies a karmic death from a stroke brought on by rage.
14* AristocratsAreEvil: Not all but many of the upper class characters have unpleasant hobbies and no scruples.
15* ArmorPiercingQuestion: As a philosopher Marcus seeks 'Truth and Beauty'. Arrius, the praetorian officer investigating Tertullia Vara's kidnapping asks "What if you found the Truth and it was ugly?"
16* ArrangedMarriage: Marcus seeks out Tertullia because he's just heard that she's been given by her father to a rich but vulgar Syrian.
17* AsTheGoodBookSays: The Christians in their constant theological wranglings quote not only the canonical bible but non-canonical books as well.
18%%* BadassBookworm: Sixtus is ''so'' this.
19* BeneathTheEarth: According to Sixtus you can go from one end of Rome to the other without showing your face above ground, and we see enough of the literal underworld to believe him.
20%%* BlueBlood: The Silani and and the Varii have this ''and'' money but it's not enough. As Marcus observes it's the Emperor's freedmen who really run Rome.
21%%* CoolOldGuy: Sixtus Claudius Julianus is made of this trope.
22%%* ConspicuousConsumption: Roman society is ''all'' about this.
23%%* CrapsackWorld: Rome is so this, and during the reign of one of the 'good' emperors too.
24%%* DecadentCourt: We don't see the Imperial Court but Roman politics are ''very'' decadent.
25* DeityOfHumanOrigin: The Romans - and Jews - in the book have trouble grasping how an executed carpenter can be God. The Christians' constant arguments over the question does not help.
26%%* DysfunctionalFamily: The Silani are very much this trope.
27%%* EarnYourHappyEnding: Marcus, and Tertullia Vara, must do this.
28%%* FantasticReligiousWeirdness: How Christianity seems to good Romans.
29%%* ForTheEvulz: Marcus believes the Christians motives are this - until he meets some.
30* GladiatorGames: Tertullia Vara's kidnapping is assumed to be revenge by the Christians on her father for burning some of their co-religionists at games he gave some years before.
31* GodBeforeDogma: The Christians avert this by arguing their complex and competing dogmas at every opportunity.
32* HappinessInSlavery: Sixtus' several slaves have been offered their freedom time and again but prefer to stay with him. As Marcus gets to know Sixtus better he thinks he understands why.
33* HeavenSeeker: At least one of the Christians is actively seeking martyrdom as a direct road to Glory (TruthInTelevision for many then).
34* TheHermit: Sixtus Claudius Julianus has been playing hermit in his deteriorating mansion on Quirinal Hill since Marcus and Tertullia were young children.
35* HighPriest: Finding the High Priest of the Christians, called 'Papa', becomes a priority for Marcus. Papa turns out to be closer than Marcus' thinks.
36%%* HolierThanThou: ALL the various and argumentative Christians sects believe they are this.
37* HopeIsScary: Marcus feels it would be a relief to give way to despair over his kidnapped love interest, as 'hope is exhausting', but Sixtus won't let him.
38%%* HumanSacrifice: Christians supposedly do this. Worshipers of Atargatis actually do.
39%%* IllegalReligion: Both Christianity and the worship of Atargatis are this. At first Marcus can see little to choose between the two.
40* ImpoverishedPatrician: Sixtus looks like this but isn't. Marcus' only income is a small allowance from his disgruntled father and the villain is living WAY over his income.
41* LoveObstructingParents: Marcus and Tertullia are childhood playmates from families of similar status and wealth. They should have no problem pairing off, but unfortunately their fathers quarreled and are now bitter enemies.
42%%* MysteryCult: Sixtus defines Christianity as one of these, and Mithraism gets a mention too.
43* NobilityMarriesMoney: The reason for Tertullia Vara's engagement to a 'greasy' Syrian merchant.
44%%* ThePhilosopher: Marcus is training to be one and Sixtus is reputed to be one.
45* ScaryAmoralReligion: What Christianity looks like to Romans.
46%%* SecretIdentity: A surprising number of characters have one.
47%%* SelfMadeMan: These were not admired by the Romans, and the examples we meet are not admirable at all.
48%%* SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil: At least if you have the wrong master it is.
49* TooImportantToWalk: Fancy litters with good looking heavily muscled matched bearers are a real status symbol in Rome.

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