Conn Iggulden - Emperor (The Gates of Rome)
Praise for
EMPEROR
THE GATES OF ROME
"What Robert Graves did for Claudius, Conn
Iggulden now does for the most famous Roman Emperor of them all.
This novel is a vibrant blending of historical fact and fiction. If
only all history lessons could be this thrilling."
—William Bernhardt
"The Gates of Rome is a big, sumptuous
feast of a novel that's so vividly written I could hear the clang
of swords and smell the scent of spice in the air. It had me
enthralled from start to finish."
—Tess Gerritsen
"An absorbing portrait of ancient Roman life and
history, well written and full of suspense."
—Kirkus Reviews
EMPEROR: GATES OF ROME
A Dell Book
PUBLISHING HISTORY
Delacorte Press hardcover edition
published January 2003
Dell international mass market
edition / September 2003
Published by
Bantam Dell
A Division of Random House,
Inc.
New York, New York
This is a work of fiction. Names,
characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the
author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to
actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely
coincidental.
All rights reserved
Copyright © 2003 by Conn
Iggulden
Cover design and hand lettering by
Craig DeCamps
Library of Congress Catalog Card
Number: 2002071517
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or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any
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For information address: Delacorte
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If you purchased this book without
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House, Inc.
ISBN 0-440-29607-2
Manufactured in the United States
of America
OPM 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
1
To my son Cameron and to my brother Hal,
the other member of the Black Cat Club
Acknowledgments
Without the help and support of a
number of people, this book would have never been started or
finished. I would like to thank Victoria, who has been a constant
source of help and encouragement. Also, the editors at
HarperCollins, who steered it through the process without too much
pain. Any mistakes that remain are, unfortunately, my own.
Also, Richard, who helped to cook the raven and
made Marcus possible. Finally, my wife, Ella, who had more faith
than I did and made the way seem easy.
EMPEROR
The Gates of
Rome
CHAPTER
1
The track in the woods was a wide
causeway to the two boys strolling down it. Both were so dirty with
thick, black mud as to be almost unrecognizable as human. The
taller of the two had blue eyes that seemed unnaturally bright
against the cracking, itching mud that plastered him.
"We're going to be killed for this, Marcus," he
said, grinning. In his hand, a sling spun lazily, held taut with
the weight of a smooth river pebble.
"Your fault, Gaius, for pushing me in. I told
you the riverbed wasn't dry all the way."
As he spoke, the shorter boy laughed and shoved
his friend into the bushes that lined the path. He whooped and ran
as Gaius scrambled out and set off in pursuit, sling whirring in a
disc.
"Battle!" he shouted in his high, unbroken
voice.
The beating they would get at home for ruining
their tunics was far away, and both boys knew every trick to get
out of trouble—all that mattered was charging through the
woodland paths at high speed, scaring birds. Both boys were
barefoot, already with calluses developing, despite not having seen
more than eight summers.
"This time, I'll catch him," Gaius panted to
himself as he ran. It was a mystery to him how Marcus, who had the
same number of legs and arms, could yet somehow make them move
faster than he could. In fact, as he was shorter, his stride should
have been a little less, surely?
The leaves whipped by him, stinging his bare
arms. He could hear Marcus taunting him up ahead, close. Gaius
showed his teeth as his lungs began to hurt.
Without warning, he broke into a clearing at
full tilt and skidded to a sudden, shocked stop. Marcus was lying
on the ground, trying to sit up and holding his head in his right
hand. Three men—no, older boys—were standing there,
carrying walking staffs.
Gaius groaned as he took in his surroundings.
The chase had carried the two boys off his fathers small estate and
into their neighbors' part of the woods. He should have recognized
the track that marked the boundary, but he'd been too caught up in
catching Marcus for once.
"What do we have here? A couple of little
mudfish, crawled up out of the river!"
It was Suetonius who spoke, the eldest son of
the neighboring estate. He was fourteen and killing time before he
went into the army. He had the sort of trained muscles the two
younger boys hadn't begun to develop. He had a mop of blond hair
over a face speckled with white-headed eruptions that covered his
cheeks and forehead, with a sprinkling of angry-looking red ones
disappearing under his praetexta tunic. He also had a long,
straight stick, friends to impress, and an afternoon to while
away.
Gaius was frightened, knowing he was out of his
depth. He and Marcus were trespassing—the best they could
expect was a few blows, the worst was a beating with broken bones.
He glanced at Marcus and saw him try to stagger to his feet. He'd
obviously been belted with something as he ran into the older
boys.
"Let us go, Tonius, we're expected back."
"Speaking mudfish! We'll make our
fortune, boys! Grab hold of them, I have a roll of twine for tying
up pigs that will do just as well for mudfish."
Gaius didn't consider running, with Marcus
unable to get away. This wasn't a game—the cruelty of the
boys could be managed if they were treated carefully, talked to
like scorpions, ready to strike without warning.
The two other boys approached with their staffs
held ready. They were both strangers to Gaius. One dragged Marcus
to his feet and the other, a hefty, stupid-looking boy, rammed his
stick into Gaius's stomach. He doubled up in agony, unable to
speak. He could hear the boy laughing as he cramped and groaned,
trying to curl into the pain.
"There's a branch that will do. Tie their legs
together and string them up to swing. We can see who's the best
shot with javelins and stones."
"Your father knows my father," Gaius spat out as
the pain in his stomach lessened.
"True—doesn't like him though. My father
is a proper patrician, not like yours. Your whole family could be
his servants if he wanted. I'd make that mad mother of yours scrub
the tiles."
At least he was talking. The thug with the
horsehair twine was intent on tying knots at Gaius's feet, ready to
hoist him into the air. What could he say to bargain? His father
had no real power in the city. His mothers family had produced a
couple of consuls—that was it. Uncle Marius was a powerful
man, so his mother said.
"We are nobilitas—my uncle Marius
is not a man to cross..."
There was a sudden high-pitched yelp as the
string over the branch went tight and Marcus was swung into the air
upside down.
"Tie the end to that stump. This fish next,"
Tonius said, laughing gleefully.
Gaius noted that the two friends followed his
orders without question. It would be pointless trying to appeal to
one of them.
"Let us down, you spot-covered pus-bag!" Marcus
shouted as his face darkened with the rush of blood.
Gaius groaned. Now they would be killed, he was
sure.
"You idiot, Marcus. Don't mention his spots; you
can see he must be sensitive about them."
Suetonius raised an eyebrow and his mouth opened
in astonishment. The heavyset boy paused in throwing the twine over
a second branch.
"Oh, you have made a mistake, little fish.
Finish stringing that one up, Decius, I'm going to make him bleed a
little."
Suddenly, the world tilted sickeningly and Gaius
could hear the twine creak and a low whistle in his ears as his
head filled with blood. He rotated slowly and came round to see
Marcus in a similar predicament. His nose was a little bloody from
being knocked down the first time.
"I think you've stopped my nosebleed, Tonius.
Thanks." Marcus's voice trembled slightly and Gaius smiled at his
bravery.
When he'd first come to live with them, the
little boy had been naturally nervous and a little small for his
age. Gaius had shown him around the estate and they'd ended up in
the hay barn, right at the top of the stacked sheaves. They had
looked down at the loose pile far bebw and Gaius had seen Marcus's
hands tremble.
"I'll go first and show you how it's done,"
Gaius had said cheerfully, launching himself feetfirst and
whooping.
Below, he'd looked up at the edge for a few
seconds, waiting to see Marcus appear. Just as he'd thought it
would never happen, a small figure shot into the air, leaping high.
Gaius had scrambled out of the way as Marcus crashed into the hay,
winded and gasping.
"I thought you were too scared to do it," Gaius
had said to the prone figure blinking in the dust.
"I was," Marcus had replied quietly, "but I
won't be afraid. I just won't."
The hard voice of Suetonius broke into Gaius's
spinning thoughts: "Gentlemen, meat must be tenderized with
mallets. Take your stations and begin the technique, like so."
He swung his stick at Gaius's head, catching him
over the ear. The world went white, then black, and when he next
opened his eyes everything was spinning as the string twisted. For
a while, he could feel the blows as Suetonius called out,
"One-two-three, one-two-three..."
He thought he could hear Marcus crying and then
he passed out to the accompaniment of jeers and laughter.
He woke and went back under a couple
of times in the daylight, but it was dusk when he was finally able
to stay conscious. His right eye was a heavy mass of blood, and his
face felt swollen and caked in stickiness. They were still upside
down and swinging gently as the evening breeze came in from the
hills.
"Wake up, Marcus—Marcus!"
His friend didn't stir. He looked terrible, like
some sort of demon. The crust of crumbling river mud had been
broken away, and there was now only a gray dust, streaked with red
and purple. His jaw was swollen, and a lump stood out on his
temple. His left hand was fat and had a bluish tinge in the failing
light. Gaius tried to move his own hands, held by the twine. Though
painfully stiff, they both worked and he set about wriggling them
free. His young frame was supple and the burst of fresh pain was
ignored in the wave of worry he felt for his friend. He had to be
all right, he had to be. First, though, Gaius had to get down.
One hand came free and he reached down to the
ground, scrabbling in the dust and dead leaves with his fingertips.
Nothing. The other hand came free and he widened his area of
search, making his body swing in a slow circle. Yes, a small stone
with a sharp edge. Now for the difficult part.
"Marcus! Can you hear me? I'm going to get us
down, don't you worry. Then I'm going to kill Suetonius and his fat
friends."
Marcus swung gently in silence, his mouth open
and slack. Gaius took a deep breath and readied himself for the
pain. Under normal circumstances, reaching up to cut through a
piece of heavy twine with only a sharp stone would have been
difficult, but with his abdomen a mass of bruises, it felt like an
impossible task.
Go.
He heaved himself up, crying out with the pain
from his stomach. He jackknifed up to the branch and gripped it
with both hands, lungs heaving with the effort. He felt weak and
his vision blurred. He thought he would vomit, and could do no more
than just hold on for a few moments. Then, inch by inch, he
released the hand with the stone and leaned back, giving himself
enough room to reach the twine and saw at it, trying not to catch
his skin where it had bitten into the flesh.
The stone was depressingly blunt and he couldn't
hold on for long. Gaius tried to let go before his hands slipped so
he could control the fall back, but it was too hard.
"Still got the stone," he muttered to himself.
"Try again, before Suetonius comes back."
Another thought struck him. His father could
have returned from Rome. He was due back any day now. It was
growing dark and he would be worried. Already, he could be out
looking for the two boys, coming nearer to this spot, calling their
names. He must not find them like this. It would be too
humiliating.
"Marcus? We'll tell everyone we fell. I don't
want my father to know about this."
Marcus creaked round in a circle, oblivious.
Five times more, Gaius spasmed up and sawed at
the twine before it parted. He hit the ground almost flat and
sobbed as his torn and tortured muscles twitched and jumped.
He tried to ease Marcus to the ground, but the
weight was too much for him and the thump made him wince.
As Marcus landed, he opened his eyes at the
fresh pain.
"My hand," he whispered, his voice cracking.
"Broken, I'd say. Don't move it. We have to get
out of here in case Suetonius comes back or my father tries to find
us. It's nearly dark. Can you stand?"
"I can, I think, though my legs feel weak. That
Tonius is a bastard," Marcus muttered. He did not try to open his
swollen jaw, but spoke through fat and broken lips.
Gaius nodded grimly. "True—we have a score
to settle there, I think."
Marcus smiled and winced at the sting of opening
cuts. "Not until we've healed a bit, though, eh? I'm not up to
taking him on at the moment."
Propping each other up, the two boys staggered
home in the darkness, walking a mile over the cornfields, past the
slave quarters for the field workers and up to the main buildings.
As expected, the oil lamps were still lit, lining the walls of the
main house.
"Tubruk will be waiting for us; he never
sleeps," Gaius muttered as they passed under the pillars of the
outer gate.
A voice from the shadows made them both
jump.
"A good thing too. I would have hated to miss
this spectacle. You are lucky your father is not here; he'd have
taken the skin off your backs for returning to the villa looking
like this. What was it this time?"
Tubruk stepped into the yellow light of the
lamps and leaned forward. He was a powerfully built ex-gladiator,
who'd bought the position of overseer to the small estate outside
Rome and never looked back. Gaius's father said he was one in a
thousand for organizing talent. The slaves worked well under him,
some from fear and some from liking. He sniffed at the two young
boys.
"Fall in the river, did we? Smells like it."
They nodded happily at this explanation.
"Mind you, you didn't pick up those stick marks
from a river bottom, did you? Suetonius, was it? I should have
kicked his backside for him years ago, when he was young enough for
it to make a difference. Well?"
"No, Tubruk, we had an argument and fought each
other. No one else was involved and even if there had been, we
would want to handle it ourselves, you see?"
Tubruk grinned at this from such a small boy. He
was forty-five years of age, with hair that had gone gray in his
thirties. He had been a legionary in Africa in the Third Cyrenaica
legion, and had fought nearly a hundred battles as a gladiator,
collecting a mass of scars on his body. He put out his great spade
of a hand and rubbed his square fingers through Gaius's hair.
"I do see, little wolf. You are your father's
son. You cannot handle everything yet, though; you are just a
little lad, and Suetonius—or whoever—is shaping into a
fine young warrior, so I hear. Mind yourselves, his father is too
powerful to be an enemy in the Senate."
Gaius drew himself up to his full height and
spoke as formally as he knew how, trying to assert his position.
"It is luck, then, that this Suetonius is in no way attached
to ourselves," he replied.
Tubruk nodded as if he had accepted the point,
trying not to grin.
Gaius continued more confidently: "Send Lucius
to me to look at our wounds. My nose is broken and almost certainly
Marcus's hand is the same."
Tubruk watched them totter into the main house
and resumed his post in the darkness, guarding the gate on first
watch, as he did each night. It would be full summer soon and the
days would be almost too hot to bear. It was good to be alive with
the sky so clear and honest work ahead.
The following morning was an agony of
protest from muscles, cuts, and joints; the two days after that
were worse. Marcus had succumbed to a fever that the physician said
entered his head through the broken bone of his hand, which swelled
to astonishing proportions as it was strapped and splinted. For
days he was hot and had to be kept in darkness, while Gaius fretted
on the steps outside. Almost exactly one week after the attack in
the woods, Marcus was lying asleep, still weak, but recovering.
Gaius could still feel pain as he stretched his muscles, and his
face was a pretty collection of yellow and purple patches, shiny
and tight in places as they healed. It was time, though: time to
find Suetonius.
As he walked through the woods of the family
estate, his mind was full of thoughts of fear and pain. What if
Suetonius didn't show up? There was no reason to suppose that he
made regular trips into the woods. What if the older boy was with
his friends again? They would kill him, no doubt about it. Gaius
had brought a bow with him this time, and practiced drawing it as
he walked. It was a man's bow and too large for him, but he found
he could plant the end in the ground and pull an arrow back enough
to frighten Suetonius, if the boy refused to back down.
"Suetonius, you are a pus-filled bag of dung. If
I catch you on my father's land, I will put an arrow through your
head."
He spoke aloud as he went along. It was a
beautiful day to walk in the woods, and he might have enjoyed it if
it weren't for his serious purpose in being there. This time, too,
he had his brown hair oiled tight against his head and clean,
simple clothes that allowed him easy movements and an unrestricted
draw.
He was still on his side of the estate border,
so Gaius was surprised when he heard footsteps up ahead and saw
Suetonius and a giggling girl appear suddenly on the wide track.
The older boy didn't notice him for a moment, so intent was he on
grappling with the girl.
"You're trespassing," Gaius snapped, pleased to
hear his voice come out steady, even if it was high. "You're on my
father's estate."
Suetonius jumped and swore in shock. As he saw
Gaius plant one end of the bow in the path and understood the
threat, he began to laugh.
"A little wolf now! A creature of many forms, it
seems. Didn't you get enough of a beating last time, little
wolf?"
The girl seemed very pretty to Gaius, but he
wished she would go away and lose herself. He had not imagined a
female present for this encounter and felt a new level of danger
from Suetonius.
Suetonius put a melodramatic arm around the
girl.
"Careful, my dear. He is a dangerous fighter. He
is especially dangerous when upside down—then he is
unstoppable!" He laughed at his own joke and the girl joined
in.
"Is he that one you mentioned, Tonius? Look at
his angry little face!"
"If I see you here again, I'll put an arrow
through you," Gaius said quickly, the words tumbling over
themselves. He pulled the shaft back a few inches. "Leave now or I
will strike you down."
Suetonius had stopped smiling as he weighed up
his chances.
"All right then, parvus lupus, I'll give
you what you seem to want."
Without warning, he rushed at him, and Gaius
released the arrow too quickly. It struck the tunic of the older
boy but fell away without piercing. Suetonius yelled in triumph and
stepped forward with his hands outstretched and his eyes cruel.
Gaius whipped the bow up in panic, hitting the older boy on the
nose. Blood spurted and Tonius roared in rage and pain, his eyes
filling with tears. As Gaius raised the bow again, Tonius seized it
with one hand and Gaius's throat with the other, carrying him back
six or seven paces with the sheer fury of his charge.
"Any other threats?" he growled as his grip
tightened. Blood poured from his nose and stained his praetexta
tunic. He wrenched the bow away from Gaius's grasp and set about
him with it, raining blows, but all the time keeping hold of his
throat.
He's going to kill me and pretend it was an
accident, Gaius thought desperately. I can see it in his
eyes. I can't breathe.
He pummeled at the larger boy with his own
fists, but his reach was not enough to do any real damage. His
vision lost color, becoming like a dream; his ears ceased to hear
sound. He lost consciousness as Tonius threw him down onto the wet
leaves.
Tubruk found Gaius on the path about
an hour later and woke him by pouring water onto his bruised and
battered head. Once again, his face was a crusted mess. His barely
scabbed eye had filled with blood, so that his vision was dark on
that side. His nose had been rebroken and everything else was a
bruise.
"Tubruk?" he murmured, dazed. "I fell out of a
tree."
The big mans laugh echoed in the closeness of
the dense woods.
"You know, lad, no one doubts your courage. It's
your ability to fight I'm not too sure about. It's time you were
properly trained before you get yourself killed. When your father
is back from the city, I'll raise it with him."
"You won't tell him about... me falling from the
tree? I hit a lot of branches on the way down." Gaius could taste
blood in his mouth, leaking back from the broken nose.
"Did you manage to hit the tree at all? Even
once?" Tubruk asked, looking at the scuffed leaves and reading the
answers for himself.
"The tree has a nose like mine, I'd say." Gaius
tried to smile, but vomited into the bushes instead.
"Hmmm. Is this the end of it, do you think? I
can't let you carry on and see you crippled or dead. When your
father is away in the city, he expects you to begin to learn your
responsibilities as his heir and a patrician, not an urchin
involved in pointless brawls." Tubruk paused to pick up a battered
bow from the undergrowth. The string had snapped and he tutted.
"I should tan your backside for stealing this
bow as well."
Gaius nodded miserably.
"No more fights, understand?" Tubruk pulled him
to his feet and wiped away some of the mud from the track.
"No more fights. Thank you for coming to get
me," Gaius replied.
The boy tottered and almost fell as he spoke,
and the old gladiator sighed. With a quick heave, he lifted the boy
up to his shoulders and carried him down to the main house,
shouting "Duck!" when they came to low branches.
Except for the splinted hand, Marcus
was back to his usual self by the following week. He was shorter
than Gaius by about two inches, brown-haired and strong-limbed. His
arms were a little out of proportion, which he claimed would make
him a great swordsman when he was older because of the extra reach.
He could juggle four apples and would have tried with knives if the
kitchen slaves hadn't told Aurelia, Gaius's mother. She had
screamed at him until he promised never to try it. The memory still
made him pause whenever he picked up a blade to eat.
When Tubruk had brought the barely conscious
Gaius back to the villa, Marcus was out of bed, having crept down
to the vast kitchen complex. He'd been in the middle of dipping his
fingers into the fat-smeared iron pans when he heard the voices and
trotted past the rows of heavy brick ovens to Lucius's
sickroom.
As always when they hurt themselves, Lucius, a
physician slave, tended to the wounds. He looked after the estate
slaves as well as the family, binding swellings, applying maggot
poultices to infections, pulling teeth with his pliers, and sewing
up cuts. He was a quiet, patient man who always breathed through
his nose as he concentrated. The soft whistle of air from the
elderly physician's lungs had come to mean peace and safety to the
boys. Gaius knew that Lucius would be freed when his father died,
as a reward for his silent care of Aurelia.
Marcus sat and munched on bread and black fat as
Lucius set the broken nose yet again.
"Suetonius beat you again then?" he asked.
Gaius nodded, unable to speak or to see through
watering eyes.
"You should have waited for me, we could have
taken him together."
Gaius couldn't even nod. Lucius finished probing
the nasal cartilage and made a sharp pull, to set the loose piece
in line. Fresh blood poured over the day's clotted mixture.
"By the bloody temples, Lucius, careful! You
almost had my nose right off then!"
Lucius smiled and began to cut fresh linen into
strips to bind around the head.
In the respite, Gaius turned to his friend. "You
have a broken, splinted hand and bruised or cracked ribs. You
cannot fight."
Marcus looked at him thoughtfully. "Perhaps.
Will you try again? He'll kill you if you do, you know."
Gaius gazed at him calmly over the bandages as
Lucius packed up his materials and rose to leave.
"Thanks, Lucius. He won't kill me because I'll
beat him. I simply need to adjust my strategy, that's all."
"He's going to kill you," repeated Marcus,
biting into a dried apple, stolen from the winter stores.
A week later to the day, Marcus rose
at dawn and began his exercises, which he believed would stimulate
the reflexes needed to be a great swordsman. His room was a simple
cell of white stone, containing only his bed and a trunk with his
personal possessions. Gaius had the adjoining room and, on his way
to the toilet, Marcus kicked the door to wake him up. He entered
the small room and chose one of the four stone-rimmed holes that
led to a sewer of constantly running water, a miracle of
engineering that meant there was little or no smell, with the night
soil washing out into the river that ran through the valley. He
removed the capstone and pulled up his night shift.
Gaius had not stirred when he returned, and he
opened the door to chide him for his laziness. The room was empty
and Marcus felt a surge of disappointment.
"You should have taken me with you, my friend.
You didn't have to make it so obvious that you didn't need me."
He dressed quickly and set out after Gaius as
the sun cleared the valley rim, lighting the estates even as the
field slaves bent to work in the first session.
What mist there was burned off rapidly, even in
the cooler woods. Marcus found Gaius on the border of the two
estates. He was unarmed.
As Marcus came up behind him, Gaius turned, a
look of horror on his face. When he saw it was his friend, he
relaxed and smiled.
"Glad you came, Marcus. I didn't know what time
he'd arrive, so I've been here awhile. I thought you were him for a
moment."
"I'd have waited with you, you know. I'm your
friend, remember. Also, I owe him a beating as well."
"Your hand is broken, Marcus. Anyway, I owe him
two beatings to your one."
"True, but I could have jumped on him from a
tree, or tripped him as he ran in."
"Tricks don't win battles. I will beat him with
my strength."
For a moment, Marcus was silenced. There was
something cold and unforgiving in the usually sunny boy he
faced.
The sun rose slowly, shadows changed. Marcus sat
down, at first in a crouch and then with his legs sprawled out in
front of him. He would not speak first. Gaius had made it a contest
of seriousness. He could not stand for hours, as Gaius seemed
willing to do. The shadows moved. Marcus marked their positions
with sticks and estimated that they had waited three hours when
Suetonius appeared silently, walking along the path. He smiled a
slow smile when he saw them and paused.
"I am beginning to like you, little wolf. I
think I will kill you today, or perhaps break your leg. What do you
think would be fair?"
Gaius smiled and stood as tall and as straight
as he could. "I would kill me. If you don't, I will keep fighting
you until I am big and strong enough to kill you. And then I will
have your woman, after I have given her to my friend."
Marcus looked in horror as he heard what Gaius
was saying. Maybe they should just run. Suetonius squinted at the
boys and pulled a short, vicious little blade from his belt.
"Little wolf, mudfish—you are too stupid
to get angry at, but you yap like puppies. I will make you quiet
again."
He ran at them. Just before he reached the pair,
the ground gave way with a crack and he disappeared from sight in a
rush of air and an explosion of dust and leaves.
"Built you a wolf trap, Suetonius," Gaius
shouted cheerfully.
The fourteen-year-old jumped for the sides, and
Gaius and Marcus spent a hilarious few minutes stamping on his
fingers as he tried to gain a purchase in the dry earth. He
screamed abuse at them and they slapped each other on the back and
jeered at him.
"I thought of dropping a big rock in on you,
like they do with wolves in the north," Gaius said quietly when
Suetonius had been reduced to sullen anger. "But you didn't kill
me, so I won't kill you. I might not even tell anyone how we
dropped Suetonius into a wolf trap. Good luck in getting out."
Suddenly, he let rip with a war whoop, quickly
followed by Marcus, their cries and ecstatic yells disappearing
into the woods as they pelted away, on top of the world.
As they pounded along the paths, Marcus called
over his shoulder, "I thought you said you'd beat him with your
strength!"
"I did. I was up all night digging that
hole."
The sun shone through the trees and they felt as
if they could run all day.
Left alone, Suetonius scrabbled up the sides,
caught an edge, and heaved himself over and out. For a while, he
sat there and contemplated his muddy praetexta and breeches. He
frowned for most of the way home, but as he cleared the trees and
came out into the sunshine, he began to laugh.
CHAPTER
2
Gaius and Marcus walked behind Tubruk
as he paced out a new field for ploughing. Every five paces, he
would stretch out a hand and Gaius would pass him a peg from a
heavy basket. Tubruk himself carried twine wrapped in a great ball
around a wooden spindle. Ever patient, he would tie the twine
around a peg and then hand it to Marcus to hold while he hammered
it into the hard ground. Occasionally, Tubruk would sight back
along the lengthening line at the landmarks he had noted and grunt
in satisfaction before carrying on.
It was dull work and both boys wanted to escape
down to the Campus Martius, the huge field just outside the city
where they could ride and join in the sports.
"Hold it steady," Tubruk snapped at Marcus as
the boy's attention wandered.
"How much longer, Tubruk?" Gaius asked.
"As long as it takes to finish the job properly.
The fields must be marked out for the ploughman, then the posts
hammered in to set the boundary. Your father wants to increase the
estate revenues, and these fields have good soil for figs, which we
can sell in the city markets."
Gaius looked around him at the green and golden
hills that made up his father's land.
"Is this a rich estate then?"
Tubruk chuckled. "It serves to feed and clothe
you, but we don't have enough land to plant much barley or wheat
for bread. Our crops have to be small and that means we have to
concentrate on the things the city wants to buy. The flower gardens
produce seeds that are crushed to make face oils for highborn city
ladies, and your father has purchased a dozen hives to house new
swarms of bees. You boys will have honey at every meal in a few
months, and that brings in a good price as well."
"Can we help with the hives when the bees come?"
Marcus spoke up, showing a sudden interest.
"Perhaps, though they take careful handling. Old
Tadius used to keep bees before he became a slave. I hope to use
him to collect the honey. Bees don't like to have their winter
stores stolen away from them, and it needs a practiced hand. Hold
that peg steady now—that's a stade, 625 feet. We'll turn a
corner here."
"Will you need us for much longer, Tubruk? We
were hoping to take ponies into the city and see if we can listen
to the Senate debate."
Tubruk snorted. "You were going to ride into the
Campus, you mean, and race your ponies against the other boys. Hmm?
There's only this last side to mark out today. I can have the men
set the posts tomorrow. Another hour or two should see us
finished."
The two boys looked at each other glumly. Tubruk
put down his spindle and mallet and stretched his back with a sigh.
He tapped Gaius on the shoulder gently.
"This is your land we're working on, remember.
It belonged to your father's father, and when you have children, it
will belong to them. Look at this."
Tubruk crouched down on one knee and broke the
hard ground with the peg and mallet, tapping until the churned,
black soil was visible. He pressed his hand into the earth and
gripped a handful of the dark substance, holding it up for their
inspection.
Gaius and Marcus looked bemused as he crumbled
the dirt between his fingers.
"There have been Romans standing where we are
standing for hundreds of years. This dirt is more than just earth.
It is us, the dust of the men and women who have gone before
us. You came from this and you will go back to it. Others will walk
over you and never know you were once there and as alive as they
themselves."
"The family tomb is on the road to the city,"
Gaius muttered, nervous in the face of Tubruks sudden
intensity.
The old gladiator shrugged. "In recent years,
but our people have been here for longer than there was ever a city
there. We have bled and died in these fields in long-forgotten
wars. We will again perhaps, in wars in years to come. Put your
hand into the ground."
Reaching out to the reluctant boy, he took
Gaius's hand and pushed it into the broken soil, closing the
fingers over as he withdrew it.
"You hold history, boy. Land that has seen
things we cannot. You hold your family and Rome in your hand. It
will grow crops for us and feed us and make money for us so that we
can enjoy luxuries. Without it, we are nothing. Land is everything,
and wherever you travel in the world, only this soil will be truly
yours. Only this simple black muck you hold will be home to
you."
Marcus watched the exchange, his expression
serious. "Will it be home to me as well?"
For a moment, Tubruk did not answer, instead
holding Gaius's gaze as the boy gripped the soil tightly in his
hand. Then he turned to Marcus and smiled.
"Of course, lad. Are you not Roman? Is not the
city as much yours as anyone's?" The smile faded and he returned
his gaze to Gaius. "But this estate is Gaius's own and one day he
will be master of it and look down on shaded fig groves and buzzing
hives and remember when he was just a little lad and all he wanted
was to show new tricks on his pony to the other boys of the Campus
Martius."
He did not see the sadness that came onto
Marcus's face for a moment.
Gaius opened his hand and placed the earth back
in the broken spot Tubruk had made, pressing it down
thoughtfully.
"Let us finish the marking then," he said, and
Tubruk nodded as he rose to his feet.
The sun was going down as the two boys
crossed one of the Tiber bridges that led to the Campus Martius.
Tubruk had insisted they wash and change into clean tunics before
setting out, but even at that late hour the vast space was still
full of the young of Rome, gathered in groups, throwing discuses
and javelins, kicking balls to each other and riding ponies and
horses with shouted encouragement. It was a noisy place and the
boys loved to watch the wrestling tournaments and chariot
practices.
Young as they were, they were both confident in
the high saddles that gripped them at the groin and buttocks,
holding them secure through maneuvers. Their legs hung long over
the ribs of the steeds, gripping tight in the turns for added
stability.
Gaius looked around for Suetonius and was
pleased not to see him in the crowds. They hadn't met again after
trapping him in the wolf pit, and that was how Gaius wanted to
leave it—with the battle won and over. Further skirmishes
could only mean trouble.
He and Marcus rode up to a group of children
near their own age and hailed them, dismounting with a leg flung
over the pony's side. No one they knew was there, but the group
parted as they approached, and the mood was friendly, their
attention on a man with a discus gripped in his right hand.
"That's Tani. He's the champion of his legion,"
one boy muttered aloud to Gaius.
As they watched, Tani launched himself, spinning
on the spot and releasing the disc at the setting sun. There were
whistles of appreciation as it flew, and one or two of the boys
clapped.
Tani turned to them. "Take care. It'll be coming
back this way in a moment."
Gaius could see another man run to the fallen
disc and pick it up before spinning it into flight once more. This
time, the discus was released at a wide angle and the crowd
scattered as it soared toward them. One boy was slower than the
rest, and when the discus hit and skipped, it caught him in the
side with a thump, even as he tried to dodge. He fell winded, and
groaned as Tani ran up to his side.
"Good stop, lad. Are you all right?"
The boy nodded, clambering to his feet but still
holding his side in pain. Tani patted him on the shoulder, stooping
smoothly to pick up the fallen discus. He returned to his spot to
throw again.
"Anyone racing horses today?" Marcus asked.
A few turned and weighed him up, casting gazes
at the sturdy little pony Tubruk had chosen for him.
"Not so far. We came to watch the wrestling, but
it finished an hour ago." The speaker indicated a trampled space
nearby where a square had been marked out on the grassy ground. A
few men and women stood in clusters nearby, talking and eating.
"I can wrestle," Gaius broke in quickly, his
face lighting up. "We could have our own competition."
The group murmured interest. "Pairs?"
"All at once—last one standing is the
winner?" Gaius replied. "We need a prize, though. How about we all
put in what money we have and last one standing takes the
collection?"
The boys in the crowd discussed this and many
began to search in their tunics for coins, giving them to the
largest, who walked with confidence as the pile of coins grew in
his hands.
"I'm Petronius. There's about twenty
quadrantes here. How much have you got?"
"Any coins, Marcus? I have a couple of bronze
bits." Gaius added them to the boy's handful and Marcus added three
more.
Petronius smiled as he counted again. "A fair
collection. Now, as I'm taking part, I'll need someone to hold it
for me until I win." He grinned at the two newcomers.
"I'll hold it for you, Petronius," a girl said,
accepting the coins into her smaller hands.
"My sister, Lavia," he explained.
She winked at Gaius and Marcus, a smaller but
still stocky version of her brother.
Chatting cheerfully, the group made their way
over to the marked square, and only a few remained on the outside
to watch. Gaius counted seven other boys in addition to Petronius,
who began limbering up confidently.
"What rules?" Gaius said as he stretched his own
legs and back.
Petronius gathered the group together with a
gesture. "No punching. If you land on your back, you are out. All
right?"
The boys agreed grimly, the mood becoming
hostile as they eyed each other.
Lavia spoke from the side: "I'll call start. All
ready?"
The contestants nodded. Gaius noted that a few
other people were wandering over, always ready to view or bet on a
contest in whatever form. The air smelled cleanly of grass and he
felt full of life. He scuffed his feet and remembered what Tubruk
had said about the soil. Roman earth, fed with the blood and bones
of his ancestors. It felt strong under his feet and he set himself.
The moment seemed to hold, and nearby he could see Tani the discus
champion spin and release again, his discus flying high and
straight over the Campus Martius. The sun was reddening as it sank,
giving a warm cast to the tense boys in the square.
"Begin!" Lavia shouted.
Gaius dropped to one knee, spoiling a lunge that
went over his head. He shoved up then, with all the strength of his
thighs, taking another boy off his feet and leaving him flat on the
dusty grass. As Gaius rose, he was hammered from the side, but spun
as he fell so that his unknown attacker hit the ground first, with
Gaius's weight knocking the wind from him.
Marcus was locked in a grip with Petronius,
their hands tight on each other's armpits and shoulders. Another
struggling combatant was shoved blindly into Petronius and the pair
fell roughly, but Gaius's moment of inattention was punished by an
arm circling his neck from behind and tightening on his windpipe.
He kicked out backward and raked his sandals down someone's shin,
hacking back with an elbow at the same time. He felt the grip
loosen but then they were both sent sprawling by a knot of fighting
boys. Gaius hit the ground hard and scrambled to get to the side of
the square, even as a foot clouted into his cheek, splitting the
skin.
Anger swelled for a moment, but he saw his
attacker hadn't even registered him, and he retired to the edge of
the square, cheering on Marcus, who had regained his feet.
Petronius was down and out, knocked cold, and only Marcus and two
others were still in the competition. The crowd that had gathered
to watch were yelling encouragement and making side bets. Marcus
grabbed one of the pair by the crotch and neck and tried to lift
him into the air for throwing. The boy struggled wildly as his feet
came off the ground, and Marcus staggered with him just as the last
gripped him around his own chest and knocked him over backward in a
heaving pile of limbs.
The stranger came to his feet with a whoop and
took a circuit of the square with his hands held high. Gaius could
hear Marcus laughing and breathed deeply in the summer air as his
friend stood up, brushing off the dust. In the middle distance,
beyond the vast Campus, Gaius could see the city, built on seven
ancient hills centuries before. All around him were the shouts and
cries of his people, and underneath his feet, his land.
In hot darkness, lit only by a
crescent moon that signaled the month coming to a close, the two
boys made their way in silence over the fields and paths of the
estate. The air was filled with the smell of fruit and flowers, and
crickets creaked in the bushes. They walked without speaking until
they reached the place where they had stood with Tubruk earlier in
the day, at the corner of the peg-marked line of a new field.
With the moon giving so little light, Gaius had
to feel along the twine until he came to the broken spot at the
corner, and then he stood and drew a slim knife from his belt,
taken from the kitchens. Concentrating, he drew the sharp blade
across the ball of his thumb. It sank in deeper than he had
intended and blood poured out over his hand. He passed the blade to
Marcus and held the thumb high, slightly worried by the injury and
hoping to slow the bleeding.
Marcus drew the knife along his own thumb, once,
then twice, creating a scratch from which he squeezed a few
swelling beads of blood.
"I've practically cut my thumb off here!" Gaius
said irritably.
Marcus tried to look serious, but failed. He
held out his hand and they pressed them together so that the blood
mingled in the darkness. Then Gaius pushed his bleeding thumb into
the broken ground, wincing. Marcus watched him for a long moment
before copying the action.
"Now you are a part of this estate as well and
we are brothers," Gaius said.
Marcus nodded and in silence they began the walk
back to the sprawling white buildings of the estate. Invisibly in
the darkness, Marcus's eyes brimmed and he wiped his hand over them
quickly, leaving a smear of blood on his skin.
Gaius stood on the top of the estate
gates, shading his eyes against the bright sun as he looked toward
Rome. Tubruk had said his father would be returning from the city,
and he wanted to be the first to see him on the road. He spat on
his hand and ran it through his dark hair to smooth it down.
He enjoyed being away from the chores and cares
of his life. The slaves below rarely looked up as they passed from
one part of the estate buildings to another, and it was a peculiar
feeling to watch and yet be unobserved: a moment of privacy and
quiet. Somewhere, his mother would be looking for him to carry a
basket for her to collect fruit, or Tubruk would be looking for
someone to wax and oil the leather harnesses of the horses and oxen
or perform one of a thousand other little tasks. Somehow, the
thought of all those things he was not doing raised his spirits.
They couldn't find him and he was in his own little place, watching
the road to Rome.
He saw the dust trail and stood up on the
gatepost. He wasn't sure. The rider was still far away, but there
weren't too many estates that could be reached from their road, and
the chances were good.
After another few minutes he was able to see the
man on the horse clearly and let out a whoop, scrambling to the
ground in a rush of arms and legs. The gate itself was heavy, but
Gaius threw his weight against it and it creaked open enough for
him to squeeze through and run off down the road to meet his
father.
His child's sandals slapped against the hard
ground and he pumped his arms enthusiastically as he raced toward
the approaching figure. His father had been gone for a full month,
and Gaius wanted to show him how much he had grown in the time.
Everyone said so.
"Tata!" he called, and his father heard
and reined in as the boy ran up to him. He looked tired and dusty,
but Gaius saw the beginnings of a smile crease against the blue
eyes.
"Is this a beggar or a small bandit I see on the
road?" his father said, reaching out an arm to lift his son to the
saddle.
Gaius laughed as he was swung into the air and
gripped his father's back as the horse began a slower walk up to
the estate walls.
"You are taller than when I saw you last," his
father said, his voice light.
"A little. Tubruk says I am growing like
corn."
His father nodded in response and there was a
friendly silence between them that lasted until they reached the
gates. Gaius slid off the horse's back and heaved the gate wide
enough for his father to enter the estate.
"Will you be home for long this time?"
His father dismounted and ruffled his hair,
ruining the spit-smoothness he'd worked at.
"A few days, perhaps a week. I wish it were
more, but there is always work to be done for the Republic." He
handed the reins to his son. "Take old Mercury here to the stables
and rub him down properly. I'll see you again after I have
inspected the staff and spoken to your mother."
Gaius's open expression tightened at the mention
of Aurelia, and his father noticed. He sighed and put his hand on
his sons shoulder, making him meet his gaze.
"I want to spend more time away from the city,
lad, but what I do is important to me. Do you understand the word
'Republic'?"
Gaius nodded and his father looked
skeptical.
"I doubt it. Few enough of my fellow senators
seem to. We live an idea, a system of government that allows
everyone to have a voice, even the common man. Do you realize how
rare that is? Every other little country I have known has a king or
a chief running it. He gives land to his friends and takes money
from those who fall out with him. It is like having a child loose
with a sword.
"In Rome, we have the rule of law. It is not yet
perfect or even as fair as I would like, but it tries to be, and
that is what I devote my life to. It is worth my life—and
yours too when the time comes."
"I miss you, though," Gaius replied, knowing it
was selfish.
His father's gaze hardened slightly, then he
reached out to ruffle Gaius's hair once more.
"And I miss you too. Your knees are filthy and
that tunic is more suitable for a street child, but I miss you too.
Go and clean yourself up—but only after you have rubbed
Mercury down."
He watched his son trudge away, leading the
horse, and smiled ruefully. He was a little taller. Tubruk
was right.
In the stables, Gaius rubbed the flanks of his
father's horse, smoothing away sweat and dust and thinking over his
fathers words. The idea of a republic sounded very fine, but being
a king was clearly more exciting.
Whenever Gaius's father, Julius, had
been away for a long absence, Aurelia insisted on a formal meal in
the long triclinium. The two boys would sit on children's
stools next to the long couches, on which Aurelia and her husband
would recline barefoot, with the food served on low tables by the
household slaves.
Gaius and Marcus hated the meals. They were
forbidden to chatter and sat in painful silence through each
course, allowing the table servants only a quick rub of their
fingers between dipping them into the food. Although their
appetites were large, Gaius and Marcus had learned not to offend
Aurelia by eating too quickly and so were forced to chew and
swallow as slowly as the adults while the evening shadows
lengthened.
Bathed and dressed in clean clothes, Gaius felt
hot and uncomfortable with his parents. His father had put aside
the informality of their meeting on the road and now talked with
his wife as if the two boys did not exist. Gaius watched his mother
closely when he could, looking for the trembling that would signal
one of her fits. At first, they had terrified him and left him
sobbing, but after years an emotional callousness had grown, and
occasionally he even hoped for the trembling so that he and Marcus
would be sent from the table.
He tried to listen and be interested in the
conversation, but it was all about developments in the laws and
city ordinances. His father never seemed to come home with exciting
stories of executions or famous street villains.
"You have too much faith in the people, Julius,"
Aurelia was saying. "They need looking after as a child needs a
father. Some have wit and intelligence, I agree, but most have to
be protected..." She trailed off and silence fell.
Julius looked up and Gaius saw a sadness come
into his face, making Gaius look away, embarrassed, as if he had
witnessed an intimacy.
"Relia?"
Gaius heard his father's voice and looked back
at his mother, who lay like a statue, her eyes focused on some
distant scene. Her hand trembled and suddenly her face twisted like
a child's. The tremor that began in her hand spread to her whole
body, and she twisted in spasm, one arm sweeping bowls from the low
table. Her voice I erupted violently from her throat, a torrent of
screeching sound that made the boys wince.
Julius rose smoothly from his seat and took his
wife in his arms.
"Leave us," he commanded, and Gaius and Marcus
went out with the slaves, leaving behind them the man holding the
twisting figure.
The following morning, Gaius was woken
by Tubruk shaking his shoulder.
"Get up, lad. Your mother wants to see you."
Gaius groaned, almost to himself, but Tubruk
heard.
"She is always quiet after a... bad night."
Gaius paused as he pulled clothes on. He looked
up at the old gladiator.
"Sometimes I hate her."
Tubruk sighed gently. "I wish you could have
known her as she was before the sickness began. She used to sing to
herself all the time, and the house was always happy. You have to
think that your mother is still there, but can't get out to you.
She does love you, you know."
Gaius nodded and smoothed his hair down
carelessly.
"Has my father gone back to the city?" he asked,
knowing the answer. His father hated to feel helpless.
"He left at dawn," Tubruk replied.
Without another word, Gaius followed him through
the cool corridors to his mother's rooms.
She sat upright in bed, her face freshly washed
and her long hair braided behind her. Her skin was pale, but she
smiled as Gaius entered, and he was able to smile back.
"Come closer, Gaius. I am sorry if I scared you
last night."
He came into her arms and let her hold him,
feeling nothing. How could he tell her he wasn't scared anymore? He
had seen it too many times, each worse than the last. Some part of
him knew that she would get worse and worse, that she was already
leaving him. But he could not think of that—better to keep it
inside, to smile and hug her and walk away untouched.
"What are you going to do today?" she asked as
she released him.
"Chores with Marcus," he replied.
She nodded and seemed to forget him. He waited
for a few seconds and, when there was no further response, turned
and walked from the room.
When the tiny space in her thoughts faded and
she focused again on the room, it was empty.
* * *
Marcus met him at the gates, carrying
a bird net. He looked into his friend's eyes and made his tone
light and cheerful.
"I feel lucky today. We'll catch a
hawk—two hawks. We'll train them and they'll sit on our
shoulders, attacking on our command. Suetonius will run when he
sees us."
Gaius chuckled and cleared his mind of thoughts
of his mother. He missed his father already, but the day was going
to be a long one and there was always something to do in the woods.
He doubted Marcus's idea of hawk-catching would work, but he would
go along with it until the day was over and all the paths had been
walked.
The green gloom almost made them miss the raven
that sat on a low branch, not far from the sunlit fields. Marcus
froze as he saw it first and pressed a hand against Gaius's
chest.
"Look at the size of it!" he whispered,
unwrapping his bird net.
They crouched down and crept forward, watched
with interest by the bird. Even for a raven it was large, and it
spread heavy black wings as they approached, before almost hopping
to the next tree with one lazy flap.
"You circle around," Marcus whispered, his voice
excited. He backed this up with circling motions of his fingers,
and Gaius grinned at him, slipping into the undergrowth to one
side. He crept around in a large circle, trying to keep the tree in
sight while checking the path for dry twigs or rustling leaves.
When Gaius emerged on the far side, he saw the
raven had changed trees again, this time to a long trunk that had
fallen years before. The gentle slope of the trunk was easy to
climb, and Marcus had already begun to inch up it toward the bird,
at the same time trying to keep the net free for throwing.
Gaius padded closer to the base of the tree. Why
doesn't it fly away? he thought, looking up at the raven. It cocked
its large head to one side and opened its wings again. Both boys
froze until the bird seemed to relax, then Marcus levered himself
upward again, legs dangling on each side of the thick trunk.
Marcus was only feet from the bird when he
thought it would fly off again. It hopped about on the trunk and
branches, seemingly unafraid. He unfolded the net, a web of rough
twine usually used for holding onions in the estate kitchens. In
Marcus's hands, it had instantly become the fearsome instrument of
a bird catcher.
Holding his breath, he threw it, and the raven
took off with a scream of indignation. It flapped its wings once
again and landed in the slender branches of a young sapling near
Gaius, who ran at it without thinking.
As Marcus scrambled down, Gaius shoved at the
sapling and felt the whole thing give with a sudden crack, pinning
the bird in the leaves and branches on the ground. With Gaius
pressing it all down, Marcus was able to reach in and hold the
heavy bird, gripping it tightly in his two hands. He raised it
triumphantly and then hung on desperately as the raven struggled to
escape.
"Help me! He's strong," Marcus shouted, and
Gaius added his own hands to the struggling bundle. Suddenly an
agonizing pain shot through him. The beak was long and curved like
a spear of black wood. It jabbed at his hand, catching and gripping
the piece of soft flesh between thumb and first finger.
Gaius yelped. "Get it off. It's got my hand,
Marcus." The pain was excruciating and they panicked together, with
Marcus fighting to hold his grip while Gaius tried to lever the
vicious beak off his skin.
"I can't get it off, Marcus."
"You'll have to pull it," Marcus replied grimly,
his face red with the effort of holding the enraged bird.
"I can't, it's like a knife. Let it go."
"I'm not letting it go. This raven is
ours. We caught it in the wild, like hunters."
Gaius groaned with pain.
"It caught us, more like." His fingers waved in
agony and the raven let go without warning, trying to snap at one
of them. Gaius gasped in relief and backed off hurriedly, holding
his hands against his groin and doubling over.
"He's a fighter, anyway," Marcus said with a
grin, shifting his grip so the searching head couldn't find his own
flesh. "We'll take him home and train him. Ravens are intelligent,
I've heard. He'll learn tricks and come with us when we go to the
Campus Martius."
"He needs a name. Something warlike," Gaius
replied, in between sucking his torn skin.
"What's the name of that god who goes round as a
raven or carries one?"
"I don't know, one of the Greek ones, I think.
Zeus?"
"That's an owl, I think. Someone has an
owl."
"I don't remember one with a raven, but Zeus is
a good name for him."
They smiled at each other and the raven went
quiet, looking around him with apparent calmness.
"Zeus it is, then."
They walked back over the fields to the estate,
with the bird held firmly in Marcus's grasp.
"We'll have to find somewhere to hide him," he
said. "Your mother doesn't like us catching animals. You remember
when she found out about the fox?"
Gaius winced, looking at the ground. "There's an
empty chicken coop next to the stables. We could put him in there.
What do ravens eat?"
"Meat, I think. They scavenge battlefields,
unless that's crows. We can get a few scraps from the kitchens and
see what he takes, anyway. That won't be a problem."
"We'll have to tie twine to his legs for the
training, otherwise he'll fly off," Gaius said thoughtfully.
Tubruk was talking to three carpenters who were
to repair part of the estate roof. He spotted the boys as they
walked into the estate yard, and motioned them over to him. They
looked at each other, wondering if they could run, but Tubruk
wouldn't let them get more than a few paces, for all his apparent
inattention as he turned back to the workers.
"I'm not giving Zeus up," Marcus whispered
harshly.
Gaius could only nod as they approached the
group of men.
"I'll come along in a few minutes," Tubruk
instructed as the men walked to their tasks. "Take the tiles off
the section until I get there."
He turned to the boys. "What's this? A raven?
Must be a sick one if you caught it."
"We trapped him in the woods. Followed him and
brought him down," Marcus said, his voice defiant.
Tubruk smiled as if he understood, and reached
out to stroke the bird's long beak. Its energy seemed to have gone
and it panted almost like a dog, revealing a slender tongue between
the hard blades.
"Poor thing," Tubruk muttered. "Looks terrified.
What are you going to do with him?"
"His name's Zeus. We're going to train him as a
pet, like a hawk."
Tubruk shook his head once, slowly. "You can't
train a wild bird, boys. A hawk is raised from a chick by an
expert, and even they stay wild. The best trainer can lose one
every now and then if it flies too far from him. Zeus is fully
grown. If you keep him, he'll die."
"We can use one of the old chicken coops," Gaius
insisted. "There's nothing in there now. We'll feed him and fly him
on a string."
Tubruk snorted. "Do you know what a wild bird
does if you keep him locked up? He can't stand walls around him.
Especially a tiny space like one of the chicken coops. It will
break his spirit and, day by day, he will pull his own feathers out
in misery. He won't eat, he'll just hurt himself until he dies.
Zeus here will choose death over captivity. The kindest thing you
can do for him is to let him go. I don't think you could have
caught him unless he was sick, so he might be dying anyway, but at
least let him spend his last days in the woods and the air, where
he belongs."
"But..." Marcus fell silent, looking at the
raven.
"Come on," Tubruk said. "Let's go out into the
fields and watch him fly."
Glumly, the boys looked at each other and
followed him back out of the gates. Together, they stood gazing
down the hill.
"Set him free, boy," Tubruk said, and something
in his voice made them both look at him.
Marcus raised and opened his hands, and Zeus
heaved himself into the air, spreading large black wings and
fighting for height. He screamed frustration at them until he was
just a dot in the sky over the woods. Then they saw him descend and
disappear.
Tubruk reached out and held the necks of the two
boys in his rough hands.
"A noble act. Now there are a number of chores
to do, and I couldn't find you earlier, so they've piled up waiting
for your attention. Inside."
He steered the boys through the gate into the
courtyard, taking a last look over the fields toward the woods
before he followed them.
CHAPTER
3
That summer saw the start of the boys'
formal education. From the beginning, they were both treated
equally, with Marcus also receiving the training necessary to run a
complex estate, albeit a minor one. In addition to continuing the
formal Latin that had been drummed into them since birth, they were
taught about famous battles and tactics as well as how to manage
men and handle money and debts. When Suetonius left to be an
officer in an African legion the following year, both Gaius and
Marcus had begun to learn Greek rhetoric and the skills of debate
that they would need if, as young senators later on, they ever
chose to prosecute or defend a citizen on a matter of law.
Although the three hundred members of the Senate
met only twice each lunar month, Gaius's father, Julius, remained
in Rome for longer and longer periods as the Republic struggled to
deal with new colonies and its swiftly growing wealth and power.
For months, the only adults Gaius and Marcus would see were Aurelia
and the tutors, who arrived at the main house at dawn and left with
the sun sinking behind them and denarii jingling in their pockets.
Tubruk was always there too, a friendly presence who stood no
nonsense from the boys. Before Suetonius had left, the old
gladiator had walked the five miles to the main house of the
neighboring estate and waited eleven hours, from dawn to dusk, to
be admitted to see the eldest son of the house. He didn't tell
Gaius what had transpired, but had returned with a smile and
ruffled Gaius's hair with his big hand before going down to the
stables to see to the new mares as they came into season.
Of all the tutors, Gaius and Marcus enjoyed the
hours with Vepax the best. He was a young Greek, tall and thin in
his toga. He always arrived at the estate on foot and carefully
counted the coins he earned before walking back to the city. They
met with him for two hours each week in a small room Gaius's father
had set aside for the lessons. It was a bare place, with a
stone-flagged floor and unadorned walls. With the other tutors,
droning through the verses of Homer and Latin grammar, the two boys
often fidgeted on the wooden benches, or drifted in concentration
until the tutor noticed and brought them back with sharp smacks
from the cane. Most were strict and it was difficult to get away
with much with only the two of them to take up the master's
attention. One time, Marcus had used his stylus to draw a picture
of a pig with a tutor's beard and face. He had been caught trying
to show it to Gaius and had to hold out his hand for the stick,
suffering miserably through three sharp blows.
Vepax didn't carry a cane. All he ever had with
him was a heavy cloth bag full of clay tablets and figures, some
blue and some red to show different sides. By the appointed hour,
he would have cleared the benches to one side of the room and set
out his figures to represent some famous battle of the past. After
a year of this, their first task was to recognize the structure and
name the generals involved. They knew Vepax would not limit himself
to Roman battles; sometimes the tiny horses and legionary figures
represented Parthia or ancient Greece or Carthage. Knowing Vepax
was Greek himself, the boys had pushed the young man to show them
the battles of Alexander, thrilled by the legends and what he had
achieved at such a young age. At first, Vepax had been reluctant,
not wanting to be seen to favor his own history, but he had allowed
himself to be persuaded and showed them every major battle where
records and maps survived. For the Greek wars, Vepax never opened a
book, placing and moving each piece from memory.
He told the boys the names of the generals and
the key players in each conflict as well as the history and
politics when they had a direct bearing on the day. He made the
little clay pieces come alive for Marcus and Gaius, and every time
it came to the end of the two hours, they would look longingly at
them as he packed them away in his bags, slowly and carefully.
One day, as they arrived, they found most of the
little room covered in the clay characters. A huge battle had been
set out and Gaius counted the blue characters quickly, then the
red, multiplying it in his head as he had been taught by the
arithmetic tutor.
"Tell me what you see," Vepax said quietly to
Gaius.
"Two forces, one of more than fifty thousand,
the other nearly forty. The red is... the red is Roman, judging by
the heavy infantry placed to the front in legion squares. They are
supported by cavalry on the right and left wings, but they are
matched by the blue cavalry facing them. There are slingers and
spearmen on the blue side, but I can't see any archers, so missile
attacks will be over a very short range. They seem roughly matched.
It should be a long and difficult battle."
Vepax nodded. "The red side is indeed Roman,
well-disciplined veterans of many battles. What if I told you the
blues were a mixed group, made up of Gauls, Spaniards, Numidians,
and Carthaginians? Would that make a difference to the
outcome?"
Marcus's eyes gleamed with interest. "It would
mean we were looking at Hannibal's forces. But where are his famous
elephants? Didn't you have elephants in your bag?" Marcus looked
hopefully over at the limp cloth sack.
"It is Hannibal the Romans were facing, but by
this battle, his elephants had died. He managed to find more later
and they were terrifying at the charge, but here he had to make do
without them. He is outnumbered by two legions. His force is mixed
where the Roman one is unified. What other factors might affect the
outcome?"
"The land," Gaius cried. "Is he on a hill? His
cavalry could smash—"
Vepax waved a hand gently. "The battle took
place on a plain. The weather was cool and clear. Hannibal should
have lost. Would you like to see how he won?"
Gaius stared at the massed pieces. Everything
was against the blue forces. He looked up.
"Can we move the pieces as you explain?"
Vepax smiled. "Of course. Today I will need both
of you to make the battle move as it did once before. Take the
Roman side, Gaius. Marcus and I will take Hannibal's force."
Smiling, the three faced each other over the
ranks of figures.
"The battle of Cannae, 126 years ago. Every man
who fought in the battle is dust, every sword rusted away, but the
lessons are still there to be learned."
Vepax must have brought every clay soldier and
horse he had to form this battle, Gaius realized. Even with each
piece representing five hundred, they took up most of the available
room.
"Gaius, you are Aemilius Paulus and Terentius
Varro, experienced Roman commanders. Line by line you will advance
straight at the enemy, allowing no deviation and no slackness in
discipline. Your infantry is superb and should do well against the
ranks of foreign swordsmen."
Thoughtfully, Gaius began moving his infantry
forward, group by group.
"Support with your cavalry, Gaius. They must not
be left behind or you could be flanked."
Nodding, Gaius brought the small clay horses up
to engage the heavy cavalry Hannibal commanded.
"Marcus, our infantry must hold. We will
advance to meet them, and our cavalry will engage theirs on the
wings, holding them."
Heads bowed, all three moved figures in silence
until the armies had shifted together, face-to-face. Gaius and
Marcus imagined the snorts of the horses and the war cries
splitting the air.
"And now, men die," Vepax murmured. "Our
infantry begin to buckle in the center as they meet the
best-trained enemy they have ever faced." His hands flew out and
switched figure after figure to new positions, urging the boys
along as they went.
On the floor in front of them, the Roman legions
pushed back Hannibal's center, which buckled before them, close to
rout.
"They cannot hold," Gaius whispered, as he saw
the great crescent bow that grew deeper as the legions forced
themselves forward. He paused and looked over the whole field. The
cavalry were stationary, held in bloody conflict with the enemy.
His mouth dropped as Marcus and Vepax continued to move pieces and
suddenly the plan was clear to him.
"I would not go farther in," he said, and
Vepax's head came up with a quizzical expression.
"So soon, Gaius? You have seen a danger that
neither Paulus nor Varro saw until it was too late. Move your men
forward, the battle must be played out." He was clearly enjoying
himself, but Gaius felt a touch of irritation at having to follow
through moves that would lead to the destruction of his armies.
The legions marched through the Carthaginian
forces, and the enemy let them in, falling back quickly and without
haste, losing as few men as possible to the advancing line.
Hannibal's forces were moving from the back of the field to the
sides, swelling the trap, and, after what Vepax said was only a
couple of hours, the entire Roman force was submerged in the enemy
on three sides, which slowly closed behind them until they were
caught in a box of Hannibal's making. The Roman cavalry were still
held by equally skilled forces, and the final scene needed little
explanation to reveal the horror of it.
"Most of the Romans could not fight, trapped as
they were in the middle of their own close formations. Hannibal's
men killed all day long, tightening the trap until there was no one
left alive. It was annihilation on a scale rarely seen before or
since. Most battles leave many alive, at least those who run away,
but these Romans were surrounded on all sides and had nowhere to
flee to."
The silence stretched for long moments as the
two boys fixed the details in their minds and imaginations.
"Our time is up today, boys. Next week I will
show you what the Romans learned from this defeat and others at the
hands of Hannibal. Although they were unimaginative here, they
brought in a new commander, known for his innovation and daring. He
met Hannibal at the battle of Zama fourteen years later, and the
outcome was very different."
"What was his name?" Marcus asked excitedly.
"He had more than one. His given name was
Publius Scipio, but because of the battles he won against Carthage,
he was known as Scipio Africanus."
As Gaius approached his tenth
birthday, he was growing into an athletic, well-coordinated lad. He
could handle any of the horses, even the difficult ones that
required a brutal hand. They seemed to calm at his touch and
respond to him. Only one refused to let him remain in the saddle,
and Gaius had been thrown eleven times when Tubruk sold the beast
before the struggle killed one or the other of them.
To some extent, Tubruk controlled the purse of
the estate while Gaius's father was away. He could decide where the
profits from grain and livestock would be best spent, using his
judgment. It was a great trust and a rare one. It wasn't up to
Tubruk, however, to engage specialist fighters to teach the boys
the art of war. That was the decision of the father—as was
every other aspect of their upbringing. Under Roman law, Gaius's
father could even have had the boys strangled or sold into slavery
if they displeased him. His power in his household was absolute,
and his goodwill was not to be risked.
Julius returned home for his son's birthday
feast. Tubruk attended him as he bathed away the dust of the
journey in the mineral pool. Despite being ten years older than
Tubruk, the years sat well on his sun-dark frame as he eased
through the water. Steam rose in wisps as a sudden rush of fresh
hot water erupted from a pipe into the placid waters of the bath.
Tubruk noted the signs of health to himself and was pleased. In
silence, he waited for Julius to finish the slow immersion and rest
on the submerged marble steps near the inflow pipe, where the water
was shallow and warmest.
Julius lay back against the coldness of the pool
ledges and raised an eyebrow at Tubruk. "Report," he said, and
closed his eyes.
Tubruk stood stiffly and recited the profits and
losses of the previous month. He kept his eyes fixed on the far
wall and spoke fluently of minute problems and successes without
once referring to notes. At last, he came to the end and waited in
silence. After a moment, the blue eyes of the only man who'd ever
employed him without owning him opened once again and fixed him
with a look that had not been melted by the heat of the pool.
"How is my wife?"
Tubruk kept his face impassive. Was there a
point in telling this man that Aurelia had worsened still further?
She had been beautiful once, before childbirth had left her close
to death for months. Ever since Gaius had come into the world, she
had seemed unsteady on her feet, and no longer filled the house
with laughter and flowers that she would pick herself out in the
far fields.
"Lucius attends her well, but she is no
better.... I have had to keep the boys away some days, when the
mood has come on her."
Julius's face hardened and a heat-fattened vein
in his neck started twitching with the load of angry blood.
"Can the doctors do nothing? They take my aureus
pieces without a qualm, but she worsens every time I see her!"
Tubruk pressed his lips together in an
expression of regret. Some things must simply be borne, he knew.
The whip falls and hurts and you must quietly wait for it to fall
no more.
Sometimes she would tear her clothes into rags
and sit huddled in a corner until hunger drove her out of her
private rooms. Other days, she would be almost the woman he had met
when he first came to the estate, but given to long periods of
distraction. She would be discussing a crop and suddenly, as if
another voice had spoken, she would tilt her head to listen, and
you might as well have left the room for all she remembered
you.
Another rush of hot water disturbed the
slow-dripping silence, and Julius sighed like escaping steam.
"They say the Greeks have much learning in the
area of medicine. Hire one of those and dismiss the fools who do
her so little good. If any of them claim that only their skills
have kept her from being even worse, have him flogged and dumped on
the road back to the city. Try a midwife. Women sometimes
understand themselves better than we do—they have so many
ailments that men do not."
The blue eyes closed again and it was like a
door shutting on an oven. Without the personality, the submerged
frame could have been any other Roman. He held himself like a
soldier, and thin white lines marked the scars of old actions. He
was not a man to be crossed, and Tubruk knew he had a ferocious
reputation in the Senate. He kept his interests small, but guarded
those interests fiercely. As a result, the powermongers were not
troubled by him and were too lazy to challenge the areas where he
was strong. It kept the estate wealthy and they would be able to
employ the most expensive foreign doctors that Tubruk could find.
Wasted money, he was sure, but what was money for if not to use it
when you saw the need?
"I want to start a vineyard on the southern
reaches. The soil there is perfect for a good red."
They talked over the business of the estate and,
again, Tubruk took no notes, nor felt the need after years of
reporting and discussing. Two hours after he had entered, Julius
smiled at last.
"You have done well. We prosper and stay
strong."
Tubruk nodded and smiled back. In all the talk,
not once had Julius asked after his own health or happiness. It was
a relationship of trust, not between equals, but between an
employer and one whose competence he respected. Tubruk was no
longer a slave, but he was a freedman and could never have the
total confidence of those born free.
"There is another matter, a more personal one,"
Julius continued. "It is time to train my son in warfare. I have
been distracted from my duty as a father to some extent, but there
is no greater exercise to a man's talents than the upbringing of
his son. I want to be proud of him and I worry that my absences,
which are likely to get worse, will be the breaking of the
boy."
Tubruk nodded, pleased at the words. "There are
many experts in the city, trainers of boys and the young men of
wealthy families."
"No. I know of them and some have been
recommended to me. I have even inspected the products of this
training, visiting city villas to see the young generation. I was
not impressed, Tubruk. I saw young men infected with this new
philosophical learning, where too much emphasis is placed on
improving the mind and not enough on the body and the heart. What
good is the ability to play with logic if your fainting soul
shrinks away from hardship? No, the fashions in Rome will produce
only weaklings, with few exceptions, as I see it. I want Gaius
trained by people on whom I can depend—you, Tubruk. I'd trust
no other with such a serious task."
Tubruk rubbed his chin, looking troubled. "I
cannot teach the skills I learned as a soldier and gladiator, sir.
I know what I know, but I don't know how to pass it on."
Julius frowned in annoyance, but didn't press
it. Tubruk never spoke lightly.
"Then spend time making him fit and hard as
stone. Have him run and ride for hours each day, over and over
until he is fit to represent me. We will find others to teach him
how to kill and command men in battle."
"What about the other lad, sir?"
"Marcus? What about him?"
"Will we train him as well?"
Julius frowned further and he stared off into
the past for a few seconds.
"Yes. I promised his father when he died. His
mother was never fit to have the boy; it was her running away that
practically killed the old man. She was always too young for him.
The last I heard of her, she was little better than a party whore
in one of the inner districts, so he stays in my house. He and
Gaius are still friends, I take it?"
"Like twin stalks of corn. They're always in
trouble."
"No more. They will learn discipline from now
on."
"I will see to it that they do."
Gaius and Marcus listened outside the
door. Gaius's eyes were bright with excitement at what he'd heard.
He grinned as he turned to Marcus and dropped the smile as he saw
his friends pale face and set mouth.
"What's wrong, Marc?"
"He said my mother's a whore," came the hissing
reply. Marcus's eyes glinted dangerously and Gaius choked back his
first joking reply.
"He said he'd heard it—just a rumor. I'm
sure she isn't."
"They told me she was dead, like my father. She
ran away and left me." Marcus stood and his eyes filled with tears.
"I hope she is a whore. I hope she's a slave and dying of
lung-rot." He spun round and ran away, arms and legs flailing in
loose misery.
Gaius sighed and rejected the idea of going
after him. Marcus would probably go down to the stables and sit in
the straw and the shadows for a few hours. If he was followed too
soon, there would be angry words and maybe blows. If he was left,
it would all go with time, the change of mood coming without
warning as his quick thoughts settled elsewhere.
It was his nature and there was no changing it.
Gaius pressed his head again to the crack between the door and the
frame that allowed him to hear the two men talk of his future.
"...unchained for the first time, so they say.
It should be a mighty spectacle. All of Rome will be there. Not all
the gladiators will be indentured slaves—some are freedmen
who have been lured back with gold coins. Renius will be there, so
the gossips say."
"Renius—he must be ancient by now! He was
fighting when I was a young man myself," Julius muttered in
disbelief.
"Perhaps he needs the money. Some of the men
live too richly for their purses, if you understand me. Fame would
allow him large debts, but everything has to be paid back in the
end."
"Perhaps he could be hired to teach
Gaius—he used to take pupils, I remember. It has been so
long, though. I can't believe he'll be fighting again. You will get
four tickets then; my interest is definitely aroused. The boys will
enjoy a trip into the city proper."
"Good—though let us wait until after the
lions have finished with ancient Renius before we offer him
employment. He should be cheap if he is bleeding a little," Tubruk
said wryly.
"Cheaper still if he's dead. I'd hate to see him
go out. He was unstoppable when I was young. I saw him fight in
exhibitions against four or five men. One time they even
blindfolded him against two. He cut them down in two blows."
"I saw him prepare for those matches. The cloth
he used allowed in enough light to see the outlines of shapes. That
was all the edge he needed. After all, his opponents thought he was
blind."
"Take a big purse for hiring trainers. The
circus will be the place to find them, but I will want your eye for
the sound of limb and honor."
"I am, as always, your man, sir. I will send a
message tonight to collect the tickets on the estate purse. If
there is nothing else?"
"Only my thanks. I know how skillfully you keep
this place afloat. While my senatorial colleagues fret at how their
wealth is eroded, I can be calm and smile at their discomfort." He
stood and shook hands in the wrist grip that all legionaries
learned.
Tubruk was pleased to note the strength still in
the hand. The old bull had a few years in him yet.
Gaius scrambled away from the door and ran down
to see Marcus in the stables. Before he had gone more than a little
way, he paused and leaned against a cool white wall. What if he was
still angry? No, surely the prospect of circus tickets—with
unchained lions no less!—surely this would be enough to burn
away his sorrow. With renewed enthusiasm and the sun on his back,
he charged down the slopes to the outbuildings of teak and lime
plaster that housed the estate's supply of workhorses and oxen.
Somewhere, he heard his mother's voice calling his name, but he
ignored it, as he would a bird's shrill scream. It was a sound that
washed over him and left him untouched.
The two boys found the body of the
raven close to where they had first seen it, near the edge of the
woods on the estate. It lay in the damp leaves, stiff and dark, and
it was Marcus who saw it first, his depression and anger lifting
with the find.
"Zeus," he whispered. "Tubruk said he was sick."
He crouched by the track and reached out a hand to stroke the
still-glossy feathers. Gaius crouched with him. The chill of the
woods seemed to get through to both of them at the same time, and
Gaius shivered slightly.
"Ravens are bad omens, remember," he
murmured.
"Not Zeus. He was just looking for a place to
die."
On an impulse, Marcus picked up the body again,
holding it in his hands as he had before. The contrast saddened
both of them. All the fight was gone and now the head lay limply,
as if held only by skin. The beak hung open and the eyes were
shriveled, hollow pits. Marcus continued to stroke the feathers
with his thumb.
"We should cremate him—give him an
honorable funeral," said Gaius. "I could run back to the kitchens
and fetch an oil lamp. We could build a pyre for him and pour some
of the oil over it. It would be a good send-off for him."
Marcus nodded and placed Zeus carefully on the
ground. "He was a fighter. He deserves something more than just
being left to rot. There's a lot of dry wood around here. I'll stay
to make the pyre."
"I'll be as quick as I can," Gaius replied,
turning to run. "Think of some prayers or something."
He sprinted back to the estate buildings, and
Marcus was left alone with the bird. He felt a strange solemnity
come upon him, as if he were performing a religious rite. Slowly
and carefully, he gathered dry sticks and built them into a square,
starting with thicker branches that were long dead and building on
layers of twigs and dry leaves. It seemed right not to rush.
The woods were quiet as Gaius returned. He too
was walking slowly, shielding the small flame of an oily wick where
it protruded from an old kitchen lamp. He found Marcus sitting on
the dry path, with the black body of Zeus lying on a neat pile of
dead wood.
"I'll have to keep the flame going while I pour
the oil, so it could flare up quickly. We'd better say the prayers
now."
As the evening darkened, the flickering yellow
light of the lamp seemed to grow in strength, lighting their faces
as they stood by the small corpse.
"Jupiter, head of all the gods, let this one fly
again in the underworld. He was a fighter and he died free," Marcus
said, his voice steady and low.
Gaius readied the oil for pouring. He held the
wick clear, avoiding the little flame, and poured on the oil,
drenching the bird and the wood in its slipperiness. Then he
touched the flame to the pyre.
For long seconds, nothing happened except for a
faint sizzling, but then an answering flame spread and blazed with
a sickly light. The boys stood and Gaius placed the lamp on the
path. They watched with interest as the feathers caught and burned
with a terrible stink. The flames flickered over the body, and fat
smoked and sputtered in the fire. They waited patiently.
"We could gather the ashes at the end and bury
them, or spread them around in the woods or the stream," Gaius
whispered.
Marcus nodded in silence.
To help the fire, Gaius poured on the rest of
the oil from the lamp, extinguishing its small light. Flames grew
again and most of the feathers had been burned away, except for
those around the head and beak, which seemed obstinate.
Finally, the last of the oil burned to nothing
and the fire sank to glowing embers.
"I think we've cooked him," whispered Gaius.
"The fire wasn't hot enough."
Marcus took a long stick and poked at the body,
now covered in wood ash but still recognizably the raven. The stick
knocked the smoking thing right out of the ashes, and Marcus spent
a few moments trying to roll it back in without success.
"This is hopeless. Where's the dignity in this?"
he said angrily.
"Look, we can't do any more. Let's just cover
him in leaves."
The two boys set about gathering armfuls and
soon the scorched raven was hidden from view. They were silent as
they walked back to the estate, but the reverent mood was gone.
CHAPTER
4
The circus was arranged by Cornelius
Sulla, a rising young man in the ranks of Roman society. The king
of Mauretania had entertained the young senator while he commanded
the Second Alaudae legion in Africa. To please him, King Bocchus
sent a hundred lions and twenty of his best spearmen to the
capital. With these as a core, Sulla had put together a program for
five days of trials and excitement.
It was to be the largest circus ever arranged in
Rome, and Cornelius Sulla had his reputation and status assured by
the achievement. There were even calls raised in the Senate for
there to be a more permanent structure to hold the games. The
wooden benches bolted and pegged together for great events were
unsatisfactory and really too small for the sort of crowds that
wanted to see lions from the dark, unknown continent. Plans for a
vast circular amphitheater capable of holding water and staging sea
battles were put forward, but the cost was huge and they were
vetoed by the peoples tribunes as a matter of course.
Gaius and Marcus trotted behind the two older
men. Since Gaius's mother had become unwell, the boys were rarely
allowed into the city proper anymore, as she fretted and rocked in
misery at the thought of what could happen to her son in the
vicious streets. The noise of the crowd was like a blow, and their
eyes were bright with interest.
Most of the Senate would travel to the games in
carriages, pulled or carried by slaves and horses. Gaius's father
scorned this and chose to walk through the crowds. That said, the
imposing figure of Tubruk beside him, fully armed as he was, kept
the plebeians from shoving too rudely.
The mud of the narrow streets had been churned
into a stinking broth by the huge throng, and after only a short
time their legs were spattered almost to the knees by filth, their
sandals covered. Every shop heaved with people as they passed, and
there was always a crowd ahead and a mob behind pushing them on.
Occasionally, Gaius's father would take side streets when the roads
were blocked completely by shopkeepers' carts carrying their wares
around the city. These were packed with the poor, and beggars sat
in doorways, blind and maimed, with their hands outstretched. The
brick buildings loomed over them, five and six stories high, and
once, Tubruk put a hand out to hold Marcus back as a bucket of
slops was poured out of an open window into the street below.
Gaius's father looked grim, but walked on
without stopping, his sense of direction bringing them through the
dark maze back onto the main streets to the circus. The noise of
the city intensified as they grew close, with the shouted cries of
hot-food sellers competing with the hammering of coppersmiths and
bawling, screaming children who hung, snot-nosed, on their mothers'
hips.
On every street corner, jugglers and conjurors,
clowns and snake charmers performed for thrown coins.
That day, the pickings were slim, despite the
huge crowds. Why waste your money on things you can see every day
when the amphitheater was open?
"Stay close to us," Tubruk said, bringing the
boys' attention back from the colors, smells, and noise. He laughed
at their wide-mouthed expressions. "I remember the first time I saw
a circus—the Vespia, where I was to fight my first battle,
untrained and slow, just a slave with a sword."
"You won, though," Julius replied, smiling as
they walked.
"My stomach was playing me up, so I was in a
terrible mood."
Both men laughed.
"I'd hate to face a lion," Tubruk continued.
"I've seen a couple on the loose in Africa. They move like horses
at the charge when they want to, but with fangs and claws like iron
nails."
"They have a hundred of the beasts and two shows
a day for five days, so we should see ten of them against a
selection of fighters. I am looking forward to seeing these black
spearmen in action. It will be interesting to see if they can match
our javelin throwers for accuracy," Julius said.
They walked under the entrance arch and paused
at a series of wooden tubs filled with water. For a small coin,
they had the mud and smell scrubbed from their legs and sandals. It
was good to be clean again. With the help of an attendant, they
found the seats reserved for them by one of the estate slaves,
who'd traveled in the previous evening to await their arrival. Once
they were seated, the slave stood to walk the miles back to the
estate. Tubruk passed him another coin to buy food for the journey,
and the man smiled cheerfully, pleased to be away from the
back-breaking labor of the fields for once.
All around them sat the members of the patrician
families and their slaves. Although there were only three hundred
representatives in the Senate, there must have been close to a
thousand others in that section. Rome's lawmakers had taken the day
off for the first battles of the five-day run. The sand was raked
smooth in the vast pit; the wooden stands filled with thirty
thousand of the classes of Rome. The morning heat built and built
into a wall of discomfort, largely ignored by the people.
"Where are the fighters, Father?" Gaius asked,
searching for signs of lions or cages.
"They are in that barn building over there. You
see where the gates are? There."
He opened a folded program, purchased from a
slave as they went in.
"The organizer of the games will welcome us and
probably thank Cornelius Sulla. We will all cheer for Sulla's
cleverness in making such a spectacle possible. Then there are four
gladiatorial combats, to first blood only. One will follow that is
to the death. Renius will give a demonstration of some sort and
then the lions will roam 'the landscapes of their Africa,' whatever
that means. Should be an impressive show."
"Have you ever seen a lion?"
"Once, in the zoo. I have never fought one,
though. Tubruk says they are fearsome in battle."
The amphitheater fell quiet as the gates opened
and a man walked out dressed in a toga so white it almost
glowed.
"He looks like a god," Marcus whispered.
Tubruk leaned over to the boy. "Don't forget
they bleach the cloth with human urine. There's a lesson in there
somewhere."
Marcus looked at Tubruk in surprise for a
moment, wondering if a joke had been made of some kind. Then he
forgot about it as he tried to hear the voice of the man who had
strode to the center of the sand. He had a trained voice, and the
bowl of the amphitheater acted as a perfect reflector. Nonetheless,
part of his announcement was lost as people shuffled or whispered
to their friends and were shushed.
"...welcome that is due... African beasts...
Cornelius Sulla!"
The last was said in crescendo and the audience
cheered dutifully, more enthusiastically than Julius or Tubruk had
been expecting. Gaius heard the words of the old gladiator as he
leaned in close to his father.
"He may be a man to watch, this one."
"Or to watch out for," his father replied with a
meaningful look.
Gaius strained to see the man who rose from his
seat and bowed. He too wore a simple toga, with an embroidered hem
of gold. He was sitting close enough for Gaius to see this really
was a man who looked like a god. He had a strong, handsome face and
golden skin. He waved and sat down, smiling at the pleasure of the
crowds.
Everyone settled back for the main excitement,
conversations springing up all around. Politics and finance were
discussed. Cases being argued in law were raked and chewed over by
the patricians. They were still the ultimate power in Rome and
therefore the world. True, the people's tribunes, with their right
to veto agreements, had taken some of the edge off their authority,
but they still had the power of life and death over most of the
citizens of Rome.
The first pair of fighters entered wearing
tunics of blue and black. Neither was heavily armored, as this was
a display of speed and skill rather than savagery. Men did die in
these contests, but it was rare. After a salute to the organizer
and sponsor of the games, they began to move, short swords held
rigid and shields moving in hypnotic rhythms.
"Who will win, Tubruk?" Gaius's father suddenly
snapped.
"The smaller, in the blue. His footwork is
excellent."
Julius summoned one of the runners for the
circus betting groups and gave over a gold aureus coin, receiving a
tiny blue plaque in return. Less than a minute later, the smaller
man sidestepped an overextended lunge and drew his knife lightly
over the other's stomach as he stepped through. Blood spilled as
over the lip of a cup, and the audience erupted with cheers and
curses. Julius had earned two aurei for the one he'd wagered, and
he pocketed the profit cheerfully. For each match that followed, he
would ask Tubruk who would win as they began to feint and move. The
odds sank after the start, of course, but Tubruk's eye was
infallible that day. By the fourth match, all nearby spectators
were craning to catch what Tubruk said and then shouting for the
betting slaves to take their money.
Tubruk was enjoying himself.
"This next one is to the death. The odds favor
the Corinthian fighter, Alexandros. He has never been stopped, but
his opponent, from the south of Italy, is also fearful and has
never been beaten to first blood. I cannot choose between them at
this point."
"Let me know as soon as you can. I have ten
aurei ready for the wager—all our winnings and my original
stakes. Your eye is perfect today."
Julius summoned the betting slave and told him
to stand close. No one else in the area wanted to bet, as they all
felt the luck of the moment and were content to wait for the signal
from Tubruk. They watched him, some with held breath, poised for
the first signal.
Gaius and Marcus looked at the crowd.
"They are a greedy lot, these Romans," Gaius
whispered, and they grinned at each other.
The gates opened again and Alexandros and Enzo
entered. The Roman, Enzo, wore a standard set of mail covering his
right arm from hand to neck and a brass helmet above the darker
iron scales. He carried a red shield with his left hand. His only
other garments were a loincloth and wrappings of linen around his
feet and ankles. He had a powerful physique and carried few scars,
although one puckered line marked his left forearm from wrist to
elbow. He bowed to Cornelius Sulla and saluted the crowd first,
before the foreigner.
Alexandros moved well, balanced and assured as
he came to the middle of the amphitheater. He was identically
dressed, although his shield was stained blue.
"They are not easy to tell apart," Gaius said.
"In the armor, they could be brothers."
His father snorted. "Except for the blood in
them. The Greek is not the same as the Italian. He has different
and false gods. He believes things that no decent Roman would ever
stand for." He spoke without turning his head, intent on the men
below.
"But will you bet on such a man?" Gaius
continued.
"I will if Tubruk thinks he will win," came the
response, accompanied by a smile.
The contest would begin with the sounding of a
ram's horn. It was held in copper jaws in the first row of seats,
and a short bearded man was waiting with his lips to it. The two
gladiators stepped close to each other and the horn sound wailed
out across the sand.
Before Gaius could tell whether the sound had
stopped, the crowd was roaring and the two men were hammering blows
at each other. In the first few seconds, strike after strike
landed, some cutting, some sliding from steel made suddenly
slippery with bright blood.
"Tubruk?" came his fathers voice.
Their area of the stands was torn between
watching the fantastic display of savagery and getting in on the
bet.
Tubruk frowned, his chin on his bunched fist.
"Not yet. I cannot tell. They are too even."
The two men broke apart for a moment, unable to
keep up the pace of the first minute. Both were bleeding and both
were spattered with dust sticking to their sweat.
Alexandros rammed his blue shield up under the
other's guard, breaking his rhythm and balance. His sword arm came
up and over, looking for a high wound. The Italian scrambled back
without dignity to escape the blow, and his shield fell in the dust
as he did so. The crowd hooted and jeered, embarrassed by their
man. He rose again and attacked, perhaps stung by the comments of
his countrymen.
"Tubruk?" Julius laid his hand on the man's arm.
The fight could be over in seconds, and if there was an obvious
advantage to one of the fighters, the betting would cease.
"Not yet. Not... yet..." Tubruk was a study in
concentration.
On the sand, the area around the fighters was
speckled darkly where their blood had dripped. Both paced to the
left and then the right, then rushed in and cut and sliced, ducked
and blocked, punched and tried to trip the other. Alexandros caught
the Italian's sword on his shield. It was partially destroyed in
the force of the blow, and the blade was trapped by the softer
metal of the blue rectangle. Like the other, it too was wrenched to
the sand, and both men faced each other sideways, moving like crabs
so that their arm-mail would protect them. The swords were nicked
and blunted and the exertions in the raging Roman heat were
beginning to tell on their strength.
"Put it all on the Greek, quickly," Tubruk
said.
The betting slave looked for approval to the
owner behind him. Odds were whispered and the bets went on, with
much of the crowd taking a slice.
"Five to one against on Alexandros—could
have been a lot better if we'd gone earlier," Julius muttered as he
watched the two fighters below.
Tubruk said nothing.
One of the gladiators lunged and recovered too
fast for the other. The sword whipped back and into his side,
causing a gout of blood to rush. The riposte was viciously fast and
sliced through a major leg muscle. A leg buckled and as the man
went down, his opponent hacked into his neck, over and over, until
he was thumping at a corpse. He lay in the mixing blood as it was
sucked away by the dry sand, and his chest heaved with the pain and
exertion.
"Who won?" Gaius asked frantically. Without the
shields it wasn't clear, and a murmur went around the seats as the
question was repeated over and over. Who had won?
"I think the Greek is dead," the betting slave
said.
His master thought it was the Roman, but until
the victor rose and removed his helmet, no one could be sure.
"What happens if they both die?" Marcus
asked.
"All bets are off," replied the owner and
financier of the betting slave. Presumably he had a lot of money
riding on the outcome as well. Certainly he looked as tense as
anyone there.
For maybe a minute, the surviving gladiator lay
exhausted, his blood spilling. The crowd grew louder, calling on
him to rise and take off the helmet. Slowly, in obvious pain, he
grasped his sword and pushed himself up on it. Standing, he swayed
slightly and reached down to take a handful of sand. He rubbed the
sand into his wound, watching as it fell away in soft red clumps.
His fingers too were bloody as he raised them to remove the
helmet.
Alexandros the Greek stood and smiled, his face
pale with loss of blood. The crowd threw abuse at the swaying
figure. Coins glittered in the sun as they were thrown, not to
reward, but to hurt. With curses, money was exchanged all around
the amphitheater, and the gladiator was ignored as he sank to his
knees again and had to be helped out by slaves.
Tubruk watched him go, his face unreadable. "Is
he a man to see about training?" Julius asked, ebullient as his
winnings were counted into a pouch.
"No—he won't last out the week, I should
think. Anyway, there was little schooling in his technique, just
good speed and reflexes."
"For a Greek," said Marcus, trying to join
in.
"Yes, good reflexes for a Greek," Tubruk
replied, his mind far away.
While the sand was being raked clean,
the crowd continued with their business, although Gaius and Marcus
could see one or two spectators reenacting the gladiators' blows
with shouts and mock cries of pain. As they waited, the boys saw
Julius tap Tubruk on his arm, bringing to his attention a pair of
men approaching through the rows. Both seemed slightly out of place
at the circus, with their togas of rough wool and their skins
unadorned by metal jewelry.
Julius stood with Tubruk, and the boys copied
them. Gaius's father put out his hand and greeted the first to
reach them, who bowed his head slightly on contact.
"Greetings, my friends. Please take a seat. This
is my son and another boy in my care. I'm sure they can spend a few
minutes buying food?"
Tubruk handed a coin to both of them and the
message was clear. Reluctantly, they moved off between the rows and
joined a queue at a food stall. They watched as the four men bent
their heads close and talked, their voices lost in the crowd.
After a few minutes, as Marcus was buying
oranges, Gaius saw the two newcomers thank his father and take his
hand again. Then each moved over to Tubruk, who put coins in their
hands as they left.
Marcus had bought an orange for each of them,
and when they'd returned to their seats, he handed them out.
"Who were those men, Father?" Gaius asked,
intrigued.
"Clients of mine. I have a few bound to me in
the city," Julius replied, skinning his orange neatly.
"But what do they do? I have never seen them
before."
Julius turned to his son, registering the
interest. He smiled. "They are useful men. They vote for
candidates I support, or guard me in dangerous areas. They carry
messages for me, or... a thousand other small things. In return,
they get six denarii a day, each man."
Marcus whistled. "That must add up to a
fortune."
Julius transferred his attention to Marcus, who
dropped his gaze and fiddled with the skin of his orange.
"Money well spent. In this city, it is good to
have men I can call on quickly, for any sudden task. Rich members
of the Senate may have hundreds of clients. It is part of our
system."
"Can you trust these clients of yours?" Gaius
broke in.
Julius grunted. "Not with anything worth more
than six denarii a day."
Renius entered without announcement.
One moment, the spectators were chatting amongst themselves with
the dirty sand ring empty, and the next a small door opened and a
man walked out of it. At first, he wasn't noticed, then people
pointed and began to stand.
"Why are they cheering so loudly?" Marcus asked,
squinting at the lone figure standing in the burning sun.
"Because he has come back one more time. Now you
will be able to say you saw Renius fight when you have children of
your own," Tubruk replied, smiling.
Everyone around them seemed lit up by the
spectacle. A chant began and swelled: "Ren-i-us... Ren-i-us." The
noise drowned out all the shuffling of feet and rustling clothing.
The only sound in the world was his name.
He raised his sword in salute. Even from a
distance, it was clear that age had not yet taken a good twisting
grip on him.
"Looks good for sixty. Belly's not flat, though.
Look at that wide belt," Tubruk muttered almost to himself. "You've
let yourself go a little, you silly old fool."
As the old man received the plaudits of the
crowd, a single file of fighting slaves entered the sandy ring.
Each wore a cloth around his loins that allowed free movement and
carried a short gladius. No shields or armor could be seen.
The Roman crowd fell quiet as the men formed a diamond with Renius
at the center. There was a moment of stillness and then the animal
enclosure opened.
Even before the cage was dragged out onto the
sand, the short, hacking roars could be heard. The crowd whispered
in anticipation. There were three lions pacing the cage as it was
dragged out by sweating slaves. Through the bars they were obscene
shapes: huge humped shoulders, heads and jaws tapering back to
hindquarters almost as an afterthought. They were created to crush
out life with massive jaws. They swiped with their paws in
unfocused rage as the cage was jarred and finally came to rest.
Slaves lifted hammers aloft to knock out the
wooden pegs that held the front section of the cage. The crowd
licked dry lips. The hammers fell, and the iron lattice dropped
onto the sand, an echo clearly heard in the silence. One by one,
the great cats moved out of the cage, revealing a speed and
sureness of step that was frightening.
The largest roared defiance at the group of men
that faced it across the sand. When they made no move, it began to
pace up and down outside the cage, watching them all the while. Its
companions roared and circled and it settled back onto its
haunches.
Without a signal, without a warning, it ran at
the men, who shrank back visibly. This was death coming for
them.
Renius could be heard barking out commands. The
front of the diamond, three brave men, met the charge, swords
ready. At the last moment, the lion took off in a rushing leap and
smashed two of the slaves from their feet, striking with a paw on
each chest. Neither moved, as their chests were shards and daggers
of bone. The third man swung and hit the heavy mane, doing little
damage. The jaws closed on his arm in a snap like the strike of a
snake. He screamed and carried on screaming as he staggered away,
one hand holding the pumping red remains of the other wrist. A
sword scraped along the lion's ribs and another cut a hamstring so
that the rear quarters went suddenly limp. This served only to
enrage the beast and it snapped at itself in red confusion. Renius
growled a command and the others stepped back to allow him the
kill.
As he landed the fatal blow, the other two lions
attacked. One caught the head of the wounded man who had wandered
away. A quick crack of the jaws and it was over. That lion settled
down with the corpse, ignoring the other slaves as it bit into the
soft abdomen and began to feed. It was quickly killed, speared on
three blades in the mouth and chest.
Renius met the charge of the last to his left.
His protecting slave was tumbled by the strike and over him came
the snapping rage that was the male cat. Its paws were striking and
great dark claws stood out like spear points, straining to pierce
and tear. Renius balanced himself and struck into the chest. A
wound opened with a rush of sticky dark blood, but the blade
skittered off the breastbone and Renius was struck by a shoulder,
only luck letting the jaws snap where he had been. He rolled and
came up well, still with sword in hand. As the beast checked and
turned back on him, he was ready and sent his blade into the armpit
and the bursting heart. The strength went out of it in the instant,
as if the steel had lanced a boil. It lay and bled into the sand,
still aware and panting, but become pitiful. A soft moan came from
deep within the bloody chest as Renius approached, drawing a dagger
from his belt. Reddish saliva dribbled onto the sand as the torn
lungs strained to fill with air.
Renius spoke softly to the beast, but the words
could not be heard in the stands. He lay a hand on the mane and
patted it absently, as he would a favorite hound. Then he slipped
the blade into the throat and it was over.
The crowd seemed to draw breath for the first
time in hours and then laughed at the release of tension. Four men
were dead on the sand, but Renius, the old killer, still stood,
looking exhausted. They began to chant his name, but he bowed
quickly and left the ring, striding to the shadowed door and into
darkness.
"Get in quickly, Tubruk. You know my highest
price. A year, mind—a full year of service."
Tubruk disappeared into the crowds and the boys
were left to make polite conversation with Julius. However, without
Tubruk to act as a catalyst, the conversation died quickly. Julius
loved his son, but had never enjoyed talking to the young. They
prattled and knew nothing of decorum and self-restraint.
"He will be a hard teacher, if his reputation is
accurate. He was once without equal in the empire, but Tubruk tells
the stories better than I."
The boys nodded eagerly and determined to press
Tubruk for the details as soon as they had the opportunity.
The seasons had turned toward autumn
on the estate before the boys saw Renius again, dismounting from a
gelding in the stone yard of the stables. It was a mark of his
status that he could ride like an officer or a member of the
Senate. Both of them were in the hay barn adjoining, and had been
jumping off the high bales onto the loose straw. Covered in hay and
dust, they were not fit to be seen and peered out at the visitor
from a corner. He glanced around as Tubruk came to meet him, taking
the reins.
"You will be received as soon as you are
refreshed from your journey."
"I have ridden less than five miles. I am
neither dirty nor sweating like an animal. Take me in now, or I'll
find the way myself," snapped the old soldier, frowning.
"I see you have lost none of your charm and
lightness of manner since you worked with me."
Renius didn't smile and for a second the boys
expected a blow or a violent retort.
"I see you have not yet learned manners to your
elders. I expect better."
"Everyone is younger than you. Yes, I can
see how you would be set in your ways."
Renius seemed to freeze for a second, slowly
blinking. "Do you wish me to draw my sword?"
Tubruk was still, and Marcus and Gaius noticed
for the first time that he too wore his old gladius in a
scabbard.
"I wish you only to remember that I am in charge
of the running of the estate and that I am a free man, like
yourself. Our agreement benefits us both; there are no favors being
done here."
Renius smiled. "You are correct. Lead on then to
the master of the house. I would like to meet the man who has such
interesting types working for him."
As they left, Gaius and Marcus looked at each
other, eyes aglow with excitement.
"He will be a hard taskmaster, but will quickly
become impressed at the talent he has on his hands..." Marcus
whispered.
"He will realize that we will be his last great
work, before he drops dead," Gaius continued, caught up in the
idea.
"I will be the greatest swordsman in the land,
aided by the fact that I have stretched my arms every night since I
was a baby," Marcus went on.
"The Fighting Monkey, they will call you!" Gaius
declared in awe.
Marcus threw hay at his face and they grabbed
each other with mock ferocity, rolling around for a second until
Gaius ended up on top, sitting heavily on his friends chest.
"I will be the slightly better swordsman, too
modest to embarrass you in front of the ladies."
He struck a proud pose and Marcus shoved him off
into the straw again. They sat panting and lost in dreams for a
moment.
At length, Marcus spoke: "In truth, you will run
this estate, like your father. I have nothing and you know my
mother is a whore... no, don't say anything. We both heard your
father say it. I have no inheritance save my name, and that is
stained. I can only see a bright future in the army, where at least
my birth is noble enough to allow me high position. Having Renius
as my trainer will help us both, but me most of all."
"You will always be my friend, you know. Nothing
can come between us." Gaius spoke clearly, looking him in the
eye.
"We will find our paths together."
They both nodded and gripped hands for a second
in the pact. As they let go, Tubruk's familiar bulk appeared as he
stuck his head into the hayloft.
"Get yourselves cleaned up. Once Renius has
finished with your father, he'll want some sort of inspection."
They stood slowly, nervousness obvious in their
movements.
"Is he cruel?" Gaius asked.
Tubruk didn't smile. "Yes, he is cruel. He is
the hardest man I have ever known. He wins battles because the
other men feel pain and are frightened of death and dismemberment.
He is more like a sword than a man, and he will make you both as
hard as himself. You will probably never thank him—you will
hate him—but what he gives you will save your lives more than
once."
Gaius looked at him questioningly. "Did you know
him before?"
Tubruk laughed, a short bark with no humor. "I
should say so. He trained me for the ring, when I was a slave."
His eyes flashed in the sun as he turned, and
then he was gone.
* * *
Renius stood with his feet
shoulder-width apart and his hands clasped behind his back. He
frowned at the seated Julius.
"No. If anyone interferes, I will leave on that
hour. You want your son and the whore's whelp to be made into
soldiers. I know how to do that. I have been doing it, one way or
another, all my life. Sometimes they only learn as the enemy
charges, sometimes they never learn, and I have left a few of those
in shallow foreign graves."
"Tubruk will want to discuss their progress with
you. His judgment is usually first rate. He was, after all, trained
by you," Julius said, still trying to regain the initiative he felt
he had lost.
This man was an overwhelming force. From the
moment he entered the room, he had dominated the conversation.
Instead of setting out the manner of his son's teaching, as he had
intended, Julius found himself on the defensive, answering
questions about his estate and training facilities. He knew better
now what he did not have than what he did.
"They are very young, and..."
"Any older would be too late. Oh, you can take a
man of twenty and make him a competent soldier, fit and hard. A
child, though, can be fashioned into a thing of metal, unbreakable.
Some would say you have already left it too late, that proper
training should commence at five years. I am of the opinion that
ten is the optimum to ensure the proper development of muscle and
lung capacity. Earlier can break their spirits; later and their
spirits are too firmly in the wrong courses."
"I agree, to some ext—"
"Are you the real father of the whore's boy?"
Renius spoke curtly but quietly, as if inquiring after the
weather.
"What? Gods, no! I—"
"Good. That would have been a complication. I
accept the year contract then. My word is given. Get the boys out
into the stable yard for inspection in five minutes. They saw me
arrive, so they should be ready. I will report to you quarterly in
this room. If you cannot make the appointment, be so good as to let
me know. Good day."
He turned on his heel and strode out. Behind
him, Julius blew air out of puffed cheeks in a mixture of amazement
and contentment.
"Could be just what I wanted," he said, and
smiled for the first time that morning.
CHAPTER
5
The first thing they were told was
that they would get a good night's sleep. For eight hours, from
before midnight to dawn, they were left alone. At all other times,
they were being taught, or toughened, or cramming food into their
mouths in hasty, snatched breaks of only minutes.
Marcus had had the excitement knocked out of him
on that first day, when Renius took his chin in his leathery hand
and peered at him.
"Weak spirited, like his mother was."
He'd said no more at the time, but Marcus burned
with the humiliating thought that the old soldier he wanted so much
to like him might have seen his mother in the city. From the first
moment, his desire to please Renius became a source of shame to
him. He knew he had to excel at the training, but not in such a way
that the old bastard would approve.
Renius was easy to hate. From the first, he
called Gaius by his name, while only referring to Marcus as "the
boy" or "the whore's boy." Gaius could see it was deliberate, some
attempt to use their hatred as a tool to improve them. Yet he could
not help but feel annoyance as his friend was humbled over and over
again.
A stream ran through the estate, carrying cold
water down to the sea. One month after his arrival, they had been
taken down to the water before noon. Renius had simply motioned to
a dark pool.
"Get in," he said.
They'd looked at each other and shrugged.
The cold was numbing from the first moments.
"Stay there until I come back for you" was the
command called over his shoulder as Renius walked back up to the
house, where he ate a light lunch and bathed, before sleeping
through the hot afternoon.
Marcus felt the cold much more than his friend.
After only a couple of hours, he was blue around the face and
unable to speak for shivering. As the afternoon wore on, his legs
went numb and the muscles of his face and neck ached from
shivering. They talked with difficulty, anything to take their
minds off the cold. The shadows moved and the talk died. Gaius was
nowhere near as uncomfortable as his friend. His limbs had gone
numb long before, but breathing was still easy, whereas Marcus was
sipping small breaths.
The afternoon cooled unnoticed outside the
eternal chill of the shaded section of fast-flowing water. Marcus
rested with his head leaning to one side or the other, with an eye
half submerged and slowly blinking, seeing nothing. His mind could
drift until his nose was covered, when he would splutter and raise
himself straight again. Then he would dip once more as the pain
worsened. They had not spoken for a long time. It had become a
private battle, but not against each other. They would stay until
they were called for, until Renius came back and ordered them to
climb out.
As the day fled, they both knew that they could
not climb out. Even if Renius appeared at that moment and
congratulated them, he would have to drag them out himself, getting
wet and muddy in the process if the gods were watching at all.
Marcus slipped in and out of waking, coming back
with a sudden start and realizing he had somehow drifted away from
the cold and the darkness. He wondered then if he would die in the
river.
In one of those dreaming dozes, he felt warmth
and heard the welcoming crackle of a good log fire. An old man
prodded the burning wood with his toe, smiling at the sparks. He
turned and seemed to notice the boy watching him, white and
lost.
"Come closer to the warm, boy, I'll not hurt
ye."
The old man's face carried the wrinkles and dirt
of decades of labor and worry. It was scarred and seamed like a
stitched purse. The hands were covered in rope veins that shifted
under the skin as the swollen knuckles moved. He was dressed like a
traveling man, with patched clothes and a dark red cloth wrapping
his throat.
"What do we have here? A mudfish! Rare for these
parts, but good eating on one, they say. You could cut a leg off
and feed us both. I'd stop the bleeding, boy, I'm not without
tricks."
Huge eyebrows bristled and rose in interest at
the thought. The eyes glittered and the mouth opened to reveal soft
gums, wet and puckered. The man patted his pockets and the shadows
copied his movements, flapping on dark yellow walls that were lit
only by the flames.
"Hold still, boy, I have a knife with a saw edge
for you..." A hand like rough stone was pressed over his whole
face, suddenly larger than a hand had any right to be.
The old man's breath was warm on his ear,
smelling foully of rotting teeth.
He awoke choking and heaving dryly. His stomach
was empty and the moon had risen. Gaius was beside him still, his
face barely above the black glass water, head nodding in and out of
the darkness.
It was enough. If the choice was to fail or to
die, then he would fail and not mind the consequences. Tactically,
that was the better choice. Sometimes, it is better to retreat and
marshal your forces. That was what the old man wanted them to know.
He wanted them to give up and was probably waiting somewhere
nearby, waiting for them to learn this most important of
lessons.
Marcus didn't remember the dream, except for the
fear of being smothered, which he still felt. His body seemed to
have lost its familiar shape and just sat, heavy and waterlogged
beneath the surface. He had become some sort of soft-skinned,
bottom-dwelling fish. He concentrated and his mouth hung slackly,
dribbling back water as cold as himself. He swayed forward and
brought up his arm to hold a root. It was the first time a limb had
cleared the water in eleven hours. He felt the cold of death on him
and had no regrets. True, Gaius was still there, but they would
have different strengths. Marcus would not die to please some
poxed-up old gladiator.
He slithered out, an inch at a time, mud
plastering his face and chest as he dragged himself to the bank.
His bloated stomach did seem buoyant in the water, as if filled
from within. The sensation as his full weight finally came to bear
on the hard ground was one of ecstasy. He lay and began to shudder
in spasmodic fits of retching. Yellow bile trickled weakly out of
his lips and mixed with the black mud. The night was quiet and he
felt as if he'd just crawled out of the grave.
Dawn found him still there and a shadow blocking
the pale sun. Renius stood there and frowned, not at Marcus, but at
the tiny pale figure of the boy still in the water, eyes closed and
lips blue. As Marcus watched him, he saw a sudden spasm of worry
cross the iron face.
"Boy!" snapped the voice they had already come
to loathe. "Gaius!"
The figure in the water lolled in the moving
current, but there was no response. A muscle in Renius's jaw
clenched and the old soldier stepped up to his thighs into the
pool, scooping up the ten-year-old and throwing him over his
shoulder as if the boy were a puppy. The eyes opened with the
sudden movement, but there was no focus. Marcus rose as the old man
strode away with his burden, obviously heading back to the house.
He tottered after, muscles protesting.
Behind them, Tubruk stood in the shadows of the
opposite bank, still hidden from sight by the foliage as he had
been all night. His eyes were narrowed and as cold as the
river.
Renius seemed to be fueled by a
constant anger. After months of training, the boys had not seen him
smile except in mockery. On bad days, he rubbed his neck as he
snapped at them, and gave the impression that his temper was
cracking every second. He was worst in the midday sun, when his
skin would mottle with irritation at the slightest mistake.
"Hold the stone straight in front!" he barked at
Marcus and Gaius as they sweated in the heat. The task that
afternoon was to stand with arms outstretched in front, with a rock
the size of a fist held in their hands. It had been easy at
first.
Gaius's shoulders were aching and his arms felt
loose. He tried to tense the muscles, but they seemed out of his
control. Perspiring, he watched the stone drop by a hand's width
and felt a stripe of pain over his stomach as Renius struck with a
short whip. His arms trembled and muscles shuddered under the pain.
He concentrated on the rock and bit his lip.
"You will not let it fall. You will welcome the
pain. You will not let it fall."
Renius's voice was a harsh chant as he paced
around the boys. This was the fourth time they had raised the
stones, and each time was harder. He barely allowed them a minute
to rest their aching arms before the order to raise came again.
"Cease," Renius said, watching to see that they
controlled the descent, his whip held ready. Marcus was breathing
heavily and Renius curled his lip.
"There will come a time when you think you can't
stand the pain any more and men's lives will depend on it. You
could be holding a rope others are climbing, or walking forty miles
in full kit to rescue comrades. Are you listening?"
The boys nodded, trying not to pant with
exhaustion, just pleased he was talking instead of ordering the
stones up again.
"I have seen men walk themselves to death,
falling onto the road with their legs still twitching and trying to
lift them. They were buried with honor.
"I have seen men of my legion keep rank and move
in formation, holding their guts in with one hand. They were buried
with honor." He paused to consider his words, rubbing the back of
his neck as though he had been stung.
"There will be times when you want to simply sit
down, when you want to give up. When your body tells you it is done
and your spirit is weak.
"These are false. Savages and the beasts of the
field break, but we go on.
"Do you think you are finished now? Are your
arms hurting you? I tell you that you will raise that rock another
dozen times this hour and you will hold it. And another dozen if
you let one fall below a hand's width."
A slave girl was washing dust from a wall at the
side of the courtyard. She never looked at the boys, though
occasionally she jumped slightly as the old gladiator barked a
command. Gaius saw she looked exhausted herself, but he had noticed
she was attractive, with long dark hair and a loose slave shift.
Her face was delicate, with a pair of dark eyes and a full mouth
pressed into a line by the concentration of her work. He thought
her name was Alexandria.
As Renius spoke, she bent low to dip the cloth
in the bucket and paused to wash the dirt from the material. Her
shift gaped as she pressed the cloth into the water, and Gaius
could see the smooth skin of her neck running down to the soft
curves of her breasts. He thought he could see right down to the
skin of her stomach and imagined her nipples gently grazing against
the rough cloth as she moved.
In that moment, Renius was forgotten, despite
the pain in his arms.
The old man stopped speaking and turned on his
heel to see what was distracting the boys from their lesson. He
growled as he saw the slave and crossed to her with three quick
strides, taking her arm in a cruel grip that made her cry out. His
voice was a bellow.
"I am teaching these children a lesson that will
save their lives, and you are flashing your paps at them like a
cheap whore!"
The girl cowered from his anger, pulling as far
as she could reach from the held wrist.
"I... I..." she stammered, seeming dazed, but
Renius swore and took her by the hair. She winced in pain and he
swung her to face the boys.
"I don't care if there are a thousand of these
behind my back. I am teaching you to concentrate!"
In one brutal move, he flicked her legs away
with a sweep of his foot and she fell. Still holding her hair,
Renius raised his whip in his other hand and brought it down
sharply, in sequence with his words.
"You will not distract these boys
while I teach."
The girl was crying as Renius let her go. She
crawled a couple of paces, then came up to a crouch and ran from
the yard, sobbing.
Marcus and Gaius looked dumbfounded at Renius as
he turned back to them. His expression was murderous.
"Close your mouths, boys. This was never a game.
I will make you good enough and hard enough to serve the Republic
after I am gone. I will not allow weakness of any kind. Now raise
the stones and hold them until I say to cease."
Once again, the boys raised their arms, not even
daring to exchange glances.
* * *
That evening, when the estate was
quiet and Renius had departed for the city, Gaius delayed his usual
exhausted collapse into sleep to visit the slave quarters. He felt
guilty being there and kept an eye out for Tubruk's shadow, though
he couldn't quite have explained why.
The household slaves slept under the same roof
as the family, in a wing of simple rooms. It was not a world he
knew and he felt nervous as he walked along the darkening
corridors, wondering whether he should knock at doors, or call her
name, if it really was Alexandria.
He found her sitting on a low ledge outside an
open door. She seemed lost in thought and he cleared his throat
gently as he recognized her. She scrambled to her feet in fright
and then held herself still, looking at the floor. She had cleaned
the dust of the day from her skin, and it was smooth and pale in
the evening light. Her hair was tied back with a scrap of cloth,
and her eyes were wide with darkness.
"Is your name Alexandria?" he said quietly.
She nodded.
"I came to say sorry for today. I was watching
you at your chores and Renius thought you were distracting us."
She stood perfectly still in front of him and
kept her gaze on the floor at his feet. The silence stretched for a
moment and he blushed, unsure how to continue.
"Look, I am sorry. He was cruel."
Still she said nothing. Her thoughts were
pained, but this was the son of the house. I am a slave, she
longed to say. Every day is pain and humiliation. You have
nothing to say to me.
Gaius waited for a few more moments and then
walked away, wishing he hadn't come.
Alexandria watched him leave, watched the
confident walk and the developing strength that Renius was bringing
out. He would be as vicious as that old gladiator when he was
older. He was free and Roman. His compassion came from his youth,
and that was fast being burned away in the training yard. Her face
was hot with the anger she had not dared show. It was a small
victory not to have talked to him, but she cherished it.
Renius reported their progress at the
end of each quarter-year. On the evening before the appointed day,
Gaius's father would return from his lodgings in the capital and
receive Tubruk's summary of the estates wealth. He would see the
boys and spend a few minutes extra with his son. The following day,
he would see Renius at dawn and the boys would sleep in, grateful
for the slight break in their routine.
The first report had been frustratingly
short.
"They have made a beginning. Both have some
spirit," Renius had stated flatly.
After a long pause, Julius realized that there
was to be no further comment.
"They are obedient?" he asked, wondering at the
lack of information. For this he'd paid so much gold?
"Of course," Renius replied, his expression
baffled.
"They, er... they show promise?" Julius battled
on, refusing to allow this conversation to go the way of the last
one, but again feeling as if he were addressing one of his old
tutors instead of a man in his employ.
"A beginning has been made. This work is not
accomplished quickly."
"Nothing of value ever is," Julius replied
quietly.
They looked at each other calmly for a moment
and both nodded. The interview was at an end. The old warrior shook
hands with a brief touch of dry skin in a quick, hard grip and
left. Julius remained standing, gazing at the door that closed
behind his exit.
Tubruk thought the training methods were
dangerous and had mentioned an incident where the boys could have
drowned without supervision. Julius grimaced. He knew that to
mention the worry to Renius would be to sever their agreement.
Preventing the old murderer from going too far would rest with the
estate manager.
Sighing, he sat down and thought about the
problems he faced in Rome. Cornelius Sulla had continued to rise in
power, bringing some towns in the south of the country into the
Roman fold and away from their merchant controllers. What was the
name of that last? Pompeii, some sort of mountain town. Sulla kept
his name in the mind of the vacuous public with such small
triumphs. He commanded a group of senators with a web of lies,
bribery, and flattery. They were all young and brought a shudder to
the old soldier as he thought of some of them. If this was what
Rome was coming to, in his lifetime...!
Instead of taking the business of empire
seriously, they seemed to live only for sordid pleasures of the
most dubious kinds, worshipping at the temple of Aphrodite and
calling themselves the "New Romans." There were few things that
still caused outrage in the temples of the capital, but this new
group seemed intent on finding the limits and breaking them, one by
one. One of the people's tribunes had been found murdered, one who
opposed Sulla whenever possible. This would not have been too
remarkable in itself; he had been found in a pool, made red by a
swiftly opened vein in his leg, a not-uncommon mode of death. The
problem was that his children too had been found killed, which
looked like a warning to others. There were no clues and no
witnesses. It was unlikely the murderer would ever be found, but
before another tribune could be elected, Sulla had forced through a
resolution that gave a general greater autonomy in the field. He
had argued the need himself and was eloquent and passionate in his
persuasion. The Senate had voted and his power had grown a little
more, while the power of the Republic was nibbled away.
Julius had so far managed to stay neutral, but
as he was related by marriage to another of the power players, his
wife's brother Marius, he knew eventually that sides would have to
be chosen. A wise man could see the changes coming, but it saddened
him that the equalities of the Republic were felt as chains by more
and more of the hotheads in the Senate. Marius too felt that a
powerful man could use the law rather than obey it. Already he had
proven this by making a mockery of the system used to elect
consuls. Roman law said that a consul could only be elected once by
the Senate and must then step down from the position. Marius had
recently secured his third election with martial victories against
the Cimbri tribes and the Teutons, whom he had smashed with the
Primigenia legion. He was still a lion of the emerging Rome, and
Julius would have to find the protection of his shadow if Cornelius
Sulla continued to grow in power.
Favors would be owed and some of his autonomy
would be lost if he threw his colors into the camp of Marius, but
it might be the only wise choice. He wished he could consult his
wife and listen to her quick mind dissect the problem as she used
to do. Always she could see an angle on a problem, or a point of
view that no one else could see. He missed her wry smile and the
way she would press her palms against his eyes when he was tired,
bringing a wonderful coolness and peace...
He moved quietly through the corridors to
Aurelia's rooms and paused outside the door, listening to her long,
slow breaths, barely audible in the silence.
Carefully, he entered the room and crossed over
to the sleeping figure, kissing her lightly on the brow. She didn't
stir and he sat by the bed, watching her.
Asleep, she seemed the woman he remembered. At
any moment, she could wake and her eyes would fill with
intelligence and wit. She would laugh to see him sitting there in
the shadows and pull back the covers, inviting him in to the warmth
of her.
"Who can I turn to, my love?" he whispered. "Who
should I support and trust to safeguard the city and the Republic?
I think your brother Marius cares as little for the idea as Sulla
himself." He rubbed his jaw, feeling the stubble.
"Where does safety lie for my wife and my son?
Do I throw in my house to the wolf or the snake?"
Silence answered him and he shook his head
slowly. He rose and kissed Aurelia, imagining just for one moment
more that, if her eyes opened, someone he knew would be looking
out. Then he left quietly, shutting the door softly behind him.
When Tubruk walked his watch that evening, the
last of the candles had guttered out and the rooms were dark.
Julius still sat in his chair, but his eyes were closed and his
chest rose and fell slowly, with a soft whistle of air from his
nose. Tubruk nodded to himself, pleased he was getting some rest
from worry.
The following morning, Julius ate with
the two boys, a small breaking of the fast with bread, fruit, and a
warm tisane to counter the dawn chill. The depressive thoughts of
the day before had been put aside and he sat straight, his gaze
clear.
"You look healthy and strong," he said to the
pair of them. "Renius is turning you into young men."
They grinned at each other for a second.
"Renius says we will soon be fit enough for
battle training. We have shown we can stand heat and cold and have
begun to find our strengths and weaknesses. All this is internal,
which he says is the foundation for external skill." Gaius spoke
with animation, his hands moving slightly with his words.
Both boys were clearly growing in confidence,
and Julius felt a pang for a moment that he was not able to see
more of their growth. Looking at his son, he wondered if he would
come home to a stranger one day.
"You are my son. Renius has trained many, but
never a son of mine. You will surprise him, I think." Julius looked
at Gaius's incredulous expression, knowing the boy was not used to
praise or admiration.
"I will try to. Marcus will surprise him too, I
expect."
Julius did not look at the other boy at the
table, although he felt his eyes. As if he were not present, he
answered, wanting the point to be remembered and annoyed at Gaius's
attempt to bring his friend into the conversation.
"Marcus is not my son. You carry my name and my
reputation with you. You alone."
Gaius bowed his head, embarrassed and unable to
hold his fathers strangely compelling gaze. "Yes, Father," he
muttered, and continued to eat.
Sometimes he wished there were other children,
brothers or sisters to play with and to carry the burden of his
father's hopes. Of course, he would not give up the estate to them,
that was his alone and always had been, but occasionally he felt
the pressure as an uncomfortable weight. His mother especially,
when she was quiet and placid, would croon to him that he was all
the children she had been allowed, one perfect example of life. She
often told him that she would have liked daughters to dress and
pass on her wisdom to, but the fever that had struck her at his
birth had taken that chance away.
Renius came into the warm kitchen. He wore open
sandals with a red soldier's tunic and short leggings that ended on
his calves, stretched tight over almost obscenely large muscles,
the legacy of life as an infantryman in the legions. Despite his
age, he seemed to burn with health and vitality. He halted in front
of the table, his back straight and his eyes bright and
interested.
"With your permission, sir, the sun is rising
and the boys must run five miles before it clears the hills."
Julius nodded and the two boys stood quickly,
waiting for his dismissal.
"Go—train hard," he said, smiling. His son
looked eager, the other—there was something else there in
those dark eyes and brows. Anger? No, it was gone. The pair raced
off and the two men were once again left alone. Julius indicated
the table.
"I hear you are intending to begin battle school
with them soon."
"They are not strong enough yet; they may not be
this year, but I am not just a fitness instructor to them, after
all."
"Have you given any thought to continuing their
training after the year contract is up?" Julius asked, hoping his
casual manner masked his interest.
"I will retire to the country next year. Nothing
is likely to change that."
"Then these two will be your last
students—your last legacy to Rome," Julius replied.
Renius froze for a second and Julius let no
trace of his emotions betray itself on his face.
"It is something to think about," Renius said at
last, before turning on his heel and going into the gray dawn
light.
Julius grinned wolfishly behind him.
CHAPTER
6
As officers, you will ride to the
battle, but fighting from horseback is not our chief strength.
Although we use cavalry for quick, smashing attacks, it is the
footmen of the twenty-eight legions that break the enemy. Every man
of the 150,000 legionaries we have in the field at any given moment
of any day can walk thirty miles in full armor, carrying a pack
that is a third his own weight. He can then fight the enemy,
without weakness and without complaint."
Renius eyed the two boys who stood in the heat
of the noon sun, returned from a run and trying to control their
breathing. More than three years he had given them, the last he
would ever teach. There was so much more for them to learn! He
paced around them as he spoke, snapping the words out.
"It is not the luck of the gods that has given
the countries of the world into the palms of Rome. It is not the
weakness of the foreign tribes that leads them to throw themselves
onto our swords in battle. It is our strength, greater and
deeper than anything they can bring to the field. That is our first
tactic. Before our men even reach the battle, they will be
unbreakable in their strength and their morale. More, they will
have a discipline that the armies of the world can bloody
themselves against without effect.
"Each man will know that his brothers at his
side will have to be killed to leave him. That makes him stronger
than the most heroic charge, or the vain screams of savage tribes.
We walk to battle. We stand and they die."
Gaius's breathing slowed and his lungs ceased to
clamor for oxygen. In the three years since Renius had first
arrived at his father's villa, he had grown in height and strength.
Approaching fourteen years of age, he was showing signs of the man
he would one day be.
Burned the color of light oak by the Roman sun,
he stood easily, his frame slim and athletic, with powerful
shoulders and legs. He could run for hours round the hills and
still find reserves for a burst of speed as his father's estate
came into view again.
Marcus too had undergone changes, both
physically and in his spirit. The innocent happiness of the boy he
had been came and went in flashes now. Renius had taught him to
guard his emotions and his responses. He had been taught this with
the whip and without kindness of any kind for three long years. He
too had well-developed shoulders, tapering down into lightning-fast
fists that Gaius could not match anymore. Inside him, the desire to
stand on his own, without help from his line or the patronage of
others, was like a slow acid in his stomach.
As Renius watched, both boys became calm and
stood to attention, watching him warily. It was not unknown for him
to suddenly strike at an exposed stomach, testing, always testing
for weakness.
"Gladii, gentlemen—fetch your swords."
Silently, they turned away and collected the
short swords from pegs on the training yard wall. Heavy leather
belts were buckled around their waists, with a leather "frog"
attached, a holder for the sword. The scabbard slid snugly into the
frog, tightly held by lacing so that it would remain immobile if
the blade was suddenly drawn.
Properly attired, they returned to the attention
position, waiting for the next order.
"Gaius, you observe. I will use the boy to make
a simple point." Renius loosened his shoulders with a crack and
grinned as Marcus slowly drew the gladius.
"First position, boy. Stand like a soldier, if
you can remember how."
Marcus relaxed into the first position, legs
shoulder-width apart, body slightly turned from full frontal, sword
held at waist height, ready to strike for the groin, stomach, or
throat, the three main areas of attack. Groin and neck were
favorites, as a deep cut there would mean the opponent bled to
death in seconds.
Renius shifted his weight, and Marcus's point
wavered to follow the movement.
"Slashing the air again? If you do that, I'll
see it and pattern you. I only need one opening to cut your throat
out, one blow. Let me guess which way you're going to shift your
weight and I'll cut you in two." He began to circle Marcus, who
remained relaxed, his eyebrows raised over a face blank of
expression. Renius continued to talk.
"You want to kill me, don't you, boy? I can
feel your hatred. I can feel it like good wine in my
stomach. It cheers me up, boy, can you believe that?"
Marcus attacked in a sudden move, without
warning, without signal. It had taken hundreds of hours of drill
for him to eliminate all his "tells," his telegraphing tensions of
muscle that gave away his intentions. No matter how fast he was, a
good opponent would gut him if he signaled his thoughts before each
move.
Renius was not there when the stabbing lunge
ended. His gladius pressed up against Marcus's throat.
"Again. You were slow and clumsy as usual. If
you weren't faster than Gaius, you'd be the worst I'd ever
seen."
Marcus gaped and, in a split second, the
sun-warmed gladius was pressed against his inner thigh, by the big
pulsing vein that carried his life.
Renius shook his head in disgust. "Never
listen to your opponent. Gaius is observing, you are
fighting. You concentrate on how I am moving, not the words I
speak, which are simply to distract you. Again."
They circled in the shadows of the yard.
"Your mother was clumsy in bed at first."
Renius's sword snaked out as he spoke and was snapped aside with a
bell ring of metal. Marcus stepped in and pressed his blade against
the leathery old skin of Renius's throat. His expression was cold
and unforgiving.
"Predictable," Marcus muttered, glaring into the
cold blue eyes, nettled nonetheless.
He felt a pressure and looked down to see a
dagger held in Renius's left hand, touching him lightly on the
stomach. Renius grinned.
"Many men will hate you enough to take you with
them. They are the most dangerous of all. They can run right onto
your sword and blind you with their thumbs. I've seen that done by
a woman to one of my men."
"Why did she hate him so much?" Marcus asked as
he took a pace away, sword still ready to defend.
"The victors will always be hated. It is the
price we pay. If they love you, they will do what you want, but
when they want to do it. If they fear you, they will do your will,
but when you want them to. So, is it better to be loved or
feared?"
"Both," Gaius said seriously.
Renius smiled. "You mean adored and respected,
which is the impossible trick if you are occupying lands that are
only yours by right of strength and blood. Life is never a simple
problem from question to answer. There are always many
answers."
The two boys looked baffled and Renius snorted
in irritation.
"I will show you what discipline means. I will
show you what you have already learned. Put your swords away and
stand back to attention."
The old gladiator looked the pair over with a
critical eye. Without warning, the noon bell sounded and he
frowned, his manner changing in an instant. His voice lost the snap
of the tutor and, for once, was low and quiet.
"There are food riots in the city, did you know
that? Great gangs that destroy property and stream away like rats
when someone is brave enough to draw a sword on them. I should be
there, not playing games with children. I have taught you for two
years longer than my original agreement. You are not ready, but I
will not waste any more of my evening years on you. Today is your
last lesson." He stepped over to Gaius, who stared resolutely
ahead.
"Your father should have met me here and heard
my report. The fact that he is late for the first time in three
years tells me what?"
Gaius cleared his dry throat. "The riots in Rome
are worse than you believed."
"Yes. Your father will not be here to see this
last lesson. A pity. If he is dead and I kill you, who will inherit
the estate?"
Gaius blinked in confusion. The man's words
seemed to jar with his reasonable tone. It was as if he were
ordering a new tunic.
"My uncle Marius, although he is with the
Primigenia legion—the First-Born. He will not be
expecting—"
"A good standard, the Primigenia, did well in
Egypt. My bill will be sent to him. Now I will indulge you as the
current master of the estate, in your father's absence. When you
are ready, you will face me for real, not a practice, not to first
blood, but an attack such as you might face if you were walking the
streets of Rome today, among the rioters.
"I will fight fairly, and if you kill me you may
consider yourself to have graduated from my tutelage."
"Why kill us after all the time you have—"
Marcus spluttered, breaking discipline to speak without
permission.
"You have to face death at some point. I cannot
continue to train you, and there is a last lesson to be learned
about fear and anger."
For a moment, Renius looked unsure of himself,
but then his head straightened and the "Snapping Turtle," as the
slaves called him, was back, his intensity and energy
overpowering.
"You are my last pupils. My reputation as I go
into retirement hangs on your sorry necks. I will not let you go
improperly trained, so that my name is blackened by your deeds. My
name is something I have spent my life protecting. It is too late
to consider losing it now."
"We would not embarrass you," Marcus muttered,
almost to himself.
Renius rounded on him. "Your every stroke
embarrasses me. You hack like a butcher attacking a bull carcass in
a rage. You cannot control your temper. You fall for the simplest
trap as the blood drains from your head! And you!" He turned
to Gaius, who had begun to grin. "You cannot keep your thoughts
from your groin long enough to make a Roman of you. Nobilitas? My
blood runs cold at the thought of boys like you carrying on my
heritage, my city, my people."
Gaius dropped the grin at the reference to the
slave girl that Renius had whipped in front of them for distracting
the boys. It still shamed him and a slow anger began to grow as the
tirade continued.
"Gaius, you may choose which of you will duel
first. Your first tactical decision!" Renius turned and strode away
onto the fighting square laid out in mosaic on the training ground.
He stretched his leg muscles behind them, seemingly oblivious to
their dumbstruck gazes.
"He has gone mad," Marcus whispered. "He'll kill
us both."
"He is still playing games," Gaius said grimly.
"Like with the river. I'm going to take him. I think I can do it.
I'm certainly not going to refuse the challenge. If this is how I
show him that he has taught me well, then so be it. I will thank
him in his own blood."
Marcus looked at his friend and saw his
resolution. He knew that, as much as he didn't want either of them
to fight Renius, it was he who had the better chance. Neither could
win outright, but only Marcus had the speed to take the old man
with him into the void.
"Gaius," he murmured. "Let me go first."
Gaius looked him in the eye, as if to gauge his
thoughts. "Not this time. You are my friend. I do not want to see
him kill you."
"Nor I you. Yet I am the faster of us—I
have a better chance."
Gaius loosened his shoulders and smiled tightly.
"He is only an old man, Marcus. I'll be back in a moment."
Alone, Gaius took up his position. Renius
watched him through eyes narrowed against the sun.
"Why did you choose to fight first?"
Gaius shrugged. "All lives end. I chose to. That
is enough."
"Aye, it is. Begin, boy. Let's see if you have
learned anything."
Gently, smoothly, they began to move around each
other, gladii held out and flat-bladed, catching the sun.
Renius feinted with a sudden shift of a
shoulder. Gaius read the feint and forced the old man back a step
with a lunge. The blades clashed and the battle began. They struck
and parried, came together in a twist of heaving muscle, and the
old warrior threw the young boy backward and left him sprawling in
the dust.
For once, Renius didn't mock him, his face
remaining impassive. Gaius rose slowly, balanced. He could not win
with strength.
He took two quick steps forward and brought the
blade up in a neat slice, breaking past the defense and cutting
deeply into the mahogany skin of Renius's chest. The old man
grunted in surprise as the boy pressed the attack without pause,
cut after cut. Each was parried with tiny shifts of weight and
movements of the blade. The boy would clearly tire himself in the
sun and be ready for the butcher's knife.
Sweat poured into Gaius's eyes. He felt
desperate, unable to think of new moves that might work against
this hard-eyed thing of wood that read and parried him so easily.
He flailed and missed, and, as he overbalanced, Renius extended his
right arm, sinking the blade into the exposed lower abdomen.
Gaius felt his strength go. His legs seemed weak
sticks and folded beyond his control under him, rubbery and
painless. Blood spattered the dust, but the colors had gone from
the courtyard, replaced by the thump of his heartbeat and flashes
in his eyes.
Renius looked down and Gaius could see his eyes
shine with moisture. Was the old man crying?
"Not... good... enough," the old gladiator spat.
Renius stepped forward, his eyes full of pain.
The brightness of the sun was blocked by a dark
bar of shadow as Marcus slid his sword under the sagging throat
skin of the old warrior. One step behind Renius, he could see the
old man stiffen in surprise.
"Forgotten me?" It would be the work of a single
thought to pull the blade back sharply and end the vicious old man,
but Marcus had glanced at the body of his friend and knew the life
was pouring out of him. He allowed the rage to build inside him for
a moment, and the chance for a quick death disappeared as Renius
stepped smoothly away and brought up his bloody sword again. His
face was stone, but his eyes shone.
Marcus began his attack, in past the guard and
out before the old man had a chance to move. If he had been trying
for a fatal blow, it would have landed, as the old man held
immobile, his face rigid with tension. As it was, the blow was
simply a loosener and the life in the old man came back with a
rush.
"Can't you even kill me when I hold still for
the strike?" Renius snapped as he began to circle again, keeping
his right side to Marcus.
"You were always a fool—you have a fools
pride," Marcus almost growled at him, forced to pay attention to
this man as his friend died in the heat, alone.
He attacked again, his thought become deeds, no
reflection or decision, simply blows and moves, unstoppable. Red
mouths opened on the old body, and Marcus could hear the spatter of
blood on the dust like spring rain.
Renius had no time to speak again. He defended
desperately, his face showing shock for a second before settling
into his gladiatorial mask. Marcus moved with extraordinary grace
and balance, too fast to counter, a warrior born.
Again and again, the old man only knew he had
stopped a blow when he heard the clash of metal as his body moved
and reacted without conscious thought. His mind seemed detached
from the fight.
His thoughts spoke in a dry voice: I am an
old fool. This one may be the best I have trained, but I have
killed the other—that was a mortal blow.
His left arm hung, flapping obscene and loose,
the shoulder muscle sliced. The pain was like a hammer and he felt
sudden exhaustion slam into him, like the years catching up with
him at last. The boy had never been this fast before; it was as if
the sight of his friend dying had opened doors within him.
Renius felt his strength desert him in one
despairing sigh. He had seen so many at this point where the spirit
cannot take the flesh further. He warded off the battered blade of
the gladius without energy, batting it away for what he knew would
be the last time.
"Cease, or I will drop you where you stand,"
came a new voice, quiet, but carrying somehow through the courtyard
and house.
Marcus didn't pause. He had been trained not to
react to taunts, and no one was taking this kill from him. He
tensed his shoulders to drive in the iron blade.
"This bow will kill you, boy. Put the sword
down."
Renius looked Marcus in the eyes, seeing madness
there for a moment. He knew the lad would kill him, and then
the light was gone and control had come back.
Even with the heat of his own blood warming his
limbs, the yard seemed cold to the old man as he watched Marcus
glide backward out of range and then turn to look at the newcomer.
Renius had rarely been so certain of his own death to come.
There was a bow, with a glinting arrowhead. An
old man, older than Renius, held the bow without a shiver of
muscle, despite the obvious heft of the draw. He wore a rough brown
robe and a smile that stretched over only a few teeth.
"No one has to die here today. I would know. Put
the weapon away and let me summon doctors and cool drinks for
you."
Reality came back to Marcus in a rush. The
gladius dropped from his hand as he spoke. "Gaius, my friend, is
injured. He may die. He needs help."
Renius sank onto one knee, unable to stand. His
sword fell from nerveless fingers and the red stain widened around
him as his head bowed. Marcus walked past him without a downward
glance, over to where Gaius lay.
"His appendix has been ruptured, I see," the old
man said over his shoulder.
"Then he is dead. When the appendix swells, it
is always fatal. Our doctors cannot remove the swollen thing."
"I have done it, once before. Summon the slaves
of the house to bear this boy inside. Fetch me bandages and heated
water."
"Are you a healer?" Marcus asked, searching the
man's eyes for hope.
"I have picked up a few things on my travels. It
is not over yet." Their eyes met.
Marcus looked away, nodding to himself. He
trusted the stranger, but could not have said why.
Renius slid onto his back, his chest barely
moving. He looked like what he was, a frail old brown stick of a
man, made hard but brittle in the Roman sun. As Marcus's gaze fell
on him, he tried to rise, shuddering with weakness.
Marcus felt a hand press down on his shoulder,
interrupting his rage as it grew again. Tubruk stood beside him,
his face black with anger. Marcus could feel the ex-gladiator's
hand shake slightly.
"Relax, boy. There'll be no more fighting. I
have sent for Lucius and Gaius's mothers doctor."
"You saw?" Marcus stammered.
Tubruk tightened his grip.
"The end of it. I hoped you would kill him," he
said grimly, looking over to where Renius bled. Tubruks expression
was hard as he turned back to the newcomer.
"Who are you, ancient? A poacher? This is a
private estate."
The old man stood slowly and met Tubruks eyes.
"Just a traveler, a wanderer," he said.
"Will he die?" Marcus interrupted.
"Not today, I think," the old man replied. "It
would not be right after I have arrived—am I not a guest of
the house now?"
Marcus blinked in confusion, trying to weigh the
reasonable sound of the words with the still-swirling pain and rage
inside him.
"I don't even know your name," he said.
"I am Cabera," the old man said softly. "Peace
now. I will help you."
CHAPTER
7
Gaius lifted into consciousness, woken
by angry voices in the room. His head pounded and he felt weak in
every bone. Pain from below his waist heaved in great waves, with
answering throbs at pulse points on his body. His mouth was dry and
he could not speak or keep his eyes open. The darkness was soft and
red and he tried to go back under, not yet willing to join the
conscious struggle again.
"I have removed the perforated appendix and tied
off the severed vessels. He has lost a great deal of blood, which
will take time to be replenished, but he is young and strong." A
stranger's voice—one of the estate doctors? Gaius didn't know
or care. As long as he wasn't going to die, they should just leave
him alone to get well.
"My wife's doctor says you are a charlatan." His
father's voice, no give in it.
"He would not operate on such a wound—so
you have lost nothing, yes? I have removed the appendix once
before; it is not a fatal operation. The only problem is the onset
of fever, which he must fight on his own."
"I was taught that it was always fatal. The
appendix swells and bursts. It cannot be removed as you might cut
off a finger." His father sounded tired, Gaius thought.
"Nevertheless, I have done so. I have also
bandaged the older man. He too will recover, although he will never
fight again, with the damage to his left shoulder. All will live
here. You should sleep."
Gaius heard footsteps cross his room and felt
the warm, dry skin of his father's palm on his damp forehead.
"He is my only child; how can I sleep, Cabera?
Would you sleep if it was your child?"
"I would sleep like a baby. We have done all
that we can. I will continue to watch over him, but you must get
your rest." The other voice seemed kind, but it did not have the
rounded tones of the physicians that tended his mother. There was a
trace of a strange accent, a mellifluous rhythm as he spoke.
Gaius sank into sleep again as if he held a dark
weight on his chest. The voices continued on the edge of hearing,
slipping in and out of fever dreams.
"Why have you not closed the wound with
stitches? I've seen a lot of battle wounds, but we close them and
bind them."
"This is why the Greeks dislike my methods. The
wound must have a drain for the pus that will fill it as the fever
strengthens. If I closed it tight, the pus would have nowhere to go
and poison his flesh. Then he would surely die, as most do. This
could save him."
"If he dies, I will cut your own appendix out
myself."
There was a cackle and a few words in a strange
language that echoed in Gaius's dreams.
"You would have a job finding it. Here is the
scar from when my father removed mine many years ago— with
the drain."
Gaius's father spoke with finality: "I will
trust your judgment then. You have my thanks and more if he
lives."
Gaius woke as a cool hand touched his
forehead. He looked into blue eyes, bright in skin the color of
walnut wood.
"My name is Cabera, Gaius. It is good to meet
you at last and at such a moment in your life. I have been
traveling for thousands of your miles. It is enough to make me
believe in the gods to have arrived here when I was needed.
No?"
Gaius couldn't respond. His tongue was thick and
solid in his mouth. As if reading his thoughts, the old man reached
over and brought a shallow bowl of water to his lips.
"Drink a little. The fever is burning the
moisture from your body."
The few drops slid into his mouth and loosened
the gummy saliva that had gathered there. Gaius coughed and his
eyes closed again. Cabera looked down at the boy and sighed for a
moment. He checked that there was no one around and then placed his
bony old hands over the wound, around the thin wood tube that still
dribbled sluggish fluid.
A warmth came from his hands that Gaius could
feel even in his dreams. He felt tendrils of heat spread up into
his chest and settle into his lungs, clearing away fluid.
The heat built until it was almost painful, and
then Cabera took his hands away and sat still, his breathing
suddenly harsh and broken.
Gaius opened his eyes again. He still felt too
weak to move, but the feeling of liquid moving inside him had gone.
He could breathe again.
"What did you do?" he murmured.
"Helped a little, yes? You needed a little help,
even after all my skills as a surgeon." The old face was deeply
lined with exhaustion, but his eyes still shone out from the dark
creases. The hand was pressed against his forehead again.
"Who are you?" Gaius whispered.
The old man shrugged. "I am still working on an
answer to that. I have been a beggar and the chief of a village. I
think of myself as a seeker after truths, with a new truth for each
place I reach."
"Can you help my mother?" Gaius kept his eyes
closed, but he could hear the soft sigh that came from the man.
"No, Gaius. Her problem is in her mind, or the
soul, perhaps. I can help a little with physical hurt, but nothing
more. It is much simpler. I am sorry. Sleep now, lad. Sleep is the
real healer, not I."
Darkness came, as if ordered.
When he woke again, Renius was sitting
on the bed, his face unreadable as always. As Gaius opened his
eyes, he took in the changed appearance of his teacher. His left
shoulder was heavily bound close to the body and there was a pallor
under the sun-darkened skin.
"How are you, lad? I can't tell you how good it
is to see you getting better. That old tribesman must be a miracle
worker." The voice at least was the same, curt and hard.
"I think he may be, yes. I'm surprised to see
you here after almost killing me," Gaius murmured, feeling his
heart pump faster as the memories came fresh. He felt sweat break
out on his forehead.
"I did not mean to cut you badly. It was a
mistake. I am sorry." The old man looked into his eyes for
forgiveness and found it there waiting for him.
"Don't be sorry. I am alive and you are alive.
Even you make mistakes."
"When I thought I'd killed you..." There was
pain in the old face.
Gaius struggled to sit up and found, to his
surprise, that his strength was growing. "You did not kill me. I
will always be proud to say it was you who trained me. Let there be
no more words on this. It is done."
For a second Gaius was struck by the
ridiculousness of a thirteen-year-old boy comforting the old
gladiator, but the words came easily as he realized he felt a
genuine affection for this man, especially now he could see him as
a man and not a perfect warrior, cut from some strange stone.
"Is my father still here?" he asked, hoping he
would be.
Renius shook his head. "He had to return to the
city, though he sat by your bed for the first few days, until we
were sure you were on the mend. The riots grow worse and Sulla's
legion has been recalled to establish order."
Gaius nodded and held out his clenched hand
before him. "I would like to be there, to see the legion come
through the gates."
Renius smiled at the young man's enthusiasm.
"Not this time, I think, but you will see more of the city when you
are well again. Tubruk is outside. Are you strong enough to see
him?"
"I feel much better, almost normal. How long has
it been?"
"A week. Cabera gave you herbs to keep you
asleep. Even so, you've healed incredibly quickly, and I've seen a
lot of wounds. That old man calls himself a seer. I think he does
have a little magic about him, that one. I'll call Tubruk."
As Renius rose, Gaius put out his hand. "Will
you be staying on?"
Renius smiled, but shook his head. "The training
is over. I am retiring to my own little villa, to grow old in
peace."
Gaius hesitated for a second. "Do you... have a
family?"
"I had one, once, but they are long gone. I will
spend my evenings with the other old men, telling lies and drinking
good red wine. I will keep an eye on your life, though. Cabera says
you are someone special, and I don't believe that old devil is
wrong very often."
"Thank you," Gaius said, unable to put into
words what the gladiator had given him.
Renius nodded and took his hand and wrist in a
firm grip. Then he was gone and the room felt suddenly empty.
Tubruk filled the doorway and smiled a slow
smile. "You look better. There is color in your cheeks."
Gaius grinned at him, beginning to feel like his
old self again. "I feel stronger. I have been lucky."
"No such thing. Cabera's responsible. He is an
amazing man. He must be eighty, but when your mother's latest
doctor complained about how you were treated, Cabera took him
outside and gave him a hiding. I haven't laughed so hard in a long
time. He has a lot of strength in those skinny arms and a fast
right cross as well. You should have seen it." He chuckled at the
memory, then his face became sober.
"Your mother wanted to see you, but we thought
it would... distress her too much until you were well. I'll bring
her in tomorrow."
"Now would be all right. I am not too
tired."
"No. You are still weak and Cabera says you
shouldn't be overworked with visitors."
Gaius's face showed mock surprise at Tubruk
taking advice from anyone.
Tubruk smiled again. "Well, as I said, he is an
amazing man, and after what he managed with you, what he says goes,
as far as your care is concerned. I only let Renius in here because
he is leaving today."
"I am glad you did. I would not have liked to
leave unfinished business."
"That's what I thought."
"I'm surprised you didn't take his head off,"
Gaius said cheerfully.
"I thought about it, but accidents happen in
training. He just went too far, that's all. For what it's worth,
he's proud of both of you. I think the old bastard developed a
liking for you, probably for your stubbornness— you're as bad
as he is, I think."
"How is Marcus?" Gaius asked.
"Itching to get in here, of course. You might
try to convince him it wasn't his fault. He says he should have
forced you to let him fight first, but—"
"It was my decision and I don't regret it. I
lived, after all."
Tubruk snorted. "Don't become overconfident. It
makes a man believe in the power of prayer to see you survive a
wound like that. If it weren't for Cabera, you would not have
survived it. You do owe him your life. Your father has been trying
to get him to accept some sort of reward, but he won't take
anything except his keep. I still don't really know why he is here.
He seems to believe... that we are moved by the gods like we throw
dice, and they wanted him to see the glorious city of Rome before
he was too old." The bluff freedman looked perplexed and Gaius
thought that it wouldn't help to mention his strange memory of the
heat from Cabera's hands. That would keep, no doubt.
"I will get some soup brought in. Would you like
some fresh bread with it?"
Gaius's stomach agreed wholeheartedly and Tubruk
left, smiling once again.
Renius gained the saddle of his
gelding with difficulty. His left arm felt useless, the pain more
than the simple ache of healing gashes he had known so many times
before.
He was pleased there were no servants or slaves
around to see his clumsiness. The great estate house seemed
deserted.
At last, he was able to grip the body of the
horse with his legs, allowing his muscles to support their weight.
Even with evening coming on, he would make it back to the city
before complete darkness. He sighed at the thought. What was there,
really, for him now? He would sell his town house, although the
prices had dropped during the rioting. Perhaps it would be better
to wait until the streets were quiet again. With Sulla leading his
legion into the city, there would be executions and public
floggings, but order would eventually be restored. It had happened
before. The Romans did not like war on their doorstep. They
thrilled to hear of broken armies of barbarians, but no one enjoyed
the brutality of martial law, with a curfew and the scarcity of
food that would inevitably—
He heard a sound behind him and his thoughts
were interrupted.
Marcus stood watching him, his face calm. "I
came to wish you goodbye."
Almost unconsciously, Renius noticed the
developed shoulders and the easy way of standing the boy had. He
would make a name for himself in some future the old warrior would
not be there to see.
A shiver touched him at the thought. No one
lives forever, not an Alexander, not a Scipio or a Hannibal, not
even a Renius.
"I am glad Gaius is healing," Renius replied
clearly.
"I know. I did not come to be angry at you, but
to apologize," Marcus said, looking at the sand at his feet.
Renius raised his eyebrows.
Marcus took a deep breath. "I am sorry I did not
kill you, you twisted, evil bastard. If our paths ever cross in
later years, I will take your throat out."
Renius swayed in the saddle, as if the words
were blows. He could feel the hatred and it cheered him up
immensely. Laughter threatened to overcome him as the little
cockerel made its threats, but he realized he could give a last
gift to his pupil, if he chose his words carefully.
"Such hatred will kill you, boy. And then you
won't be there to protect Gaius."
"I will always be there for him."
"No. Not until you can keep your temper. You
will die in some brawl in a stinking barroom, unless you can find
calm in yourself. You would have killed me, yes; at my age, my
stamina melts faster than I care to admit. But if we had met when I
was young, I would have cut through you faster than corn falls to
the knife. Remember that the next time you meet a young man with a
reputation to make." Renius grinned then and it was like seeing the
teeth of a shark, lips sliding back over a cruel expression.
"He may get the chance sooner than you think,"
Cabera said, coming out of the shadows.
"What? You were listening, you old devil?"
Renius said, still smiling, although his expression eased at the
sight of the healer, whom he had come to respect.
"Look to the city. You will not be going
anywhere tonight, I think," Cabera continued, his expression
serious.
Both Marcus and Renius turned to look out over
the hills. Although Rome was hidden by the rise of the land, an
orange glow grew brighter as they watched in horror.
"Jupiter's balls—they've set the city on
fire!" Renius spat. His beloved city.
For a moment, he thought of spurring the horse
away, knowing his place should be in the streets. Men knew his
face; he could help restore order. A cool hand touched his ankle
and he looked down into the face of old Cabera.
"I see the future occasionally. If you go there
now, you will be dead by dawn. This is truth."
Renius shifted his weight and the gelding
clopped its hooves on the sand, feeling his emotions.
"And if I stay?" he snapped.
Cabera shrugged. "You may die here too. The
slaves will be coming to loot this place. We don't have long
now.
Marcus gaped at the words. There were close to
five hundred slaves on the estate. If they all went wild, there
would be butchery. Without another word, he ran back into the
buildings, shouting for Tubruk to raise the alarm.
"Would you like a hand dismounting from that
fine gelding?" asked Cabera, his eyes wide and innocent.
Renius grimaced, suddenly able to muster his
usual anger despite the cheerful old man. "The gods don't tell us
what is going to happen," he said.
Cabera smiled wistfully. "I used to believe
that. When I was young and arrogant, I used to think I could
somehow read people, see their true selves and guess at what they
would do. It was years before I was humble enough to know it could
not be me. It isn't like glancing through a clear window. I just
look at you and toward the city and I feel death. Why not? Many men
have talents that could almost be magic to those without them.
Think of it like that if it makes you more comfortable. Come on.
You will be needed here tonight."
Renius snorted. "I suppose you have made a lot
of money with this talent of yours?"
"Once or twice I have, but money does not stay
with me. It steals out into the hands of wine merchants and loose
women and gamblers. All I have is my experiences, but they are
worth more than coin."
After a few moments of thought, Renius accepted
the helping hand and was not surprised to find it steady and
strong, not after seeing those skinny shoulders pull the heavy bow
in the training yard.
"You will have to hold my scabbard for me, old
man. I will be all right when my sword is out." He began to lead
the horse back into the stables, stroking its nose and murmuring
that they would ride later, when all the excitement was over. He
paused for a moment. "You can see the future?"
Cabera grinned and hopped from one foot to the
other, amused. "You want to know if you will live or die here,
yes?" he chattered. "That is what everyone asks."
Renius found his usual sourness coming back in
force. "No. I don't think I do want to know that. Keep it to
yourself, magician." He led the horse away without looking back,
his shoulders showing his irritation.
When he had gone, Cabera's face filled with
grief. He liked the man and was pleased to find that a sort of
decency still resided in Renius's heart, despite the fame and money
he had won in his life.
"Perhaps I should have let you go and wither
with the other old men, my friend," he muttered to himself. "You
might even have found happiness somewhere. Yet if you had left, the
boys would have been surely killed, so this is a sin I can live
with, I think." His eyes were bleak as he turned to the great gates
of the estate outer wall and began to push them closed. He wondered
if he too would die in this foreign land, unknown in his own. He
wondered if his father's spirit was close by and watching and
decided that it probably wasn't. His father at least had had the
sense not to sit in the cave and wait for the bear to come
home.
Galloping hoofbeats sounded in the
distance. Cabera held the main gate open as he watched the
approaching figure. Was it the first of the attackers or a
messenger from Rome? He cursed his vision that allowed him such
fragmentary glimpses into the future, and never anything that
involved himself. Here he was holding the door for the rider, so he
had had no warning. The clearest visions were those in which he
wasn't involved at all, which was probably meant to be a lesson
from the gods—one rather wasted on him, on the whole. He had
found that he could not live life as an observer.
A trail of dark dust followed the figure, barely
showing in the gloom of the gathering twilight.
"Hold the gate!" a voice commanded.
Cabera raised an eyebrow. What did the man think
he was doing?
Gaius's father, Julius, came thundering through
the opening. His face was red and his rich clothes were stained
with soot.
"Rome is on fire," he said as he jumped to the
ground. "But they will not get my home." In that moment, he
recognized Cabera and patted his shoulder in greeting.
"How is my son?"
"Doing well. I am..." Cabera trailed off as the
vigorous older version of Gaius strode away to organize the
defenses. Tubruk's name echoed around the internal corridors of the
estate.
Cabera looked puzzled for a moment. The visions
had changed a little—the man was a force of nature and might
just be enough to tip the balance in their favor.
His mind went blank again as he heard the shouts
rise in the fields. Muttering in frustration, Cabera climbed the
steps up to the estate wall, to use his eyes where his internal
vision had failed.
Darkness filled every horizon, but Cabera could
see pinpoint pricks of light moving in the fields, meeting and
multiplying like fireflies. Each would be a lamp or a torch held by
angry slaves, their blood warmed by the heat of the sky over the
capital. They were already marching toward the great estate.
CHAPTER
8
All the house servants and slaves
stayed loyal. Lucius, the estate doctor, unwrapped his bandages and
materials, spreading vicious-looking metal tools on a piece of
cloth on one of the wide kitchen tables. He collared two of the
kitchen boys as they were grabbing cleavers to help in the
battle.
"You two stay with me. You'll get your fill of
cutting and blood right here." They were reluctant, but Lucius was
more of an old family friend and his word had always been law to
them before. The lawlessness that was rife in Rome had not yet
spread to the estate.
Outside, Renius had everyone in the yard.
Grimly, he counted them. Twenty-nine men and seventeen women. "How
many of you have been in the army?" his voice rapped.
Six or seven hands rose.
"You men have priority for swords. The rest of
you go and find anything that will cut or crush. Run!"
The last word shocked the frightened men and
women out of their lethargy and they scattered. Those who had
already found weapons remained, their faces dark and full of
fear.
Renius walked up to one of them, a short, fat
cook with an enormous cleaver resting on his shoulder. "What's your
name?" he said.
"Caecilius," came the reply. "I'll tell my
children I fought with you when this is over."
"That you will. We don't have to break a full
assault. The attackers are out for easy targets to rape and rob. I
mean to make this estate a little too hard to crack for them to
bother with. How's your nerve?"
"Good, sir. I'm used to killing pigs and calves,
so I won't faint at a drop or two of blood."
"This is a little different. These pigs have
swords and clubs. Don't hesitate. Throat and groin. Find something
to block a blow—some sort of shield."
"Yes, sir, directly."
The man attempted to salute and Renius forced
himself to smile, biting back his temper at the sloppy manners. He
watched the fat figure run away into the buildings and wiped the
first beads of sweat from his brow. Strange that such men as that
should understand loyalty where so many others threw it aside at
the first hint of freedom. He shrugged. Some men would always be
animals and others would be... men.
Marcus walked out into the yard, his sword out
of its scabbard. He was smiling. "Would you like me to stand near
you, Renius? Cover your left side for you?"
"If I wanted help, puppy, I'd ask you. Until
that time, take yourself to the gate and keep a lookout. Call me
when you can see numbers."
Marcus snapped off a salute, much crisper than
that of the cook, yet held a little too long. Renius could sense
his insolence and considered breaking the boy's mouth for him. No,
right now he needed that stupid confidence of youth. He'd learn
soon enough what killing was like.
As the men returned, he sent them to positions
along the walls. They were far too few, but he believed what he had
said to Caecilius. The outbuildings would be burned, no doubt; the
granaries would probably go and the animals would be slaughtered,
but the main complex would not be worth the deaths it would take.
An army could take it in minutes, he knew—but these were
slaves, drunk on stolen wine and freedom that would vanish again
with the morning sun. One strong man with a good sword arm and a
ruthless temperament could handle a mob.
There was no sign yet of Julius or Cabera. No
doubt the former was putting on his breastplate and greaves, the
full uniform. But where had the old healer got to? That bow of his
would be a useful asset in the first few minutes of bloodshed.
The noise of the men on the walls was like a
flock of geese cackling in excited nervousness.
"Silence!" Renius snapped. "The next man to
speak will get back down here and face me."
In the sudden absence of chatter, they could
again hear the screams and yells of the slaves in the fields.
"We need to listen to what is going on outside.
Keep silent and stretch a few muscles. Keep a distance from the
next man along, so you can swing without cutting his head off."
The men shuffled apart from the little knots
that had formed out of a need for contact. The fear was in all
their eyes. Renius cursed to himself. Ten good men from his old
legion and he could hold this place until dawn. These were children
with sticks and knives. He took a deep breath as he tried to find
words to encourage them. Even the iron legions had needed speeches
to fire their blood, and they were confident of their skills.
"There is nowhere to run to. If the mob breaks
past you, everyone in this house will die. That is your
responsibility. You must not leave your position—we are
stretched thinly enough as it is. The wall is four feet
wide—one long pace. Learn it—if you take more than one
step back, you will fall."
He watched as the men shuffled around on the
wall, checking the width for themselves. His face hardened.
"I will keep fighters in the courtyard to deal
with any that get over the wall. Do not look down, even if you see
your friends being killed before you."
Cabera came out of the buildings, his bow
restrung in his hand. "This is how you inspire them? Your empire is
built on this sort of speech?" he muttered.
Renius frowned at him. "I have never lost a
battle. Not with my legion, not in the arena. I have never had a
man run or break under my command. If you run, you will pass me,
and I will not run."
"I won't run," Marcus said clearly, into the
silence.
Renius met his eyes, seeing a touch of the
madness he had witnessed before.
"Nor will I, Renius," said another.
The others all nodded and murmured that they
would sooner die, but still the faces of a few were puckered in
terror.
"Your children, your brothers, your fathers will
ask you if you did. Be sure you can look them all in the eye."
Heads nodded and shoulders lifted a little
straighter.
"Better," Cabera muttered again.
Julius moved easily through the open door onto
the courtyard. His breastplate and leggings were oiled and smooth.
His short scabbard swung as he walked. His face was a brutal mask
as an obvious rage burned inside. The men on the wall turned away
from him, looking out over the fields.
"I will take the head of every man from my
estate not within these walls," he growled.
Cabera shook his head quickly, not wanting to
disagree with the man while those on the wall were listening.
"Sir," he whispered. "They all have friends outside. Good men and
women who are trapped or unable to fight through to you. Such a
threat hurts their morale."
"It pleases me. Every man outside these walls
will be killed and I will pile their heads inside the gates! This
is my home and Rome is my city. We will cut out the filth that burn
the houses and scatter them on the wind! Do you hear me, little
man?" His internal fury built into incandescent rage. Renius and
Cabera stared at him as he climbed up the corner steps and walked
the length of the wall, shouting orders and noting sloppiness.
"For a man in politics, he has an unusual
approach to a problem," Cabera said quietly.
"Rome is full of men like him. That, my friend,
is why we have an empire, not empty speeches." Renius smiled his
shark smile and walked over to where the women waited in a quietly
murmuring group.
"What can we do?" asked a slave girl. He
recognized her as the one he had whipped so many months ago for
distracting the boys in their training. Her name was Alexandria, it
came back to him. While the others shrank from his gaze, as
befitted the rank of slaves of the house, she held his eyes and
waited for his answer.
"Fetch some knives. If anyone gets past the
wall, you must fall on them and keep stabbing until they are
dead."
A gasp came from a couple of the older women,
and one looked a little sick.
"Do you want to be raped and killed? Gods,
woman, I am not asking you to stand on the wall, just to protect
our backs. There are too few men to bring some down to protect you
as well!" He had no patience with their softness. Good for bed, but
when you had to depend on one... Gods!
Alexandria nodded. "Knives. The spare wood axe
is in the stable, unless someone has it. Go and search for some,
Susanna. Quickly now."
A matronly type, still looking pale, trotted off
on the errand.
"Can we carry water? Arrows? Fire? Is there
anything else we can do?"
"Nothing," Renius snapped, losing patience.
"Just make sure you kill anyone that lands in the yard. Put a knife
in their throat before they can regain their feet. It's a ten-foot
fall; there'll be a moment of weakness when you must strike."
"We won't let you down, sir," Alexandria
replied.
He held her gaze for a second longer, noting the
flash of hate that broke through the calm demeanor. He seemed to
have more enemies in this place than outside the walls!
"See you don't," he said curtly, and turned on
his heel.
The cook had returned with a large metal plate
strapped to his chest. His enthusiasm was embarrassing, but Renius
clapped him on the shoulder as he went to join the others.
Tubruk was standing with Cabera, holding a
strung bow in his large hands.
"Old Lucius is a fine shot with a bow, but he's
in the kitchens setting up for the wounded," he said, his face
grim.
"Get him out here. He can climb down later, when
he's done the job," Renius replied, without looking at him. He was
scanning the walls, noting the positions, looking for failing
nerves. They couldn't hold against a proper attack, so he prayed to
his household god that the slaves outside couldn't mount one.
"Will the slaves have bows?" he asked
Tubruk.
"One or two small ones for hares, perhaps.
There's not a decent bow on the estate except for this—and
Cabera's."
"Good. Otherwise, they could pick us all off.
We'll have to light the torches in the yard soon, to give them
light to kill by. It will silhouette the men, but they can't fight
in the dark, not this lot."
"They may surprise you, Renius. Your name has a
lot of power still. Remember the crowds at the games? Every man
here will have a story for all the generations of his family to
come, if he survives."
Renius snorted. "You'd better get to the wall;
there's a space on the far side."
Tubruk shook his head. "The others have accepted
you as leader, I know. Even Julius will listen to you once his
temper calms down. I will stay by Marcus, to protect him. With your
permission?"
Renius stared at him. Would nothing work
properly? Fat cooks, girls with knives, arrogant children? And now
his orders were to be ignored just before a fight? His right fist
lifted in a smashing uppercut that seemed to lift Tubruk up and
backward. He hit the dust unmoving and Renius ignored him, turning
to Cabera.
"When he awakes, tell him the boy can look after
himself. I know. Tell him to take his place or I will kill
him."
Cabera smiled, his eyes wide, but the old man's
face was like winter. In the distance, there was a sudden clamor of
metal beating on metal. Sound rose in a wave and chants filled the
black night. The torches were lit just as the first few slaves
reached the estate wall. Behind them were hundreds from Rome,
burning everything in their path.
CHAPTER
9
It very nearly ended before it had
begun. As Renius had thought, the wild-looking slaves that streamed
up to the estate walls had little idea of how to overcome armed
defenders and milled around, shouting and screaming. Although it
was a perfect opportunity for bowmen, Renius had shaken his head at
Cabera and Lucius, who watched with arrows ready and cold eyes.
There was still a chance the slaves would look for easier targets,
and a few arrows might fan their rage into white-hot
desperation.
"Open the gates!" someone shouted from the mass
of torchbearers. In the flickering light, it could have been a
festival if it were not for the brutal expressions of the
attackers. Renius watched them, weighing options. More and more
came from the rear. Clearly there were already more than a small
estate could support. Rogue slaves from Rome swelled the ranks with
nothing to lose, bringing hate and violence where reason might have
won the day. Those at the front were pushed forward and Renius
raised his arm, ready to have his two lonely archers send the first
shafts into the crowd. They could hardly miss at this range.
A man stepped forward. He was heavily muscled
and sported a thick black beard that made him look like a
barbarian. Probably, only days previously, he had been meekly
carrying rocks in a quarry, or training horses for some indulgent
master. Now his chest was splashed with someone else's blood and
his face was a sneer of hate, his eyes glimmering in the flames of
his torch.
"You on the walls. You are slaves like us. Kill
those who call themselves your betters. Kill them all and we will
welcome you as friends."
Renius dropped his arm and Cabera put a
feathered shaft through the man's throat.
In the moment of silence, Renius roared at the
crowd of slaves: "That is what you will get from me. I am Renius
and you will not pass here. Go home and wait for justice!"
"Justice like that?" came a scream of rage.
Another man ran to the walls and jumped for the high ledge. The
moment had arrived and suddenly the crowd howled and came forward
in a rush.
Few had swords. Most were armed, like the
defenders, with whatever they could find. Some had no weapons
except their frenzied rage, and Renius dispatched the first of
these with a slick blow to his neck, ignoring the quivering fingers
that scrabbled at his breastplate. All along the line, screams rose
above the crash of metal on metal and metal into flesh. Renius
could see Cabera drop his bow and raise a wicked-looking short
knife, with which he stabbed and leapt away, letting the bodies
fall back on their fellows. The old man stamped on fingers that
gained easier and easier holds on the wall as the bodies of the
dead served as props for new attackers.
Renius grew slightly light-headed and knew his
shoulder had torn again, feeling the sudden warmth from the
bandages accompanied by a blistering pain. He set his teeth against
it and slammed his gladius into a man's stomach, almost losing the
weapon in the slimy grip of his guts as he toppled backward.
Another took his place and another, and Renius could not see an end
to them. He took a blow from a length of timber that left him dazed
for a second. He staggered back, reeling, trying to find the energy
to lift the sword to meet the next one. His muscles ached and the
exhaustion he had felt fighting Marcus came back to hit him once
again.
"I am too old for this," he muttered, spitting
blood over his chin. There was a movement to his left and he swung
to meet it, too slowly. It was Marcus, grinning at him. He was
covered in blood and looked like a demon from the ancient
myths.
"I am a little worried about the speed of my low
guard. I wonder if you could observe it for me? Let me know where
the trouble is?"
As he spoke, he shoulder-barged a man as he
tried to straighten. The man fell badly, toppling backward onto his
head with a yell.
"I told you not to leave your position," Renius
gasped, trying not to show his weakness.
"You were going to be killed. That honor is
mine—not to be given away lightly to motherless scum like
these, I think!" He nodded over to the other side of the gate,
where the man Caecilius, known to most simply as Cook, was grinning
hugely, cutting around him with abandon.
"Come, pigs, come, cattle. I will cut you to
pieces." Underneath the fat there must have been muscle, for he
waved the enormous cleaver as if it were made of light wood.
"Cook is holding them without me. In fact, he is
having the time of his life," Marcus went on cheerfully.
Three men breasted the wall at once, leaping
from the pile of bodies that was now half as high as the top. The
first swung a sword at Marcus, who slid his own into the man's
chest from the side, letting the wild lunge carry the man onto the
cobbles of the yard below. The second he dispatched with a reverse
cut that caught the man at eye level, cutting into meat and bone.
He died instantly.
The third whooped with pleasure as he closed on
Renius. He knew the old man for who he was, and in his mind was
already telling the story to friends as Renius brought his sword up
under his guard, ripping into his chest.
Renius let the man fall, and the sword slid
clear. His left arm was hurting again, but this time it was a deep
ache. His chest pulsed with pain and he groaned.
"Are you hurt?" Marcus asked, without taking his
eyes off the wall.
"No. Get back to your post," Renius snapped, his
face suddenly gray.
Marcus looked at him for a long moment. "I think
I'll stay awhile longer," he said softly. More men surged over the
wall and his sword danced, licking from one throat to the next
unstoppably.
Gaius's father barely noticed those who fell
beneath his sword. He fought as he had been trained: thrust, guard,
reverse. The bodies piled most thickly at the foot of the gate, and
a little voice was telling him they should have broken by now. They
were only slaves. They did not have to pass this wall. Why didn't
they break? He would have the wall raised to the height of three
men when this was over.
It seemed as if they threw themselves onto his
sword, which wetted itself in their blood, drenching the wall and
gates with the gushing fluids, drenching him. His shoulders ached,
his arm was leaden. Only his legs were still strong beneath him.
They must break soon and look for easier targets, surely? Thrust,
guard, and reverse. He was locked in the legionary's rhythm of
death, but more and more were climbing the piles of flesh to get
into the estate. His sword had lost its edge on bone and blades,
and his first cut only scraped a man leaping at him. A dagger
punctured the hard muscle of his stomach and he grunted in agony,
whipping his sword through the man's jaw and dropping him.
Alexandria stood in the yard, in a pool of
darkness. The other women were crying softly to themselves. One was
praying. She could see Renius was exhausted and was disappointed
when the boy Marcus stepped in to save him. She wondered why he had
done it and widened her eyes at the contrast between them. On the
one side, the grizzled warrior, veteran of a thousand conflicts,
slow and in pain. On the other, Marcus, a smooth-moving murderer,
smiling as he brought death to the slaves that met his sword. It
did not matter if they had swords or clubs. He made them look
clumsy and then took away their strength in a slice or a blow. One
man clearly didn't realize he was dying. His blood poured from his
chest, but he still kept hacking away with a broken spear shaft,
his face manic.
Curious, Alexandria strained to see the man's
face, and she caught the stricken moment when he felt the pain and
saw the darkness coming.
All her life she had heard stories of men's
strength and glory, and they seemed to hang over this butchery like
golden ghosts, not quite fitting the reality. She looked for
moments of comradeship, of bravery in the face of death, but down
in the shadows, she could not see it.
The cook was enjoying the fight, that was
obvious. He had begun to sing some vulgar song about a market day
and pretty maids, thumping out the chorus with more volume than
tune, as he buried his cleaver in skulls and necks. Men fell from
his blade and his song grew more raucous as they dropped.
On her left, one of the defenders fell into the
yard from the walkway. He made no attempt to protect himself from
the impact, and his head smashed on the hard stone with a wet
sound. Alexandria shuddered and grabbed the shoulder of another
woman in the darkness. Whoever it was, was sobbing quietly to
herself, but there was no time for that.
"Quickly—they'll be coming through the
gap!" she hissed, pulling the other along with her, not trusting
herself to do the job alone.
As they moved, there was another crunching thud
from a different section of the wall. Screams of triumph sounded. A
man scrambled down, hanging for a moment before letting go and
falling the last couple of feet.
He spun, a wild, bloody nightmare, and as his
eyes lit up at the lack of defenders, Alexandria rammed her blade
up into his heart. Life escaped him with a sigh and another man hit
the cobbles nearby. The snap of his ankle was audible even over the
baying from outside the walls. The matronly Susanna, usually so
careful over the exact setting of the master's table at banquets,
slipped a skinning knife across his throat and walked away from him
as he shuddered and spasmed behind her.
Alexandria looked up at the bright ring of
torches above. At least they had light! How awful it was to die in
the dark.
"More torches here!" she yelled, hoping that
someone would answer.
Hands grabbed her from behind and her head was
wrenched to one side. She tensed for the agony that would come, but
the weight on her shoulders fell away suddenly and she turned to
see Susanna, her knife hand freshly covered in red wetness.
"Keep your spirits up, love. The night's not
over yet." Susanna smiled and the moment of panic passed for
Alexandria. She checked the yard with the others and barely winced
when another defender fell, this time screaming as he hit the yard.
Three men came through the gap he had left this time, with two more
visible as they struggled up over the slippery bodies.
All the women drew their knives and the
torchlight caught the blades, even down in the yard's blackness.
Before the men's eyes could adjust to the gloom, the women were on
them, gripping and stabbing.
Gaius came awake with a start. His
mother sat by the bed, holding a damp cloth. Its touch had awakened
him, and as he looked at her she pressed it to his forehead,
crooning gently to herself. In the distance, he could hear screams
and the clear sounds of battle. How had he remained asleep? Cabera
had given him a warm drink as the evening darkened. There must have
been something in it.
"What is going on, Mother? I can hear
fighting!"
Aurelia smiled at him sadly. "Shhh, my darling.
You must not excite yourself. Your life is slipping away and I have
come to make your last hours peaceful."
Gaius blanched a little. No, he felt weak, but
sound. "I am not dying. I am getting better. Now, what is happening
in the yard? I should get out there!"
"Shhh, shhh. I know they said you were getting
better, but I also know they lie to me. Now be still and I will
cool your brow for you."
Gaius looked at her in disbelief. All his life,
this shambling idiot had been coming to the fore, dragging away the
lively, quick-witted woman he missed. He winced in anticipation of
the screaming fit that would follow a wrong word from him.
"I want to feel the night air on my skin,
Mother. One last time. Please leave so that I may dress."
"Of course, my darling. I'll go back to my rooms
now that I have said goodbye to you, my perfect son." She giggled
for a moment and sighed as if she carried a great weight.
"Your father is out there getting himself killed
instead of looking after me. He has never looked after me properly.
We have not made love in years now."
Gaius didn't know what to say. He sat up and
closed his eyes against the weakness. He couldn't even hold his
hand in a fist, but he had to know what was going on. Gods, why
wasn't there someone around? Were they all out there? Tubruk?
"Please leave, Mother. I must dress. I want to
sit outside in my last moments."
"I understand, my love. Goodbye." Her eyes
filled with tears as she kissed his forehead, and then the little
room was empty again.
For a moment, he was tempted simply to fall back
on the pillows. His head felt thick and heavy and he guessed the
drug Cabera had given him would have kept him under till morning if
his mother hadn't had one of her ideas. Slowly, he swung his legs
out and pressed his feet against the floor. Weak. Clothes. One
thing at a time.
Tubruk knew they couldn't hold much
longer. He ran himself ragged trying to cover a gap where two other
men had once stood beside him. Again and again, he spun barely in
time to meet the attack of those who were creeping up on him as he
killed those in front. His breath came in wheezing gasps and, for
all his skill, he knew death was close.
Why would they not break? Damn all the gods to
hell, they must break! He cursed himself for not arranging for some
sort of fallback position, but there really was none. The walls
were the only defense the estate had, and these trembled on the
brink of being completely overwhelmed.
He slipped in blood and went down badly, the air
rushing out of him. A dagger punched into his side and a dirty bare
foot tried to crush his face, pressing his head down. He bit it and
distantly heard someone scream. He made it to one knee too late to
stop two scrambling figures dropping down into the yard. He hoped
the women could handle them. Gingerly he felt his side and winced
at the trickle of blood, watching it for air bubbles. There were
none and he could still breathe, though the air tasted like hot tin
and blood.
For a few moments, no one came at him and he was
able to look around the walls. Of the original twenty-nine, there
were fewer than fifteen left. They had worked miracles up on the
wall, but it wasn't going to be enough. Julius fought on,
despairing as his strength flowed from his wounds. He pulled the
dagger out of his flesh with a groan and instantly lost it in the
chest of the next man to face him. His breath was burning his
throat and he looked into the yard, seeing his son come out. He
smiled and the pride felt as if it would burst his chest. Another
blade entered him, shoved down into the gap between his breastplate
and his neck, deep into his lung. He spat blood and buried his
gladius into the attacker without seeing or knowing his face. His
arms dropped away and the sword fell from his grasp, clattering on
the stones of the courtyard below. He could only watch as the rest
came on.
Tubruk saw Julius collapse under a mass of
bodies that spilled past him over the narrow walkway and down into
the dark. He cried out his grief and rage, knowing he couldn't
reach him in time. Renius was still on his feet, but only Marcus's
care kept the old warrior from death, and even that blinding whirl
of blades was faltering as Marcus bled from wounds, his life
dribbling away in a score of gashes.
Gaius climbed up beside Tubruk, his face white
from the effort of dragging himself up the steps to the wall. His
gladius was out and he swung it as he reached the top, cutting into
a man levering himself up over the dark bodies. Tubruk slid his
blade into the man's ribs as Gaius swayed, but still the slave
wouldn't die. He flailed with a dagger and cut Gaius across the
face. Gaius hammered another blow at his neck and then the life was
gone. More faces appeared, shouting and cursing as they struggled
onto the slippery stones.
"Your father, Gaius."
"I know." Gaius's sword arm came up without a
quiver to block a spear, relic of some old battle. He stepped
inside its reach and took out the man's throat in a spray of bloody
wetness. Tubruk charged two more, making one drop over the edge,
but falling to his knees in the sticky mess of the floor as he did
so. Gaius cut the next down as he reversed his blade to plunge it
into Tubruk. Then he staggered back a pace, his face white under
the blood, his knees buckling. They waited together for the next
one up to the edge.
The night suddenly became brighter as the feed
barns were set alight, and still no new attacker came to end it for
him.
"One more," Tubruk swore through bloody lips. "I
can take one more with me. You should go down, you're not fit to
fight."
Gaius ignored him, his mouth a grim line. They
waited, but no one came. Tubruk edged closer to the outer wall and
looked over at the mangled limbs and broken carcasses that were
piled beneath the ledge, sprawled in slippery gore and glassy
expressions. There was no one there waiting for him with a dagger,
no one at all.
The light from the burning barns silhouetted
leaping figures as they capered around in the darkness. Tubruk
began to chuckle to himself, wincing as his lips split again.
"They've found the wine store," he said, and the
laughter could not be stopped, despite the wrenching pain it
brought.
"They are leaving!" Marcus growled,
amazed. He hawked and spat blood at the floor, wondering vaguely if
it was his own. He turned and grinned at Renius, seeing how he sat
slumped, propped against two carcasses. The old warrior just looked
at him, and for a moment Marcus began to remember his acid
dislike.
"I..." He paused and took two quick steps to the
old man. He was dying, that was obvious. Marcus pressed a hand made
black with blood and dirt onto Renius's chest, feeling the heart
flutter and miss. "Cabera! Over here, quickly!" he shouted.
Renius closed his eyes against the noise and the
pain.
Alexandria panted as if she were in
labor. She was exhausted and covered in blood, which she had never
imagined would be as sticky and foul as it actually was. They never
mentioned this in the stories either. The stuff was slippery for a
few moments, then gummed up your hands, making every surface tacky
to the touch. She waited for the next one to drop into the yard,
walking around almost drunkenly, her knife held in a stiff arm by
her side.
She stumbled over a body and realized it was
Susanna. She would never cut a goose again, or put fresh rushes
down in the kitchens, or feed scraps to stray puppies on her
shopping trips in Rome. This last thought brought clear-water tears
that ran through the mud and stink. Alexandria kept walking, kept
the patrol going, but no new enemies appeared, landing in the yard
like crows. No one came, but still she staggered on, unable to
stop. Two hours to dawn and she could still hear screaming in the
fields.
"Stay on the walls! No man leaves his
post until dawn," Tubruk bellowed around the yard. "They could
still be back."
He didn't think they would, though. The wine
store held the best part of a thousand wax-sealed amphorae. Even if
the slaves smashed a few, there should still be enough to keep them
happy until sunup.
After that final command was given, he wanted to
climb down himself to cross quickly to where Julius lay among the
dead, but someone had to hold the place.
"Go to your father, lad."
Gaius nodded once and descended, bracing himself
against the wall for support. The pain was agonizing. He could feel
that the operation incision had ripped open, and touching the area
left his fingers red and glistening. As he dragged himself back up
the stone steps to the defenders' positions, his wounds tore at his
will, but he held on.
"Are you dead, Father?" he whispered as he
looked down at the body. There could be no answer.
"Hold your positions, lads. It's over for now,"
Tubruk's voice snapped across the yard.
Alexandria heard the news and dropped the knife
onto the cobbles. Her wrists were being held by another slave girl
from the kitchens, saying something to her. She could not make out
the words over the screaming of the wounded, suddenly breaking into
what she had thought was silence.
I have been in silence and darkness
forever, she thought. I have seen hell.
Who was she again? The lines had blurred
somewhere in the evening, as she killed slaves who wanted freedom
as much as she did. The weight of it all bore her down to the
ground and she began to sob.
Tubruk could not resist any longer. He
limped down from his place on the wall and up again to where Julius
lay. He and Gaius looked down at the body without words.
Gaius tried to feel the reality of the man's
death. He could not. What lay on the floor was a broken thing, torn
and gashed, in spreading pools of a liquid that looked more like
oil than blood in the torchlight. His father's presence was
gone.
He spun round suddenly, his hand coming up to
ward something off.
"There was someone next to me. I could feel
someone standing there, looking down with me," he began to
babble.
"That would be him, all right. This is a night
for ghosts."
The feeling had gone, though, and Gaius
shivered, his mouth set tight against a grief that would drown
him.
"Leave me, Tubruk. And thank you."
Tubruk nodded, his eyes dark shadows as he
limped down the steps into the yard. Wearily, he climbed back up to
his old place on the wall and looked over each body he'd cut down,
trying to remember the details of each death. He could recognize
only a few and he soon gave that up and sat against a post, with
his sword between his legs, watching the waning flicker of fire
from the fields and waiting for the dawn.
Cabera placed his own palms over
Renius's heart.
"This is his time, I think. The walls inside him
are thin and old. Some are leaking blood where there should be
none."
"You healed Gaius. You can heal him," said
Marcus.
"He is an old man, lad. He was already weak and
I..." Cabera paused as he felt a hot blade touch his back. Slowly
and carefully, he turned his head to look at Marcus. There was
nothing to reassure him in the grim expression.
"He lives. Do your work, or I'll kill just one
more today."
At the words, Cabera could feel a shift and
different futures came into play, like gambling chips slotting into
position with a silent click. His eyes widened, but he said nothing
as he began to summon his energies for the healing. What a strange
young man who had the power to bend the futures around him! Surely
he had come to the right place in history. This was indeed a time
of flux and change, without the usual order and safe
progression.
He pulled an iron needle from the hem of his
robe and threaded it neatly and quickly. He worked with care,
sewing the bloody lips of slashed flesh together, remembering what
it was to be young, when anything seemed possible. As Marcus
watched, Cabera pressed his brown hands against Renius's chest and
massaged the heart. He felt it quicken and stifled an exclamation
as life came flooding back into the old body. He held his position
for a long time, until the etched pain eased from Renius's
expression and he looked as if he were merely asleep. As Cabera
rose to his feet, swaying with exhaustion, he nodded to himself as
if a point had been confirmed.
"The gods are strange players, Marcus. They
never tell us all their plans. You were right. He will see a few
more dawns and sunsets before the end."
CHAPTER
10
The fields were deserted by the time
the sun came over the horizon. Those who had broken into the wine
store were no doubt lying amongst the corn, still in the deep
slumber of drunkenness. Gaius looked out over the wall to see
sluggish smoke rising from the blackened ground. Scorched trees
stood stark and bare, and the winter grain still smoldered in the
skeletal wrecks of the feed barns.
It was a strangely peaceful scene, with even the
morning birds silent. The violence and emotions of the night before
were somehow distant when you were able to look out across the
fields. Gaius rubbed his face for a moment, then turned to walk
down the steps into the courtyard.
Brown stains spattered every white wall and
surface. Pools of blood congealed in corners and obscene smears
showed where the bodies had already been shifted, dragged outside
the gates to be taken to pits when carts could be arranged. The
defenders were laid out on clean cloths in cool rooms, their limbs
arranged for dignity. The others were simply thrown onto a growing
pile where arms and legs stuck out at angles. Gaius watched the
work and in the background heard the screams of the wounded as they
were stitched or made ready for amputation.
He burned with anger and had nowhere to unleash
it. He had been locked away for safety while everyone he loved
risked their lives and while his father had given his in defense of
his family and the estate. True, he had still been weak from the
operation, his scabs barely healed, but to be denied the chance to
help his father! There were no words, and when Cabera had come to
him to offer sympathy, Gaius ignored him until he went away. He sat
exhausted and trickled dust through his fingers, remembering
Tubruk's words years before and understanding them at last. His
land.
A slave approached, one whose name Gaius did not
know, but who bore wounds that showed he had been part of the
defense.
"The dead are all outside the gates, master.
Shall we find carts for them?"
It was the first time any man had addressed him
as anything but his own name. Gaius hardened his expression so as
not to reveal his surprise. His mind was full of pain and his voice
sounded as if from a deep pit.
"Bring lamp oil. I'll burn them where they
lie."
The slave ducked his head in acknowledgment and
ran for the oil. Gaius walked outside the gates and looked on the
ungainly mass of death. It was a grisly sight, but he could find no
sympathy in him. Each one there had chosen this end when they had
attacked the estate.
He doused the pile in oil, sloshing it over the
flesh and faces, into open mouths and unblinking eyes. Then he lit
it and found he couldn't watch the corpses burn after all. The
smoke brought back a memory of the raven he and Marcus had caught,
and he called a slave over to him.
"Fetch barrels from the stores and keep it
burning until they are ash," he said grimly. He went back inside as
the heat built and the smell followed him like an accusing
finger.
He found Tubruk lying on his side and biting
onto a piece of leather as Cabera probed a dagger wound in his
stomach in the great kitchen. Gaius watched for a while, but no
words were exchanged. He moved on, finding the cook sitting on a
step with a bloody cleaver still in his hand. Gaius knew his father
would have had words of encouragement for the man, who looked
desolate and lost. He himself could not summon up anything except
cold anger and stepped over the figure, who stared off into space
as if Gaius weren't there. Then he stopped. If his father would
have done it, then so would he.
"I saw you fight on the wall," he said to the
cook, his voice strong and firm at last.
The man nodded and seemed to gather himself. He
struggled to stand. "I did, master. I killed a great number, but I
lost count after a while."
"Well, I've just burned 149 bodies, so it must
have been many," Gaius said, trying to smile.
"Yes. No one got past me. I have never known
such luck. I was touched by the gods, I think. We all were."
"Did you see my father die?"
The cook stood and raised an arm as if to put it
on the boy's shoulder. At the last moment, he thought better of it
and turned the gesture into a wave of regret.
"I did. He took a great many with him and many
before. There were piles around him at the end. He was a brave man
and a good one."
Gaius felt his calm waver at the kind thought
and his jaw clenched. When he had overcome his surge of sorrow, he
spoke graciously: "He would be proud of you, I know. You were
singing when I caught a glimpse of you."
To his surprise, the man blushed deeply.
"Yes. I enjoyed the fight. I know there was
blood and death all around, but everything was simple, you see.
Anyone I could see was to be killed. I like things to be
clear."
"I understand," Gaius said, forcing a bleak
smile. "Rest now. The kitchens are open and soup will be brought
around soon."
"The kitchens! And I am here! I must go, master,
or the soup will be fit for nothing."
Gaius nodded and the man bolted off, leaving his
enormous cleaver resting against the step, forgotten. Gaius sighed.
He wished his own life were that simple, to be able to take on and
cast off roles without regret.
Lost in thought as he was, he didn't notice the
man's return until he spoke.
"Your father would be proud of you too, I think.
Tubruk says you saved him when he was exhausted at the end, and
with you injured as well. I would be proud if my son were as
strong."
Tears came unbidden to Gaius's eyes and he
turned away so the other would not see them. This was not the time
to be breaking apart, not when the estate was in a shambles and the
winter feed all burned. He tried to busy himself with the details,
but he felt helpless and alone and the tears came more strongly as
his mind touched again and again on his loss, like a bird pecking
at weeping sores.
* * *
"Ho there!" came a voice from outside
the main gate.
Gaius heard the cheerful tone and composed
himself. He was the head of the estate, a son of Rome and his
father, and he would not embarrass the old man's memory. He walked
the steps to the top of the wall, barely aware of the phantom
images that came rushing at him. Those were all from the dark. In
the sun the shadows had little reality.
At the top, he looked down on the bronze helmet
of a slim officer on a fine gelding that pawed the ground
restlessly as it waited. The officer was accompanied by a
contubernium of ten legionaries. Each man appeared alert and
smartly turned out. The officer looked up and nodded to Gaius. He
was around forty, tanned and fit-looking.
"We saw your smoke. Came to investigate in case
it was more of the slaves on the rampage. I see you've had trouble
here. My name is Titus Priscus. I am a centurion with Sulla's
legion, who have just blessed the city with their presence. My men
are ranging the countryside hereabouts, on cleanup and execution
detail. May I speak to the master of the estate?"
"That would be me," Gaius said. "Open the
gates," he called below.
Those words achieved what all the marauders of
the night before could not, and the heavy gates were pulled open,
allowing the men entry.
"Looks like you had it rough out here," Titus
said, all trace of cheerfulness gone from his voice and manner. "I
should have known from the pile of bodies, but... did you lose many
of your own?"
"Some. We held the walls. How is the city?"
Gaius was at a loss as to what to say to the man. Was he meant to
make polite conversation?
Titus dismounted and gave the reins to one of
his men.
"Still there, sir, although hundreds of wooden
houses went up and there are a few thousand dead in the streets.
Order has been restored for the moment, though I can't say it would
be safe to stroll out after dark. At the moment, we're rounding up
all the slaves we can find and crucifying one in ten to make an
example—Sulla's orders—on all the estates near
Rome."
"Make it one in three if they're on my land.
I'll replace them when things have settled. I don't like the
thought of letting anyone who fought against me last night go
without punishment."
The centurion looked at him for a second,
unsure. "Begging your pardon, sir, but are you able to give that
order? You'll excuse me checking, but, in the circumstances, is
there anyone to back you?"
For a second, anger flared in Gaius, but then he
remembered what he must look like to the man. There had been no
opportunity to clean himself up after Lucius and Cabera had
restitched and rebandaged his wounds. He was dirty and bloodstained
and unnaturally pale. He didn't know that his blue eyes were also
rimmed with red from the oily smoke and crying, and that only
something in his manner kept a seasoned soldier like Titus from
cuffing the boy for his insolence. There was something, though, and
Titus couldn't have said exactly what it was. Just a feeling that
this young man was not someone to cross lightly.
"I would do the same in your position. I will
fetch my estate manager, if the doctor is finished with him." Gaius
turned away without another word.
It would have been politeness to offer the men
refreshment, but Gaius was annoyed that he had to summon Tubruk to
establish his bona fides. He left them waiting.
Tubruk was at least clean and dressed in good,
dark clothing. His wounds and bandages were all concealed under his
woolen tunic and bracae—leather trousers. He smiled as
he saw the legionaries. The world was turning the right way up
again.
"Are you the only ones in this area?" he asked
without preamble or explanation.
"Er, no, but..." Titus began.
"Good." Tubruk turned to Gaius. "Sir, I suggest
you have these men send out a message that they will be delayed. We
need men to get the estate back in order."
Gaius kept his face as straight as Tubruk's,
ignoring Titus's expression. "Good point, Tubruk. Sulla has sent
them to help the outlying estates, after all. There is much work to
be done."
Titus tried again. "Here, now look..."
Tubruk noticed him once more. "I suggest you
take the message yourself. These others look fit enough for a
little hard labor. Sulla won't want you to abandon us to our
wreckage, I'm sure."
The two men faced each other and Titus sighed,
reaching up to remove his helmet.
"Never let it be said that I shirked a job of
work," he muttered. Turning to one of the legionaries, he jerked
his head toward the fields. "Get back out and join up with the
other units. Spread the word that I'll be held up here for a few
hours. Any slaves you find—tell them one in three, all
right?"
The man nodded cheerfully and took off. Titus
began to unbuckle his breastplate. "Right, where do you want my
lads to start?"
"You handle this, Tubruk. I'll go and check on
the others." Gaius turned away, showing his appreciation with a
quick grip of the other's shoulder as he left. What he wanted to do
was to go for a long walk in the woods by himself, or sit by the
river pool and settle his thoughts. That would come later, though,
after he had seen and spoken with every man and woman who had
fought for his family the night before. His father would have done
the same.
As he passed the stables, he heard a pulsing sob
from the darkness within. He paused, unsure whether he should
intrude. There was so much grief in the air, as well as inside him.
Those who had fallen had friends and relatives who had not expected
to begin this day alone. He stood for a moment longer, still
smelling the oily stink of the bodies he had fired. Then he went
into the cool shadow of the stalls. Whoever it was, their grief was
now his responsibility, their burdens were his to share. That was
what his father had understood and why the estate had prospered for
so long.
His eyes adjusted slowly after the morning
glare, and he peered into each stall to find the source of the
sounds. Only two held horses, and they nickered softly to him as he
reached and stroked their soft muzzles. His foot scraped against a
pebble and the sobbing ceased on the instant, as if someone were
holding their breath. Gaius waited, as still as Renius had taught
him to stand, until he heard the sigh of released air and knew
where the person was.
In the dirty straw, Alexandria sat with her
knees tight against her chin and her back to the far stone wall.
She looked up as he came into sight, and he saw that the dirt on
her face was streaked with tears. She was close to his own age,
maybe a year older, he recalled. The memory of her being flogged by
Renius came into his mind with a stab of guilt.
He sighed. He had no words for her. He crossed
the short distance and sat against the wall next to her, taking
care to leave space between them as he leaned back so that she
would not be threatened. The silence was calm and the smells and
feel of the stables had always been a comforting place to Gaius.
When he was very young, he too had escaped here to hide from his
troubles or from punishment to come. He sat, lost in memory for a
while, and it didn't seem awkward between them, though nothing was
said. The only sounds were the horses' movements and the occasional
sob that still escaped Alexandria.
"Your father was a good man," she whispered at
last.
He wondered how many times he would hear the
phrase before the day was over and whether he could stand it. He
nodded mutely.
"I'm so sorry," he said to her, feeling rather
than seeing her head come up to look at him. He knew she'd killed,
had seen her covered in blood down in the yard as he'd come out the
night before. He thought he understood why she was crying and had
meant to try to comfort her, but the words unlocked a rush of
sorrow in him and his eyes filled with tears. His face twisted in
pain as he bowed his head to his chest.
Alexandria looked at him in astonishment, her
eyes wide. Before she had time to think, she had reached over to
him and they were holding each other in the darkness, a blot of
private grief while the world went on in the sun outside. She
stroked his hair with one hand and whispered comfort to him as he
apologized over and over, to her, to his father, to the dead, to
those he had burned.
When he was spent, she began to release him, but
in the last fragment of time before he was too far, she pressed her
lips lightly on his, feeling him start slightly. She pulled away,
hugging her knees tightly, and, unseen in the shadows, her face
burned. She felt his eyes on her but couldn't meet them.
"Why did you...?" he muttered, his voice hoarse
and swollen from crying.
"I don't know. I just wondered what it would be
like."
"What was it like?" he replied, his voice
strengthening with amusement.
"Terrible. Someone will have to teach you to
kiss."
He looked at her, bemused. Moments before, he
had been drowning in a sorrow that would not diminish or wane in
him. Now he was noticing that beneath the dirt and wisps of straw
and smell of blood—beneath her own sadness—there was a
rare girl.
"I have the rest of the day to learn," he said
quietly, the words stumbling out past nervous blockages in his
throat.
She shook her head. "I have work to do. I should
be back in the kitchen."
In a smooth movement, she rose from her crouch
and left the stall, as if she were going to walk right away without
another word. Then she paused and looked at him.
"Thank you for coming to find me," she said, and
walked out into the sunlight.
Gaius watched her go. He wondered if she had
realized he had never kissed a girl before. He could still feel a
light pressure on his lips as if she had marked him. Surely she
hadn't meant "terrible"? He saw again the stiff way she had carried
herself as she left the stables. She was like a bird with a broken
wing, but she would heal with time and space and friends. He
realized he would as well.
Marcus and Tubruk were laughing at
something Cabera had said as Gaius came into the room. At the sight
of him, they all fell silent.
"I came... to thank you. For doing what you did
on the walls," Gaius began.
Marcus cut him off, stepping closer and grabbing
his hand. "You never need to thank me for anything. I owe more than
I could ever pay to your father. I was sorry to hear he fell at the
last."
"We came through. My mother lives, I live. He
would do it again if offered the chance, I know. You took some
wounds?"
"Toward the end. Nothing serious, though. I was
untouchable. Cabera says I will be a great fighter." Marcus broke
into a grin.
"Unless he gets himself killed, of course. That
would slow him down a little," Cabera muttered, busying himself
with applying wax to the wood of his bow.
"How is Renius?" Gaius asked.
Both seemed to pause for a second at the
question. Marcus looked evasive. There was something odd there,
Gaius thought.
"He'll live, but it will be a long time before
he's ever fit again," Marcus said. "At his age an infection would
be the end of him, but Cabera says he'll make it."
"He will," Cabera said firmly.
Gaius sighed and sat down. "What happens now?
I'm too young to take my father's place, to represent his interests
in Rome. In truth, I would not be happy running only the estate,
but I never had time to learn about the rest of his affairs. I
don't know who looked after his wealth, or where the deeds to the
land are." He turned to Tubruk. "I know you are familiar with some
of it and I would trust you to control the capital until I am
older, but what do I do now? Continue to hire tutors for Marcus and
myself? Life seems suddenly vague, without direction, for the first
time."
Cabera stopped polishing at this outburst.
"Everyone feels this at some time. Did you think I planned to be
here when I was a young boy? Life has a way of taking twists and
turns you did not expect. I would not have it any other way, for
all the pain it brings. Too much of the future is already set; it
is good that we cannot know every detail or life would become a
gray, dull sort of death."
"You will have to learn fast, that is all,"
Marcus continued, his face alight with enthusiasm.
"With Rome as it is? Who will teach me? This is
not a time of peace and plenty, where my lack of political skill
can be overlooked. My father was always very clear about that. He
said Rome was full of wolves."
Tubruk nodded grimly. "I will do what I can, but
already some will be looking at which estates have been weakened
and might be bought cheaply. This is not the time to be
defenseless."
"But I don't know enough to protect us!" Gaius
went on. "The Senate could take everything I own if I don't pay
taxes, for example, but how do I pay? Where is the money and where
do I take it and how much should I pay? Where are the names of my
father's clients? You see?"
"Be calm," Cabera said, beginning the slow
strokes along the wood of his bow again. "Think instead. Let us
begin with what you do have and not what you don't know."
Gaius took a deep breath and once again wished
his father were there to be the rock of certainty in his life.
"I have you, Tubruk. You know the estate, but
not the other dealings. None of us knows anything about politics or
the realities of the Senate."
He looked again at Cabera and Marcus. "I have
you two and I have Renius on hand, but none of us has even entered
the Senate chambers, and my father's allies are strangers to
us."
"Concentrate on what we have, otherwise
you will despair. So far you have named some very capable people.
Armies have been started with less. What else?"
"My mother and her brother Marius, but my father
always said he was the biggest wolf of them all."
"We need a big wolf right now, though. Someone
who knows the politics. He is your blood, you must go and see him,"
Marcus said quietly.
"I don't know if I can trust him," Gaius said,
his expression bleak.
"He will not desert your mother. He must help
you to keep control of the estate, if only for her," Tubruk
declared.
"True. He has a place in Rome I could visit.
There is no one else to help, so it must be him. He is a stranger
to me, though. Since my mother began her sickness, he has rarely
been to the estate."
"That will not matter. He will not turn you
away," Cabera said peacefully, eyeing the shine he had wrought in
the bow.
Marcus looked sharply at the old man. "You seem
very sure," he said.
Cabera shrugged. "Nothing is sure in this
world."
"Then it is settled. I will send a messenger
before me and visit my uncle," Gaius said, something of his gloom
lifting.
"I will come with you," Marcus said quickly.
"You are still recovering from your wounds and Rome is not a safe
place at the moment, you know."
Gaius smiled properly for the first time that
day.
Cabera muttered, as if to himself, "I came to
this land to see Rome, you know. I have lived in high mountain
villages and met tribes thought lost to antiquity on my travels. I
believed I had seen everything, but all the time people told me I
had to visit Rome before I died. I said to them, 'This lake is true
beauty,' and they would reply, 'You should see Rome.' They say it
is a wondrous place, the center of the world, yet I have never
stepped inside its walls."
Both boys smiled at the old man's transparent
subterfuge.
"Of course you will come. I consider you a
friend of the house. You will always be welcome anywhere I am, on
my honor," Gaius replied, his tone formal, as if repeating an
oath.
Cabera laid the bow aside and stood with his
hand outstretched. Gaius took it firmly.
"You too will always be welcome at my home
fires," Cabera said. "I like the climate around here, and the
people. I think my travels will wait for a little while."
Gaius released the grip, his expression
thoughtful. "I will need good friends around me if I am to survive
my first year of politics. My father described it as walking
barefoot in a nest of vipers."
"He seems to have had a colorful turn of phrase,
and not a high opinion of his colleagues," Cabera said, giving out
a dry chuckle. "We will tread lightly and stamp on the occasional
head as it becomes necessary."
All four smiled and felt the strength that comes
from such a friendship, despite the differences in age and
background.
"I would like to take Alexandria with us," Gaius
added suddenly.
"Oh, yes? The pretty one?" Marcus replied, his
face lighting up.
Gaius felt his cheeks grow red and hoped it
wasn't obvious. Judging by the expressions of the others, it
was.
"You will have to introduce me to this girl,"
Cabera said.
"Renius whipped her, you know, for distracting
us at practice," Marcus continued.
Cabera tutted to himself. "He can be charmless.
Beautiful women are a joy in life..."
"Look, I—" Gaius began.
"Yes, I'm sure you want her simply to hold the
horses or something. You Romans have such a way with women, it is a
wonder your race has survived."
Gaius left the room after a while, leaving
laughter behind him.
* * *
Gaius knocked at the door of the room
where Renius lay. He was alone for the moment, although Lucius was
nearby and had just been in to check the wounds and stitches. It
was dark in the room and at first Gaius thought the old man was
asleep.
He turned to leave rather than disturb the rest
he must need, but a whispering voice stopped him.
"Gaius? I thought it was you."
"Renius. I wanted to thank you." Gaius
approached the bed and drew up a chair beside the figure. The eyes
were open and clear and Gaius blinked as he took in the features.
It must have been the dim light, but Renius looked younger. Surely
not, yet there was no denying that some of the deep-seamed wrinkles
had lessened and a few black hairs could be seen at the temples,
almost invisible in the light, but standing out against the white
bristles.
"You look... well," Gaius managed.
Renius gave a short, hard chuckle. "Cabera
healed me and it has worked wonders. He was more surprised than
anyone, said I must have a destiny or something, to be so affected
by him. In truth, I feel strong, although my left arm is still
useless. Lucius wanted to take it off, rather than have it flapping
around. I... may let him, when the rest of me has healed."
Gaius absorbed this in silence, fighting back
painful memories.
"So much has happened in such a short time," he
said. "I am glad you are still here."
"I couldn't save your father. I was too far away
and finished myself. Cabera said he died instantly, with a blade in
his heart. Most likely, he wouldn't even have known it."
"It's all right. You don't need to tell me. I
know he would have wanted to be on that wall. I would have wanted
it too, but I was left in my room, and..."
"You got out, though, didn't you? I'm glad you
did, as it turned out. Tubruk says you saved him right at the end,
like a... reserve force." The old man smiled and coughed for a
while. Gaius waited patiently until the fit was over.
"It was my order to leave you out of it. You
were too weak for hours of fighting, and your father agreed with
me. He wanted you safe. Still, I'm glad you got out for the end of
it."
"So am I. I fought with Renius!" Gaius said, his
eyes brimming with tears, though he smiled.
"I always fight with Renius," muttered the old
man. "It isn't that much to sing about."
CHAPTER
11
The dawn light was cold and gray; the
skies clear over the estate lands. Horns sounded low and mournful,
drowning the cheerful birdsong that seemed so inappropriate for a
day marking the passing of a life. The house was stripped of
ornament save for a cypress branch over the main gate to warn
priests of Jupiter not to enter while the body was still
inside.
Three times the horns moaned and finally the
people chanted, "Conclamatum est"—"The sadness has
been sounded." The grounds inside the gates were filled with
mourners from the city, dressed in rough wool togas, unwashed and
unshaven to show their grief.
Gaius stood by the gates with Tubruk and Marcus
and watched as his father's body was brought out feetfirst and laid
gently in the open carriage that would take him to the funeral
pyre. The crowd waited, heads bowed in prayer or thought as Gaius
walked stiffly to the body.
He looked down into the face he had known and
loved all his life and tried to remember it when the eyes could
open and the strong hand reach out to grip his shoulder or ruffle
his hair. Those same hands lay still at his sides, the skin clean
and shining with oil. The wounds from the defense of the walls were
covered by the folds of his toga, but there was nothing of life
there. No rise and fall of breath; the skin looked wrong, too pale.
He wondered if it would be cold to the touch, but he could not
reach out.
"Goodbye, my father," he whispered, and almost
faltered as grief swelled in him. The crowd watched and he steadied
himself. No shame in front of the old man. Some of them would be
friends, unknown to him, but some would be carrion birds, come to
judge his weakness for themselves. He felt a spike of anger at this
and was able to smother the sadness. He reached out and took his
father's hand, bowing his head. The skin felt like cloth, rough and
cool under his grip.
"Conclamatum est," he said aloud, and the
crowd murmured the words again.
He stood back and watched in silence as his
mother approached the man who had been her husband. He could see
her shaking under her dirty wool cloak. Her hair had not been
tended by slaves and stood out in wild disarray. Her eyes were
bloodshot and her hand trembled as she touched his father for the
last time. Gaius tensed, and begged inside that she would complete
the ritual without disgrace. Standing so close, he alone could hear
the words she said as she bent low over the face of his father.
"Why have you left me alone, my love? Who will
now make me laugh when I am sad and hold me in the darkness? This
is not what we dreamed. You promised me you would always be there
when I am tired and angry with the world."
She began to sob in heaves and Tubruk signaled
to the nurse he'd hired for her. As with the doctors, she had
brought no physical improvement, but Aurelia seemed to draw comfort
from the Roman matron, perhaps simply from female companionship. It
was enough for Tubruk to keep her on, and he nodded as she took
Aurelia's arm gently and led her away into the darkened house.
Gaius breathed out slowly, suddenly aware of the
crowd again. Tears came into his eyes and were ignored as they
brimmed and held against his lashes.
Tubruk approached and spoke quietly to him. "She
will be all right," he said, but they both knew it wasn't true.
One by one, the other mourners came to pay their
respects to the body, and more than a few spoke to Gaius afterward,
praising his father and pressing him to contact them in the
city.
"He was always straight with me, even when
profit lay the other way," said one gray-haired man in a rough
toga. "He owned a fifth part of my shops in the city and lent me
the money to buy them. He was one of the rare ones you could trust
with anything, and he was always fair."
Gaius gripped his hand strongly. "Thank you.
Tubruk will make arrangements to discuss the future with you."
The man nodded. "If he is watching me, I want
him to see me being straight with his son. I owe him that and
more."
Others followed and Gaius was proud to see the
genuine sadness his father had left behind. There was a world in
Rome that the son had never seen, but his father had been a decent
man and that mattered to him, that the city was a little poorer
because his father would no longer walk the streets.
One man was dressed in a clean toga of good
white wool, standing out in the crowd of mourners. He did not pause
at the carriage, but came straight to Gaius.
"I am here for Marius the consul. He is away
from the city, but wanted to send me to let you know your father
will not be forgotten by him."
Gaius thanked him politely, his mind working
furiously. "Send the message that I will call on Consul Marius when
he is next in the city."
The man nodded. "Your uncle will receive you
warmly, I am sure. He will be at his town house three weeks from
today. I will let him know." The messenger made his way back
through the crowd and out of the gates, and Gaius watched him
go.
Marcus moved to his shoulder, his voice low.
"Already you are not so alone as you were," he said.
Gaius thought of his mother's words. "No. He has
set my standard and I will meet it. I will not be a lesser man when
I lie there and my son greets those who knew me. I swear it."
Into the dawn silence came the low voices of the
praeficae women, singing softly the same phrases of loss
over and over. It was a mournful sound and the world was filled
with it as the horses pulled the carriage with his father out of
the gates in slow time, with the people falling in behind, heads
bowed.
In only a few minutes the courtyard was empty
again, and Gaius waited for Tubruk, who had gone inside to check on
Aurelia.
"Are you coming?" Gaius asked him as he
returned.
Tubruk shook his head. "I will stay to serve
your mother. I don't want her alone at this time."
Tears came again into Gaius's eyes and he
reached out for the older man's arm.
"Close the gates behind me, Tubruk. I don't
think I can do it."
"You must. Your father is gone to the tomb and
you must follow, but first the gates must be shut by the new
master. It is not my place to take yours. Close up the estate for
mourning and go and light the funeral pyre. These are your last
tasks before I will call you master. Go now."
Words would not come from his throat and Gaius
turned away, pulling the heavy gates shut behind him. The funeral
procession had not gone far with their measured step, and he walked
after them slowly, his back straight and his heart aching.
The crematorium was outside the city, near the
family tomb. For decades, burials within the walls of Rome had been
forbidden as the city filled every scrap of available space with
buildings. Gaius watched in silence as his father's body was laid
on a high pyre that hid him from view in the center of it. The wood
and straw were soaked with perfumed oils, and the odor of flowers
hung heavily in the air as the praeficae changed their dirge to one
of hope and rebirth. Gaius was brought a sputtering torch by the
man who had prepared his father's body for the funeral. He had the
dark eyes and calm face of a man used to death and grief, and Gaius
thanked him with distant politeness.
Gaius approached the pyre and felt the gaze of
all the mourners on him. He would show them no public weakness, he
vowed to himself. Rome and his father watched to see if he would
falter, but he would not.
Close, the smell of the perfumes was almost
overpowering. Gaius reached out with a silver coin and opened his
father's loose mouth, pressing the metal against the dry coolness
of the tongue. It would pay the ferryman, Charon, and his father
would reach the quiet lands beyond. He closed the mouth gently and
stood back, pressing the smoking torch against the oily straw
stuffed between the branches at the base of the pyre. A memory of
the smell of burning feathers slipped into his mind and was gone
before he could identify it.
The fire grew quickly, with popping twigs and a
crackle that was loud against the soft songs of the praeficae.
Gaius stepped back from the heat as his face reddened, and held the
torch limply in his hand. It was the end of childhood while he was
yet a child. The city called him and he did not feel ready. The
Senate called him and he was terrified. But he would not fail his
father's memory and would meet the challenges as they came. In
three weeks, he would leave the estate and enter Rome as a citizen,
a member of the nobilitas.
At last, he wept.
CHAPTER
12
"Rome—the largest city in the
world," Marcus said, shaking his head in wonder as they passed into
the vast paved expanse of the forum. Great bronze statues gazed
down on the small group as they walked their horses through the
bustling pedestrians.
"You don't realize how big everything is until
you get up close," Cabera replied, his usual confidence muted. The
pyramids of Egypt seemed larger in his memory, but the people there
looked always to the past with their tombs. Here, the great
structures were for the living and he felt the optimism of it.
Alexandria too seemed awed, though in part it
was at how much everything had changed in the five years since
Gaius's father had bought her to work in his kitchens. She wondered
if the man who had owned her mother was somewhere still in the city
and shuddered as she recalled his face, remembering how he had
treated them. Her mother had never been free and died a slave after
a fever struck her and several others in the slave pens beneath one
of the sale houses. Such plagues were fairly common and the big
slave auctions were accustomed to passing over a few bodies each
month, accepting a few coins for them from the ash makers. She
remembered, though, and the waxen stillness of her mother still
pressed against her arms in dreams. She shuddered again and shook
her head as if to clear it.
I will not die a slave, she thought to
herself, and Cabera turned to look at her, almost as if he had
heard the thought. He nodded and winked and she smiled at him. She
had liked him from the first. He was another who didn't quite fit,
wherever he found himself.
I will learn useful skills and make things to
sell, and I will buy myself free, she thought, knowing the
glory of the forum was affecting her and not caring. Who wouldn't
dream in a place that looked as if it had been built by gods? You
could see how to make a hut, just by looking at it, but who could
imagine these columns being raised? Everything was bright and
untouched by the filth she remembered, narrow dirty streets and
ugly men hiring her mother by the hour, with the money going to the
owner of the house.
There were no beggars or whores in the forum,
only well-dressed, clean men and women, buying, selling, eating,
drinking, arguing politics and money. On each side, the eye was
filled with gargantuan temples in rich stone; huge columns with
their heads and feet gilded; great arches erected for military
triumphs. Truly, this was the beating heart of empire. Each of them
could feel it. There was a confidence here, an arrogance. While
most of the world scrubbed in the dirt still, these people had
power and astonishing wealth.
The only sign of the recent troubles was the
grim presence of legionaries standing to attention at every corner,
watching the crowds with cold eyes.
"It is meant to make a man feel small," Renius
muttered.
"But it does not!" Cabera countered, gaping
around him. "It makes me feel proud that man can build this. What a
race are we!"
Alexandria nodded silently. It showed that
anything could be achieved—even, perhaps, freedom.
Small boys advertised their masters' wares from
hundreds of tiny shops along the edges: barbers, carpenters,
butchers, stonemasons, gold and silver jewelers, potters, mosaic
makers, rug weavers—the list was endless, the colors and
noises a blur.
"That is the temple of Jupiter, on the
Capitoline hill. We will come back and make a sacrifice when we
have seen your uncle Marius," Tubruk said, relaxed and smiling in
the morning sun. He was leading the group and raised his arm to
halt them.
"Wait. That man's path will cross ours. He is a
senior magistrate and must not be hindered."
The others drew up and halted.
"How do you know who he is?" Marcus asked.
"Do you see the man beside him? He is a lictor,
a special attendant. Do you see that bundle on his shoulder? Those
are wooden rods for scourging and a small axe for beheading. If the
magistrate were bumped by one of our horses, say, he could order a
death on the spot. He needs neither witnesses nor laws to apply.
Best to avoid them completely, if we can."
In silence, they all watched the man and his
attendant as they crossed the plaza, seemingly unaware of the
attention.
"A dangerous place for the ignorant," Cabera
whispered.
"Everywhere is, in my experience," Renius
grunted from the back.
Past the forum, they entered lesser streets that
abandoned the straight lines of the main ones. Here, there were
fewer names on the intersections. The houses were often four or
even five stories high, and Cabera, in particular, gaped at
these.
"The view they must have! Are they very
expensive, these top houses?"
"Apartments, they are called, and no, they are
the cheapest," said Tubruk. "They have no running water at that
height and are in great danger from fire. If one starts on the
bottom floor, those at the top rarely get out. You see how the
windows are so small? That is to keep out the sun and rain, but it
also means you can't jump from them."
They wound their way through the heavy
stepping-stones that crossed the sunken roads at intervals. Without
these, the fastidious pedestrians would have had to step down into
the slippery muck left by horses and donkeys. The wheels of carts
had to be set a regulation width apart so that they could cross in
the gaps, and Cabera nodded to himself as he watched the
process.
"This is a well-planned city," he said. "I have
never seen another like it."
Tubruk laughed. "There is no other like it. They
say Carthage was of similar beauty, but we destroyed that more than
fifty years ago, sowing the land with salt so that it could never
again rise in opposition to us."
"You speak almost as if a city is a living
thing," Cabera replied.
"Is it not? You can feel the life here. I could
feel her welcoming me as I came through the gate. This is my home,
as no other house can be."
Gaius too could feel the life around him.
Although he had never lived within the walls, it was his home as it
was Tubruk's—maybe more so, as he was nobilitas, born free
and of the greatest people in the world. My people built
this, he thought. My ancestors put their hands on these
stones and walked these streets. My father may have stood at that
corner, and my mother could have grown up in one of the gardens I
can glimpse off the main street.
His grip on the reins relaxed and Cabera looked
at him and smiled, sensing the change of mood.
"We are nearly there," Tubruk said. "At least
Marius's house is well away from the smell of dung in the streets.
I don't miss that, I can assure you."
They turned off the busy road and walked the
horses up a steep hill and a quieter, cleaner street.
"These are the houses of the rich and powerful.
They have estates in the country but mansions here, where they
entertain and plot for more power and even more wealth," Tubruk
continued, his voice blank enough of emotion to make Gaius glance
at him. The houses were sealed from the public gaze by iron gates,
taller than a man. Each was numbered and entered by a small door
for those on foot. Tubruk explained that this was only the least
part; the buildings went back and back, from private baths to
stables to great courtyards, all hidden from the vulgar
plebeians.
"They set great store by privacy in Rome,"
Tubruk said. "Perhaps it is part of living in a city. Certainly, if
you were just to drop in at a country estate, you would be unlikely
to cause offense, but here you must make appointments and announce
yourself and wait and wait until they are ready to receive you.
This is the one. I will tell the gatekeeper we have arrived."
"I'll leave you here then," Renius said. "I must
go to my own house and see if it has been damaged in the
rioting."
"Do not forget the curfew. Be inside as the sun
sets, my friend. They are still killing everyone left on the
streets after dark."
Renius nodded. "I'll watch out."
He turned his horse away and Gaius reached out
to put a hand on his good right arm.
"You're not leaving? I thought..."
"I must check my house. I need to think alone
for a while. I don't feel ready to settle down with the other old
men, not anymore. I will be back tomorrow dawn to see you and...
well, tomorrow dawn it is." He smiled and rode away.
As he trotted down the hill, Gaius noted again
the darkness of his hair and the energy that filled the man's
frame. He turned and looked at Cabera, who shrugged.
"Gatekeeper!" Tubruk shouted. "Attend to
us."
After the heat of the Roman streets,
the cool stone corridors that led into the house grounds were a
welcome relief. The horses and bags had been whisked away, and the
four visitors were taken into the first building, beckoned on by an
elderly slave.
They stopped at a door of gold wood and the
slave opened it, gesturing inside.
"You will find all you need, Master Gaius.
Consul Marius has given you leave to wash and change after your
journey. You are not expected to appear before him until sunset,
three hours from now, when you will dine. Shall I show your
companions the way to the servants' rooms?"
"No. They will stay with me."
"As you wish, master. Shall I take the girl to
the slave quarters?"
Gaius nodded slowly, thinking. "Treat her with
kindness. She is a friend of my house."
"Of course, sir," replied the man, motioning to
Alexandria.
She flashed a glance at Gaius and the expression
was unreadable in her dark eyes.
Without another word, the quiet little man left,
his sandals making no noise on the stone floor. The others looked
at one another, each taking some form of comfort from the company
of friends.
"I think she likes me, that one," Marcus mused
to himself.
Gaius looked at him in surprise and Marcus
shrugged. "Lovely legs, as well." He went in to their quarters,
chuckling, leaving Gaius stupefied behind him.
Cabera whistled softly as he entered the room.
The ceiling was forty feet from the mosaic floor, and a series of
brass rafters crossed and recrossed the space. The walls were
painted in the dark reds and oranges that they had seen so often
since entering the city, but the floor was the thing that caught
the attention, even before they looked up at the vault of a roof.
It was a series of circles, gripping a marble fountain in the
middle of the huge room. Each circle contained running figures,
racing to catch the one in front and frozen in the attempt. The
outer circles were figures from the markets, carrying their wares,
then, as the eye followed the circles inward, different aspects of
society could be seen. There were the slaves, the magistrates, the
members of the Senate, legionaries, doctors. One circle contained
only kings, naked except for their crowns. The innermost ring,
forming a belt around the actual fountain, contained pictures of
the gods, and they alone were still. They stood looking up at all
the running hordes that sprinted around but could never leap from
one circle to another.
Gaius walked across the rings to the fountain
and drank, using a cup that rested on the marble edge. In truth, he
was tired, and impressed as he was by the beauty of the room, the
most important fact was that no food or couches were included in
the splendor. The others followed him through an arch into the next
room.
"This is more like it," Marcus said cheerfully.
A polished table was laid with food: meat, bread, eggs, vegetables,
and fish. Fruit was piled in bowls of gold. Soft couches stood
around invitingly, but another door led onward and Gaius could not
resist looking.
The third room had a deep pool in the center.
The water steamed invitingly and bare wooden benches lined the
walls, piled high with soft white cloths. Robes hung from stands by
the water, and four male slaves stood by low tables, ready to give
massages if needed.
"Excellent," Tubruk said. "Your uncle is a fine
host, Gaius. I am for a bath first, before I eat." As he spoke, he
began to pull off his clothes. One of the slaves walked to him and
held out an arm for the garments as they were removed. When Tubruk
was naked, the slave disappeared with them out of the only door. A
few moments later, another entered and took up his place at the
tables.
Tubruk lowered himself completely into the
water, holding his breath as he slid below the surface and relaxing
every muscle in the heat. By the time he surfaced, Gaius and Marcus
had scrambled out of their garments, flung them at another slave,
and plunged into the opposite end, naked and laughing.
A slave held his arm out for Cabera's clothes,
and the old man frowned at him. Then he sighed and began stripping
the robe from his skinny body.
"Always new experiences," he said as he eased
into the water, wincing.
"Shoulders, lad," Tubruk called to one of the
attendants.
The man nodded and knelt at the side of the
pool, pressing his thumbs into Tubruk's muscles, unknotting the
stresses that had been there since the slave attack on the
estate.
"Good," Tubruk sighed, and began to doze, lulled
by the heat.
Marcus was first out onto the massage table,
lying on the smooth cloth and steaming in the colder air. The
nearest slave detached some instruments from his belt, almost like
a set of long brass keys. He poured warm olive oil on liberally and
then began to scrape Marcus's wet skin as if he were skinning a
fish, working the dirt of the journey off the surface and wiping a
surprising amount of black filth onto a cloth at his waist. Then he
rubbed the skin dry and poured a little more oil on for the
massage, beginning great sweeping strokes along the spine.
Marcus groaned with satisfaction. "Gaius, I
think I'm going to like it here," he muttered through slack
lips.
Gaius lay in the water and let his mind drift
free. Marius might not want to have the two boys around. He had no
children of his own and the gods knew it was a difficult time for
the Republic. All the fragile freedoms his father had loved were
coming under threat with soldiers on every corner. As consul,
Marius was one of the two most powerful men in the city, but with
Sulla's legion on the streets, his power became a fiction, his life
at Sulla's whim. Yet how could Gaius protect his father's interests
without his uncle's help? He had to be introduced to the Senate,
sponsored by another. He could not just take his father's old
place; they would throw him out and that would be the end of
everything. Surely the blood tie to his mother would be worth a
little help, but Gaius could not be sure. Marius was the golden
general who had dropped in on his sister occasionally when Gaius
was small. But the visits had become fewer and fewer as her illness
progressed, and it had been years since the last visit.
"Gaius?" Marcus's voice interrupted his
thoughts. "Come and have a massage. You're thinking too much
again."
Gaius grinned at his friend and rose from the
water. It did not occur to him to be embarrassed at his nakedness.
No one was.
"Cabera? Ever had a massage?" he asked as he
passed the old man, whose eyes were drooping.
"No, but I'll try anything once," Cabera
replied, wading toward the steps.
"You're in the right city then," Tubruk said
with a chuckle, eyes closed.
Clean and cool in fresh clothes and
with the edge taken off their hunger, the four were escorted to
Marius at sundown. As a slave, Alexandria did not accompany them,
and for a moment Gaius was disappointed. When she was with them, he
hardly knew what to say to her, but when she was gone his mind
filled with clever pieces of wit that he could never quite remember
to say later. He had not brought up the kiss in the stables with
her and wondered if she thought of it as often as he did. He
cleared his mind of her, knowing he had to be sharp and focused to
meet a consul of Rome.
A portly slave stopped them outside the door to
the chamber and fussed with their clothing, producing a carved
ivory comb to pull Marcus's curls back into place and straightening
Tubruk's jacket. As the fleshy fingers approached Cabera, the old
man's hands shot out and slapped them away.
"Don't touch!" he snapped waspishly.
The slave's face remained blank and he carried
on improving the others. At last he was satisfied, although he
permitted himself a frown at Cabera.
"The master and mistress are present this
evening. Bow first to the master as you present yourselves, and
keep your eyes on the floor as you bow. Then bow to Mistress
Metella, an inch or two less deep. If your barbarian slave requires
it, he can knock his head on the floor a few times as well."
Cabera opened his mouth to retort, but the slave
turned away and pushed the doors open.
Gaius entered first and saw a beautiful room
with a garden in the center, open to the sky. Around the rectangle
of the garden was a walkway, with other rooms leading off it.
Columns of white stone held the overhang of roof, and the walls
were painted with scenes from Roman history: the victories of
Scipio, the conquest of Greece. Marius and his wife, Metella, stood
to receive their guests, and Gaius forced a smile onto his face,
suddenly feeling very young and very awkward.
As he approached, he could see the man sizing
him up and wondered what conclusions he was drawing. For his own
part, Marius was an impressive figure. General of a hundred
campaigns, he wore a loose toga that left his right arm and
shoulder bare, revealing massive musculature and a dark weave of
hair on the chest and forearms. He wore no jewelry or adornment of
any kind, as if such things were unnecessary to a man of his
stature. He stood straight and radiated strength and will. His face
was stern and dark brown eyes glared out from under heavy brows.
Every feature revealed the city of his birth. His arms were clasped
behind him and he said nothing as Gaius approached and bowed.
Metella had once been a beauty, but time and
worry had clawed at her face, lines of some nameless grief gripping
her skin with an old woman's talons. She seemed tense, the cords of
sinew on her neck standing out. Her hands quivered slightly as she
looked at him. She wore a simple dress of red cloth, complemented
with earrings and bracelets of bright gold.
"My sister's son is always welcome in my house,"
Marius said, his voice filling the space.
Gaius almost sagged with relief, but held
himself firm.
Marcus came up beside him and bowed smoothly.
Metella locked eyes with him and the quivering in her hands
increased. Gaius caught Marius's sideways glance of worry at her as
she stepped forward.
"Such beautiful boys," she said, holding out her
hands. Bemused, they took one each. "What you have suffered in the
uprising! What you have seen!"
She put a hand to Marcus's cheek. "You will be
safe here, do you understand? Our home is your home, for as long as
you want."
Marcus put his hand up to cover hers and
whispered, "Thank you." He seemed more comfortable with the strange
woman than Gaius was. Her intensity reminded him too painfully of
his own mother.
"Perhaps you could check on the arrangements for
the meal, my dear, while I discuss business with the boys," Marius
boomed cheerfully from behind them.
She nodded and left, with a backward glance at
Marcus.
Marius cleared his throat. "I think my wife
likes you," he said. "The gods have not blessed us with children of
our own, and I think you will bring her comfort."
His gaze passed over them.
"Tubruk—I see you are still the concerned
guardian. I heard you fought well in the defense of my sister's
house."
"I did my duty, sir. It was not enough in the
end."
"The son lives, and his mother. Julius would say
that was enough," Marius replied. At this, his eyes returned to
Gaius.
"I can see your father's face in yours. I am
sorry for his leaving. I cannot say we were truly friends, but we
had respect for each other, which is more honest than many
friendships. I could not attend his funeral, but he was in my
thoughts and prayers."
Gaius felt the beginnings of liking for this
man. Perhaps that is his talent, warned an inner voice. Perhaps
that is why he has been elected so many times. He is a man whom
others follow.
"Thank you. He always spoke well of you," he
replied out loud.
Marius laughed, a short bark. "I doubt it. How
is your mother, is she... the same?"
"Much the same, sir. The doctors despair."
Marius nodded, his face betraying nothing. "You
must call me Uncle from now on, I think. Yes. Uncle suits me well.
And you, who is this?" Once again, his eyes and focus had switched
without warning, this time to Cabera, who looked back
impassively.
"He is a priest and healer, my adviser. Cabera
is his name," Gaius replied.
"Where are you from, Cabera? Those are not Roman
features."
"The distant east, sir. My home is not known in
Rome."
"Try me. I have traveled far with my legion in
my lifetime." Marius did not blink, his gaze was relentless.
Cabera didn't seem perturbed by it. "A hill
village a thousand miles east of Aegyptus. I left it as a boy and
the name is lost to me. I too have traveled far since then."
The flame gaze snapped away as Marius lost
interest. He looked again at the two boys.
"My house is your home from now on. I presume
Tubruk will be returning to your estate?"
Gaius nodded.
"Good. I will arrange your entrance to the
Senate as soon as I have sorted out a few problems of my own. Do
you know Sulla?"
Gaius was painfully aware that he was being
assessed. "He controls Rome at present."
Marius frowned, but Gaius went on: "His legion
patrols the streets and that gives him a great deal of
influence."
"You are correct. I see living on a farm hasn't
kept you completely away from the affairs of the city. Come and sit
down. Do you drink wine? No? Then this is as good a time as any to
learn."
As they sat on couches around the food-laden
table, Marius bowed his head and began to pray aloud: "Great Mars,
grant that I make the right decisions in the difficult days to
come." He straightened and grinned at them, motioning for a slave
to pour wine.
"Your father could have been a great general if
he had wanted," Marius said. "He had the sharpest mind I have ever
encountered, but chose to keep his interests small. He did not
understand the reality of power—that a strong man can be
above the rules and laws of his neighbors."
"He set great stock by the laws of Rome," Gaius
replied, after a moment's thought.
"Yes. It was his one failing. Do you know how
many times I have been elected consul?"
"Three," Marcus put in.
"Yet the law only allows one term. I shall be
elected again and again until I grow tired of the game. I am a
dangerous man to refuse, you see. It comes down to that, for all
the laws and regulations that are so dear to the old men of the
Senate. My legion is loyal to me and me alone. I abolished the land
qualification to join, so many of them owe their only livelihood to
me. True, some of them are the scrapings of the gutters of Rome,
but loyal and strong despite their origins and birth.
"Five thousand men would tear this city apart if
I were assassinated, so I walk the streets in safety. They
know what will happen if I die, do you see?
"If they can't kill me, they have to accommodate
me, except that Sulla has finally come into the game, with a legion
of his own, loyal only to him. I can't kill him and he can't kill
me, so we growl at each other across the Senate floor and wait for
a weakness. At present, he has the advantage. His men are in the
streets, as you say, whereas mine are camped outside the walls.
Stalemate. Do you play latrunculi? I have a board here."
This last question was to Gaius, who blinked and
shook his head.
"I will teach you. Sulla is a master, and so am
I. It is a good game for generals. The idea is to kill the enemy
king, or to remove his power so that he is helpless and must
surrender."
A soldier entered in full, shining uniform. He
saluted with a stiff right arm.
"General. The men you requested have arrived.
They entered the city from different directions and gathered
here."
"Excellent! You see, Gaius, another move in the
game is upon us. Fifty of my men are with me in my home. Unless
Sulla has spies on every gate, he will not know they have entered
the city. If he guesses my intentions, there will be a century from
his legion waiting outside at daybreak, but all life is a gamble,
yes?"
He addressed the guard. "We will leave at dawn.
Make sure my slaves look after the men. I will come along in a
while."
The soldier saluted again and left.
"What are you going to do?" Marcus asked,
feeling completely out of his depth.
Marius rose and flexed his shoulders. He called
a slave over and told him to prepare his uniform, ready for
dawn.
"Have you ever seen a Triumph?"
"No. I don't think there has been one for a few
years," Gaius replied.
"It is the right of every general who has
captured new lands: to march his legion through the streets of his
beloved capital city and receive the love of the crowd and the
thanks of the Senate.
"I have captured vast tracts of lush farming
land in northern Africa, like Scipio before me. Yet a Triumph has
been denied me by Sulla, who has the Senate under his thumb at the
moment. He says the city has seen too much upheaval, but that is
not the reason. What is his reason?"
"He does not want your men in the city, under
any pretext," Gaius said quickly.
"Good, so what must I do?"
"Bring them in anyway?" Gaius hazarded.
Marius froze. "No. This is my beloved
capital city. It has never had a hostile force enter its gates. I
will not be the first. That is blind force, which is always chancy.
No, I am going to ask! Dawn is in six hours. I suggest you get a
little sleep, gentlemen. Just let one of the slaves know when you
want to be taken to your rooms. Good night." He chuckled and strode
off, leaving the four of them alone.
"He—" Cabera began, but Tubruk held up a
warning finger, motioning with his eyes at the slaves who stood by
so unobtrusively.
"Life will not be dull here," Cabera said
quietly. Both Marcus and Gaius nodded and grinned at each
other.
"I'd like to see him 'ask,'" Marcus said.
Tubruk shook his head quickly. "Too dangerous.
There will certainly be bloodshed, and I have not brought you to
Rome to see you killed the first day! If I had known Marius planned
something of this sort, I would have delayed."
Gaius put a hand on the man's arm. "You have
been a good protector, Tubruk, but I too want to see this. We will
not be refused in this."
His voice was quiet, but Tubruk stared as if
Gaius had shouted. Then he relaxed.
"Your father was never this foolhardy, but if
you are set, and Marius agrees, I will come along to watch your
back, as I have always done. Cabera?"
"Where else would I go? I still wander the same
path as you."
Tubruk nodded. "Dawn, then. I suggest you rise
at least an hour or two before daybreak, for stretching exercises
and a light breakfast." He rose and bowed to Gaius. "Sir?"
"You may leave, Tubruk," Gaius said, his face
straight.
Tubruk left.
Marcus raised an eyebrow, but Gaius ignored him.
They were not in private and could not enjoy the casual
relationship of the estate. Kin or not, Marius's house was not a
place to relax. Tubruk had reminded them of this in his formal
style.
Marcus and Cabera departed soon after, leaving
Gaius to his thoughts. He lay back on a couch and stared at the
night stars over the open garden.
He felt his eyes fill. His father was gone and
he was stuck with strangers. Everything was new and different and
overwhelming. Every word had to be considered before it left his
mouth; every decision had to be judged. It was exhausting, and, not
for the first time, he wished he were a child again, without
responsibility. He had always been able to turn to others when he
made mistakes, but whom could he turn to now? He wondered if his
father or Tubruk had ever felt as lost as he did. It didn't seem
possible that they knew the same fears. Perhaps everyone had them,
but hid their worries from others.
When he was calm again, he rose in the darkness
and walked silently out of the room, barely admitting his
destination to himself. The corridors were silent and seemed
deserted, but he had walked only a few paces before a guard stepped
toward him and spoke.
"Can I help you, sir?"
Gaius started. Of course Marius would have
guards around his house and gardens.
"I brought a slave in with me today. I would
like to check on her before I sleep."
"I understand, sir," the guard replied, with a
small smile. "I'll show you the way to the slave quarters."
Gaius gritted his teeth. He knew what the man
was thinking, but speaking again would only worsen his suspicions.
He followed in silence until they came to a heavy door at the end
of the passage. The soldier knocked quietly and they waited for
just a few moments before it opened.
A senior female glared at the guard. Her hair
was graying and her face quickly set into disapproving lines,
clearly a common expression with her.
"What do you want, Thomas? Lucy is asleep and
I've told you before—"
"It's not for me. This young man is Marius's
nephew. He brought a girl in with him today?"
The woman's manner changed as she perceived
Gaius, who was shaking his head in painful silence, wondering how
public things were going to get.
"Alexandria, wasn't it? Beautiful girl. My name
is Carla. I'll show you to her room. Most of the slaves are asleep
by now, so tread quietly, if you please." She beckoned for Gaius to
follow and he did so, neck and back stiff with embarrassment. He
could feel Thomas's eyes on his back before the door closed gently
behind him.
This part of Marius's house was plain but clean.
A long corridor was lined with closed doors, and there were small
candles in holders along the walls at intervals. Only a few were
lit, but enough light was shed for Gaius to see where they were
going.
Carla's voice was lowered to a harsh whisper as
she turned to him. "Most of the slaves sleep in a few large rooms,
but your girl was put in one of her own that we keep for favored
ones. You said to treat her kindly, is that true?"
Gaius blushed. He had forgotten the interest
that Marius's slaves would take in Alexandria and himself. It would
be all over the house by the morning that he had visited her in the
night.
They turned a final corner and Gaius froze in
astonishment. The final door of the corridor was open, and against
the low light from within, he could see Alexandria standing there,
beautiful in the flickering candlelight. She alone would have
caused him to take a quick breath, but there was someone with her,
leaning against the wall in the shadows.
Carla darted forward and they both recognized
Marcus at the same time. For his part, he seemed just as surprised
to see them.
"How did you get in here?" Carla asked, her
voice strained.
Marcus blinked. "I crept about the place. I
didn't want to wake everyone up," he answered.
Gaius looked at Alexandria and his chest
tightened with jealousy. She looked annoyed, but the glint in her
eyes only heightened her tousled appearance. Her voice was
curt.
"As you can both see, I am fine and quite
comfortable. Slaves have to be up before dawn, so I would like to
go to sleep, unless you want to bring Cabera or Tubruk along as
well?"
Marcus and Gaius looked on her with surprised
expressions. She really seemed quite angry.
"No? Then good night." She nodded to them, her
mouth firm, and gently closed the door.
Carla stood with her mouth open in astonishment.
She wasn't sure how to start apologizing.
"What are you doing here, Marcus?" Gaius
demanded, keeping his voice low.
"Same thing as you. I thought she might be
lonely. I didn't know you were going to make it a social occasion,
did I?"
Doors were opening along the corridor and a low
female voice called, "Everything all right, Carla?"
"Yes, dear. Thank you," Carla hissed back.
"Look. She's gone to bed. I suggest you two follow her example
before the whole house turns out to see what's happening."
Grim-faced, they nodded and walked back down the
corridor together, leaving Carla with her hand over her mouth to
stop her laughing before they were out of earshot. She nearly made
it.
As Alexandria had predicted, the house
of Marius came suddenly alive a good two hours before dawn. The
kitchen ovens were lit, the windows opened, torches placed along
the walls until the sun rose. Slaves bustled around, carrying trays
of food and towels for the soldiers. The silence of the dark hours
was broken by coarse laughter and shouts. Gaius and Marcus were
awake at the first sounds, with Tubruk only a little behind them.
Cabera refused to get up.
"Why would I want to? I will just throw on my
robe and walk to the gates! Two more hours till dawn sounds good to
me."
"You can wash and have breakfast," Marcus said,
his eyes lively.
"I washed yesterday and I don't eat much before
noon. Now go away."
Marcus retreated and joined the others as they
ate a little bread and honey, washed down with a hot, spiced wine
that filled their bellies with warmth. They had not spoken of the
events of the night before, and both could feel a small tension
between them and silences in the spaces they would usually have
filled with light talk.
Finally, Gaius took a deep breath. "If she likes
you, I will stay out of it," he said, each word pronounced
clearly.
"Very decent of you," Marcus replied, smiling.
He drained his cup of hot wine and walked out of the room,
smoothing his hair with one hand.
Tubruk glanced at Gaius's expression and barked
out a laugh before following.
* * *
Looking fresh and rested, Marius
strode back into the garden rooms with the clatter of iron-soled
sandals on stone. He seemed even bigger in the general's uniform,
an unstoppable figure. Marcus found himself watching the walk for
weaknesses, as he had learned to watch any opponent. Did he dip a
once-injured shoulder or favor a slightly weaker knee? There was
nothing. This was a man who had never been close to death, who had
never known despair. Though he had no children, a single weakness.
Marcus wondered if it was Marius or his wife who was barren. The
gods were known to be capricious, but what a jest to give so much
to a man yet leave him unable to pass it on.
Marius wore a chestplate of bronze and a long
red cloak over his shoulders. He had a simple legionary's gladius
strapped to his waist, though Marcus noted the silver handle that
set it apart from common blades. His brown legs were mostly bare
under a leather kilt. He moved well, uncommonly well for a man of
his age. His eyes glittered with some excitement or
anticipation.
"Good to see you all up and about. You'll be
marching with my men?" His voice was deep and steady, with no trace
of nerves.
Gaius smiled, pleased not to have had to ask.
"We all are, with your permission... Uncle."
Marius nodded his head at the word. "Of course,
but stay well back. This is a dangerous morning's entertainment, no
matter how it turns out. One thing—you don't know the city,
and if we do become separated, this house may no longer be safe.
Seek out Valcinus at the public baths. They will be shut until
noon, but he'll let you in if you mention my name. All set?"
Marcus, Gaius, and Tubruk looked at each other,
dazed at the speed of events. At least two of them were a little
excited at the same time. They fell in behind Marius as he strode
out to the yard where his men waited patiently.
Cabera joined them at the last minute. His eyes
were as sharp as ever, but white stubble showed on his cheeks and
chin. Marcus grinned at him and received a scowl as reply. They
stood near the back of the group of men, and Gaius took in the
countenances of the soldiers around him. Brown skinned and dark
haired to a man, they carried rectangular shields strapped to their
left arms. On the brass face of each shield was the simple crest of
the house of Marius—three arrows crossing each other. In that
moment, Gaius understood what Marius had been explaining. These
were Roman soldiers who would fight in defense of their city, but
their loyalty was to the crest they carried.
All was silent as they waited for the great
gates to swing open. Metella appeared out of the shadows and kissed
Marius, who responded with enthusiasm, grasping a buttock. His men
regarded this impassively, not sharing his lively mood. Then she
turned and kissed Gaius and Marcus. To their surprise, they could
see tears shining in her eyes.
"You come back safe to me. I will wait for you
all."
Gaius looked around for Alexandria. He had a
vague notion that he could tell her of his noble decision to make
way for Marcus. He hoped that she would be touched by his sacrifice
and scorn Marcus's affections. Unfortunately, he could not see her
anywhere, and then the gates opened and there was no more time.
Gaius and Marcus fell in with Tubruk and Cabera
as the soldiers of Marius clattered out onto the dawn streets of
Rome.
CHAPTER
13
Under normal circumstances, the
streets of Rome would have been empty at dawn, with the majority of
the people waking in the late morning and continuing business up to
midnight. With the curfew in force, the rhythm of the day had
changed and the shops were opening as Marius and his men marched
out.
The general led the soldiers, his step easy and
sure. Shouts of warning went up from passersby, and Gaius could see
people duck back into doorways as they spotted the armed men. After
the recent riots, no one was in the mood to stand and watch the
procession as it wound its way down the hill to the city forum,
where the Senate had its buildings.
At first, the main roads emptied as the
early-rising workers stood well back for the soldiers. Gaius could
feel their eyes on them and heard angry mutters. One word was
repeated from hard faces: "Scelus!"—a crime for
soldiers to be on the streets. The dawn was damp and cold and he
shivered slightly. Marcus too looked grim in the gray light, and he
nodded as their eyes met, his hand on the hilt of his gladius. The
tension was heightened by the clatter and crash as the men moved.
Gaius had not realized how noisy fifty soldiers could be, but in
the narrow streets the clank of iron-shod sandals echoed back and
forth. Windows opened in the high apartments as they passed, and
someone shouted angrily, but they marched on.
"Sulla will cut your eyes out!" one man howled
before slamming his door shut.
Marius's men ignored the taunts and the crowd
gathering behind them, drawn by the excitement and danger into a
swelling mob.
Up ahead, a legionary carrying Sulla's mark on
his shield turned at the noise and froze. They marched toward him
and Gaius could feel the sudden excitement as every eye fixed on
the lone man. He chose discretion over valor and set off at a trot,
disappearing around a corner. A man at the front with Marius leaned
forward as if to follow, but the general put a hand against his
chest.
"Let him go. He'll tell them I'm coming." His
voice carried back through the ranks and Gaius marveled at his
calmness. No one else spoke and they continued, feet crashing down
in time.
Cabera looked behind them and blanched as he saw
the streets filling with followers. There was nowhere to retreat; a
crowd was dogging their footsteps, their eyes bright with
excitement, calling and hooting to each other. Cabera reached into
his robe and brought forth a small blue stone on a thong, kissing
it and mumbling a short prayer. Tubruk looked at the old man and
put a hand out to his shoulder, gripping it briefly.
By the time they reached the great expanse of
the forum, the crowd had spread to fill parallel roads and spilled
out behind and around them. Gaius could feel the nervousness of the
men he walked behind, and saw their muscles tense as they loosened
their swords in the scabbards, ready for action. He swallowed and
found his throat dry. His heart beat quickly and he felt
lightheaded.
As if in mockery of the mood, the sun chose the
moment they entered the forum to break from behind the morning
mists, lighting the statues and temples on one side with gold.
Gaius could see the steps of the Senate building ahead and licked
suddenly dry lips as white-robed figures came out from the darkness
and stood waiting for them. He counted four of Sulla's legionaries
on the steps, hands on swords. Others would be on their way.
Hundreds of people were filling the forum from
every direction, and jeers and calls could be heard echoing in the
nearby streets. They all watched Marius and his men and they left
an avenue to the Senate, knowing his destination without having to
be told. Gaius clenched his teeth. There were so many people! They
showed no sign of fear or awe and pointed, shouted, jostled, and
shoved each other for a better view. Gaius was beginning to regret
having asked to come.
At the foot of the steps, Marius halted his men
and took one pace forward. The crowd pushed in around them, filling
every space. The air smelled of sweat and spiced food. Thirty wide
steps led up to the doors of the debating chamber. Nine senators
stood on them.
Gaius recognized the face of Sulla, standing on
the highest step. He stared straight at Marius without expression,
his face like a mask. His hands were held behind his back, as if he
were about to begin a lecture. His four legionaries had taken up
position on the lowest step, and Gaius could see that they at least
were nervous about what would happen next.
Responsive to some invisible cue, the swelling
crowd fell silent, broken here and there by mutters and curses as
people struggled for better positions.
"You all know me," Marius bellowed. His voice
carried far in the silence. "I am Marius, general, consul, citizen.
Here, before the Senate, I claim my right to hold a Triumph,
recognizing the new lands my legion has conquered in Africa."
The crowd pressed closer and one or two came to
blows, sharp yelps breaking the tension of the moment. They pressed
against the soldiers and two had to raise their arms and shove
figures back into the mass, with more angry shouts in response.
Gaius could feel the ugly mood of the crowd. They had gathered as
they did when the games were on, to see death and violence and be
entertained.
Gaius noticed that the other senators looked to
Sulla to respond. As the only other consul, it was his word that
carried the authority of the city.
He took two steps down, closer to the soldiers.
His face reddened with anger, but his words were quiet.
"This is unlawful. Tell your men to disperse.
Come inside and we will discuss this when the full Senate has
convened. You know the law, Marius."
Those in the crowd who could hear him cheered
this, while others shouted vulgarities, knowing they were protected
from being seen by the churning mass of people.
"I do know the law! I know that a general has
the right to demand a Triumph. I make that demand. Do you deny me?"
Marius too had taken a step forward and the crowd surged with him,
pushing and shoving, spilling onto the Senate steps between the two
men.
"Vappa! Cunnus!" They screamed abuse at
the soldiers who rebuffed them, and Marius turned to the front row
of his fifty. His eyes were cold and black.
"Enough. Make room for your general," he
said, his voice grim.
The front ten men drew their swords and cut down
the nearest members of the crowd. In seconds, gashed bodies spat
blood over the marble steps. They did not stop, killing with a cold
intensity, men and women falling before them. A wail went up as the
crowd tried to back away, but those at the rear could not see what
was happening and continued to push forward. Every man of the fifty
soldiers drew his gladius and cut around him, careless of who fell
under the blade.
It must have been only a few seconds from start
to finish, but it seemed hours to Gaius and Marcus, who could only
watch in horror as the ranks of the crowd were sliced down like
wheat. The bodies littered the forum and the crowd was suddenly
fighting to get away, the message having finally got through. A few
more seconds and there was a great ring around Marius and his men,
growing wider as citizens and slaves alike ran from the red
swords.
Not a word had been said. Blades were wiped on
the dead and resheathed. The men returned to their positions and
Marius looked up at the senators again.
The stones of the forum were slicked wet with
blood. The other men on the steps had gone pale, taking involuntary
paces backward away from the slaughter. Only Sulla had held firm,
and his lips twisted into a bitter grimace as the stench of fresh
blood and opened bowels came to him.
The two men looked at each other for a long
moment, as if only they were in the forum. The moment stretched and
Marius raised his hand as if to give another command to his waiting
men.
"One month from today," Sulla snapped. "Hold
your Triumph, General, but remember you have made an enemy today.
Savor the moments of joy that are due to you."
Marius inclined his head. "My thanks, Sulla, for
your wisdom."
He turned his back on the senators and called
the turn, walking through the ranks to take up position at the
front again. The crowd held back, but anger was on every bitter
face.
"Forward," came the bellow, and once again, the
crash of iron on stone was heard as the half-century followed their
general out of the plaza.
Gaius shook his head in wonderment at Tubruk and
Marcus, saying nothing. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw a
century of Sulla's men enter the plaza from a side street, each man
running with his sword out and in hand. He tensed and would have
shouted a warning, but caught Tubruk's shake of the head.
Behind them, Sulla had raised his hand to halt
his men, and they stood to attention, watching Marius leave with
angry expressions. As Gaius reached the edge of the forum, he saw
Sulla make a circle with his right hand in the air.
"A little too close in timing for my liking,"
Tubruk whispered.
Marius snorted up ahead, overhearing. He strode
forward, his voice carrying back. "Close formation in the streets,
men. This is not over yet."
The soldiers drew into a tightly packed unit.
Marius looked back over his shoulder.
"Watch the side streets. Sulla will not let us
get clean away if he can help it. Keep your wits about you and your
swords loose."
Gaius felt dazed, carried along by events beyond
his control. This was the safety of his uncle's shadow? He walked
along with the others, hemmed in by legionaries.
A short, barking scream sounded from behind and
Gaius whirled, almost knocked off his feet by the soldier behind
him. One of the men was lying on the cobbles, in the filth of the
road. Blood pooled around him and Gaius caught a glimpse of three
men stabbing and cutting in a frenzy.
"Don't look," Tubruk warned, turning Gaius
forward with gentle pressure on his shoulder.
"But the man! Shouldn't we stop?" Gaius shouted,
astonished.
"If we stop, we'll all die. Sulla has unleashed
his dogs."
Gaius glanced into a side street as they passed
and saw a group of men with daggers drawn, running toward them. By
their bearing, they were legionaries, but without uniforms. Gaius
drew his sword almost at one with all the others. His heart began
to pound again and he felt sweat break out on his forehead.
"Hold your nerve! We stop for nothing," Marius
shouted back, his neck and back muscles rigid.
The knife men attacked the back row again as it
passed, one of them going down with a gladius in his ribs before
the others bore their man down onto the ground. He yelled in fear
as his sword was wrenched from his grasp and then the yell was cut
suddenly short.
As they marched on, Gaius could hear hoots of
triumph from behind. He sneaked a look back and wished he hadn't as
the attackers raised a bloody head and howled like animals. The men
around him swore viciously and one of them suddenly stopped,
raising his sword.
"Come on, Vegus, we're nearly there," another
urged him, but he shook off the hands on his shoulders and spat at
the ground.
"He was my friend," he muttered, and broke rank,
racing back toward the bloody group. Gaius tried to watch what
happened. He could hear the cry as they saw him coming, but then
men seemed to pour out of the alleyways and the soldier was torn
apart without a sound.
"Steady," Marius shouted, and Gaius could hear
the anger in the voice, the first touch of it he'd seen in the man.
"Steady," he called again.
Marcus took a dagger from the man on his right
and drifted back through the ranks. He was in the last row of three
when they passed the dark mouth of an alleyway and four others
sprang, their knives held to kill. Marcus ducked and took the
weight of an attacker as they crashed together in a violent
embrace. He pulled his knife across the throat he saw so close to
his own and blinked as the blood spurted out over him. He used the
body to block another thrust and then threw it at the remaining
attackers. As it landed, the men went down to swift, punching stabs
from the three legionaries, who then rejoined the ranks without a
word. One of them clapped a hand on Marcus's shoulder and Marcus
grinned at him. He ghosted up through the ranks again and arrived
at Gaius's side, panting slightly. Gaius clasped the back of his
neck for a second.
Then the gates were opening in front of them and
they were safe, holding formation until the last man was through
into the courtyard.
As the gates closed, Gaius went back to look
down the hill they'd walked together. It was deserted; not a face
showed. Rome seemed as quiet and orderly as ever.
CHAPTER
14
Marius almost glowed with pleasure and
energy as he walked amongst his men, clapping his hands to
shoulders and laughing. They grinned wryly, like schoolboys being
congratulated by a tutor.
"We've done it, boys!" Marius shouted. "We'll
show this city a day to remember a month from today." They cheered
him and he called for wine and refreshments, summoning every slave
of his home to treat the men like kings.
"Anything they want!" he bellowed. Wine cups of
gold and silver were pressed into the rough hands of every man back
in through the gates, Gaius and Marcus included. Dark purple wine
sloshed and gurgled as it was poured from clay jugs. Alexandria was
with the other slaves and smiled at both Marcus and Gaius. Gaius
nodded to her, but Marcus winked as she passed him.
Tubruk sniffed his wine and chuckled. "The
best."
Marius held his cup high, his expression somber.
Silence fell after a few seconds.
"To those who didn't make it today, who died for
us. Tagoe, Luca, and Vegus. Good men all."
"Good men all!" Every voice echoed his in a
guttural chorus, and the cups were tipped back and held out for
refills from the waiting slaves.
"He knew their names," Gaius whispered to
Tubruk, who brought his head close to reply.
"He knows all their names," he muttered. "That
is why he is a good general. That is why they love him. He could
tell you some of the history of every man here and a good portion
of the legion outside Rome as well. Oh, you can call it a trick if
you like, a cheap way to impress the men who serve. I know that's
what he would say if you asked him." He paused to look at the
general as he caught a huge and husky soldier in a headlock and
walked through the crowd with him. The man bellowed, but didn't
struggle. He bore it as it was meant.
"They're his children, I think. You can see how
much he loves them. That big man could probably tear Marius's arms
off if he wanted. On another day, he'd put a dagger in a man for
looking at him with a squint in the noonday sun. But Marius can
lead him around by the head and he laughs. I'm not sure you can
train a man into that skill—I think it's born into you, or
not. You don't even need to have it to be a good general.
"These men would follow Sulla if they were in
his legion. They'd fight for him and hold formation and die for
him. But they love Marius, so they can't be bribed or bought, and
in battle they will not ever run, not to the last man. Not while
he's watching, anyway. There used to be a land qualification to be
in the legions, but Marius abolished it. Now anyone can make a
career fighting for Rome, at least for him. Half these men wouldn't
have made it into the army before Marius had his law passed by the
Senate. They owe him a great deal."
The men began to walk out of the entrance
square, off to be bathed and massaged by the prettiest female
slaves on the grounds. Several beauties had taken arms and were
already gasping and exclaiming at stories of battle prowess. When
Marius let go of the big legionary's head, he immediately called a
girl over, a slim brunette with kohl-dark eyes. The big man took
one look and grinned like a wolf, gathering her up into his arms.
The echoes of her laughter came back off the brick walls as he
trotted into the main buildings.
One young soldier dropped a powerfully muscled
arm onto Alexandria's shoulder and said something to her. Marcus
came up behind the man quickly.
"Not this girl, friend. She's not from this
house."
The soldier looked at him and took in the boy's
bearing and determined expression. He shrugged and called to
another slave girl as she passed by. Gaius stood watching the
exchange and when Alexandria caught his eye, her face filled with
anger. She turned her back on Marcus and strode into the cool
interior of the garden rooms.
Marcus turned to his friend. He had noticed her
expression and his own was thoughtful.
"Why was she so annoyed?" Gaius said,
exasperated. "I wouldn't have thought she wanted to go with that
big ox. You saved her."
Marcus nodded. "That may be the problem. Perhaps
she didn't want me to. Perhaps she wanted you to save her."
"Oh." Gaius's face lit up. "Really?"
Marius staggered over to Gaius and his friends,
still laughing, his hair plastered to his forehead with wine
emptied over him. His eyes were shining with pleasure. He took
Gaius by both shoulders.
"Well, lad? How was your first taste of
Rome?"
Gaius grinned back at him. You couldn't help it.
The man's emotions were infectious. When he frowned, dark clouds of
fear and anger followed him around and touched all who met him.
When he smiled, you wanted to smile. You wanted to be one of his
men. Gaius could feel the power of the man and for the first time
wondered if he could ever command that kind of loyalty himself.
"It was frightening, but exciting as well," he
replied, unable to stop his lips from smiling.
"Good! Some don't feel it, you know. They just
add up supply figures and calculate how many men it would take to
hold a ravine. They just don't feel the excitement."
He looked over at Marcus, Tubruk, and
Cabera.
"Get drunk if you like, have a woman if you can
find one by now. We'll do no work today and no one can leave until
it's dark after that trouble we had. Tomorrow, we'll start planning
how to bring five thousand men fifty miles and all the way through
Rome. Do you know anything about supply?"
Both Marcus and Gaius shook their heads.
"You'll learn. The best army in the world is
lost without food and water, boys. That's the thing to know.
Everything else falls into place. My home is your home, remember.
I'm going to sit in the fountain and get drunk." He collected three
unopened jugs of wine from the remaining male slaves and walked
away—a man with a mission.
Tubruk watched him leave the courtyard with a
wry smile. "Once, in North Africa, on the eve of a battle against a
savage tribe, they say Marius walked alone into the enemy camp
carrying a jug of wine in each hand. Remember, this was the camp of
seven thousand of the most brutal warriors the legion had
encountered. He drank all night with the chief of the tribe,
despite not understanding a word of each others language. They
toasted life and the future and courage. Then the next morning he
staggered back to his own lines."
"What happened next?" Marcus said.
"They wiped out the tribe to the last man. What
would you expect?" Tubruk laughed.
"Why didn't the chief kill him?" Marcus
continued.
"I suppose he liked him. Most people do."
Metella came into the courtyard and held out her
hands to Gaius and Marcus, smiling. "I'm glad you are safely
returned to us. I want you both to think of this house as a place
of peace and refuge for you."
She gazed into Marcus's eyes and he looked back
calmly. "Is it true you grew up without a mother?"
Marcus blushed a little, wondering how much
Marius had told her. He nodded and Metella gave a little gasp.
"You poor boy. I would have brought you to me
earlier if I had known."
Marcus was wondering if she knew what the
legionaries were getting up to with her female slaves. She didn't
seem to fit into the bluff world of Marius and his legion. He
wondered what his own mother was like, and for the first time
considered trying to find her. Marius would probably know, but it
was not a question he wished to ask the man. Perhaps Tubruk would
tell him before he returned to the estate.
Metella took her hand away from his and reached
up to brush his cheek.
"You have had a rough time of it, but that is
all over now."
Slowly, he touched her hand with his and it was
as if they had reached some private understanding. Suddenly her
eyes glistened with tears and she turned and walked away along the
cloisters.
Marcus looked at Gaius and shrugged.
"You have a friend there," Tubruk said, watching
her retreating figure. "She has taken a liking to you."
"I'm a bit old to need a mother," Marcus
muttered.
"Possibly, but she's not too old to need a
son."
At noon, there was a commotion at the
house gates. Some of the legionaries turned out with swords drawn
in case it was a reprisal for the morning's work. Gaius and Marcus
rushed to the courtyard with the rest and then stopped and
gaped.
Renius was there, draped through the metal bars
and singing a drunken dirge. He used the crossbar of the gate to
steady himself, but his tunic was soaked with wine and specks of
vomit. A guard stepped up to the bars and spoke to him as Gaius and
Marcus came up, Tubruk just behind them.
Suddenly, Renius reached up to the man's hair
and pulled his head into the metal with a clang. Unconscious, the
soldier fell away and the others began to shout in anger.
"Let him in and kill him!" yelled one man, but
another said it could be a trap of Sulla's to make them open the
gates. This gave them all pause and it was Gaius and Marcus who
approached the gates next.
"Can we help you?" Marcus said, raising his
eyebrows in polite inquiry.
Renius mumbled angrily, "I'll stick my sword up
you, whore's boy."
Marcus started to laugh.
"Open the gates," Gaius called to the other
guard. "It's Renius—he's with me."
The guard ignored him as if he had not spoken,
making it clear that Gaius could not give orders in that house. As
Gaius stepped toward the gate, a legionary took a pace to stand in
front of him, shaking his head slowly.
Marcus sidled over to the gate and said a few
quiet words to the guard there.
The man was in the middle of replying when
Marcus butted him savagely, knocking him down into the dust.
Ignoring the guard as he flailed and tried to get up, Marcus ran
back the big bolts that held the door secure and opened it.
Renius fell into the yard and lay flat, his good
arm twitching. Marcus chuckled and began to close the gate when he
heard the smooth metallic sound of a knife coming from a sheath. He
spun and was just in time to block a thrust from the furious guard
with his forearm. With his left hand, he backhanded the man across
the mouth and sent him sprawling again. Marcus shut the gate.
Two more of the men ran up to grab him, but a
voice called "Hold!" and everyone froze for a second. Marius walked
into the courtyard, showing no effects from the wine he had been
putting away steadily for two hours. As he approached, the two men
kept their eyes on Marcus, who looked calmly back at them.
"Gods! What is going on in my house?" Marius
came up and put a heavy hand on the shoulder of one of the men
facing Marcus.
"Renius is here," Gaius said. "He came with us
from the estate."
Marius looked down at the sprawling figure,
peacefully asleep on the stones.
"He never got drunk when he was a gladiator. I
can see why if this is how it affects him. What happened to you?"
The last question was addressed to the guard who had resumed his
post. His mouth and nose were bloody and his eyes sparked with
indignation, but he knew better than to complain to Marius.
"Caught myself in the face with the gate when I
was opening it," he said slowly.
"Damned careless of you, Fulvio. You should have
let my nephew help you with it."
The message was clear. The man nodded and wiped
a little of the blood away with his hand.
"Glad we've cleared that up. Now, you and
you"—he pointed a stiff finger at Gaius and
Marcus—"come with me to my study. We need to discuss a couple
of things."
He waited until Gaius and Marcus had walked in
front of him before falling in behind. Over his shoulder, he
called, "Get that old man somewhere to sleep it off, and keep that
damned gate shut."
Marcus caught the eye of the legionaries nearby
and found they were all grinning, whether in malice or genuine
amusement, he couldn't say.
Marius opened the door of his study
and let the two go through into a room lined with maps on every
wall, showing Africa and the empire and Rome herself. He closed the
door quietly and then turned to face them. His eyes were cold and
Gaius felt a momentary pang of fear as the man focused his dark
gaze on him.
"What did you think you were doing?" Marius spat
from between clenched teeth.
Gaius opened his mouth to say he was letting
Renius in when he thought better of it.
"I'm sorry. I should have waited for you."
Marius banged his heavy fist on the desk. "I
suppose you realize that if Sulla had had twenty picked men in the
street waiting for just such an opportunity, we would most likely
be dead by now?"
Gaius blushed miserably.
Marius swiveled to face Marcus. "And you. Why
did you attack Fulvio?"
"Gaius gave the order to open the gates. The man
ignored him. I made it happen."
There was no give in Marcus. He looked up at the
older man and met his gaze unflinchingly.
The general raised his eyebrows in disbelief.
"You expected him, a veteran of thirty conflicts, to take orders
from a beardless boy of fourteen?"
"I... didn't think about it." For the first
time, Marcus looked unsure of himself, and the general turned back
to Gaius.
"If I back you in this, I will lose some of the
respect of the men. They all know you made a mistake and will be
waiting to see what I do about it."
Gaius's heart sank.
"There is a way out of this, but it will cost
you both dearly. Fulvio is the boxing champion of his century. He
lost a lot of face today when you clipped him, Marcus. I daresay he
would be willing to take part in a friendly fight, just to clear
the air. Otherwise, he may well put a knife in you when I am not
around to step in."
"He'll kill me," Marcus said quietly.
"Not in a friendly match. We won't use the iron
gloves, because of your tender age, just goatskin ones to protect
your hands. Have you been trained at all?"
The boys murmured that they had, thinking of
Renius.
Marius turned to Gaius again. "Of course, win or
lose, if your friend shows courage, the men will love him, and I
can't have my nephew in his shadow, do you understand?"
Gaius nodded, guessing what was coming.
"I'll put you in against one of the others.
They're all champions at some skill or other, which is why I chose
them for the escort duty to the Senate. You'll both take a beating,
but if you handle yourselves well enough, the incident will be
forgotten and you may even gain a bit of standing with my men. They
are the scum of the gutters, most of them; they fear nothing and
have respect only for strength. Oh, I can just order them back to
duties and do nothing, letting you hide in the shadow of my
authority, but that won't do, d'you see?"
Their faces were bleak, and he snorted
suddenly.
"Smile, boys. You might as well. There is no
other way out of this, so why not spit in old Jupiter's eye while
you're at it?"
They looked at each other, and both grinned.
Marius laughed again. "You'll do. Two hours.
I'll tell the men and announce the opponents. That'll give Renius
time to sober up a little. I should think he would want to see
this. By all the gods, I want to see this! Dismissed!"
Gaius and Marcus walked slowly back to their
rooms. Their initial levity had faded, leaving a sick churning in
both their stomachs at what was to come.
"Hey! Do you realize I put a century boxing
champion on his back? I am damn well going to try and win this
match. If I can hit him once, I can knock him out. One good strike
is all it takes."
"But this time he'll be expecting it," Gaius
replied morosely. "I'll probably get that big ape Marius was
leading around by the head earlier; that would be just the sort of
joke he likes."
"Big men are slow. You're fast with the cross,
but you'll have to stay out of range. All these soldiers are heavy
and that means they can hit harder than we can. Keep moving your
feet and wear them down."
"We're going to be murdered," Gaius replied.
"Yes, I think we probably are."
Tubruk was calmly accepting when he heard the
news back at their rooms.
"I expected something like it. Marius loves
contests and is forever staging them between his own men and those
of the other legions. This is just his style—a bit of
cheering and a deal of blood and everything is forgotten and
forgiven.
"Thankfully, you haven't drunk more than a cup
or two of wine. Come on, two hours is not long to get you warmed up
and ready. You'd better spar for a while in one of the training
rooms. Get a slave to direct you to one, and I'll find you as soon
as I have some gloves. One thing—don't let Marius down.
Especially you, Gaius. You're his kin, you have to put on a good
show."
"I understand," Gaius replied grimly.
"Then get going. I'll have some of the slaves
throw ice water on Renius—from a distance so that he doesn't
go berserk."
"What happened with him? Why was he drunk so
early in the day?" Gaius asked curiously.
"I don't know. Concentrate on one thing at a
time. You'll have a chance to speak to Renius this evening. Now
go!"
While the rest of Rome slept through
the heat of the afternoon, the men from the First-Born legion
gathered in the largest training room, lining the walls, laughing,
chatting, and sipping cool beer and fruit juices. After the fights,
Marius had promised them a ten-course feast of good food and wine,
and the mood was relaxed and cheerful. Tubruk stood with Marcus and
Gaius, loosening the shoulders of one, then the other. Cabera sat
on a stool, his face inscrutable.
"They are both right-handed," Tubruk said
quietly. "Fulvio you know; the other, Decidus, is a javelin
champion. He has very strong shoulders, though he doesn't look
fast. Stay away from them, make them come to you."
Marcus and Gaius nodded. Both were a little pale
under their tanned skin.
"Remember, the idea is to stay upright long
enough to show you have nerve. If you go down early, get up. I'll
stop it if you're in real trouble, but Marius won't like that, so I
will have to be careful." He put a hand on each of their
shoulders.
"Both of you have skill and courage and wind.
Renius is watching. Don't let us down."
Both boys glanced over to where Renius sat, his
useless arm strapped to his belt. His hair was still damp and
murder glinted from his expression.
Cheering began as Marius entered. He held up his
hands for quiet and it came quickly.
"I expect each man to do his best, but know that
my money will be on my nephew and his friend. Two bets, twenty-five
aurei on each. Do I have any takers?"
For a moment, the silence held. Fifty gold
pieces was a huge bet for a private fight, but who could resist?
The gathered men emptied their pouches and some left for their
rooms to fetch more coins. After a while, the money was there and
Marius added his own pouch so that one hundred gold pieces were
held in his great hand, enough to buy a farm, or a warhorse and
full armor and weapons.
"Will you hold the bag for us, Renius?" Marius
asked.
"I will," he replied, his tone solemn and
formal. He seemed to have thrown off most of the effects of drink,
but Gaius noticed he did not try to rise and waited until the money
was brought to him.
Fulvio and Decidus entered the training hall to
more cheering from the men. There was now no question where their
support lay.
Both men were wearing only a tight-fitting cloth
wrapped around their groins and upper thighs, held by a wide belt.
Decidus had the sort of shoulders and physique usually seen on the
statues of the forum. Gaius watched him closely, but there were no
obvious weaknesses. Fulvio did not wave to the crowd. His nose was
bound with a strip of cloth tied at the back of his head, and his
lips were swollen and angry looking.
Gaius nudged Marcus. "Looks like you broke his
nose with that butt earlier on. He'll be expecting you to hit it
again, you realize. Wait for a good opportunity."
Marcus nodded, engrossed as Gaius had been with
his study of the man and his movements.
Marius raised his hands again to be heard over
the lively soldiers.
"Marcus and Fulvio will fight the first bout. No
time limits, but a round ends when one man has a knee or more on
the ground. When one is unable to rise, the bout is over and the
other will begin. Come to your marks."
Fulvio and Marcus came to stand on either side
of the general.
"When the horn is blown, you begin. Good
luck."
Marius walked sedately to the sidelines with the
men and signaled to one to sound the horn usually used in battle. A
hush fell and the blare resonated as a pure note.
Marcus loosened his shoulders, rocked his head
from side to side, and stepped forward. He held his hands high as
he had been taught by Renius, but Fulvio kept his fists relaxed,
his arms only slightly bent. He swayed as Marcus jabbed with his
left, and the blows went by harmlessly. One fist shot out and
thumped into Marcus's chest, over the heart. He gasped in pain and
backed away, then set his teeth and came in again. He launched a
fast jab followed immediately by a straight right, but again Fulvio
moved out of the way with a single step and hammered the same spot
with his gloved right hand. Marcus felt the air explode out of him
with the pain.
The men had begun cheering and only Gaius,
Tubruk, and Cabera cheered for the younger fighter. Fulvio was
smiling and Marcus began to think. The man was fast and difficult
to hit. At present, Marcus was doing all the work, winning nothing
for his efforts. He growled in rage and surged forward, his right
arm cocked. He saw Fulvio steady himself and then pulled up
suddenly, letting the blow that should have knocked him out go past
his chin. Marcus punched fast and hard at Fulvio's nose and was
gratified at the crunch of bones he felt. At that second, a cross
caught him on the side of his head and he went down hard on the
wooden floor, dazed and winded.
He panted as he came up onto one knee and looked
up at Fulvio standing a couple of paces away. Blood streamed from
his nose again and he looked murderous.
Marcus got up into a flurry of blows. He tried
to stay away and fend off the worst of them, but Fulvio was all
over him, thumping fists into his stomach and kidneys from all
angles, chopping him to pieces and, when the pain made him hunch,
catching Marcus with swift uppercuts to the head, rocking him back.
He fell again and lay there, his chest heaving painfully. He tasted
blood in his mouth and his left eye was swelling shut under the
assault of Fulvio's straight right.
This time he rose and took three quick steps
backward to give him time to compose himself. Fulvio came at him
remorselessly, moving his head and body from side to side as he
looked for the best place to hit. The man resembled a snake about
to bite, and Marcus knew the next time he went down he was unlikely
to get up. Anger flooded him and he ducked the first punch on sheer
reflexes, batting the follow-through away with his arm. He felt
Fulvios forearm slide under his fingers and suddenly gripped the
wrist. His right fist came into the man's stomach with all the
power of his shoulders behind it, and he was rewarded with a slight
whoosh of pain.
Still holding the arm, he tried to repeat the
punch, but Fulvio brought his left over and clipped him hard on the
jaw. The world went black and he fell down, barely feeling the hard
wooden boards underneath him. His legs seemed to have lost all
strength, and he could only manage to get himself up onto all
fours, panting like a beast.
Fulvio waved a glove at him to get up, still
unsatisfied. Marcus looked down at the floor and wondered if he
should. Blood dribbled from between his lips and he watched it
spatter into a small pool.
Ah well, he thought. One more try.
This time Fulvio didn't rush him. He was
grinning again and beckoned with his hands for Marcus to come on.
Marcus tightened his jaw. He was going to put the man on his back
one more time if it killed him. He imagined each of Fulvio's fists
held a dagger, so that any contact would mean death. He felt his
spirits rise. He knew how to fight with swords and knives, so why
was this so different? He let himself sway a little, wanting Fulvio
to come in. Most of his knife training had revolved around
counterstrikes, and he wanted the boxer to throw another punch.
Fulvio quickly lost patience and came in fast, fists bobbing.
Marcus watched the fists and when one exploded
toward him, he blocked, lifting it with his forearm, and
counterpunched into Fulvio's abdomen. Fulvio grunted and the left
came over the top again in reflex, but this time Marcus dropped his
head and the blow skidded over him, leaving Fulvio open for a split
second. Marcus hammered everything into a straight left stopper,
wishing it were his right. Fulvio's head rocked back and, when it
came level, the right was ready and Marcus smacked it into the
boxer's broken nose again. Fulvio took a sudden seat and fresh
blood poured from his battered nose.
Before Marcus could feel any pleasure, the man
leapt up and poured out a string of blows, seeming to move twice as
fast as he had before. Marcus went down after the first two and
caught two more as he fell. This time he didn't get up and didn't
hear the cheers or the horn as Marius nodded to end the match.
Fulvio raised his hands in triumph and Marius
ruefully signaled the first fifty of the hundred gold coins to be
given back to the men. They gathered together in a momentary huddle
and then, when silence had fallen, one of them offered the bag back
to Marius.
"We'll let the win ride for the next one, sir,
if you're willing," he said.
Marius grimaced in mock horror, but nodded and
said he would cover the bet. The men cheered again.
Marcus woke up as Tubruk threw a cup of wine in
his face.
"Did I win?" he said through smashed lips.
Tubruk chuckled and wiped some of the blood and
wine off his face.
"Not even close, but you were still astonishing.
You shouldn't have been able to touch him."
"Touched him properly, though," he mumbled,
smiling and wincing as his lips cracked. "Knocked him on his
arse."
Marcus looked around for somewhere to spit and,
finding nothing handy, swallowed a gummy mixture of phlegm and
blood.
Every part of him hurt, worse than it had when
he'd been tied up by Suetonius years before. He wondered if he'd be
as good-looking when he'd healed, but his thoughts were interrupted
by Fulvio coming over, taking off his gloves as he walked.
"Good fight. I had three gold pieces on me,
myself. You're very fast—in a few years, you could be
seriously dangerous."
Marcus nodded and put out his hand. Fulvio
looked at it and then shook it briefly and walked back to the men,
who cheered him all over again.
"Take the cloth and keep dabbing as the blood
drips," Tubruk continued cheerfully. "You'll need stitches over
your eye. We'll have to cut it to get the swelling down as
well."
"Not yet. I'll watch Gaius first."
"Of course." Tubruk walked away, still
chuckling, and Marcus squinted at him through his one good eye.
Gaius clenched his fists and waited for Tubruk
to reach him. His opponent had already taken the floor and was
limbering up, stretching his muscular shoulders and legs.
"He's a big brute," he muttered as Tubruk came
alongside.
"True, but he's not a boxer. You have a
reasonable chance against this one, as long as you don't get in the
way of one of his big punches. He'll put you out like snuffing a
candle if he catches you. Stay back and use your feet to move
around him."
Gaius looked at him quizzically. "Anything
else?"
"If you can, punch him in the testicles. He'll
watch for it, but it isn't strictly speaking against the
rules."
"Tubruk, you do not have the heart of a decent
man."
"No, I have the heart of a slave and a
gladiator. I have two gold pieces on you for this one and I want to
win."
"Did you bet on Marcus?" he asked.
"Of course not. Unlike Marius, I don't throw
money away."
Marius came to the center and signaled for
silence once again.
"After that disappointing loss, the money rides
on the next bout. Decidus and Gaius, take your marks. Same rules.
When you hear the horn, begin." He waited until both stood eyeing
each other and walked to the wall, folding his great arms over his
chest.
As the horn sounded, Gaius stepped in and
slammed his fist up into Decidus's throat. The bigger man gave out
a choked groan and raised both his hands to his neck, in agony.
Gaius threw a scything uppercut that caught Decidus on the chin. He
went down onto his knees and then toppled forward, his eyes glassy
and blank. Gaius walked slowly back to his stool and sat down. He
smiled silently and Renius, watching, remembered the same smile on
a younger boy's face as he'd lifted him from the icy waters of a
river pool. Renius nodded sharply in approval, his eyes bright, but
Gaius did not see it.
The silence roared for a second, then the men
released the breath they'd been holding and a rabble of voices
broke out—mostly questions spiced with a few choice
swearwords as they realized the bets were all lost.
Marius walked over to the prostrate figure and
felt his neck for a second. Silence fell again. Finally, he
nodded.
"His heart beats. He'll live. Should have kept
his chin down."
The men gave a halfhearted cheer for the winner,
though their spirits weren't really in it.
Marius addressed the crowd, grinning. "If you
have an appetite, there's a feast waiting for you in the dining
hall. We'll make a night of it, for tomorrow it's back to planning
and work."
Decidus was revived and taken out, shaking his
head groggily. The rest trooped after him, leaving Marcus and Gaius
alone with the general. Renius never left his seat and Cabera
stayed back as well, his face alive with interest.
"Well, boys, you've made me a lot of money
today!" Marius boomed, starting to laugh. He had to lean against a
wall for support as the laughter shook his frame.
"Their faces! Two beardless boys and one puts
Fulvio on his backside..." The laughter overtook him and he wiped
his eyes as tears streamed over his red face.
Renius stood up, swaying a little. He walked
over to Marcus and Gaius and clapped a hand on each shoulder.
"You've started making your names," he said
quietly.
CHAPTER
15
On the night before the Triumph, the
First-Born camp was anything but peaceful. Gaius sat around one of
the campfires and sharpened a dagger that had belonged to his
father. All around, the fires and noise of seven thousand soldiers
and camp followers made the darkness busy and cheerful. They were
camped in open country, less than five miles from the gates of the
city. For the last week, armor had been polished, leather waxed,
tears in cloth stitched. Horses were groomed until they shone like
chestnuts. Marching drills had become tense affairs; mistakes were
not tolerated and no one wanted to be left behind when they marched
into Rome.
The men were all proud of Marius and themselves.
There was no false modesty in the camp; they knew they and he
deserved the honor.
Gaius stopped sharpening as Marcus came into the
firelight and took a seat on a bench. Gaius looked into the flames
and didn't smile.
"What's the word?" he said angrily, without
turning his head.
"I leave at dawn tomorrow," Marcus replied. He
too looked into the fire as he continued speaking. "This is for the
best, you know. Marius has written a letter for me to take to my
new century. Would you like to see it?"
Gaius nodded and Marcus passed a scroll over to
him. He read:
I recommend this young man to you, Carac. He will make a
first-rate soldier in a few years. He has a good mind and excellent
reflexes. He was trained by Renius, who will accompany him to your
camp. Give him responsibility as soon as he has proved he can
handle it. He is a friend of my house.
Marius. Primigenia.
"Fine words. I wish you luck," Gaius said
bitterly as he finished, passing back the scroll.
Marcus snorted. "More than just fine words! Your
uncle has given me my ticket into another legion. You don't
understand what this means to me. Of course I would like to stay
with you, but you will be learning politics in the Senate, then
taking a high post in the army and the temples. I own nothing
except my skills and my wits and the equipment Marius has given me.
Without his patronage, I would be pushed to get a post as a temple
guard! With it, I have a chance to make something of myself. Do you
grudge it of me?"
Gaius turned to him, his anger surprising
Marcus. "I know it's what you have to do, I just never saw myself
tackling Rome alone. I always expected you to be with me. That is
what friendship means."
Marcus gripped his arm tightly. "You will always
be my greatest friend. If ever you need me to be at your side, then
call and I will come to you. You remember the pact before we came
to the city? We look out for each other and we can trust each other
completely. That is my oath and I have never broken it."
Gaius did not look at him and Marcus let his
hand fall away.
"You can have Alexandria," Marcus said,
attempting a noble expression.
Gaius gasped. "A parting gift? What a generous
friend you are! You are too ugly for her, as she told me just
yesterday. She only likes your company for the contrast. You make
her look more beautiful when your monkey face is around."
Marcus nodded cheerfully. "She does seem to want
me only for sex. Perhaps you can read poetry to her while I run her
through the positions."
Gaius took a quick breath of indignation, then
smiled slowly at his friend. "With you gone, I will be the one
showing her the positions." He chuckled to himself at this, hiding
his thoughts. What positions? He could think of only two.
"You will be like a bullock after me, with all
the practice I have been getting. Marius is a generous man."
Gaius looked at his friend, trying to judge how
much of his boasting was just that. He knew Marcus had proved a
favorite with the slave girls of Marius's house and was rarely to
be found in his own room after dark. As for himself, he didn't know
what he felt. Sometimes he wanted Alexandria so much it hurt him,
and other times he wanted to be chasing the girls along the
corridors as Marcus did. He did know that if he ever tried to force
her as a slave, he would lose all that he found precious. A silver
coin would buy him that kind of union. The idea that Marcus might
have already enjoyed what he wanted made his blood thump in
irritation.
Marcus broke in on these thoughts, his voice
low. "You will need friends when you are older, men you can trust.
We've both seen what sort of power your uncle has, and I think both
of us would like a taste of it."
Gaius nodded.
"Then what good will I be to you as a penniless
son of a city whore? I can make my name and fortune in my new
legion, and
then we can make real plans for the future."
"I understand. I remember our oath and I will
stick to it." Gaius was silent for a moment, then shook his head to
clear it of thoughts of Alexandria. "Where will you be
stationed?"
"I'm with the Fourth Macedonia, so Renius and I
are going to Greece—the home of civilization, they say. I'm
looking forward to seeing alien lands. I have heard that the women
run races without clothes on, you know. Makes the mind bulge a bit.
Not just the mind, either." He laughed and Gaius smiled sickly,
still thinking of Alexandria. Would she have given herself to
him?
"I'm glad Renius is your escort. It'll do him
good to take his mind off his troubles for a while."
Marcus grimaced. "True, though he won't be the
best of company. He's been out of sorts ever since he turned up
drunk at your uncle's, but I can understand why."
"If the slaves had burned my house down, I'd be
a bit lost as well. They even took his savings, you know. Had them
under the floor, he said, but they must have been found by looters.
That was not a glorious chapter in our history, slaves stealing an
old man's savings. Mind you, he's not really an old man anymore, is
he?"
Marcus looked sideways at him. They had never
discussed it, but Gaius hadn't seemed to need telling.
"Cabera?" Gaius said, catching his eye.
Marcus nodded.
"I thought so; he did something similar for me,
when I was wounded. He is certainly a useful man to have
around."
"I am glad he's staying with you. He has faith
in your future. He should be able to keep you alive until I can
come back, covered in glory and draped with beautiful women, all of
whom will be the winners of footraces."
"I might not recognize you underneath all that
glory and those women."
"I'll be the same. I'm sorry I'll miss the
Triumph tomorrow. It should really be something special. You know
he's had silver coins printed with his face? He's going to throw
them to the crowds in the streets."
Gaius laughed. "Typical of my uncle. He likes to
be recognized. He enjoys fame more than winning battles, I think.
He's already paying the men with those coins so the money gets
spread around Rome even faster. It should annoy Sulla at least,
which is probably what he really wants."
Cabera and Renius came out of the darkness and
took up the spaces on Marcus's bench.
"There you are!" Renius said. "I was beginning
to think I couldn't find you to say goodbye."
Gaius noted again the fresh strength of the man.
He looked no more than forty, or a well-preserved forty-five. His
grip was like a trap as he put out his hand and Gaius took it.
"We'll all meet again," Cabera said.
They looked at him.
He held his palms up and smiled. "It's not a
prophecy, but I feel it. We haven't finished our paths yet."
"I'm glad you're staying, at least. With Tubruk
back at the estate and these two off to Greece, I would be all on
my own here," Gaius said, smiling a little shyly.
"You look after him, you old scoundrel," Renius
said. "I didn't go to all the trouble of training him to hear he's
been kicked by a horse. Keep him away from bad women and too much
drink." He turned to Gaius and held up a finger. "Train every day.
Your father never let himself become soft and neither should you if
you are to be of any use to our city."
"I will. What are you going to do when you have
delivered Marcus?"
Renius's face darkened for a second. "I don't
know. I don't have the funds to retire anymore, so we'll see... It
is in the hands of the gods as always."
For a moment, they all looked a little sad.
Nothing ever stayed the same.
"Come on," he continued gruffly. "Time for
sleep. Dawn can't be more than a few hours away, and we all have a
long day ahead of us."
They shook hands in silence for the last time
and returned to their tents.
When Gaius awoke the following
morning, Marcus and Renius were gone.
By him, folded carefully, was the toga
virilis, a man's garment. He looked at it for a long time,
trying to recall Tubruks lessons on the correct way to wear one. A
boy's tunic was so much simpler, and the low toga hem would become
dirty very quickly. The message was clear in its simplicity: A man
did not climb trees and throw himself through muddy rivers. Boyish
pursuits were to be put behind him.
In daylight, the large ten-man tents could be
seen stretching into the distance, the orderly lines showing the
discipline of the men and their general. Marius had spent most of
the month mapping out a six-mile route along the streets that
ended, as before, at the Senate steps. The filth had been scrubbed
from the stones of the roads, but they were still narrow, winding
courses, and the legion could get only six men or three horses
across. There were going to be just under eleven hundred rows of
soldiers, horses, and equipment. After a lot of argument with his
engineers, Marius had agreed to leave his siege weapons at the
camp—there was just no way to get them around the tight
corners. The estimate was that it would take three hours to
complete the march, and that was without holdups or mistakes of any
kind.
By the time Gaius had washed, dressed, and
eaten, the sun was clear of the horizon and the great shining mass
of soldiers was in position and almost ready to march. Gaius had
been told to dress in a full toga and sandals and to leave his
weapons in the camp. After so long carrying a legionary's tools, he
felt a little defenseless without them, but obeyed.
Marius himself would be riding on a throne set
atop a flat open carriage, pulled by a team of six horses. He would
wear a purple toga, a color that could only be worn by a general at
the head of a Triumph. The dye was incredibly expensive, gathered
from rare seashells and distilled. It was a garment to wear only
once, and the color of the ancient kings of Rome.
As he passed under the city gates, a slave would
raise a gilded laurel wreath above his head and hold it there for
the rest of the journey. Four words had to be whispered throughout
the Triumph, cheerfully ignored by Marius: "Remember thou art
mortal."
The carriage had been put together by the legion
engineers, made to fit perfectly between the street
stepping-stones. The heavy wooden wheels were shod with an iron
band, and the axles freshly greased. The main body had been gilded
and shone in the morning sun as if made of pure gold.
As Gaius approached, the general was inspecting
his troops, his expression serious. He spoke to many of the men and
they answered him without moving their gaze from the middle
distance.
At last, the general seemed satisfied and
climbed up onto the carriage.
"The people of our city will not forget this
day. The sight of you will inspire the children to join the forces
that keep us all safe. Foreign ambassadors will watch us and be
cautious in their dealings with Rome, with the vision of our ranks
always in their minds. Merchants will watch us and know there is
something more in the world than making money. Women will watch us
and compare their little husbands to the best of Rome! See your
reflections in the eyes as we pass. You will give the people
something more than bread and coin today; you will give them
glory."
The men cheered at the last and Gaius found
himself cheering as well. He walked to the throned carriage and
Marius saw him.
"Where shall I stand, Uncle?" he asked.
"Up here, lad. Stand at my right shoulder, so
that they will know you are beloved of my house."
Gaius grinned and clambered on, taking position.
He could see into the far distance from his new height and felt a
thrill of anticipation.
Marius dropped his arm and horns sounded,
echoing down the line to the far back. The legionaries took their
first step on the hard-packed soil.
On each side of the great gold carriage, Gaius
recognized faces from the first bloody trip to the Senate. Even on
a day of rejoicing, Marius had his handpicked men with him. Only a
fool would risk a thrown knife with the legion in the streets; they
would destroy the city in rage—but Marius had warned his men
that there were always fools, and there were no smiles in the
ranks.
"To be alive on such a day is a precious gift of
the gods," Marius said, his voice carrying.
Gaius nodded and rested his hand on the
throne.
"There are six hundred thousand people in the
city, and not one of them will be tending his business today. They
have already begun lining the streets and buying seats at windows
to cheer us through. The roads are strewn with fresh rushes, a
carpet for us to walk on for each step of the six miles. Only the
forum is being kept clear so that we can halt the whole five
thousand in one block there. I shall sacrifice a bull to Jupiter
and a boar to Minerva, and then you and I, Gaius, we will walk into
the Senate to attend our first vote."
"What is the vote about?" Gaius asked.
Marius laughed. "A simple matter of officially
accepting you into the ranks of the nobilitas and adulthood. In
truth, it is only a formality. You have the right through your
father, or, indeed, my sponsorship would do it. Remember, this city
was built and is maintained on talent. There are the old houses,
the purebloods; Sulla himself is from one such. But other men are
there because they have dragged themselves up to power, as I have.
We respect strength and cherish what is good for the city,
regardless of the parentage."
"Are your supporters from the new men?" Gaius
asked.
Marius shook his head. "Strangely enough, no.
They are often too wary of being seen to side with one of their
own. Many of them support Sulla, but those who follow me are as
often highborn as they are new wolves in the fold. The people's
tribunes make a great show of being untouched by politics and take
each vote as they find it, although they can always be depended on
to vote for cheaper corn or more rights for the slaves. With their
veto, they can never be ignored."
"Could they prevent my acceptance then?"
Marius chuckled. "Take off the worried look.
They do not vote in internal matters, such as new members, only in
city policy. Even if they did, it would be a brave man to vote
against me with my legion standing thousands deep in the forum
outside. Sulla and I are consuls—the supreme commanders of
all the military might of Rome. We lead the Senate, not the other
way around." He smiled complacently and called for wine, having the
full cup handed to him.
"What happens if you disagree with the Senate,
or with Sulla?" Gaius asked.
Marius snorted into his wine cup. "All too
common. The people elect the Senate to make and enforce the
laws—and to build the empire. They also elect the other, more
senior posts: aediles, praetors, and consuls. Sulla and I are here
because the people voted for us, and the Senate do not forget that.
If we disagree, a consul may forbid any piece of legislation and
its passage stops immediately. Sulla or I have only to say
'Veto'—'I forbid it'—as the speeches begin and
that is the end for that year. We can also block each other in this
way, although that does not happen often."
"But how does the Senate control the consuls?"
Gaius pressed, interested.
Marius took a deep draft of the wine and patted
his stomach, smiling. "They could vote against me, even remove me
from office in theory. In practice, my supporters and clients would
prevent any such vote going through, so for the whole year, a
consul is almost untouchable in power."
"You said a consul was only elected for one year
and has to step down," Gaius said.
"The law bends for strong men, Gaius. Each year,
the Senate clamors for an exception to be made and for me to be
reelected. I am good for Rome, you see—and they know it."
Gaius felt pleased at the quiet conversation, or
as quiet as the general ever managed, at least. He understood why
his father had been wary of the man. Marius was like summer
lightning—it was impossible to tell what he would strike
next—but he had the city in the palm of his hand for the
moment, and Gaius had discovered that was where he too wanted to
be: at the center of things.
They could hear the roar of Rome long
before they reached the gates. The sound was like the sea, a
formless, crashing wave that engulfed them as they halted at the
border tower. City guards approached the golden carriage and Marius
stood to receive them. They too were polished and perfectly turned
out, and they had a formal air.
"Give your name and state your business," one
said.
"Marius, general of the First-Born. I am here. I
will hold a Triumph on the streets of Rome."
The man flushed a little and Marius grinned.
"You may enter the city," the guard said,
stepping back and waving the gate open.
Marius leaned close to Gaius as he sat down
again. "Protocol says I have to ask permission, but this is too
fine a day to be polite to guards who couldn't cut it in the
legions. Take us in." He signaled and again the horns blew all down
the line. The gates opened and the crowd peered around, roaring in
excitement. The noise crashed out at the legion, and Marius's
driver had to snap the reins sharply to make the horses move
on.
The First-Born entered Rome.
"You must get out of bed now if you
want to be ready in time to see the Triumph! Everyone says it will
be glorious and your father and mother are already dressed and with
their attendants while you lie and drowse!"
Cornelia opened her eyes and stretched, careless
of the covers falling away from her golden skin. Her nurse, Clodia,
busied herself with the window hangings, parting them to air the
room and letting sunshine spill in.
"Look, the sun is high and you are not even
dressed. It is shameless to find you without clothes. What if I was
a male, or your father?"
"He wouldn't dare come in. He knows I don't
bother with nightclothes when it's hot."
Still yawning, Cornelia rose naked from her bed
and stretched like a cat, arching her back and pressing her fists
into the air. Clodia crossed to the bedroom door and dropped the
locking bar in case someone tried to enter.
"I suppose you'll be wanting a dip in the bath
before you dress," Clodia said, affection spoiling the attempt at a
stern tone.
Cornelia nodded and padded through to the
bathing room. The water steamed, reminding her that the rest of the
house had been up and working since the first moments of dawn. She
felt vaguely guilty, but that dissolved in the soothing heat as she
swung a leg over the side and climbed in, sighing. It was a luxury
she enjoyed, preferring not to wait until the formal bathing
session later in the day.
Clodia bustled in after her, carrying an armful
of warm linen. She was never still, a woman of immense energy. To a
stranger, there was nothing in her dress or manner to indicate her
slavery. Even the jewels she wore were real and she chose her
clothes from a sumptuous wardrobe.
"Hurry! Dry yourself with these and put on this
mamillare."
Cornelia groaned. "It binds me too tightly to
wear on hot days."
"It will keep your breasts from hanging like
empty bags in a few years." Clodia snorted. "You'll be pleased
enough to have worn it then. Up! Out of that water, you lazy thing.
There's a glass of water on the side to clean your mouth."
As Cornelia dabbed her body dry, Clodia laid out
her robes and opened a series of small silver boxes of paints and
oils.
"On with this," she said, dropping a long white
tunic over Cornelia's outstretched arms. The girl shrugged herself
into it and sat at the single table, propping up an oval bronze
mirror to see herself.
"I would like my hair to be curled," she said
wistfully, holding a lock of it in her fingers. It was a dark gold,
but straight for all its thickness.
"Wouldn't suit you, Lia. And there's no time
today. I should think your mother is already finished with her
ornatrix and will be waiting for us. Simple, understated
beauty is what we're after today."
"A little ochre on the lips and cheeks then,
unless you want to paint me with that stinking white lead?"
Clodia blew air out of her lips in irritation.
"It will be a few years before you need to conceal your complexion.
What are you now, seventeen?"
"You know I am, you were drunk at the feast,"
Cornelia replied with a smile, holding still while the color was
applied.
"I was merry, dear, just as everybody else was.
There is nothing wrong with a little drink in moderation, I have
always said." Clodia nodded to herself as she rubbed in the
colors.
"Now a little powdered antimony around the eyes
to make men think they are dark and mysterious, and we can start on
the hair. Don't touch it! Hands to yourself, remember, in case you
smudge."
Swiftly and dexterously, Clodia parted the dark
gold hair and gathered it into a chignon at the back, revealing the
slender length of Cornelia's neck. She looked at the face in the
mirror and smiled at the effect.
"Why your father hasn't found a man for you, I
will never know. You're certainly attractive enough."
"He said he'd let me choose and I haven't found
anyone to like yet," Cornelia replied, touching the pins in her
hair.
Clodia tutted to herself. "Your father is a good
man, but tradition is important. He should find you a young man
with good prospects, and you should have a house of your own to
run. I think you will enjoy that, somehow."
"I'll take you with me when that happens. I'd
miss you if I didn't, like... a dress that is a bit old and out of
fashion but still comfortable, you know?"
"How beautifully you put your affection for me,
my dear," Clodia replied, buffeting Cornelia's head with her hand
as she turned away to pick up the robe.
It was a great square of gold cloth that hung
down to Cornelias knees. It had to be artfully arranged for the
best effect, but Clodia had been doing it for years and knew
Cornelias tastes in cut and style.
"It is beautiful—but heavy," Cornelia
muttered.
"So are men, dear, as you will find out," Clodia
replied with a sparkle in her eyes. "Now run to your parents. We
must be early enough to have a good place to watch the Triumph.
We're going to the house of one of your father's friends."
"Oh, Father, you should have lived to
see this," Gaius whispered as they passed into the streets. The way
ahead was dark green, with every spot of stone covered by rushes.
The people too wore their best and brightest clothes, a surging
throng of color and noise. Hands were held out, and hot, envious
eyes watched them. The shops were all boarded shut, as Marius had
said. It seemed the whole city had turned out for a holiday to see
the great general. Gaius was astonished at the numbers and the
enthusiasm. Did they not remember these same soldiers cutting
themselves room on the forum only a month before? Marius had said
they respected only strength, and the proof was in their cheers,
booming and echoing in the narrow streets. Gaius glanced to his
right into a window and saw a woman of some beauty throwing flowers
at him. He caught one and the crowd roared again in
appreciation.
Not a soul pushed onto the road, despite the
lack of soldiers or guards along the edge. The lesson of the last
time had clearly been learned, and it was as if there were an
invisible barrier holding them back. Even the hard-faced men of
Marius's own guard were grinning as they marched.
Marius sat like a god. He placed his massive
hands on the arms of the golden throne and smiled at the crowd. The
slave behind him raised the garland of gilded laurel over his head,
and the shadow fell on his features. He nodded and every eye
followed his progress. His horses were trained for the battlefield
and ignored the yelling people, even when some of the more daring
landed flowers around their necks as well.
Gaius stood at the great man's shoulder as the
ride went on and the pride he felt lifted his soul. Would his
father have appreciated this? The answer was probably not and Gaius
felt a pang of sorrow at that. Marius was right: Just to be alive
on this day was to touch the gods. He knew he would never forget it
and could see in the eyes of the people that they too would store
away the moments to warm them in the dark winters of years yet to
pass.
Halfway along the route, Gaius saw Tubruk
standing on a corner. As their eyes met, Gaius could feel all the
history between them. Tubruk raised his arm in a salute and Gaius
returned it. The men around Tubruk turned to look at him and wonder
at his connection. He nodded as they passed and Gaius nodded back,
swallowing down the catch in his throat. He was drunk with emotion
and gripped the back of the throne to keep from swaying in the tide
of cheering.
Marius gave a signal to two of his men and they
climbed onto the carriage, holding soft leather bags. Hands were
plunged into the dark recesses and came up glinting with fistfuls
of silver coins. Marius's image went flying over the crowd, and
they screamed his name as they scrabbled for the metal in his wake.
Marius too reached in and his fingers emerged dripping pieces of
silver; he sprayed the coins high with a gesture and laughed as
they fell and the crowd dipped to pick up the gifts. He smiled at
their pleasure and they blessed him.
From a low window, Cornelia looked out
over the bobbing mass of people, pleased to be clear of the crowds.
She felt a thrill as Marius drew close on his throne, and cheered
with the rest. He was a handsome general and the city loved
heroes.
There was a young man next to him, too young to
be a legionary. Cornelia strained forward to get a better look. He
was smiling and his eyes flashed blue as he laughed at something
Marius said.
The procession came abreast of where Cornelia
and her family watched. She saw coins go flying and the people rush
to grab the pieces of silver. Her father, Cinna, sniffed at
this.
"Waste of money. Rome loves a frugal general,"
he said waspishly.
Cornelia ignored him, her gaze on Marius's
companion. He was attractive and healthy looking, but there was
something else about him, about the way he held himself. There was
an inner confidence, and as Clodia often said, there was nothing in
the world so attractive as confidence.
"Every mother in Rome will be after that young
cockerel for their daughters," Clodia whispered at her elbow.
Cornelia blushed and Clodia's eyebrows shot up
in surprise and pleasure.
The Triumph passed on for another two hours, but
for Cornelia it was wasted time.
The colors and faces had blurred
together, the men were heavily draped in flowers, and the sun had
reached noon by the time they began the entry to the forum. Marius
signaled to his driver to put the carriage at the front, by the
Senate steps. The space echoed as the hooves struck the stone slabs
and the noise of the streets was slowly left behind. For the first
time, Gaius could see Sulla's soldiers guarding the entrances to
the plaza and the boiling mass of the crowds beyond.
It was almost peaceful after the colorful riot
of the trip into the center.
"Stop her here," Marius said, and stood from the
throne to watch his men come in. They were well drilled and formed
tidy ranks, layer on layer from the farthest corner to the Senate
steps, until the forum was full of the shining rows of his
soldiers. No human voice could carry to every man, so a horn gave
the order to stand to attention, and they crashed their feet
together and down, making thunder. Marius smiled with pride. He
gripped Gaius's shoulder.
"Remember this. This is why we slog through
battlefields a thousand miles from home."
"I could never forget today," Gaius replied
honestly, and the grip tightened for a moment before letting
go.
Marius walked to where a white bull was held
steady by four of his men. A great black-bristled boar was
similarly held, but snorted and chafed against the ropes.
Marius accepted a taper and lit the incense in a
golden bowl. His men bowed their heads and he stepped forward with
his dagger, speaking softly as he cut the two throats.
"Bring us all through war and pestilence, safe
home to our city," he said. He wiped the blade on the skin of the
bull as it sank to its knees, bawling its fear and pain. Sheathing
the dagger, he put an arm around Gaius's shoulder, and together
they walked up the wide white steps of the Senate building.
It was the seat of power in all the world.
Columns that could not be girdled by three large men holding their
arms outstretched supported a sloping roof that was itself mounted
with distant statues. Bronze doors that dwarfed even Marius stood
closed at the top of the steps. Made of interlocking panels, they
looked as if they were designed to stand against an army, but as
the pair ascended, the doors opened silently, pulled from within.
Marius nodded and Gaius swallowed his awe.
"Come, lad, let us go and meet our masters. It
would not do to keep the Senate waiting."
CHAPTER
16
Marcus wondered at the tight
expression on Renius's face as they traveled the road to the sea.
From dawn until late in the afternoon, they had trotted and walked
the stone surface without a word. He was hungry and desperately
thirsty, but would not admit it. He had decided at noon that if
Renius wanted to do the whole trip to the docks without stopping,
then he would not give up first.
Finally, when the smell of dead fish and seaweed
soured the clean country air, Renius pulled up and, to his
surprise, Marcus noticed the man was pale.
"I want to break off here, to see a friend of
mine. You can go on to the docks and get a room there. There's an
inn...
"I'm coming with you," Marcus said curtly.
Renius's jaw tightened and he muttered "As you
please," before turning off the main road onto a lesser track.
Mystified, Marcus followed him as the track
wound through woods for miles. He didn't ask where they were going,
just kept his sword loose in his scabbard in case there were
bandits hidden in the foliage. Not that a sword would be much use
against a bow, he noted.
The sun, where it could be seen at all through
the canopy, had dropped down toward the horizon when they rode into
a small village. There were no more than twenty small houses, but
the place had a well-kept air to it. Chickens were penned and goats
tethered outside most dwellings, and Marcus felt no sense of
danger. Renius dismounted.
"Are you coming in?" he said as he walked to a
door.
Marcus nodded, and tied the two horses to a
post. Renius was inside by the time he was done, and he frowned,
resting a hand on his dagger as he went in. It was a little dark
inside, lit only by a candle and a small fire in the hearth, but
Marcus could see Renius hugging an ancient old man with his one
good arm.
"This is my brother, Primus. Primus, this is the
lad I mentioned, traveling with me to Greece."
The man must have been eighty years old, but he
had a firm grip.
"My brother has written about your progress and
the other one, Gaius. He doesn't like anyone, but I think he
dislikes you two less than most people."
Marcus grunted.
"Take a seat, boy. We have a long night ahead of
us." He went over to his small wood fire and placed a long metal
poker in its fiery heart.
"What is happening?" Marcus asked.
Renius sighed. "My brother was a surgeon. He is
going to take my arm off."
Marcus felt a sick horror come over him as he
realized what he was going to see. Guilt too flushed his face. He
hoped Renius wouldn't mention how he had been injured. To cover his
embarrassment, he spoke quickly. "Lucius or Cabera could have done
it, I'm sure."
Renius silenced him with a raised hand.
"Many people could do the job, but Primus was...
is the best."
Primus cackled, revealing a mouth with very few
teeth. "My little brother used to chop people up and I would stitch
them back together," he said cheerfully. "Let us have a light for
this." He turned to an oil lamp and lit it from a candle. When he
turned back, he squinted at Renius.
"I know my eyes are not what they were, but did
you dye your hair?"
Renius flushed. "I do not want to be told your
eyes are failing before you start cutting me, Primus. I am aging
well, that is all."
"Damned well," Primus agreed. He emptied a
leather satchel of tools onto a table surface and gestured to his
brother to sit down. Looking at the saws and needles, Marcus wished
he had taken the advice and gone on to the docks, but it was too
late. Renius sat and sweat dripped from his forehead. Primus gave
him a bottle of brown liquid and he raised it, taking great
swallows.
"You, boy, get that rope and tie him to the
chair. I don't want him thrashing around and breaking my
furniture."
Feeling sick, Marcus took the lengths of rope,
noting with a quiet horror that they were all stained with ancient
blood. He busied himself with the knots and tried not to think
about it.
After a few minutes, Renius was immobile and
Primus poured the last of the brown liquid into his throat.
"That's all I have, I'm afraid. It will take the
edge off, but not much."
"Just get on with it," Renius growled through
clenched teeth.
Primus raised a thick piece of leather to his
mouth and told him to bite it. "It will save your teeth, at
least."
He turned to Marcus. "You hold the arm still. It
will make the sawing quicker." He placed Marcus's hands on the
corded bicep and checked that the ropes held the wrist and elbow
securely. He slid a vicious-looking blade from his pack and held it
up to the light, squinting at the edge.
"I will cut a circle around the bone, then
another below it to give the saw room. We will take out a ring of
flesh, saw the bone, and cauterize the leaks. It must be fast, or
he will bleed to death. I will leave enough skin to fold over the
stump, then it must be bound securely. He must not touch it for the
first week, then, each morning and night, he should rub in an
ointment I will give you. I have no leather cup for the stump; you
will have to make or buy one yourself."
Marcus swallowed nervously.
Primus plunged his fingers into the muscles and
nerves of the useless arm, feeling around. After a minute, he
tutted to himself, his face sad.
"It is as you said. There is no feeling at all.
The muscles are cut and beginning to waste. Was it a fight?"
Involuntarily, Marcus glanced up at Renius. The
eyes above the bared teeth were manic and he looked away. "A
training accident," he said softly, his voice muffled by the
leather piece.
Primus nodded and pressed the blade to the skin.
Renius tensed and Marcus gripped the arm.
With deft, sure strokes, Primus cut deep,
stopping only to dab at the wound with a piece of cloth to remove
obscuring gouts of blood. Marcus felt his stomach heave, but
Renius's brother seemed completely relaxed, blowing air between his
teeth in something close to a little tune. White bone sheathed in a
pink curtain appeared, and Primus grunted in satisfaction. After
only a few seconds, he had reached the bone all the way around and
begun the second cut.
Renius looked down at the gory hands of his
brother, and his lip curled into a bitter grimace. After that, he
stared at the wall, his jaw clenched. A slight tremble of his
breathing was the only sign of his fear.
Blood spilled over Marcus's hands, the chair,
the floor, everything. There were lakes of it inside Renius and it
was all coming out, shining and wet. The second ring was gouged
out, leaving great flaps of hanging skin. Primus notched and
sliced, removing the dark lumps of meat and dropping them
carelessly on the floor.
"Don't worry about the mess. I have two dogs
that will love this when I let them in."
Marcus turned his head away and vomited
helplessly. Primus tutted and rearranged the hands that held the
arm. A white spike of bone was visible a hand's breadth up from the
elbow.
Renius had begun to breathe in hard blasts from
his nose, and Primus pressed a hand against his brother's neck,
feeling for the pulse.
"I'll be as quick as I can," he muttered.
Renius nodded, unblinking.
Primus stood up and wiped his hands on a cloth.
He looked his brother in the eyes and grimaced at what he found
there.
"This is the hard part. You will feel the pain
when I cut the bone, and the vibration is very unpleasant. I will
be as fast as I can. Hold him very still. For two minutes, you must
be like a rock. No more of this puking, understand?"
Marcus took deep breaths, miserably, and Primus
brought out a thin-bladed saw, set in a wooden handle like a
kitchen knife.
"Ready?"
They both muttered assent and Primus set the
blade and began to cut, his elbow moving back and forth almost in a
blur.
Renius went rigid and his whole body rose
against the ropes holding him. Marcus gripped as if his life
depended on it, and winced whenever the blood made his fingers slip
and the saw snagged.
Without warning, the arm came free, leaning
sideways and away from Renius. Renius looked down at it and grunted
in anger. Primus wiped his hands and pressed a wad of cloth into
the wound. He gestured to Marcus to hold it in place and fetched
the iron bar that had been heating in the fire. The tip glowed and
Marcus winced in anticipation.
When the cloth was removed, Primus worked
quickly, stabbing the tip into every spot of welling blood. Each
contact sizzled and the stench was horrible. Marcus dry-heaved onto
the floor, a line of sticky yellow bile connecting him with it.
"Put this back in the fire, quickly. I will hold
the cloth while it heats again."
Marcus staggered upright and took the bar,
jamming it back into the flames. Renius's head lolled on his
shoulders and the leather strip fell from his slack mouth.
Primus kept holding the cloth, then removing it
to watch the blood come. He swore viciously.
"I've missed half the pipes at least. Used to
be, I could hit each one with one go, but I haven't done this in a
few years. It has to be done right, or the wound will poison
itself. Is the iron ready yet?"
Marcus withdrew it, but the point was still
black. "No. Will he be all right?"
"Not if I can't seal the wound, no. Get outside
and fetch some wood to build up the fire."
Marcus was thankful for the excuse and left
quickly, taking great gulps of sweet air as he stood outside. It
was almost dark—gods, how long had they been in there? He
noticed a couple of large hounds tied to a wall around the side,
asleep. He shuddered and gathered heavy chunks of wood from the
pile near them. They woke at his approach and growled softly, but
didn't get up. Without looking at them, he went back inside,
dumping two billets onto the flames.
"Bring me the iron as soon as the tip is red,"
Primus muttered, pressing the wad of cloth hard against the
stump.
Marcus avoided looking at the detached arm. It
seemed wrong, away from a body, and his stomach heaved in a series
of quick spasms before he had the sense to gaze back at the
flames.
Once more the bar had to be reheated before
Primus was finally satisfied. Marcus knew he would never be able to
forget the fsss sound of the burning and repressed a shudder
as he helped bind the stump in clean cloth bandages. Together, they
lifted Renius onto a pallet bed in another room, and Marcus sat on
the edge, wiping the sweat out of his eyes, thankful it was
over.
"What happens to... that?" He gestured toward
the arm that was still tied to the chair.
Primus shrugged. "Doesn't seem right to give the
whole thing to my dogs. I'll probably bury it somewhere in the
woods. It would only rot and smell if I didn't, but a lot of men
ask for them. There are so many memories wrapped up in a hand. I
mean, those fingers have held women and patted children. It is a
lot to lose, but my brother is strong. I hope strong enough even
for this."
"Our ship leaves in four days, on the best
tide," Marcus said weakly.
Primus scratched his chin. "He can sit a horse.
He will be weak for a few days, but he's as strong as a bull. The
problems will be with balance. He will have to retrain, almost from
scratch. How long is the sea trip?"
"A month, with good winds," Marcus replied.
"Use the time. Practice with him every day. Of
all men, my brother will not enjoy being less than capable."
CHAPTER
17
Marius paused at the inner doors of
the Senate chamber.
"You are not allowed to enter until you are
officially accepted as a citizen, and then only as my guest for the
day. I will propose you and make a short speech on your behalf. It
is a formality. Wait until I return and show you where you may
sit."
Gaius nodded calmly and stood back as Marius
rapped on the doors and walked through them as they opened. He was
left alone in the outer chamber and paced up and down it for a
while.
After twenty minutes, he began to fret at the
delay and wandered over to the open outer doors, looking down onto
the massed soldiers in the forum. They were an impressive sight,
standing rigidly to attention despite the heat of the day. From the
height of the Senate doors and with the open plaza ahead of him,
Gaius had a good view of the bustling city beyond. He was lost in
his inspection of this when he heard the creak of hinges from the
inner doors and Marius stepped out.
"Welcome to the nobilitas, Gaius. You are a
citizen of Rome and your father would be proud. Sit next to me and
listen to the matters of the day. You will find them interesting, I
suspect."
Gaius followed and met the eyes of the senators
as they watched him enter. One or two nodded to him and he wondered
if they had known his father, memorizing faces in case he had a
chance to speak to them later on. He glanced around the hall,
trying not to stare. The world listened to what these few had to
say.
The arrangement was very like the circus in
miniature, he thought as he took the seat Marius indicated. Five
stepped tiers of seating curled around a central space where one
speaker at a time could address the others. Gaius remembered from
his tutors that the rostrum was made from the prow of a
Carthaginian warship, and was fascinated to imagine its
history.
The seats were built into the curving rows, with
dark wooden arms protruding where they were not obscured by seated
men. Everyone wore white togas and sandals and the effect was of a
working room, a place that crackled with energy. Most of the men
had white hair, but a few were young and physically commanding.
Several of the senators were standing, and he guessed this was to
show they wanted to raise a point or add to the debate at hand.
Sulla himself stood at the center of it all, talking about taxation
and corn. He smiled at Gaius when he saw the young man looking over
at him, and Gaius felt the power of it. Here was another like
Marius, he judged on the instant, but was there room in Rome for
two of that kind? Sulla looked as he had when Gaius had seen him at
the games. He was dressed in a simple white toga, belted with a
band of red. His hair was oiled and gleamed in dark gold curls. He
glowed with health and vitality and seemed completely relaxed. As
Gaius took his seat next to his uncle, Sulla coughed into his hand
delicately.
"I think, given the more serious business of the
day, that this taxation debate can be postponed until next week.
Are there any objections?" Those who were standing sat down,
looking unperturbed. Sulla smiled again, revealing even, white
teeth.
"I welcome the new citizen and offer the hope of
the Senate that he will serve the city as well as his father did."
There was a murmur of approval and Gaius dipped his head slightly
in acknowledgment.
"However, our formal welcome must also be put
aside for the moment. I have received grave news of a threat to the
city this very morning." He paused and waited patiently for the
senators to stop talking. "To the east, a Greek general,
Mithridates, has overrun a garrison of ours in Asia Minor. He may
have as many as eight thousand men in rebellion. They have
apparently become aware of the overstretched state of our current
fighting forces and are gambling on our being too weak to regain
the territory. However, if we do not act to repel him, we risk his
army growing in strength and threatening the security of our Greek
possessions."
Several senators rose to their feet, and shouted
arguments began on the benches. Sulla held his hands up for
quiet.
"A decision must be made here. The legions
already in Greece are committed to controlling the unstable
borders. They do not have the men to break this new threat. We
cannot leave the city defenseless, especially after the most recent
riots, but it is of equal importance that we send a legion to meet
the man in the field. Greece is watching to see how we will
respond—it must be with speed and fury."
Heads nodded in violent agreement. Rome had not
been built on caution and compromise. Gaius looked at Marius in
sudden thought. The general sat with his hands clenched in front of
him, and his face was tight and cold.
"Marius and I command a legion each. We are
months closer than any other from the north. The decision I put to
the vote is which of the two should take ship to meet the enemy
army."
He flashed a look at Marius, and for the first
time, Gaius could see the bright malice in his eyes. Marius
rose to his feet and the chamber hushed. Those standing sat to
allow the first response to the other consul. Marius put his hands
behind his back and Gaius could see the whiteness of his
knuckles.
"I find no fault with Sulla's proposed course of
action. The situation is clear: Our forces must be split to defend
Rome and our foreign dominions. I must ask him whether he will
volunteer to be the one to banish the invader."
All eyes turned to Sulla.
"I will trust the judgment of the Senate on
this. I am a servant of Rome. My personal wishes do not come into
it."
Marius smiled tightly and the tension could be
felt in the air between them.
"I concur," Marius said clearly, and took his
seat.
Sulla looked relieved and cast his gaze around
the vaulted room.
"Then it is a simple choice. I will say the name
of each legion, and those who believe that is the one to fight
Mithridates will stand up and be counted. The rest will stand when
they hear the second name. No man may abstain in such a vote on the
security of the city. Are we all agreed?"
The three hundred senators murmured their assent
solemnly, and Sulla smiled. Gaius felt fear touch him. Sulla paused
for a long moment, clearly enjoying the tension. At last he spoke
one word into the silence.
"First-Born."
Marius placed his hand on Gaius's shoulder. "You
may not vote today, lad."
Gaius remained in his seat, craning around him
to see how many would stand. Marius looked levelly at Sulla, as if
the matter were of no importance to him. It seemed that all around
them men were getting up, and Gaius knew his uncle had lost. Then
the noises stopped and no more men stood. He looked down at the
handsome consul standing at the center and could see Sulla's face
change from relaxed pleasure to disbelief, then fury. He made the
count and had it checked by two others until they agreed.
"One hundred and twenty-one in favor of the
First-Born dealing with the invader."
He bit his lip, his expression brutal for a
second. His gaze fastened on Marius, who shrugged and looked away.
The standing men sat.
"Second Alaudae," Sulla whispered, his voice
carrying on the well-crafted acoustics of the hall. Again, men
stood, and Gaius could see it was a majority. Whatever plan Sulla
had attempted had failed, and Gaius saw him wave the senators to
their seats without allowing the count to be properly finished and
recorded. Visibly, he gathered himself, and when he spoke he was
again the charming young man Gaius had seen when he entered.
"The Senate has spoken and I am the servant of
the Senate," he said formally. "I trust Marius will use the city
barracks for his own men in my absence?"
"I will," said Marius, his face calm and
still.
Sulla went on: "With the support of our forces
in Asia Minor, I do not see this as a long campaign. I will return
to Rome as soon as I have crushed Mithridates. Then we will decide
the future of this city." He said the last looking straight at
Marius, and the message was clear.
"I will have my men vacate the barracks this
evening. If there is no further business? Good day to you all."
Sulla left the chamber, with a group of his supporters falling in
behind him. The pressure disappeared in the room and suddenly
everyone was speaking, chuckling, or looking thoughtfully at each
other.
Marius stood and immediately there was
quiet.
"Thank you for your trust, gentlemen. I will
guard this city well against all comers." Gaius noted that Sulla
could well be one of those Marius would guard against, when he
returned.
Senators crowded around his uncle, a
few shaking his hand in open congratulation. Marius pulled Gaius to
him with one hand and reached out with the other to take the
shoulder of a scrawny man, who smiled at them both.
"Crassus, this is my nephew, Gaius. You would
not believe it to look at him, but Crassus here is probably the
richest man in Rome."
The man had a long, thin neck and his head
bobbed at the end of it, with warm brown eyes twinkling in a mass
of tiny wrinkles.
"I have been blessed by the gods, it is true. I
also have two beautiful daughters."
Marius chuckled. "One is tolerably attractive,
Crassus, but the other takes after her father."
Internally, Gaius winced at this, but Crassus
didn't seem to mind at all. He laughed ruefully.
"That is true, she is a little bony. I will have
to give her a large dowry to tempt the young men of Rome." He faced
Gaius and put out his hand. "It is a pleasure to meet you, young
man. Will you be a general like your uncle?"
"I will," Gaius said seriously.
Crassus smiled. "Then you will need money. Come
to me when you need a backer?"
Gaius took the offered hand, gripping it briefly
before Crassus moved away into the crowd.
Marius leaned over to him and muttered in his
ear, "Well done. He has been a loyal friend to me and he has
incredible wealth. I will arrange for you to visit his estate; it
is astonishing in its opulence. Now, there is one other I want you
to meet. Come with me."
Gaius followed him through the knots of senators
as they talked over the events of the day and Sulla's humiliation.
Gaius noted that Marius shook hands with every man who met his eye,
saying a few words of congratulation, asking after families and
absent friends. He left each group smiling.
Across the other side of the Senate hall, a
group of three men were talking quietly, stopping as soon as Marius
and Gaius approached.
"This is the man, Gaius," Marius said
cheerfully. "Gnaeus Pompey, who is described by his supporters as
the best field general Rome has at present—when I am ill or
out of the country."
Pompey shook hands with them both, smiling
affably. Unlike the spare Crassus, he was a little overweight, but
he was as tall as Marius and carried it well, creating an
impression of solid bulk. Gaius guessed him to be no more than
thirty, which made his military status very impressive.
"There is no possibility about it, Marius,"
Pompey replied. "Truly I am wondrous in the field of battle. Strong
men weep at the beauty of my maneuvers."
Marius laughed and clapped him on the
shoulder.
Pompey looked Gaius up and down. "A younger
version of you, old fox?" he said to Marius.
"What else could he be, with my blood in his
veins?"
Pompey clasped his hands behind his back. "Your
uncle has taken a terrible risk today, by pushing Sulla out of
Rome. What did you think of it?"
Marius began to reply, but Pompey held up a
hand.
"Let him speak, old fox. Let me see if he has
anything to him."
Gaius answered without hesitation, the words
coming surprisingly easily. "It is a dangerous move to offend
Sulla, but my uncle enjoys gambles of this kind. Sulla is the
servant of the city and will fight well against this foreign
general. When he returns, he will have to make an accommodation
with my uncle. Perhaps we can extend the barracks so that both
legions can protect the city."
Pompey blinked and turned to Marius. "Is he a
fool?"
Marius chuckled. "No. He just doesn't know if I
trust you or not. I suspect he has already guessed my plans."
"What will your uncle do when Sulla returns?"
Pompey whispered, close to Gaius's ear.
Gaius looked around, but there was no one close
enough to overhear, except for the three Marius obviously
trusted.
"He will close the gates. If Sulla tries to
force an entry, the Senate will have to declare him an enemy of
Rome. He will have to either begin a siege or retreat. I suspect he
will put himself at Marius's command, as any general in the field
might do to the consul of Rome."
Pompey agreed, unblinking. "A dangerous path,
Marius, as I said. I cannot support you openly, but I will do my
best for you in private. Congratulations on your triumphal march.
You looked splendid." He gestured to the two with him and they
walked away.
Gaius began to speak again, but Marius shook his
head.
"Let us go outside, the air is thick with
intrigue in here." They moved toward the doors and, outside, Marius
put a finger to his lips to stop Gaius's questions. "Not here.
There are too many listeners."
Gaius glanced around and saw that some of
Sulla's senators were close, staring over with undisguised
hostility. He followed Marius out into the forum, taking a seat on
the stone steps away from where they could be overheard. Nearby,
the First-Born still stood to attention, looking invincible in
their shining armor. It was a peculiar feeling to be in the
presence of thousands and yet to sit relaxed with his uncle on the
very steps of the Senate.
Gaius could not hold it in any longer.
"How did you swing the vote against Sulla?"
Marius began to laugh and wiped his forehead
free of sudden perspiration. "Planning, my lad. I knew of the
landing of Mithridates almost as soon as it happened, days before
Sulla heard. I used the oldest lever in the world to persuade the
waverers in the Senate to vote for me, and even then, it was closer
than I would have liked. It cost me a fortune, but from tomorrow
morning I have control of Rome."
"He will be back, though," Gaius warned.
Marius snorted. "In six months or longer,
perhaps. He could be killed on the battlefield, he could even lose
to Mithridates; I have heard he is a canny general. Even if Sulla
beats him in double time and finds fair sea winds to Greece and
back, I will have months to prepare. He will leave as easily as he
likes, but I tell you now, he won't get back in without a
fight."
Gaius shook his head in disbelief at this
confirmation of his thoughts. "What happens now? Do we go back to
your house?"
Marius smiled a little sadly in response. "No. I
had to sell it for the bribes—Sulla was already bribing them,
you see, and I had to double his offers in most cases. It took
everything I own, except my horse, my sword, and my armor. I may be
the first penniless general Rome has ever had." He laughed
quietly.
"If you had lost the vote, you would have lost
everything!" Gaius whispered, shocked by the stakes.
"But I did not lose! I have Rome and my legion
stands in front of us."
"What would you have done if you had lost,
though?"
Marius blew air through his lips in disdain. "I
would have left to fight Mithridates, of course. Am I not a servant
of the city? Mind you, it would have taken a brave man to accept my
bribe and still vote against me with my legion waiting just
outside, wouldn't it? We must be thankful that the Senate values
gold as much as they do. They think of new horses and slaves, but
they have never been poor as I was poor. I value gold only for what
it brings me, and this is where it has put me down—on these
steps, with the greatest city in the world at my back. Cheer up,
lad, this is a day for celebration, not regrets."
"No, it's not that. I was just thinking that
Marcus and Renius are heading east to join the Fourth Macedonia.
There's a fair chance they will meet this Mithridates coming the
other way."
"I hope not. Those two would have that Greek for
breakfast, and I want Sulla to have something to do when he
gets there."
Gaius laughed and they stood up together. Marius
looked at his legion and Gaius could feel the joy and pride burning
out of him.
"This has been a good day. You have met the men
of power in the city, and I have been loved by the people and
backed by the Senate. By the way, that slave girl of yours, the
pretty one? I'd sell her if I were you. It's one thing to tumble a
girl a few times, but you seem to be sweet on her and that will
lead to trouble."
Gaius looked away, biting his lip. Were there no
secrets?
Marius continued blithely, unaware of his
companion's discomfort. "Have you even tried her yet? No? Maybe
that will get her out of your system. I know a few good houses here
if you want to get a little experience in first. Just ask when
you're ready."
Gaius did not reply, his cheeks hot.
Marius stood and looked with obvious pride at
the Primigenia legion ranked before them.
"Shall we march the men over to the city
barracks, lad? I think they could do with a good meal and a decent
night's sleep after all this marching and standing in the sun."
CHAPTER
18
Marcus looked out onto the
Mediterranean Sea and breathed in the warm air, heavy with salt.
After a week at sea, boredom had set in. He knew every inch of the
small trading vessel and had even helped in the hold, counting
amphorae of thick oil and ebony planking transported from Africa.
For a while, his interest had been kindled by the hundreds of rats
below the decks, and he spent two days crawling to their nests in
the darkness, armed with a dagger and a marble paperweight stolen
from the captain's cabin. After he had thrown dozens of the little
bodies overboard, the rats had learned to recognize his smell or
his careful tread, retreating into crevices deep in the wood of the
ship the moment he set foot on the ladder below.
He sighed and watched the sunset, still awed by
the colors of the sinking sun out at sea. As a passenger, he could
have stayed in his cabin for the whole journey, as Renius seemed
determined to do, but the tiny, cramped space offered nothing in
terms of amusement, and Marcus had quickly come to use it only to
sleep.
The captain had allowed him to stand watch, and
he had even tried his hand at controlling the two great steering
oars at the back, or what he had learned to call the stern, but his
interest soon paled.
"Another couple of weeks of this will kill me,"
he muttered to himself, using his knife to cut his initials into
the wooden rail. A scuffling noise sounded behind him, but he
didn't turn, just smiled and kept watching the sunset. There was
silence and then another noise, the sort a small body might make if
it was shifting for comfort.
Marcus spun and launched his knife underarm, as
Renius had once taught him. It thudded into the mast and quivered.
There was a squeak of terror and a flash of dirty white feet in the
darkness as something scuttled deeper into shadow, trying too hard
to be silent.
Marcus strolled over to the knife and freed it
with a wrench. Sliding it back into the waist sheath, he squinted
into the blackness.
"Come out, Peppis, I know you're in there," he
called. He heard a sniff. "I wouldn't have hit you with the knife,
it was just a joke. Honestly."
Slowly, a skeletal little boy emerged from
behind some sacking. He was filthy almost beyond belief and his
eyes were wide with fear.
"I was just watching you," Peppis said
nervously.
Marcus looked more closely at him, noticing a
small crust of dried blood under his nose and a purple bruise over
one eye.
"Have the men been beating you again?" he said,
trying to make his voice friendly.
"A little, but it was my fault. I tripped on a
rope and pulled a knot undone. I didn't mean to but Firstmate said
he would teach me to be clumsy. I'm already clumsy, though, so I
said I didn't need no teaching and then he knocked me about." He
sniffed again and wiped his nose with the back of his hand, leaving
a silvery trail.
"Why don't you run away at a port?" Marcus
asked.
Peppis puffed his chest out as far as it would
go, revealing his ribs like white sticks under his skin. "Not me.
I'm going to be a sailor when I'm older. I'm learning all the time,
just by watching the men. I can tie ever so many knots now. I could
have retied that rope today if Firstmate woulda let me, but he
didn't know that."
"Do you want me to have a word with the... first
mate? Tell him to stop the beatings?"
Peppis turned even paler and shook his head.
"He'd kill me if you do, maybe this trip or maybe on the way back.
He's always saying if I can't learn to be a sailor, he'll put me
over the side some night when I'm sleeping. That's why I don't
sleep in my bunk, but out here on the decks. I move around a lot so
he won't know where to find me if he thinks it's time."
Marcus sighed. He felt sorry for the little boy,
but there was no simple answer to his problems. Even if the first
mate were quietly put over the side himself, Peppis would be
tortured by the others. They all took part and the first time
Marcus had mentioned it to Renius, the old gladiator had laughed
and said there was one like him on every ship of the sea. Even so,
it galled Marcus to have the boy hurt. He had never forgotten what
it was like to be at the mercy of bullies like Suetonius, and he
knew that if he had built the wolf trap, and not Gaius, he would
have dropped rocks in and crushed the older boy. He sighed again
and stood up, stretching tired muscles.
Where would he have ended up if Gaius's parents
hadn't looked after him and brought him up? He could very easily
have stowed away on a trade ship and have been in just the sort of
horrible position Peppis found himself. He would never have been
trained to fight or defend himself, and lack of food would have
made him weak and sickly.
"Look," he said, "if you won't let me help you
with the sailors, at least let me share my food with you. I don't
eat much anyway and I've been sending some of it back, especially
in rough water. All right? You stay there and I'll bring you
something."
Peppis nodded silently and, a little cheered,
Marcus went belowdecks to his cramped cabin to fetch the cheese and
bread left for him earlier. In truth, he was hungry, but he could
go without and the little boy was practically starved to death.
Leaving Peppis to chew on the food, Marcus
wandered back to the steering oars, knowing that the first mate
took a turn about midnight. Like Peppis, he'd never heard the man's
real name. Everyone called him by his station and he seemed to do
his job well enough, keeping the crew in line with a hard hand. The
little ship Lucidae had a reputation for honest dealing too,
with very little of the cargo ever going missing on voyages. Other
ships had to write off such small losses to keep their crews happy,
but not the owners of the Lucidae.
Marcus brightened as he saw the man had already
taken his place, holding one of the two great rudders steady
against the currents and chatting in a low voice to his partner on
the other.
"A fine evening," he said as he came close.
Firstmate grunted and nodded. He had to be polite to paying
passengers, but bare civility was all he would offer. He was a
powerfully built man and held the rudder with only one arm, while
his companion threw his weight and both shoulders into the task of
holding his steady. The other man said nothing and Marcus
recognized him as one of the crew, tall and long-armed with a
shaven skull. He gazed steadfastly ahead, engrossed in his task and
the feel of the wood in his hands.
"I'd like to buy one of the crew as a slave. Who
should I talk to?" Marcus said, keeping his voice amiable.
Firstmate blinked in surprise, and two gazes
rested on the young Roman.
"We're free men," the other said, his voice
showing his distaste.
Marcus looked disconcerted. "Oh, I didn't mean
one of you, of course. I meant the boy Peppis. He's not on the crew
lists. I checked, so I thought he might be available for sale. I
need a boy to carry my sword and—"
"I've seen you on the decks," the first mate
rumbled from deep in his chest. "You were making angry faces when
we were giving him his lessons. I reckon you're one of those soft
city lads who thinks we're too hard on the ship boys. Either that
or you want him in your bed. Which is it?"
Marcus smiled slowly, revealing his teeth. "Oh
dear. That sounds like an insult, my friend. You'd better let that
rudder go, so I can give you a lesson myself."
The first mate opened his mouth to retort and
Marcus hit it. For a while, the Lucidae wandered off course
over the dark sea.
Renius woke him by shaking him
roughly.
"Wake up! The captain wants to see you."
Marcus groaned. His face and upper body were a
mass of heavy bruises. Renius whistled softly as he stood up and,
wincing, began to dress. Using his tongue, Marcus found a loose
tooth and pulled out the water pot under his bed to spit bloody
phlegm into it.
With the part of his mind that was active, he
was pleased to notice that Renius was wearing his iron breastplate
and had his sword strapped on. The stump of his arm was bound with
clean bandages, and the depression that had kept him in his cabin
for the first weeks seemed to have disappeared. When Marcus had
pulled on his tunic and wrapped a cloak against the cold morning
breeze, Renius held the door open.
"Someone beat the first mate into the ground
last night, and another man with him," Renius said cheerfully.
Marcus put his hand up to his face and felt a
ridge of split skin on his cheek. "Did he say who did it?" he
muttered.
"He says he was jumped from behind, in the dark.
He has a broken shoulder, you know." Renius had definitely lost his
depression, but Marcus decided that the new, chuckling Renius was
not really an improvement.
The captain was a Greek named Epides. He was a
short, energetic man with a beard that looked as if it were pasted
on, without a troublesome hair out of place on his face. He stood
up as Marcus and Renius entered, and rested his hands on his desk,
which was held to the floor against the rocking of the ship with
heavy iron manacles. Each finger had a valuable stone set into gold
on it, and they glittered with every movement. The rest of the room
was simple, as befitted a working trader. There was no luxury and
nowhere to look but at the man himself, who glared at both of
them.
"Let's not try the protestations of innocence,"
he said. "My first mate has a broken shoulder and collarbone and
you did it."
Marcus tried to speak, but the captain
interrupted.
"He won't identify you, Zeus himself knows why.
If he did, I'd have you flogged raw on the decks. As it is, you
will take up his duties for the remainder of this trip, and I will
be sending a letter to your legion commander about the sort of
ill-disciplined lout he is taking on. You are hereby signed on as
crew for this voyage, as is my right as captain of Lucidae.
If I discover you are shirking your duties in any way, I will flog
you. Do you understand?"
Marcus again began to answer, but this time
Renius stopped him, speaking quietly and reasonably.
"Captain. When the lad accepted his position in
the Fourth Macedonia, he became, from that moment, a member of that
legion. As you are in a difficult position, he will volunteer to
replace the first mate until we make land in Greece. However, it
will be I who makes sure he does not shirk his duties. If he is
flogged by your order, I will come up here and rip your heart out.
Do we understand each other?" His voice remained calm, almost
friendly, right to the end.
Epides paled slightly and raised a hand to
smooth his beard in a nervous gesture. "Just make sure he does the
job. Now get out and report to the second mate for work."
Renius looked at him for a long moment and then
nodded slowly, turning to the door and allowing Marcus to walk
through first before following.
Left alone, Epides sank into his chair and
dipped a hand into a bowl of rosewater, dabbing it onto his neck.
Then he composed himself and smiled grimly as he gathered his
writing materials. For a while, he mused over the clever, sharp
retorts he should have made. Threatened by Renius, by all the gods!
When he returned home, the story he would tell would include the
blistering ripostes, but at the actual moment, something naked and
violent in the man's eyes had stopped his mouth.
The second mate was a dour man from
northern Italy called Parus. He said very little as Marcus and
Renius reported to him, just outlined the daily tasks for a first
mate of a trader, ending with the stint on the rudder at around
midnight.
"Won't seem right, calling you first mate, with
him still belowdecks."
"I'll be doing his job for him. You'll call me
by his name while I'm doing it," Marcus replied.
The man stiffened. "What are you, sixteen? The
men won't like it either," he said.
"Seventeen," Marcus lied smoothly. "The men will
get used to it. Maybe we'd better see them now."
"Have you sailed before?" Parus asked.
"First trip, but you tell me what needs doing
and I'll get it done. All right?"
Puffing out his cheeks in obvious disgust, Parus
nodded. "I'll get the men on deck."
"I'll get the men on deck, First Mate,"
Marcus said clearly through his swollen lips. His eyes glinted
dangerously, and Parus wondered how he'd beaten Firstmate in a
fight and why the man wouldn't identify him to the captain when any
fool could see who it had been.
"First Mate," he agreed sullenly, and left
them.
Marcus turned to Renius, who was looking askance
at him.
"What are you thinking?" Marcus asked.
"I'm thinking you'd better watch your back, or
you won't ever see Greece," Renius replied seriously.
All the crew who weren't actively
working gathered on the small deck. Marcus counted fifteen sailors,
with another five on the rudders and sail rigging around.
Parus cleared his throat for their
attention.
"Since Firstmate's arm is broken, the captain
says the job belongs to this one for the rest of the trip. Get back
to work."
The men turned to go and Marcus took a step
forward, furious.
"Stay where you are," he bellowed, surprising
himself with the strength of his voice. He had their attention for
a moment and he didn't intend to waste it.
"Now, you all know I broke Firstmate's arm, so
I'm not going to deny it. We had a difference of opinion and we
fought over it, that's the end of the story. I don't know why he
hasn't told the captain who it was, but I respect him a bit more
for it. I'll do his job as best I'm able, but I'm no sailor and you
know that too. You work with me and I won't mind if you tell me
when I'm wrong. But if you tell me I'm wrong, you'd better
be right. Fair enough?"
There was a mutter from the assembled men.
"If you're no sailor, you ain't going to know
what you're doing. What use is a farmer on a trade ship?" called a
heavily tattooed sailor. He was sneering and Marcus responded
quickly, coloring in anger.
"First thing is for me to walk the ship and
speak to each one of you. You tell me exactly what your job is and
I'll do it. If I can't do it, I'll go back to the captain and tell
him I'm not up to the job. Anyone object?"
There was silence. A few of them looked
interested at the challenge, but most faces were bluntly hostile.
Marcus clenched his jaw and felt the loose tooth grate.
He pulled his dagger from his belt and held it
up. It was a well-crafted weapon, given to him by Marius as a
parting gift. Not lavishly decorated, it was nonetheless an
expensive piece, with a bronze wire handle.
"If any man can do something I can't do, I will
give him this, presented to me by General Marius of the Primigenia.
Dismissed."
This time, there was much more interest in the
faces, and a number of the sailors looked at the blade he still
held as they went back to their tasks.
Marcus turned to Renius and the gladiator shook
his head slowly in disbelief.
"Gods, you're green. That's too good a blade to
throw away," he said.
"I won't lose it. If I have to prove myself to
the crew, that's what I'll do. I'm fit enough. How hard can these
jobs be?"
CHAPTER
19
Marcus clung to the mast crosspiece
with a knuckle-whitening grip. At this, the highest point of the
Lucidae, it seemed as if he were swinging with the mast from
one horizon to the other. The sea below was spattered gray with
choppy white waves, no danger to the sturdy little vessel. His
stomach heaved and every part of him responded with discomfort. All
his bruises had stiffened by noon and now he found it hard to turn
his head to the right without pain sending black and white spots
into his vision.
Above him, barefoot and standing without support
on the spar, was a sailor, the first to try to win the dagger. The
man grinned without malice, but the challenge was
clear—Marcus had to join him and risk falling into the sea
or, worse, onto the deck far below.
"These masts didn't look so tall from below,"
Marcus grunted through clenched teeth.
The sailor walked over to him, perfectly
balanced and adjusting his weight all the time to the roll and
pitch of the ship.
"Tall enough to kill you. Firstmate could walk
the spar, though, so I think you'll just have to make your
choice."
He waited patiently, occasionally checking knots
and ropes for tautness out of habit. Marcus gritted his teeth and
heaved himself over the crosspiece, resting his unruly stomach on
it. He could see the other men below and noted that a few of the
faces were turned upward to see him succeed, or perhaps to be sure
of getting out of the way if he fell—he didn't know.
The tip of the mast, festooned with ropes, lay
within his reach, and he grabbed it and used it to pull himself up
enough to get one foot on the cross-spar. The other leg hung below
and for a few moments he used its swing to steady himself. Another
grunt of effort against his tortured muscles and he was crouching
on the spar, gripping the mast tip with both hands, his knees
almost higher than his chin. He watched the horizon move and
suddenly felt as if the ship were still and the world spun around
him. He felt dizzy and closed his eyes, which helped only a
little.
"Come on now," he muttered to himself. "Good
balance you've got."
His hands shook as he released the mast, using
the muscles in his legs to counteract the great swing. Then he
uncrouched like an old man, ready to grab at the mast again as soon
as he felt his balance fail. He brought himself up from a low bow
to a round-shouldered standing position, his eyes fixed on the
mast. He flexed his knees a little and began to adjust to the
movement through the air.
"There isn't much wind, of course," the sailor
said equably. "I've been up here in a storm trying to tie down a
ripped sail. This is nothing."
Marcus suppressed a retort. He didn't want to
anger a man who could stand so comfortably with his arms folded,
sixty feet above the deck. He looked at him, his eyes leaving the
mast for the first time since he reached that height.
The sailor nodded. "You have to walk the length.
From your end to mine. Then you can go down. If your nerve goes,
just hand me the dagger before you climb down. It won't be too easy
to get if you hit the planks."
This was more like the sort of thing Marcus
understood. The man was trying to make him nervous and achieved the
opposite. He knew he could trust his reflexes. If he fell, there
would be time to grab something. He would just ignore the height
and the movement and take the risk. He stood up fully and shuffled
back to the edge, leaning forward as the mast seemed determined to
take him down as far as the sea for a moment before coming upright
and over again. Then he found himself looking down a mountain
slope, blocked only by the relaxed sailor.
"Right," he said, holding his arms out for
balance. "Right."
He began to shuffle, never taking the soles of
his bare feet from the wood. He knew the sailor could walk along it
with careless ease, but he wasn't going to try to match years of
experience in a few breathtaking steps. He inched along and his
confidence grew mightily, until he was almost enjoying the swing,
leaning into and away from it and chuckling at the movement.
The sailor looked unperturbed as Marcus reached
him.
"Is that it?" Marcus asked.
The man shook his head. "To the end, I said.
There's a good three feet to go yet."
Marcus looked at him in annoyance. "You're in my
way, man!" Surely he wasn't expected to get round him on a piece of
wood no wider than his thigh?
"I'll see you down there then," the man said,
and stepped off the crosspiece.
Marcus gaped as the figure shot past him. In the
same moment as he saw the hand gripping the spar and the face
grinning up at him, he lost balance and swayed in panic, suddenly
knowing he would be smashed onto the deck. More faces below swam
into his vision. They all seemed to be looking up, pale blurs and
pointing fingers. Marcus waved his arms frantically and arched back
and forth in whiplike spasms as he fought to save himself. Then he
steadied and concentrated on the spar, ignoring the drop below and
trying to find the rhythm of muscle he had so enjoyed only moments
before.
"You nearly went there," the sailor said, still
casually hanging from the spar by one arm, seemingly oblivious to
the drop. It had been a clever trick and had nearly worked.
Chuckling and shaking his head, the man started to reach out to a
rope when Marcus trod on the fingers that were wrapped around the
crosspiece.
"Hey!" the man shouted, but Marcus ignored him,
putting all his weight on his heel as he shifted with the movement
of the Lucidae. Suddenly he was enjoying it again and took a
deep, cleansing breath. The fingers squirmed beneath him and there
was an edge of panic in the sailors voice as he found he couldn't
quite reach the nearest rope, even bringing his legs up. With his
hand free, he would have swung and released without any difficulty,
but, held fast, he could only dangle and shout curses.
Without warning, Marcus moved his foot to take
the last step to the end of the spar and was cheered by the
scrambling sounds below him as the sailor, caught by surprise, slid
and gripped furiously to save himself. Marcus looked down and saw
the angry stare as the sailor began to climb back up to the
crosspiece. There was murder in his expression and Marcus moved
quickly to sit down in the center of the spar, gripping the mast
top firmly between his thighs. Still feeling unsafe, he wrapped his
left leg around the mast below to hold himself steady. He took out
Marius's dagger and began to whittle his initials into the wood at
the very top.
The sailor almost sprang onto the crosspiece and
stood at the end, glaring. Marcus ignored him, but he could
practically hear the train of thought as the man realized he had no
weapons and that his superior balance was canceled by the firm grip
Marcus had on the mast. To get close enough to shove Marcus off, he
would have to risk getting the dagger in his throat. The seconds
ticked by.
"All right, then. You keep the knife. Time to
get down."
"You first," Marcus said, without looking
up.
He listened to the dwindling sounds of the
sailors descent and finished carving his initials into the hard
wood. In all, he was disappointed. If he carried on making enemies
at this rate, there really would be a knife in the dark one
night.
Diplomacy was, he decided, a lot harder than it
looked.
* * *
Renius was not around to congratulate
him on his safe return from the high rigging, so Marcus continued
his round of the ship on his own. After the initial excitement at
the thought of winning the dagger, the stares he received were
either uninterested or openly malevolent. Marcus clasped his hands
behind his back to stop the involuntary shaking that had hit them
as his feet touched the safe wood of the deck. He nodded to every
glance as if it were a word of greeting, and to his surprise, one
or two nodded back, perhaps only from habit, but it reassured him a
little.
One sailor, his long hair tied back with a strip
of blue cloth, was clearly trying to meet Marcus's eye. He seemed
friendly enough, so Marcus stopped.
"What do you do here?" he asked, a little
warily.
"Come to the stern... First Mate," said the man,
and strode off, gesturing him to follow. Marcus walked with him to
stand by the two steering oars.
"My name's Crixus. I do a lot of things when
they needs doing, but my special job is to free the rudders when
they get fouled. It could be weed, but it's usually fishing
nets."
"How do you free them?"
Marcus could guess at the answer, but he asked
anyway, trying to sound light and cheerfully interested. He had
never been a strong swimmer, but this man's chest expanded to
ridiculous proportions when he took a breath.
"You should find it easy after your little walk
on the mast. I just dive off the side, swim down to the rudders,
and use my knife to cut off whatever is fouling them."
"That sounds like a dangerous job," Marcus
replied, pleased at the easy grin he received in return.
"It is, if there are sharks down there. They
follow Lucidae, see, in case we throw any scraps off."
Marcus rubbed his chin, trying to remember what
a shark was. "Big, are they, these sharks?"
Crixus nodded with energy. "Gods, yes. Some of
them could swallow a man whole! One washed up near my village once
and it had half a man inside. Bit him in two, it must have
done."
Marcus looked at him and thought he had another
one trying to scare him off. "What do you do when you meet these
sharks down there, then?" he said.
Crixus laughed. "You punch them on the nose. It
puts them off having you for a meal."
"Right," Marcus said dubiously, looking into the
dark, cold waters. He wondered if he should put this one off until
the following day. The climb down from the mast top had loosened
most of his muscles, but every movement still made him wince and
the weather wasn't warm enough to make swimming attractive.
He looked at Crixus and could see the man
expected him to refuse. Inwardly, he sighed. Nothing was working
out the way he'd intended.
"There isn't anything fouling the rudders today,
is there?" he said, and Crixus's smile widened as he thought Marcus
was trying to find excuses not to try it.
"Not in clear sea, no. Just scrape a barnacle
off the bottom of one—it's a shell, a little animal that
attaches to ships. Bring one back and I'll buy you a drink. Come
back empty-handed and that pretty little blade belongs to me, all
right?"
Marcus agreed reluctantly and began to remove
his tunic and sandals, leaving him standing in just the undercloth
that protected his modesty. Under Crixus's amused eye, he began to
stretch his legs, using the wooden rail as a brace. He took his
time, knowing from Crixus's enthusiasm that the man thought he'd
never manage it.
Finally, he was loose and ready. Taking his
knife, he stepped up onto the flat wooden section around the stern,
readying himself for the dive. It was a good twenty feet, even in
such a low-slung vessel as the Lucidae, which fairly
wallowed in the water. He tensed, trying to remember the few dives
he had managed on a trip to a lake with Gaius's parents when he was
eight or nine. Hands together.
"You'd better put this on." Crixus interrupted
his thoughts. The man was holding the tar-sealed end of a slim
rope. "It goes around your waist to stop you being left behind by
Lucidae. She doesn't look fast, but you couldn't catch her
by swimming."
"Thanks," Marcus said suspiciously, wondering if
Crixus had meant to let him dive without it, changing his mind at
the last moment. He tied the rope securely and looked at the cold
water below, scythed into plough lines by the rudders. A thought
struck him.
"Where's the other end?"
Crixus had the grace to look embarrassed and
confirmed Marcus's earlier suspicions. Mutely, he pointed to where
the rope was made fast, and Marcus nodded, returning to his
inspection of the waves.
Then he dived, turning slightly in the air to
hit the gray water with a hard smacking sound.
Marcus held his breath as he plunged under the
surface, jerking as the rope stopped his descent. He could still
feel movement as the ship started to tow him. He fought to reach
the surface and gasped in relief as he broke through the waves near
the rudders.
He could see their dark flanks cutting the waves
and tried to find a handhold on the slippery surface above the
waterline. It was impossible and he found he had to swim strongly
just to stay near them. As soon as he slowed his hands and legs, he
drifted out until the rope was taut again.
The cold was cramping his muscles and Marcus
realized he had only a short time before he was useless in the
water. Gripping his dagger tightly in his right fist, he gulped
breath and dived below, using his hands to guide him down the
slippery green underside of the nearest rudder.
At the base, his lungs were bursting. He was
able to hold himself for a few seconds while his fingers scrabbled
around in the slime, but he could feel nothing that felt like the
sort of shell Crixus had told him to expect. Cursing, he kicked his
legs back to the surface. As he couldn't hold the rudders to rest,
he felt his strength slipping away.
He pulled in another breath and disappeared down
into the darkness once more.
Crixus felt the presence of the old gladiator
before he saw him reach his side and look down at the quivering
rope in the water between the rudders. When he met the man's eyes,
Crixus could see gray anger and took a step back in reaction.
"What are you doing?" Renius asked quietly.
"He's checking the rudders and cutting off
barnacles," Crixus replied.
Renius's lip twisted with distaste. Even with
one arm, he radiated violence, standing utterly still. Crixus
noticed the gladius strapped to his belt and wiped his hands on his
ragged cloth leggings. Together, they watched Marcus surface and go
under three more times. His arms flapped aimlessly in the water
below and both men could hear his exhausted coughing.
"Bring him up now. Before he drowns himself,"
Renius said.
Crixus nodded quickly and began to haul in the
rope, hand over hand. Renius didn't offer to help him, but standing
with his hand resting on the gladius hilt seemed enough
encouragement.
Crixus was sweating heavily by the time Marcus
reached the deck level. He hung almost limp in the rope, his limbs
too tired to control.
As if he were loading a bale of cloth, Crixus
pulled him over the edge and rolled him faceup on the deck, eyes
closed and panting. Crixus smiled as he saw the dagger was still in
one hand and reached for it. There was a quick sound behind him,
and he froze as Renius brought his sword into the line of
sight.
"What are you doing now?"
"Taking the dagger! He... he had to bring a
shell back..." the man stammered.
"Check his other hand," Renius said.
Marcus could barely hear him through the water
sounds in his ears and the pain in his chest and limbs, but he
opened his left fist and in it, surrounded by scratches and cuts,
was a round shell with its live occupant glistening wetly
inside.
Crixus's jaw dropped and Renius waved him away
with his sword.
"Get that second mate to gather the men...
Parus, his name was. This has gone far enough."
Crixus looked at the sword and the man's
expression and didn't argue.
Renius crouched at Marcus's side and sheathed
his sword. Reaching over, he slapped Marcus's white face a few
times, bringing a little color back. Marcus coughed wretchedly.
"I thought you'd stop when you nearly fell off
the spar. What you think you are proving, I don't know. Stay here
and rest while I deal with the men."
Marcus tried to say something, but Renius shook
his head.
"Don't argue. I've been dealing with men like
these all my life."
Without another word, he stood and walked to
where the crew had gathered, taking a position where they could all
see him. He spoke through teeth held tightly together, but his
voice carried to all of them.
"His mistake was expecting to be treated with
honor by scum like you. Now, I don't have the inclination to win
your trust or your respect. I'll give you a simple choice from this
moment. You do your jobs well. You work hard and stand your watches
and keep everything tight until we make port. I have killed more
men than I can count, and I will gut any man who does not obey me
in this. Now be men! If anyone wants to make pretty words to argue
with me, let him take up a sword and gather his friends and come
against me all at once."
His voice rose to a bellow. "Don't walk away
from me here and plot in corners like old ladies in the sun! Speak
now, fight now, for if you don't and I find whispers later, I will
crack your heads open for you, I swear it!"
He glared around at them and the men looked at
their feet. No one spoke, but Renius said nothing. The silence went
on and on, growing painful. No one moved; they stood like statues
on the decks. At last, he took a breath and snarled at them.
"Not a single one of you with courage enough to
take on an old man with one arm? Then get back to your work and
work well, for I'll be watching each one of you and I won't give
warnings."
He walked through them and they parted, standing
mutely aside. Crixus looked at Parus and he shrugged slightly,
stepping back with the rest. The Lucidae sailed on serenely
through the cold sea.
Renius sagged against the cabin door as it
closed behind him. He could feel his armpits were damp with sweat
and cursed under his breath. He was not used to bluffing men into
obedience, but his balance was terrible and he knew he was still
weak. He wanted to sleep, but could not until he had finished his
exercises. Sighing, he drew his gladius and went through the
strokes he had been taught half a century before, faster and faster
until the blade hit the roof of the small space and wedged. Renius
swore in anger and the men near his door heard him and looked at
each other with wide eyes.
That night, Marcus was standing at the
prow on his own, looking out at the moonlit waves and feeling
miserable. His efforts of the day had earned him nothing, and
having to have Renius clear up his failure felt like a metal weight
in his chest.
He heard low voices behind him and swung to see
black figures coming around the raised cabins. He recognized Crixus
and Parus, and the man from the high rigging, whose name he did not
know. He steadied himself for the blows, knowing he couldn't take
them all, but Crixus held out a leather cup of some dark liquid. He
was smiling slightly, not sure Marcus wouldn't dash it out of his
hand.
"Here. I promised you a drink if you picked up a
shell, and I keep my promises."
Marcus took the cup and the three men relaxed
visibly, coming over to lean against the side and look out over the
black water as it passed below them. All three had similar cups,
and Crixus filled them from a soft leather bag that gurgled when he
shifted its weight under his arm.
Marcus could smell the bitter liquid as he
raised it to his mouth. He had never tasted anything stronger than
wine before and took a deep gulp before he realized that whatever
it was stung the cuts on his lips and gums. In reflex, just to
clear his mouth, he swallowed and immediately choked as fire burst
in his stomach. He fought for breath and Parus reached out an arm
and thumped his back, his face expressionless.
"Does you good, that stuff," Crixus said,
chuckling.
"Does you good, First Mate," Marcus
replied through his spluttering.
Crixus smiled. "I like you, lad. I really do,"
he said, refilling his own cup. "Mind you, that friend of yours,
Renius, now he is a truly evil bastard."
They all nodded and peacefully went back to
watching the sea and the sky.
CHAPTER
20
Marcus viewed the busy port with mixed
feelings as it grew before him. The Lucidae maneuvered
nimbly through the ancient stones that marked the edge of the wild
sea and the calm lake of the harbor itself. A host of ships
accompanied them, and they had had to stand off from the harbor for
most of the morning until a harassed pilot took a boat out to guide
them in.
At first, Marcus had thought nothing of the
month at sea, considering it with as much interest as he might
consider a walk from one town to another. Only the destination had
been important in his mind. Now, though, he knew the name of each
one of the small crew and had felt their acceptance after that
night spent drinking on the prow. Even the return of Firstmate to
light duties hadn't spoiled things with the men. Firstmate, it
seemed, bore no grudges and even seemed proud of him, as if his
acceptance by the crew were in some way his doing.
Peppis had never stopped sleeping in corners on
the decks at night, but he had filled out a little with the food
Marcus saved for him, and the beatings had stopped by some unseen
signal amongst the men. The little boy had become a much more
cheerful character and might one day be a sailor, as he hoped.
To some extent, Marcus envied the boy; it was
freedom of a kind. These men would see all the ports of the known
world while he marched over foreign fields under the baking sun,
carrying Rome always with him.
He took a deep breath and closed his eyes,
trying to sift apart all the strange scents on the sea breeze.
Jasmine and olive oil were strong, but there was also the smell of
a mass of people again—sweat and excrement. He sighed and
jumped as a hand clapped onto his shoulder.
"It will feel good to get land under our heels
again," Renius said, staring with him into the harbor town. "We'll
hire horses to take us east to the legion and find your century to
get you sworn in."
Marcus nodded in silence and Renius caught his
mood. "Only memories stay the same, lad. Everything else changes.
When you see Rome again, you'll hardly know it and all the people
you loved will be different. There's no stopping it; it's the most
natural thing in the world."
Seeing Marcus wasn't cheered, he went on.
"This civilization was ancient when Rome was
young. It's an alien place to a Roman, and you'll have to watch
their ideas of soft living don't spoil you. There are savage tribes
that raid across the border in Illyria, though, so you'll see your
share of action. That got your interest, did it?" He laughed, a
short bark. "I suppose you thought it would be all drill and
standing in the sun? Marius is a good judge, lad. He's sent you to
one of the hardest posts in the empire. Even the Greeks don't bend
the knee without a good deal of thought, and Macedonia is where
Alexander was born. This is just the place to put a bit of strength
into your steel."
Together they watched as the Lucidae
eased against the dockside and ropes were thrown and tied down. In
a short while, the little trader was tethered securely and Marcus
almost felt sorry for her sudden loss of freedom. Epides came out
on deck dressed in a chiton, a traditional Greek tunic worn at knee
length. He glittered with jewelry and his hair shone with oil in
the sun. He saw the two passengers standing at the side waiting to
disembark and walked over to them.
"I have grave news, gentlemen. A Greek army has
risen in the north, and we could not put in at Dyrrhachium as
planned. This is Oricum, about a hundred miles to the south."
Renius tensed. "What? You were paid to put us
down in the north, so that we could join the lad's legion.
I—"
"It was not a possibility, as I said," the
captain replied, smiling. "The flag codes were quite clear as we
neared Dyrrhachium. That is why we have been following the coast
south. I could not risk the Lucidae with a rebel army drunk
on broken Roman garrisons. The safety of the ship was at
stake."
Renius grabbed Epides by his chiton, lifting him
up to his toes.
"Damn you, man. There's a bloody great mountain
between here and Macedonia, as you are well aware. That is another
month of hard travel for us and great expense, which is your
responsibility!"
Epides struggled, his face purpling in rage.
"Take your hands off me! How dare you accost me
on my own ship? I'll call the harbor guards and have you hanged,
you arrogant—"
Renius shifted his grip to a ruby on a heavy
gold chain around Epides's neck. With a savage jerk, he broke the
links and tucked it away into his belt pouch. Epides began
stuttering with incoherent anger and Renius shoved him away,
turning to Marcus as the man fell sprawling onto the deck.
"Right. Let's get off. At least we can afford to
buy supplies for the trip when I sell the chain."
When he saw Marcus's gaze flick behind him,
Renius spun and drew his sword in one motion. Epides was lunging
with a jeweled dagger, his face contorted.
Renius swayed inside the blow clumsily and
ripped his gladius up into the man's smooth-shaven chest. He
withdrew the blade and ran it over the chiton in quick wipes as
Epides fell to the deck, writhing.
"Drunk on broken garrisons, was it?" he
muttered, struggling to sheathe the sword. "Damn this
scabbard—won't stay still..."
Marcus stood stunned at the quick death, and the
nearby members of the crew gaped at the suddenly violent scene.
Renius nodded to them as the gladius slid home.
"Get the ramps down. We have a long journey
ahead of us."
A section in the side was opened and plank
gangways were put down to allow the cargo to be unloaded. Marcus
shook his head in silent disbelief. He checked his belongings for
the last time and patted his sides, feeling again the loss of his
dagger, which he'd given to Firstmate the previous evening. He had
known it was the right thing to do somehow, and the smiles of the
crew as the man had shown it around had told him he had made the
right choice. There were no smiles now and he wished he'd kept
it.
He pulled his pack onto his shoulders and helped
Renius with his.
"Let's see what Greece has to offer," he said.
Renius grinned at his sudden change in mood, walking past the
twisted body of Epides without looking down. They left the
Lucidae without a backward glance.
The ground moved alarmingly under his feet and
Marcus swayed uncertainly for a few moments before the habit of
years reestablished itself.
"Wait!" a voice called behind them. They turned
to see Peppis coming down the ramp in a flurry of arms and legs. He
pulled up breathlessly, and they waited for him to calm enough to
speak.
"Take me with you, sir," he said, looking
beseechingly at Marcus, who blinked in surprise.
"I thought you wanted to grow up to be a
sailor," he said.
"Not anymore. I want to be a fighter, a
legionary like you and Renius," Peppis said, the words rushing out
of him. "I want to defend the empire from savage hordes."
Marcus looked at Renius. "Have you been talking
to the boy?"
"I told him a few stories, yes. Many boys dream
of being in the legions. It is a good life for a man," Renius
replied without embarrassment.
Peppis saw Marcus waver and pressed on. "You'll
need a servant, someone to carry your sword and look after your
horse. Please don't send me back."
Marcus shrugged his pack from his shoulders and
handed it to the boy, who beamed at him.
"Right. Carry this. Do you know how to look
after a horse?"
Peppis shook his head, still beaming.
"Then you will learn."
"I will. I will be the best servant you ever
had," the boy replied, his arms wrapped around the pack.
"At least the captain can't object," Marcus
said.
"No. I didn't like the man," Renius replied
gruffly. "Ask someone where the nearest stables are. We'll move on
before dark."
The stables, the travelers' resting
house, the people themselves, were a peculiar mixture to Marcus. He
could see Rome in a thousand small touches, not least the
serious-faced legionaries who marched the streets in pairs, looking
out for trouble. Yet at every step he would see something new and
alien. A pretty girl walking with her guards would speak to them in
a string of soft gibberish that they seemed to understand. A temple
near the stables was built of pure white marble as at home, but the
statues were odd, close to the ones he knew, but with different
faces cut into the stone. Beards were much in evidence, perfumed
with sweet oils and curled, but the strangest things he saw were on
the walls of a temple devoted to healing the sick.
Half- and full-size limbs, perfectly formed in
plaster or stone, hung on the outer walls from hooks. A child's
leg, bent at the knee, shared the space with the model of a woman's
hand, and nearby there was a miniature soldier made from reddish
marble, beautiful in its detail.
"What are those?" Marcus had asked Renius as
they passed.
"Just a custom," he said with a shrug. "If the
goddess heals you, you have a cast of the limb made and presented
to her. It helps to bring in more people for the temple, I should
think. They don't heal anyone without a little gold first, so the
models are like a sign for a shop. This isn't Rome, lad. They are
not like us when you get down to it."
"You don't like them?"
"I respect what they achieved, but they live too
much in the glories of the past. They are a proud people, Marcus,
but not proud enough to take our foot off their necks. They like to
think of us as barbarians, and the highbred ones will pretend you
don't exist, but what good is thousands of years of art if you
can't defend yourself? The first thing men must learn is to be
strong. Without strength, anything else you have or make can be
taken from you. Remember that, lad."
At least the stables were like stables anywhere.
The smell brought a sudden pang of homesickness to Marcus, and he
wondered how Tubruk fared on the estate and how Gaius was handling
the dangers of the capital.
Renius patted the flank of a sturdy-looking
stallion. He ran his hands down its legs and checked the mouth
carefully. Peppis watched him and mimicked his action, patting legs
and checking tendons with a serious frown on his face.
"How much for this one?" Renius asked the owner,
who stood with two bodyguards. The man had none of the smell of
horses about him. He looked clean and somehow polished, with hair
and beard that shone darkly.
"He is strong, yes?" he replied, his Latin
accented but clear. "His father won races in Pontus, but he is a
little too heavy for speed, more suited for battle."
Renius shrugged. "I just want him to take me
north, over the mountains. How much are you asking?"
"His name is Apollo. I bought him when a rich
man lost his wealth and was forced to sell. I paid a small fortune,
but I know horses, I know what he is worth."
"I like him," Peppis said.
Both men ignored the boy.
"I will pay five aurei for him and sell him
after the journey is over," Renius said firmly.
"He is worth twenty and I have paid for his feed
all winter," the trader replied.
"I can buy a small house for twenty!"
The trader shrugged and looked apologetic. "Not
anymore. Prices have gone up. It is the war in the north. All the
best ones are being taken for Mithridates, an upstart who calls
himself a king. Apollo is one of the last of the good stock."
"Ten is my final offer. We are buying two of
yours today, so I want a price for both."
"Let us not argue. Let me show you another of
lesser worth that will carry you north. I have two others I could
sell together; brothers they are, and fast enough."
The man walked on down the row of horses, and
Marcus eyed Apollo, who watched him with interest as he chewed a
mouthful of hay. He patted the soft nose as the continuing argument
dwindled with distance. Apollo ignored him and reached back for
another mouthful, pulled from a string sack nailed to the stable
wall.
After a while, Renius returned, looking a little
pale.
"We've got two, for tomorrow: Apollo and another
one he called Lancer. I'm sure he makes the names up on the spot.
Peppis will ride with you; his small weight won't be any trouble.
Gods, the prices these people ask for! If your uncle hadn't
provided so generously, we'd be walking tomorrow."
"He's not my uncle," Marcus reminded him. "How
much did they cost us?"
"Don't ask and don't expect to eat much on the
journey. Come on, we'll pick the horses up tomorrow at dawn. Let us
hope that the prices for rooms haven't risen as high, or we'll be
sneaking back in here when it gets dark."
Continuing to grumble, Renius strode out of the
stables, with Marcus and Peppis following him, trying not to
smile.
CHAPTER
21
Marcus sat easily on his horse,
occasionally reaching forward to scratch Lancer's ears as they rode
down the mountain path. Peppis was dozing behind him, lulled by the
gentle rhythm of the horse's walk. Marcus thought of waking him
with an elbow to see the view, but decided to leave him alone.
It seemed as if they could see all of Greece
from the heights, spread out below in a rolling green and yellow
landscape with groves of olive trees and isolated farms speckling
the hills and valleys. The clean air smelled different, carrying
the scent of unknown flowers.
Marcus remembered gentle Vepax, the tutor, and
wondered if he had walked these hills. Or perhaps Alexander himself
had taken armies through to the plains on his way to battle distant
Persia. He imagined the grim Cretan archers and the Macedonian
phalanx as they followed the boy king, and his back straightened in
the saddle.
Renius rode ahead, his eyes swinging from the
narrow trail to the surrounding scrub foliage and back in a
monotonous pattern of alertness. He had withdrawn into himself more
and more over the previous week of travel, and whole days had
passed without more than a few words spoken between them. Only
Peppis broke the long silences with exclamations of wonder at birds
or lizards on the rocks. Marcus hadn't pushed for conversation,
sensing that the gladiator was happier with silence. He smiled
wryly at the man's back as they rode, mulling over how he felt
about him.
He had hated him once, at that moment in the
courtyard of the estate, with Gaius lying wounded in the dust. Yet
a grudging respect had existed even before Marcus had raised his
sword against him. Renius had a solidity to him that made other men
seem insubstantial in comparison. He could be brutal and had a
great capacity for callous violence, oblivious to pain or fear.
Others followed his lead without a thought, as if they somehow knew
this man would see them through. Marcus had seen it on the estate
and on the ship, and it was difficult not to feel a touch of awe
himself. Even age couldn't hold him. Marcus remembered the moment
as Cabera closed the old man's wounds, and his surprise at the way
the healing took so quickly. They had both watched in astonishment
as life swelled in the broken figure and the skin flushed with
suddenly rushing blood.
"He walks a greater path than most," Cabera had
said later, when Renius had been laid out on a cool bed in the
house to finish his healing. "His feet are strong in the
earth."
Marcus had wondered at Cabera's tone as he tried
to make the young man understand the importance of what he had
seen.
"Never have I seen death take its grip off a man
as it did with Renius. The gods were whispering in my mind when I
touched him."
The path twisted and turned and they slowed to
let the horses pick their way over the rocky trail, unwilling to
risk a sprain or a fall on the steep slope.
What does the future hold for you, I
wonder? Marcus thought to himself in the comfortable silence.
Father.
The word came to him and he realized the idea
had been there for some time. He had never known a man to call
father, and the word unlocked a door in his mind as he explored his
feelings further without pain. Renius was not his blood, but a part
of him wished he were traveling these lands with his father, the
two of them protecting each other from dangers. It was a grand
daydream and he pictured men's faces as they heard he was the son
of Renius. They would look at him with a little awe of their own
perhaps, and he would simply smile.
Renius broke wind noisily, shifting his weight
to the left without looking back. Marcus laughed suddenly at this
interruption to his thoughts and continued chuckling to himself at
intervals for some time after. The gladiator rode on, his thoughts
on the descent and his future once he had delivered Marcus to his
legion.
As they approached a narrow part of the trail,
boulders rose on both sides as if the thin path had been cut
through them. Renius laid his hand on his sword and loosened the
blade.
"We're being watched. Be ready," he called back
in a low voice.
Almost as he finished speaking, a dark figure
rose from the undergrowth nearby.
"Stop."
The word was spoken with casual confidence and
in good, clear Latin, but Renius ignored it. Marcus partly drew his
sword and kept the horse walking with pressure from his knees. From
the sudden stiffness in the arms around his waist, he knew Peppis
was awake and alert, but for once staying silent.
The man looked like a Greek, with the
distinctive curled beard, but, unlike the merchants of the town
they'd seen, he had the air of a warrior about him. He smiled and
called out again.
"Stop or you will be killed. Last chance."
"Renius?" Marcus muttered nervously.
The old man scowled, but kept going, digging his
heels into Apollo's flanks to urge him into a trot.
An arrow cut the air, taking the horse high in
the shoulder with a dull thumping sound. Apollo screamed and fell,
pitching Renius to the ground in a crash of metal and swearing.
Peppis cried out in fear and Marcus reined in, scanning the
undergrowth for the archer. Was there only one, or were there more
out there? These men were obviously brigands; they would be lucky
to escape alive if they submitted meekly.
Renius came to his feet awkwardly, yanking out
his sword. His eyes glinted. He nodded to Marcus, who dismounted
smoothly, using his horse to block the sight of the hidden archer.
He drew his gladius, reassured by its familiar weight. Peppis came
off the horse in a scramble and tried to hide behind a leg,
muttering nervously to himself.
The stranger spoke again, his voice friendly.
"Do not do anything foolish. My companions are very good with their
bows. Practice is the only way to fill the hours here in the
mountains, that and relieving the occasional traveler of his
possessions."
"There is only one archer, I think," Renius
growled, staying light on the balls of his feet and keeping an eye
on the scrub. He knew the man would not have stayed in the same
place and could be creeping in to get a clean kill as they
spoke.
"You wish to gamble your life on this, yes?"
The two men looked at each other and Peppis
gripped Lancer's leg, making the horse snort with displeasure.
The outlaw was clean and simply dressed. He
looked much like one of the huntsmen Marcus had known on the
estate, burned a deep brown by constant exposure to the sun and
wind. He did not look like a man given to empty threats, and Marcus
groaned inwardly. At best, they would arrive at the legion with no
kit or equipment, a beginning he might never live down. At worst,
death was a few moments away.
"You look like an intelligent man," the outlaw
continued. "If I drop my hand, you will be dead on the instant. Put
your sword on the ground and you will live a few moments more,
perhaps until you grow old, yes?"
"I've been old. It isn't worth it," Renius
replied, already beginning to move.
He threw his gladius at the man, end over end in
the air. Before it struck, he was leaping away into the shadow of
the rock-side. An arrow cut the air where he had been, but no
others accompanied it. Only one archer.
Marcus had used the moment to duck under his
horse's belly past Peppis, and came up running, throwing himself at
the slope, trusting to his speed to keep him steady. He cleared the
main ridge without slowing down and accelerated, guessing where the
archer must be hiding. As he approached, a man broke from the cover
of a grove of fig trees off to his right, and he almost skidded as
he turned to follow.
He had him in twenty paces along the loose rock
surface, bringing him down from behind in a leap. The impact jarred
the gladius from his hand, and he found himself locked in a
struggle with a man who was bigger and stronger than he was. The
archer twisted violently in Marcus's grip and they found each
others throats with grasping hands. Marcus began to panic. The
man's face was red, but his neck appeared to be made of wood and he
couldn't seem to get a crushing grip on the thick flesh.
He would have called for Renius, but the man
couldn't have climbed the ridge with only one arm, and anyway he
could not draw breath with the archer's great paws on his throat.
Marcus dug his thumbs into the windpipe and heaved all his downward
weight onto them. The man grunted in pain, but the hairy hands
tightened still further and Marcus saw flashes of white light
across his vision as his body began to scream for air. His own
hands seemed to weaken and he despaired for a second. His right
hand came off the throat, almost without his conscious thought, and
began to hammer the grunting face. The white lights were streaked
with flashes of black, and his vision began to narrow into a dark
tunnel, but he kept striking over and over. The face below him was
a messy red pulp, but the hands on his throat were merciless.
Then they fell away, without drama, lying limp
on the ground. Marcus sobbed in air and rolled off to one side. His
heart was beating at an impossible speed and he felt light-headed,
almost as if he were floating. He pulled himself onto his knees and
his fingers scrabbled without strength for the hilt of his sword in
ever-widening circles.
Finally, they closed on the leather grip and he
breathed a silent prayer of thanks. He could hear Renius and Peppis
calling for him below, but had no breath to answer. Staggering, he
took a few steps back to the man and froze as he saw the eyes were
open and looking at him, the heavy chest heaving as raggedly as his
own.
Rasping words grated past the man's smashed
lips, but they were Greek and Marcus couldn't understand them.
Still panting, he pressed the sharp tip of the gladius against the
man's chest and shoved down hard. Then his grip slipped off the
hilt and he collapsed in a sprawl, turning weakly to empty his
stomach onto the ground.
By the time Marcus climbed stiffly back to the
path, Peppis was recovering Renius's sword, pulling it from the
chest of the sprawling body. The boy grimaced as the blade slid
clear and he tottered back to the others, pale and unsteady. Renius
was holding a pad of cloth to the wound in Apollo's shoulder. The
big horse was shivering visibly with shock, but was on his feet and
aware. Peppis had to hold Lancer's reins tightly as the horse
stepped and skittered, wide nostrils and eyes showing his fear at
the smell of blood.
"Are you all right, lad?" Renius asked as Marcus
reached them.
Marcus nodded, unable to speak. His throat felt
crushed and air seemed to whistle with each breath. He pointed at
it and Renius beckoned him closer so he could take a look. He made
the movement slow, so as not to alarm the horses.
"Nothing permanent," he said a moment later.
"Big hands, judging by the prints."
Marcus could only gasp weakly. He hoped Renius
couldn't smell the sour vomit odor that seemed to surround him in a
cloud, but guessed he could and chose not to mention it.
"They made a mistake attacking us," Peppis
observed, his little face serious.
"Yes, they did, boy, though we were lucky as
well," Renius replied. He looked at Marcus. "Don't try to speak,
just help the boy strap the equipment to your horse. Apollo will be
lame for a week or two. We'll ride in turns unless those bandits
have mounts nearby."
Lancer whinnied and an answering snort came from
farther down the mountain. Renius grinned.
"Luck is with us again, I see," he said
cheerfully. "Did you search the bowman?"
Marcus shook his head and Renius shrugged.
"Not worth climbing up again. They wouldn't have
had much and a bow's no use to a man with one arm. Let's get going.
We can get off this rock by sunset if we keep a fast pace."
Marcus began removing Apollo's packs, taking the
reins. Renius patted his shoulder as he turned away. The action was
worth far more than words.
After a month of long days and cold
nights, it was good to see the legion camp from far away across the
plain. Even at that distance, thin sounds carried. It seemed like a
town on the horizon, with eight thousand men, women, and children
engaged in the simple day-to-day tasks necessary to keep such a
large body of men in the field. Marcus tried to imagine the
armories and smithies, built and taken apart with each camp. There
would be food kitchens, building-supply dumps, stonemasons,
carpenters, leather-workers, slaves, prostitutes, and thousands of
other civilians who lived and were paid to support the might of
Rome in battle. Unlike the tent rows of Marius's legion, this was a
permanent camp, with a solid wall and fortifications surrounding
the main grounds. In a sense, it was a town, but a town constantly
prepared for war.
Renius pulled up and Marcus drew alongside on
Lancer, tugging on the reins to halt the third horse, which they
had named Bandit after his last owner. Peppis sat awkwardly on
Bandit's riding blanket, his mouth open at the sight of the
encamped legion. Renius smiled at the boy's awe.
"That's it, Marcus. That is your new home. Do
you still have the papers Marius gave you?"
Marcus patted his chest in response, feeling the
folded pack of parchment under the tunic.
"Are you coming in?" he asked. He hoped so.
Renius had been a part of his life for so long that the thought of
seeing the man riding away while he rode up to the gates alone was
too painful to express.
"I'll see you and Peppis to the praefectus
castrorum—the quartermaster. He will tell you which
century you will join. Learn the history quickly; each has its own
record and pride."
"Any other advice?"
"Obey every order without complaint. At the
moment, you fight like an individual, like one of the savage
tribes. They will teach you to trust your companions and to fight
as a unit, but the learning does not come easily to some."
He turned to Peppis. "Life will be hard for you.
Do as you are told and when you are grown you will be allowed to
join the legion. Do nothing that shames you. Do you
understand?"
Peppis nodded, his throat dry from fear of this
alien life.
"I will learn. So will he," Marcus said.
Renius nodded and clicked his tongue at his
horse to move on. "That you will."
Marcus felt an obscure satisfaction at the
clean, orderly layout of streets, complete with rows of long, low
buildings for the men. He and Renius had been greeted warmly at the
gate as soon as he had shown his papers, and they proceeded on foot
to the prefects quarters, where Marcus would pledge years of his
life in the field service of Rome. He took confidence from Renius
as the man strode confidently through the narrow roads, nodding in
approval at the polished perfection of the soldiers who marched
past in squads often. Peppis trotted behind them, carrying a heavy
pack of equipment on his back.
The papers had to be shown twice more as they
approached the small white building from which the camp prefect ran
the business of a Roman town in a foreign land. At last they were
allowed entry, and a slim man dressed in a white toga and sandals
came into the outer rooms to meet them as they passed through the
door.
"Renius! I heard it was you in the camp. The men
are already talking about you losing your arm. Gods, it is good to
see you!" He beamed at them, the image of Roman efficiency,
suntanned and hard, with a strong grip as he greeted each of them
in turn.
Renius smiled back with genuine warmth. "Marius
didn't tell me you were here, Carac. I am glad to see you
well."
"You haven't aged, I swear it! Gods, you don't
look a day over forty. How do you do it?"
"Clean living," Renius grunted, still
uncomfortable with the change Cabera had wrought.
The prefect raised an eyebrow in disbelief but
let the subject drop.
"And the arm?"
"Training accident. The lad here, Marcus, cut me
and I had it taken off."
The prefect whistled and shook Marcus's hand
again. "I never thought I'd meet a man who could get to Renius. May
I see the papers you brought with you?"
Marcus felt nervous all of a sudden. He passed
them over and the prefect motioned them to long benches as he
read.
Finally, he passed them back. "You come very
well recommended, Marcus. Who is the boy?"
"He was on the merchant ship we took from the
coast. He wants to be my servant and join the legion when he is
older."
The prefect nodded. "We have many such in the
camp, usually the bastard children of the men and the whores. If he
shapes up, there may be a place, but the competition will be
fierce. I am more interested in you, young man."
He turned to Renius. "Tell me about him. I will
trust your judgment."
Renius spoke firmly, as if reporting. "Marcus is
unusually fast, even more so when his blood is fired. As he
matures, I expect him to become a name. He is impetuous and brash
and likes to fight, which is partly his nature and partly his
youth. He will serve the Fourth Macedonia well. I gave him his
basic training, but he has gone beyond that and will go
further."
"He reminds me of your son. Have you noticed the
resemblance?" the prefect asked quietly.
"It had not... occurred to me," Renius replied
uncomfortably.
"I doubt that. Still, we always have need of men
of quality, and this is the place for him to find maturity. I will
place him with the fifth century, the Bronze Fist."
Renius took in a sharp breath. "You honor
me."
The prefect shook his head. "You saved my life
once. I am sorry I could not save your son's. This is a small part
of my debt to you."
Once again they shook hands. Marcus looked on in
some confusion.
"What now for you, old friend? Will you return
to Rome to spend your gold?"
"I had hoped there would be a place for me
here," Renius said quietly.
The prefect smiled. "I had begun to think you
would not ask. The Fist is short of a weapons master to train them.
Old Belius died of a fever six months ago, and there is no one else
as good. Will you take the post?"
Renius grinned suddenly, the old sharp grin. "I
will, Carac. Thank you."
The prefect slapped him on the shoulder in
obvious pleasure.
"Welcome to the Fourth Macedonia, gentlemen." He
signaled to a legionary standing to attention nearby. "Take this
young man to his new quarters in the Bronze Fist century. Send the
boy to the stables until I can assign duties to him with the other
camp children. Renius and I have a lot of catching up to
do—and a lot of wine to drink while we do it."
CHAPTER
22
Alexandria sat in silence, polishing
grime from an ancient sword in Marius's little armory. She was
pleased he had been able to get back his town house. She'd heard
the owner had rushed to make a gift of it to the new ruler of Rome.
Much better than the thought of living with the rough soldiers in
the city barracks—well, it would have been difficult at best.
Gods knew, she wasn't afraid of men; some of her earliest memories
were of them with her mother in the next room. They came in reeking
of beer and cheap wine and went out with a swagger. They never
seemed to last very long. One of them had tried to touch her once,
and she remembered seeing her mother properly angry for the first
time in her young life. She'd cracked his skull with a poker and
together they'd dragged him into an alleyway and left him. For
days, her mother had expected the door to burst in and men to take
her away to be hanged, but no one had come.
She sighed as she worked at the layers of
crusted oil on the bronze blade, relic of some old campaign. At
first, Rome had seemed a city with limitless possibilities, but
Marius had taken control three months before and here she was still
working all day for nothing and every day a little older. Others
were changing the world, but her life remained the same. Only at
night, when she sat with ancient Bant in his little metalwork room,
did she feel she was making any progress in her life. He had shown
her the uses of his tools and guided her hands through the first
clumsy steps. He didn't speak much, but seemed to enjoy her
company, and she liked his silences and kind blue eyes. She had
seen him first as he was shaping a brooch in the workshop, and knew
in that moment that it was something she could do. It was a skill
worth learning, even for a slave.
She rubbed more vigorously. To be worth no more
to a man than a horse, or even a good sword like the one she held!
It wasn't fair.
"Alexandria!" Carla's voice, calling. For a
moment, she was tempted to remain silent, but the woman had a
tongue like a whip and her disapproval was feared by most of the
female slaves.
"Here," she called, putting the sword down and
wiping her hands on a rag. There would be another task for her,
another few hours of labor before sleep.
"There you are, love. I need someone to run down
to the market for me; would you do that?"
"Yes!" Alexandria stood up quickly. She had come
to look forward to these rare errands over the previous few months.
They were the only occasions when she was allowed to leave Marius's
house, and on the last few she had been trusted on her own. After
all, where could she run?
"I have a list of things for you to buy for the
house. You always seem to get the best price," Carla said as she
passed a slate over.
Alexandria nodded. She enjoyed bargaining with
the traders. It made her feel like a free woman. The first time,
she hadn't been alone, but even with a witness, Carla had been
shocked at how much money the girl had saved the house. The traders
had been charging over market value for years, knowing Marius had
deep pockets. The older woman realized the girl had a talent and
sent her out as much as possible, seeing also that she needed the
little touches of freedom. Some never got used to the condition of
slavery and were slowly broken down into depression and
occasionally despair. Carla enjoyed watching Alexandria's face
light up at the thought of a trip out.
She guessed the girl was keeping a coin or two
from what she was given, but what did that matter? She was saving
them silvers, so if she kept the odd bronze, Carla didn't begrudge
them to her.
"Go on with you. I want you back in two hours
and not a minute later, understand?"
"I do, Carla. Two hours. Thank you."
The older woman grinned at her, remembering when
she had been young and the world was such an exciting place. She
knew all about Alexandria's visits to Bant the metalworker. The old
man had taken quite a liking to her, it seemed. There was very
little in the house that Carla didn't find out about sooner or
later, and she knew that in Alexandria's room was a small bronze
disc that she had decorated with a lion's head using Bants tools.
It was a pretty piece.
As she watched the trim figure vanish around a
corner, Carla wondered if it was a present for Gaius. Bant had said
the girl had a talent for the work. Aye, perhaps because she was
making it for love.
* * *
The market was a riot of smells and
swirling crowds, but Alexandria didn't dawdle over the items on the
list for once. She completed her business quickly, getting good
prices, but leaving the discussion before they were pared right to
the bone. The shopkeepers seemed to enjoy the arguments with the
pretty girl, throwing their hands into the air and calling for
witnesses to see what she was demanding. She smiled at them then,
and for a few the smile dropped the price further than they could
believe after she had left. Certainly more than their wives could
believe.
With packages stowed safely in two cloth bags,
Alexandria hurried on to her real destination, a tiny jewelry shop
at the end of the stalls. She had been inside many times to look at
the man's designs. Most of the pieces were bronze or pewter. Silver
was rarely worked in jewelry, and gold was too expensive unless
particular pieces were commissioned. The metalsmith himself was a
short man, dressed in a rough tunic and a heavy leather apron. He
watched her as she came into the tiny shop, and stopped work on a
small gold ring to keep an eye on the girl. Tabbic was not a
trusting man, and Alexandria could feel his steady gaze on her as
she looked over his wares.
Finally she summoned enough courage to speak to
him.
"Do you buy items?" she said.
"Sometimes," came the reply. "What do you
have?"
She produced the bronze disc from a pocket in
her tunic, and he took it from her hand, holding it up to the
daylight to see the design. He held it for a long time and she
didn't dare speak for fear of angering him. Still he said nothing,
just turned it over and over in his hands, examining every last
mark on the metal.
"Where did you get this?" he asked at last.
"I made it. Do you know Bant?"
The man nodded slowly.
"He has been showing me how."
"This is crude, but I can sell it. The execution
is clumsy, but the design is very good. The lion's face is very
well scribed; it's just that you aren't very skilled with the
hammer and awl." He turned it over again. "Tell me the truth now,
you understand? Where did you get the bronze to make this?"
Alexandria looked at him nervously. He returned
her stare without blinking, but his eyes seemed kind. Quickly she
told him about her bargaining and how she had saved a few tiny
coins from the house money, enough to purchase the bare metal
circle from a stall of trinkets.
Tabbic shook his head. "I can't take it then. It
isn't yours to sell. The coins belonged to Marius, so the bronze is
his as well. You should give it to him."
Alexandria felt tears threaten to start. She had
spent so long on the little piece, and now it had all come to
nothing. She watched, almost hypnotized, as he turned it over in
his grasp. Then he pressed it back into her hands.
Miserable, she put the disc back in her pocket.
"I'm sorry," she said.
He turned back to her. "My name is Tabbic. You
don't know me, but I have a reputation for honesty and sometimes
for pride." He held up another metal circle, gray-silver in
color.
"This is pewter. It's softer than bronze and
you'll find it easier to work. It polishes up nicely and doesn't
discolor as badly, just grows dull. Take it, and return it to me
when you have made something of it. I'll attach a pin and sell it
on as a cloak fastener for a legionary. If it's as good as the
bronze one, I could get a silver coin for it. I'll take back the
price of the pewter and the pin and you will be left with six,
maybe seven quadrantes. A business transaction, understand?"
"Where is your profit in this?" Alexandria
asked, her eyes wide at the change in fortune.
"None for this first one. I am making a small
investment in a talent I think you have. Give Bant my regards when
you see him next."
Alexandria pocketed the pewter circle and once
again had to fight against tears. She wasn't used to kindness.
"Thank you. I will give the bronze to
Marius."
"Make sure you do, Alexandria."
"How... how do you know my name?"
Tabbic picked up the ring he had been working on
as she came in. "Bant talks of little else when I see him."
Alexandria had to run to be back
before the two hours were up, but her feet were light and she felt
like singing. She would make the pewter disc into a beautiful
thing, and Tabbic would sell it for more than a silver coin and
clamor for more until her work brought in gold pieces, and one day
she would gather her profits together and buy herself free. Free.
It was a giddy dream.
As she was let into Marius's house, the scent of
the gardens filled her lungs and she stood for a moment, just
breathing in the evening air. Carla appeared and took her bags and
the coins, nodding at the savings as always. If the woman noticed
anything different about Alexandria, she didn't say, but she smiled
as she took the supplies down to the cool basement stores, where
they wouldn't spoil too quickly.
Alone with her thoughts, Alexandria didn't see
Gaius at first and wasn't expecting him. He spent most of his days
matching his uncle's punishing schedule, returning to the house at
odd hours only to eat and sleep. The guards at the gate let him in
without comment, well used to his comings and goings. He started as
he saw Alexandria in the gardens and stood for a moment, simply
enjoying the sight of her. Evening was coming on with late-summer
slowness, where the air is soft and the light has a touch of gray
for hours before it fades.
She turned as he approached, and smiled at
him.
"You look happy," he said, smiling in
return.
"Oh, I am," she replied.
He had not kissed her since the moment in the
stables back on the estate, but he sensed the time was right at
last. Marcus was gone and the town house seemed deserted.
He bent his neck and his heart thumped painfully
with something almost like fear.
He felt her warm breath before their lips
touched, and then he could taste her and he gathered her up in a
natural embrace, as they seemed to fit together without effort or
design.
"I can't tell you how often I have thought of
this," he murmured.
She looked into his eyes and knew there was a
gift she could give him and found she wanted to.
"Come along to my room," she whispered, taking
his hand.
As if in a dream, he followed her through the
gardens to her quarters.
Carla watched them go.
"And about bloody time," she muttered.
At first, Gaius was worried that he
would be clumsy, or worse, quick, but Alexandria guided his
movements and her hands felt cool on his skin. She took a little
bottle of scented oil from a shelf, and he watched as she spilled a
few sluggish drops onto her palms. It had a rich scent that filled
his lungs as she sat astride him, rubbing it gently into his chest
and lower, making him gasp. He took some of it from his own skin
and reached upward to her breasts, remembering the first time he
had seen their soft swell in the courtyard of the estate so long
ago. He pressed his mouth gently against one, then the other,
tasting her skin and moving his lips over the oily nipples. She
opened her mouth slightly, her eyes closing at his touch. Then she
bent to kiss him and her unbound hair covered them both.
As the evening darkened, they joined with
urgency and then again with playfulness and a kind of delight.
There was little light in her room without the candles, but her
eyes shone and her limbs were darkened gold as she moved under
him.
He woke before dawn to find her gaze on his
face.
"This was my first time," he said quietly.
Something in him told him not to ask the question, but he had to
know. "Was it the first for you?"
She smiled, but it was a sad smile. "I wish it
had been," she said. "I really do."
"Did you... with Marcus?"
Her eyes widened slightly. Was he truly
so innocent that he didn't see the insult?
"Oh, I would have, of course," she replied
tartly, "but he didn't ask."
"I'm sorry," he said, blushing, "I didn't
mean..."
"Did he say we did?" Alexandria demanded.
Gaius kept his face straight as he replied,
"Yes, I'm afraid he boasted about it."
"I'll put a dagger in his eye the next time I
see him. Gods!" Alexandria raged, gathering her clothes to
dress.
Gaius nodded seriously, trying not to smile at
the thought of Marcus returning innocently.
They dressed hurriedly, as neither wanted the
gossips to see him coming out of her room before the sun was up.
She left the slave quarters with him and they sat together in the
gardens, brushed by a warm night wind that moved in silence.
"When can I see you again?" he asked
quietly.
She looked away and he thought she wouldn't
answer. Fear rose in him.
"Gaius... I loved every moment of last night:
the touch and feel and taste of you. But you will marry a daughter
of Rome. Did you know I wasn't Roman? My mother was from Carthage,
taken as a child and enslaved, then made into a prostitute. I was
born late. I should never have been born so late to her. She was
never strong after me."
"I love you," Gaius said, knowing it was true
for at least that moment and hoping that was enough. He wanted to
give her something that showed she was more than just a night of
pleasure for him.
She shook her head lightly at his words.
"If you love me, let me stay here in Marius's
home. I can fashion jewelry and one day I will make enough to buy
myself free. I can be happy here as I could never be if I let
myself love you. I could, but you would be a soldier and leave for
distant parts of the world, and I would see your wife and your
children and have to nod to them in the street. Don't make me your
whore, Gaius. I have seen that life and I don't want it. Don't make
me sorry for last night. I don't want to be sorry for something so
good."
"I could free you," he whispered, in pain.
Nothing seemed to make sense.
Her eyes flashed in anger, quickly controlled.
"No, you couldn't. Oh, you could take my pride and sign me free by
Roman law, but I would have earned it in your bed. I am free where
it matters, Gaius. I realize that now. To be a free citizen in law,
I must work honestly to buy myself back. Then I am my own. I met a
man today who said he had honesty and pride. I have both, Gaius,
and I don't want to lose either. I will not forget you. Come and
see me in twenty years and I will give you a pendant of gold,
fashioned with love."
"I will," he said. He leaned in and kissed her
cheek, then rose and left the scented gardens.
He let himself out onto the streets of the city
and walked until he was lost and too tired to feel anything except
numbness.
CHAPTER
23
As the moon rose, Marius frowned at
the centurion.
"My orders were clear. Why have you not obeyed
them?"
The man stammered a little as he replied,
"General, I assumed there had been a mistake." His face paled as he
spoke. He knew the consequences. Soldiers did not send messengers
to query their orders, they obeyed them, but what he had been asked
was madness.
"You were told to consider tactics against a
Roman legion. Specifically, to find ways to nullify their greater
mobility outside the gates. Which part did you not understand?"
Marius's voice was grim and the man paled further as he saw his
pension and rank disappearing.
"I... No one expects Sulla to attack Rome. No
one has ever attacked the city—"
Marius interrupted him. "You are dismissed to
the ranks. Fetch me Octavius, your second-in-command. He will take
your place."
Something crumpled out of the man. More than
forty years old, he would never see promotion again.
"Sir, if they do come, I would like to be in the
first rows to meet them."
"To redeem yourself?" Marius asked.
The man nodded sickly.
"Granted. Yours will be the first face they see.
And they will come, and not as lambs, but wolves."
Marius watched the broken man walk stiffly away
and shook his head. So many found it difficult to believe that
Sulla would turn against their beloved city. For Marius it was a
certainty. The news he received daily was that Sulla had finally
broken the back of the rebel armies under Mithridates, burning a
good part of Greece to the ground in the process. Barely a year had
passed, and he would be returning as a conquering hero. The people
would grant him anything. With such a strong position, there was no
chance of him leaving the legion in the field or in a neighboring
city while he and his cronies came quietly back to take their seats
in the Senate and go on as usual. This was the gamble Marius had
taken. Though there was nothing else he could find to admire about
the man, Sulla was a fine general and Marius had known all along
that he could win and return.
"The city is mine now," he muttered thickly,
looking about him at the soldiers building ramparts onto the heavy
gates for arrow fire. He wondered where his nephew had got to and
noted absently how little he'd seen of him in the last few weeks.
Tiredly, he rubbed the bridge of his nose, knowing he was pushing
himself too hard.
He had snatched sleep for a year as he built his
supply lines and armed his men and planned the siege to come. Rome
had been re-created as a city fortress, and there was not a weak
point in any of the walls. She would stand, he knew, and Sulla
would break himself on the gates.
His centurions were handpicked, and the loss of
one that morning was a source of irritation. Each man had been
promoted for his flexibility, his ability to react to new
situations, ready for this time, when the greatest city in the
world would face her own children in battle—and destroy
them.
Gaius was drunk. He stood on the edge
of a balcony with a full goblet of wine, trying to steady his
vision. A fountain splashed in the garden below and blearily he
decided to go and put his head into the water. The night was warm
enough.
The noise from the party was a crashing mix of
music, laughter, and drunken shouting as he moved back inside. It
was past midnight and no one was left sober. The walls were lined
with flickering oil lamps, casting an intimate light over the
revelers. The wine slaves filled every cup as soon as it was
drained and had been doing so for hours.
A woman brushed against Gaius and draped an arm
over his shoulder, giggling, making him spill some red wine onto
the cream marble floor. Her breasts were uncovered and she pulled
his free hand onto them as she pressed her lips to his.
He broke for air and she took his wine, emptying
the cup in ones. Throwing it over her shoulder, she reached down
into the folds of his toga, fondling him with erotic skill. He
kissed her again and staggered back under her drunken weight until
his back pressed up against a column near the balcony. He could
feel its coolness against his back.
The crowd were oblivious. Many were only partly
dressed and the sunken pool in the middle of the floor churned with
slippery couples. The host had brought in a number of slave girls,
but the debauchery had spread with the drunkenness and by this late
hour the last hundred guests were ready to accept almost
anything.
Gaius groaned as the stranger opened her mouth
on him, and he signaled a passing slave for another cup of wine. He
spilled a few drops down his bare chest and watched as the liquid
dribbled down to her working mouth, absently rubbing the wine into
her soft lips with his fingers.
The music and laughter swelled around him. The
air was hot and humid with steam from the pool and the light of the
lamps. He finished the wine and threw the cup out into the darkness
over the balcony, never hearing it strike the gardens below. His
fifth party in two weeks and he thought he had been too tired to go
out again, but Diracius was known for throwing wild ones. The other
four had been exhausting and he realized this could be the end of
him. His mind seemed slightly detached, an observer to the writhing
clumps around him. In truth, Diracius had been right to say the
parties would help him forget, but even after so many months, each
moment with Alexandria was still there to be called into his mind.
What he had lost was the sense of wonder and of joy.
He closed his eyes and hoped his legs would hold
him upright to the end.
Kneeling, Mithridates spat blood over
his beard onto the ground, keeping his head bowed. A bull of a man,
he had killed many soldiers in the battle of the morning, and even
now, with his arms tied and his weapons taken, the Roman
legionaries walked warily around him. He chuckled at them, but it
was a bitter sound. All around lay hundreds of men who had been his
friends and followers, and the smell of blood and open bowels hung
on the air. His wife and daughters had been torn from his tent and
butchered by cold-eyed soldiers. His generals had been impaled and
their bodies sagged loosely, held upright on spikes as long as a
man. It was a bleak day to see it all end.
His mind wandered back over the months, tasting
again the joys of the rebellion, the pride as strong Greeks came to
his banner from all the cities, united again in the face of a
common enemy. It had all seemed possible for a while, but now there
were only ashes in the mouth. He remembered the first fort to fall
and the disbelief and shame in the Roman prefect's eyes as he was
made to watch it burn.
"Look on the flames," Mithridates had whispered
to him. "This will be Rome." The Roman had tried to reply, but
Mithridates had silenced him with a dagger across his throat, to
the cheers of his men.
Now he was the only one left of the band of
friends that had dared to throw off the yoke of Roman rule.
"I have been free," he muttered through the
blood, but the words failed to cheer him as they once could.
Trumpets sounded and horses galloped across a
cleared path to where Mithridates waited, resting back on his
haunches. He raised his shaggy head, his long hair falling over his
eyes. The legionaries nearby stood to attention in silence, and he
knew who it had to be. One eye was stuck with blood, but through
the other he could see a golden figure climb down from a stallion
and pass the reins to another. The spotless white toga seemed
incongruous in this field of death. How was it possible for
anything in the world to be untouched by the misery of such a gray
afternoon?
Slaves spread rushes over the mud to make a path
to the kneeling king. Mithridates straightened. They would not see
him broken and begging, not with his daughters lying so close in
peaceful stillness.
Cornelius Sulla strode over to the man and stood
watching. As if by arrangement with the gods, the sun chose that
moment to come from behind the clouds, and his dark blond hair
glowed as he drew a gleaming silver gladius from a simple
scabbard.
"You have given me a great deal of trouble,
Highness," Sulla said quietly.
At his words, Mithridates squinted. "I did my
best to," he replied grimly, holding the man's gaze with his one
good eye.
"But now it is over. Your army is broken. The
rebellion has ended."
Mithridates shrugged. What good was it to state
the obvious?
Sulla continued: "I had no part in the killing
of your wife and daughters. The soldiers involved have all been
executed at my command. I do not make war on women and children,
and I am sorry they were taken from you."
Mithridates shook his head as if to clear it of
the words and the sudden flashes of memory. He had heard his
beloved Livia screaming his name, but there had been legionaries
all around him armed with clubs to take him alive. He had lost his
dagger in a man's throat and his sword when it jammed in another's
ribs. Even then, with her screams in his ears, he had broken the
neck of a man who rushed in on him, but as he stooped to pick up a
fallen sword, the others had beaten him senseless and he had woken
to find himself bound and battered.
He gazed up at Sulla, looking for mockery.
Instead, he found only sternness and believed him. He looked away.
Did this man expect Mithridates the King to laugh and say all was
forgiven? The soldiers had been men of Rome and this golden figure
was their master. Was a huntsman not responsible for his dogs?
"Here is my sword," Sulla said, offering the
blade. "Swear by your gods that you will not rise against Rome in
my lifetime—and I will let you live."
Mithridates looked at the silver gladius, trying
to keep the surprise from his face. He had grown used to the fact
that he would die, but to suddenly have the offer of life again was
like tearing scabs away from hidden wounds. Time to bury his
wife.
"Why?" he grunted through the drying blood.
"Because I believe you to be a man of your word.
There has been enough death today."
Mithridates nodded silently in reply and Sulla
reached round him with the unstained blade to cut the bonds. The
king felt the soldiers nearby tense as they saw the enemy free once
more, but he ignored them, reaching out and taking the blade in his
scarred right palm. The metal was cold against his skin.
"I swear it."
"You have sons; what about them?"
Mithridates looked at the Roman general,
wondering how much he knew. His sons were in the east, raising
support for their father. They would return with men and supplies
and a new reason for vengeance.
"They are not here. I cannot answer for my
sons."
Sulla held the blade still in the man's grip.
"No, but you can warn them. If they return and raise Greece against
Rome while I live, I will visit upon her people a scale of grief
they have never known."
Mithridates nodded and let his hand fall from
the blade. Sulla resheathed it and turned away, striding back to
his horse without a backward glance.
Every Roman in sight moved off with him, leaving
Mithridates alone on his knees, surrounded by the dead. Stiffly, he
pulled himself to his feet, wincing at last at the score of pains
that plagued him. He watched the Romans break camp and move to the
west, back to the sea, and his eyes were cold and puzzled.
Sulla rode silently for the first few
leagues. His friends exchanged glances, but for a while no one
dared to break the grim silence. Finally, Padacus, a pretty young
man from northern Italy, put out his hand to touch Sulla's
shoulder, and the general reined in, looking at him
questioningly.
"Why did you leave him alive? Will he not come
against us in the spring?"
Sulla shrugged. "He might, but if he does, at
least he is a man I know I can beat. His successor might not make
mistakes so easily. I could have spent another six months rooting
out every one of his followers left alive in tiny mountain camps,
but what would we have gained except their hatred? No, the real
enemy, the real battle—" He paused and looked over to the
western horizon, almost as if he could see all the way to the gates
of Rome. "The real battle has yet to be fought, and we have spent
too much time here already. Ride on. We will assemble the legion at
the coast, ready for the crossing home."
CHAPTER
24
Gaius leaned on the stone window ledge
and watched the sun come up over the city. He heard Cornelia stir
on the long bed behind him and smiled to himself as he glanced
back. She was still asleep, her long gold hair spilling over her
face and shoulders as she shifted restlessly. In the heat of the
night, they had needed little to cover them, and her long legs were
revealed almost to the hip by the light cloth that she had gathered
in one small hand and pulled closer to her face.
For a moment, his thoughts turned to Alexandria,
but it was without pain. It had been hard for the first months,
even with friends like Diracius to distract him. He could look back
now and wince at his naïveté and clumsiness. Yet there
was sadness too. He could never be that innocent boy again.
He had seen Metella privately and signed a
document that passed Alexandria's ownership over to the house of
Marius, knowing he could trust his aunt to be kind to her. He had
also left a sum of gold pieces, taken from his estate funds, to be
handed to her on the day she purchased her freedom. She would find
out when she was free. It was a small gift, considering what she
had given him.
Gaius grinned as he felt arousal stir once more,
knowing he would have to be moving before the household came awake.
Cornelia's father, Cinna, was another of the political heavyweights
Marius was flattering and working to control. Not a man to cross,
and discovery in his beloved daughter's bedroom would mean death
even for Marius's nephew.
He glanced at her again and sighed as he pulled
his clothes to him. She had been worth it, though, worth the risk
many times over. Three years older than he, she had yet been a
virgin, which surprised him. She was his alone and that gave him
quiet satisfaction and more than a little of the old joy.
They had met at a formal gathering of Senate
families, celebrating the birth of twin sons to one of the
nobilitas. In the middle of the day, there was nothing like the
free license of one of Diracius's parties, and at first Gaius had
been bored with the endless congratulations and speeches. Then, in
a quiet moment, she had come over to him and changed everything.
She had been wearing a robe of dark gold, almost a brown, with
earrings and a torque of the same rich metal at her throat. He had
desired her from the first moments, and liked her as quickly. She
was intelligent and confident and she wanted him. It was a heady
feeling. He had sneaked in over the roofs to her bedroom window,
looking on her as she slept, her hair tousled and wild.
He remembered her rising from the bed and
sitting on it with her legs drawn up under her and her back
straight. It had been a few seconds before he noticed she was
smiling. He sighed as he pulled on his clothes and sandals.
With Sulla gone from the city for a whole year
as the Greek rebellion grew in ferocity, it was easy for Gaius to
forget that there had to be a reckoning at some point. Marius,
though, had worked from the first day for the moment that Sulla's
standards became visible on the horizon. The city was still buzzing
with excitement and dread, as it had been for months. Most had
stayed, but a steady trickle of merchants and families leaving the
city showed that not every inhabitant shared Marius's confidence
about the outcome. Every street had shops that were boarded closed,
and the Senate criticized many of the decisions made, pushing
Marius to rage when he came back to his home in the early hours of
the morning. It was a tension Gaius could barely share, with the
pleasures of the city to distract him.
He looked over at Cornelia again as he tightened
his toga, and saw her eyes were open. He crossed to her and kissed
her on the lips, feeling the rush of longing as he did. He dropped
one hand to her breast and felt her start against him as he broke
for air.
"Will you come to me again, Gaius?"
"I will," he replied, smiling, and found to his
surprise that he actually meant it.
"A good general is prepared for every
eventuality," Marius said as he handed the documents to Gaius.
"These are money orders. They are as good as gold in your hand,
drawn on the city treasury. I do not expect to have them repaid;
they are a gift to you."
Gaius looked at the sums and fought to smile.
The amounts were large, but would barely cover the debts he had run
up with the moneylenders. Marius hadn't been able to keep a close
eye on his nephew as the preparations for Sulla's return continued,
and Gaius had run lines of credit in those first few months after
Alexandria, buying women, wine, and sculpture—all to increase
his standing in a city that had respect only for gold and power.
With borrowed wealth, Gaius had come onto a jaded social scene as a
young lion. Even those who distrusted his uncle knew Gaius was a
man to be watched, and there was never a problem with the ever
larger sums he required, as the rich struggled to be next to offer
finance to Marius's nephew.
Marius must have caught a hint of Gaius's
disappointment and interpreted it as worry for the future.
"I expect to win, but only a fool wouldn't plan
for disaster where Sulla was involved. If it doesn't go as I have
planned, take the drafts and get out of the city. I have included a
reference that should get you a berth on a legion vessel to take
you to some far post of the empire. I... have also written
documents naming you as a son of my house. You will be able to join
any regiment and make your name for a couple of years."
"What if you crush Sulla, as you expect?"
"Then we will continue with your advance in
Rome. I will secure a post for you that carries life membership in
the Senate. They are jealously guarded, come the elections, but it
should not be impossible. It will cost us a fortune, but then you
are in, truly one of the chosen. Who knows where the future will
take you after that?"
Gaius grinned, caught up in the man's
enthusiasm. He would use the drafts to pay off the worst of his
debts. Of course, the horse sales were next week and the rumor was
that Arabian princes were bringing new breeds of warhorses, huge
stallions that could be guided with the gentlest touch. They would
cost a fortune, a fortune very like the one he held in his hand. He
tucked the papers inside his toga as he left. The moneylenders
would wait a little longer, he was sure.
In the cool night outside Marius's town house,
Gaius weighed up his options for the hours before dawn. As usual,
the dark city was far from quiet and he didn't feel ready for
sleep. Traders and cart drivers swore at each other, smiths
hammered, somebody laughed in a nearby house, and he could hear
crockery being smashed. The city was a place of life in a way the
estate could never match. Gaius loved it.
He could go and listen to the orators in the
forum by torchlight, perhaps joining in one of the endless debates
with other young nobles until the dawn made them all go home. Or he
could seek out Diracius's home and satisfy other appetites. Wiser
not to venture alone through the dark streets, he thought,
remembering Marius's warnings about the various raptores who
lurked in the dim alleys, ready for theft or murder. The city was
not safe at night and it was easy to become lost in the maze of
unnamed, twisting streets. One wrong turning could lead a wanderer
into an alley filled with piles of human filth and great pools of
urine, though the smell was usually enough of a warning.
A month before, he might have gathered
companions for a wild night, but the face of one girl had been
appearing more and more in his thoughts. Far from dwindling, his
longing for her seemed to be fired by contact rather than quenched.
Cornelia would be thinking of him in her father's estate rooms. He
would go to her and scale the outer wall, slipping past her
father's house guards one more time.
He grinned to himself, remembering the sudden
fear as he had slipped during the last climb, hanging above the
hard stones of the street below. It was getting so he knew every
inch of that wall, but one mistake would earn him a pair of broken
legs or worse.
"Worth the risks for you, my girl," he whispered
to himself, watching the night air frost his breath as he walked
through the unlit city streets to his destination.
CHAPTER
25
The Cinna estate began the bustle of
the working day as early as any other in Rome, heating water,
firing the ovens, sweeping, cleaning, and readying the clothes of
the family before they awoke. Before the sun had risen fully, a
slave entered Cornelia's room, looking round for clothes to be
collected for washing. Her thoughts were on the thousand chores to
be completed before the midmorning light meal, and at first she
noticed nothing. Then her eyes strayed to where a muscled leg
sprawled over the side of the bed. She froze as she saw the
sleeping couple, still entwined.
After a moment of indecision, her eyes lit up
with malice and she took a deep breath, cracking the still scene
with wild screams.
Gaius rolled naked off the bed and onto the
floor in a crouch. He took in the situation in a second, but didn't
waste any time on cursing himself. He grabbed toga and sword and
bolted for the window. The slave girl ran to the door, still
screaming, and Cornelia spat oaths after her. Thundering footsteps
sounded, and the nurse Clodia came into the room, her face full of
outrage. She swung her hand and connected with the slave girl's
face, cutting off the scream with a dull smack of flesh and
spinning her right round.
"Get out quickly, lad," Clodia snapped at him as
the slave girl whimpered on the floor. "You'd better be worth all
the trouble this is going to cause!"
Gaius nodded, but turned from the window and
came back into the room to Cornelia.
"If I don't go, they'll kill me for an intruder.
Tell them my name and tell them you're mine, that I'll marry you.
Tell them, if anyone harms you I'll kill him."
Cornelia didn't answer, just reached up and
kissed him.
He pulled away, laughing. "Gods, let me go! It
is a fine morning for a bit of a chase."
She watched with amusement as his white buttocks
flashed over the windowsill and away, trying to compose herself for
the drama to come.
Her father's guards entered the room first, led
by the dour captain who nodded to her and crossed to the window,
looking down.
"Get going," he shouted to his companions. "I'll
cross the roofs after him; you men intercept him down below. I'll
have his skin on my wall for this. Your pardon, lady," he said as a
farewell to Cornelia as his red face dropped out of sight.
Cornelia fought not to giggle with tension.
Gaius slipped and skittered on the
tiles, scraping skin from elbows and knees as he sacrificed safety
for breakneck speed. He heard the captain shouting behind him, but
didn't look back. The tiles offered precious little grip, and all
he could really do was control the speed of his fall as he slid
toward the edge and the street below. He had time to swear as he
realized his sandals were in the room above. How could he make any
kind of jump in only his bare feet? He'd break bones for sure and
then the chase would be over. He lost his grip on the toga to save
the gladius, by far the more valuable of the two items. He managed
to cling to the edge of the roof and inched along it, not risking
standing up in case archers were waiting for him. It would not be
unusual for a man of Cinna's wealth to have a small army on his
estate, much as Marius had.
Crouching low, he knew he was out of sight to
the swearing, puffing captain behind him, and Gaius looked around
desperately for a way out of the predicament. He had to get off the
roof. If he stayed, they would simply search each part of it until
they found him, and either pitch him off onto his head or drag him
before Cinna for punishment. With the heat of betrayal on him,
Cinna would be deaf to pleas, and death would quickly follow for
the charge of rape. In fact, Gaius realized Cinna would not even
have to bring charges; he would simply summon a lictor and have the
man execute Gaius on the spot. If Cinna was of a mind to, he could
have Cornelia strangled to save the honor of his house, though
Gaius knew the old man doted on his only daughter. If he had
genuinely believed she would suffer, he would have stayed to fight
it out, but he thought she would be safe enough against old Cinna's
rage.
Down below, where the roof overhung the street,
Gaius could hear shouting as the house guards formed a ring that
blocked all the exits. Behind him, the scrabbling of iron-shod
sandals on tiles was getting closer, and so he took a deep breath
to calm himself and ran, hoping his speed and balance would keep
him on the treacherous surface long enough to find safety. The
guard captain cried out in recognition as he broke cover, but Gaius
didn't have time to look back. The nearest roof was too far away to
leap onto, and the only flat place on the whole complex was a bell
tower with a small window.
He made the sill with a desperate jump as his
legs finally lost all grip, and he heaved himself up and over it,
panting in great gulps of the cold morning air. The bell room was
tiny, with steps leading down inside it to the main house below. At
first, Gaius was tempted to run down them, but then a plan surfaced
in his mind and he steadied his breathing and stretched a few
muscles as he waited for the captain to reach the window.
Moments after his decision to stay, the man
blocked the sunlight and his face lit up at the sight of the young
man cornered in the bell house. They looked at each other for a
moment, and Gaius watched with interest as the thought of being
killed as he climbed in crossed the other man's face. Gaius nodded
to him and stood well back to allow him entrance.
The captain grinned nastily at him, panting from
the run.
"You should have killed me while you had the
chance," he said, drawing his sword.
"You would have fallen off the roof and I need
your clothes—especially those sandals," Gaius replied calmly,
unsheathing his own gladius and standing relaxed, apparently
unaware of his nakedness.
"Will you tell me your name before I kill you?
Just so I have something to tell my master, you know," the captain
said, moving lightly into a fighters crouch.
"Will you give me your clothes? This is too fine
a morning for killing," Gaius countered, smiling easily.
The captain began to reply and Gaius attacked,
only to have his sword batted aside. The man had been expecting
such a move and was ready for it. Gaius realized quickly that he
was facing a skilled opponent and focused, aware of every move in
the dance. The floor was too small a space for ease, and the
stairwell loomed between them, threatening to send one of them
tumbling.
They feinted and struck around the space,
looking for weaknesses. The captain was puzzled at the young man's
skill. He had bought the position in Cinna's guard after winning a
city sword tournament and knew he was the better of most men, but
time and again his attacks were driven aside with speed and
precision. He wasn't worried, though. At worst, he could simply
hang on until help arrived, and as soon as the searchers realized
where they fought, more would be sent up the stairs to overwhelm
the intruder. Some of this confidence must have shown in his face,
as Gaius went on the offensive at last, having got the measure of
his man.
Gaius lunged through the captain's guard and
pierced his shoulder. The man took the wound with a grunt, but
Gaius knocked his riposte aside and opened a gash in the leather
chestplate. The captain found himself with his back to the wall of
the little bell tower, and then a bruising blow on his fingers sent
his gladius down the stairwell, clattering and rebounding in its
fall. The hand felt useless and he looked into Gaius's eyes,
expecting the cut that would finish him.
Gaius barely slowed. He turned his sword at the
last second so that the flat of it slammed against the man's temple
and dropped him senseless onto the floor.
More shouts sounded below and he began to strip
the captain, fingers working feverishly.
"Come on, come on..." he muttered to himself.
Always have a plan, Renius had advised him once, but apart from
stealing the man's clothes, he hadn't had time to think the rest of
his escape through.
After an age, he was dressed. The captain was
stirring and Gaius hit him again with the hilt, nodding as the
twitching movements ceased. He hoped he hadn't killed him; the man
had been doing what he was paid to do and without malice. Gaius
took a deep breath. Stairs or window? He paused for only a second,
put his own gladius into the captains scabbard, now strapped to
him, and strode down the stairs back into the main house.
Marius clenched his fists at the news
from the breathless messenger.
"How many days behind you are they?" he said as
calmly as he could.
"If they force-march, they can't be more than
three or four behind. I came as fast as I could, changing horses,
but most of Sulla's men had landed by the time I set off. I waited
to be sure it was the main force and not just a feint."
"You did well. Did you see Sulla himself?"
"I did, though it was at a distance. It seemed
to be a full landing of his legion returning to Rome."
Marius tossed a gold coin to the man, who
snatched it out of the air. Marius stood up.
"Then we must be ready to greet him. Gather the
other scouts together. I will prepare messages of welcome for you
to take to Sulla."
"General?" the messenger asked, surprised.
"Ask no questions. Is he not the conquering hero
returned to us? Meet me here in an hour to receive the
letters."
Without another word, the man bowed and
left.
The captain was found by the searchers
as he stumbled naked from the bell tower, holding his head. There
was no sign of the intruder, despite the exhaustive search that
went on all morning. One of the soldiers remembered a man dressed
like the captain who had gone off to check down a side street, but
he couldn't remember enough detail to give a good description. At
midday, the search was called off, and by then the news of Sulla's
return had hit the streets of Rome. An hour later, one of the house
guards noticed a small wrapped package leaning against the house
gate and opened it, finding the captain's uniform, scabbard, and
sandals. The captain swore as he was handed it.
Gaius was summoned into Marius's presence that
afternoon and had prepared a defense of his actions. However, the
general seemed not to have heard of the scandal and only motioned
Gaius to sit with his centurions.
"No doubt by now you will have heard that Sulla
has landed his forces on the coast and is only three or four days
from the city."
The others nodded and only Gaius had to try to
hide the shock he felt.
"It is a year and four months to the day since
Sulla left for Greece. I have had enough time to prepare a suitable
homecoming."
Some of the men chuckled in response and Marius
smiled grimly.
"This is no light undertaking. You are all men I
trust and nothing I say here is to leave this room. Do not discuss
this with your wives or mistresses or most trusted friends. I have
no doubt that Sulla has had spies in the city watching my every
move. He must be aware of our preparations and will arrive fully
warned of Rome's readiness for civil war."
The words, said at last in the open, chilled the
hearts of all who heard them.
"I cannot reveal all my plans even now, save to
say this. If Sulla reaches the city alive, and he may not, we will
treat his legion as an attacking enemy, destroying them on the
field. We have supplies of grain, meat, and salt to last us for
many months. We will seal the city against him and destroy him on
the walls. Even as we speak, the flow of traffic has ceased in and
out of Rome. The city stands alone."
"What if he leaves his legion in camp and comes
to demand his rightful entry?" asked a man Gaius didn't know. "Will
you risk the wrath of the Senate, declare yourself dictator?"
Marius was silent for a long time, then he
raised his head and spoke quietly, almost in a whisper.
"If Sulla comes alone, then I will have him cut
down. The Senate will not brand me a traitor to the state. I have
their support in everything I do."
This much was true: There was not a man of
influence who would dare to put a motion to the Senate condemning
the general. The position was clear.
"Now, gentlemen, your orders for tomorrow."
Cornelia waited patiently until her
father had finished, allowing his rage to wash over her, leaving
her untouched.
"No, Father. You will not have him tracked down.
He will be my husband and you will welcome him into our house when
the time comes."
Cinna purpled in renewed anger. "I'll see his
body rot first! He comes like a thief into my home and you sit
there like a block of marble and tell me I will accept it? I will
not, until his body lies broken at my feet."
Cornelia sighed gently, waiting for the tirade
to slow down. Shutting her ears against the shouting, she counted
the flowers that she could see from the window. Finally, the tone
changed and she brought her attention back to her father, who was
looking at her doubtfully.
"I love him, Father, and he loves me. I am sorry
we brought shame to the house, but the marriage will wash it all
away, despite the gossips in the market. You did tell me I could
choose a man I wanted, remember?"
"Are you pregnant?"
"Not as far as I know. There will be no sign
when we are married, no public show."
Her father nodded, looking older and
deflated.
Cornelia stood and put her hand on his shoulder.
"You won't regret it."
Cinna grunted dubiously. "Do I know him, this
despoiler of innocence?"
Cornelia smiled, relieved at his change in mood.
"You do, I'm sure. He is the nephew of Marius. Gaius Julius
Caesar."
Her father shrugged. "I have heard the
name."
CHAPTER
26
Cornelius Sulla sipped cooled wine in
the shadow of his tent, looking over the legion camp. It was the
last night he would have to bear away from his beloved Rome. He
shivered slightly in the breeze and perhaps in anticipation of the
conflict to come. Did he know every aspect of Marius's plans, or
would the old fox surprise him? Messages of official welcome lay
upon the table, ignored for the formality they were.
Padacus rode up, pulling the horse into a flashy
stop with the rear legs buckling on the turn. Sulla smiled at him.
So very young, and such a very beautiful man, he noted to
himself.
"The camp is secure, General," Padacus called as
he dismounted. Every inch of his armor was polished and glowing,
the leather soft and dark with oil. A young Hercules, Sulla thought
as he received and answered the salute. Loyal unto death, though,
like a pampered hound.
"Tomorrow night, we will enter the city. This is
the last night for hard ground and living like barbarians," Sulla
told him, preferring the simple image over the reality of soft beds
and fine linen in the general's tent at least. His heart was with
the men, but the privations of a legionary's life had never
appealed to the consul.
"Will you share your plans, Cornelius? The
others are all eager to know how you will handle Marius."
Padacus had pressed a little too closely in his
enthusiasm, and Sulla held up a palm.
"Tomorrow, my friend. Tomorrow will be soon
enough for preparations. I will retire early tonight, after a
little more wine."
"Will you require... company?" Padacus asked
softly.
"No. Wait. Send a couple of the better-looking
whores to me. I might as well see if I have anything new to
learn."
Padacus dropped his head as if he'd been struck.
He backed to his horse and trotted away.
Sulla watched his stiff retreat and sighed,
splashing the remaining wine in his goblet onto the black ground.
It was the third time the young man had offered, and Sulla had to
face the fact that he was becoming a problem. The line between
adoration and spite was fine in young Padacus. Better to send him
away to some other legion before he caused trouble that could not
be ignored. He sighed again and walked into the tent, flicking the
leather sheet closed over the entrance behind him.
The lamps had been lit by his slaves; the floor
was covered in rugs and cloth. Sweet-smelling oil burned in a tiny
cup, a rare mixture he enjoyed. Sulla took a deep breath and caught
a flicker of movement coming at him from the right. He collapsed
backward out of the line of the attack and felt the air move as
something slashed above him. Sulla kicked out with powerful legs
and his attacker was knocked from his feet. As the assassin flailed
round, Sulla caught his knife hand in a crushing grip. He levered
himself up so that his weight was on the man's chest, and he smiled
as he watched the man's expression change from anger and fear to
surprise and despair.
Sulla was not a soft man. True, he didn't favor
the more extreme Roman tests of courage, where injuries and scars
showed prowess, but he trained every day and fought in every
battle. His wrists were like metal and he had no difficulty in
turning the blade inward until it was pointing toward the man's
throat.
"How much did Marius pay you?" Sulla sneered,
his voice showing little strain.
"Nothing. I kill you for pleasure."
"Amateur by word and deed!" Sulla
continued, pressing the knife closer to the heaving flesh. "Guards!
Attend your consul!" he barked, and within seconds, the man was
pinned down and Sulla could stand and brush dust from himself.
The guard captain had entered with the rush of
people. He was pale, but managed to snap out a clean salute as he
stood to attention.
"It seems that an assassin has made his way
through the camp and into the tent of a consul of Rome without
being challenged," Sulla said quietly, dipping his hands into a
bowl of scented water on an oak table and holding them out to be
dried by a slave.
The guard captain took a deep breath to calm
himself. "Torture will get us the names of his masters. I will
supervise the questioning myself. I will resign my commission in
the morning, General, with your permission?"
Sulla continued as if the man had not spoken. "I
do not enjoy being accosted in my own tent. It seems such a common,
grubby incident to disturb my repose in this way."
He stooped and picked up the dagger, ignoring
the owner's frantic struggles as the grim soldiers bound him with
vicious tightness. He held the slim blade out to the nervous
captain.
"You have left me unprotected. Take this. Go to
your tent and cut your throat with it. I will have your body
collected in... two hours?"
The man nodded stiffly, taking the dagger. He
saluted again and turned on his heel, marching out of the tent
space.
Padacus placed a warm palm on Sulla's arm. "Are
you wounded?"
Sulla pulled his arm away in irritation. "I am
fine. Gods, it was only one man. Marius must have a very low
opinion of me."
"We don't know it was only one man. I will set
guards around your tent tonight."
Sulla shook his head. "No. Let Marius think he
has scared me? I'll keep those two whores you were bringing me and
make sure one of them is awake through the night. Bring them in and
get rid of everyone else. I believe I have worked up an appetite
for a little vicious entertainment."
Padacus saluted smartly, but Sulla saw the full
lips pout as he turned, and made a note. The man was definitely a
risk. He would not make it back to Rome. An accident of some
kind—a fall from his glorious gelding. Perfect.
At last he was alone and Sulla sat on a low bed,
smoothing a hand over the soft material. There was a quiet, female
cough from outside, and Sulla smiled with pleasure.
The two girls that entered at his call were
clean, lithe, and richly dressed. Both were beautiful.
"Wonderful," Sulla sighed, patting the bed
beside him. For all his faults, Padacus had an eye for truly
beautiful women, a rather wasted gift in the circumstances.
Marius frowned at his nephew.
"I do not question your decision to be wed!
Cinna will be a useful support in your career. It will suit you
politically as well as personally to marry his daughter. However, I
do question your timing. With Sulla's legion likely to
arrive at the gates of the city tomorrow evening, you want me to
arrange a marriage in such haste?"
A legionary rushed up to the general, attempting
to salute around an armful of scrolls and documents. Marius raised
a hand to hold him off.
"You discussed certain plans with me, if things
didn't work out tomorrow?" Gaius asked, his voice quiet.
Marius nodded and turned to the guard. "Wait
outside. I'll fetch you when I'm finished here."
The man attempted another salute and trotted out
of the general's barracks room. As soon as he was out of earshot,
Gaius spoke again.
"If somehow things go wrong for us... and I have
to flee the city, I won't leave Cornelia behind unmarried."
"She can't go with you!" Marius snapped.
"No. But I can't leave her without my name for
protection. She may be pregnant." He hated to admit the extent of
their relationship. It was a private thing between them, but only
Marius could get the sacrifices and priests ready in the short time
left to them, and he had to be made to understand.
"I see. Does her father know of... your
intimacy?"
Gaius nodded.
"Then we are lucky he is not at the door with a
horsewhip. Fair enough. I will make ready for the briefest of vow
ceremonies. Dawn tomorrow?"
Gaius smiled suddenly, released from a tension
he had felt pressing on him.
"That's more like it," Marius laughed in
response. "Gods, Sulla isn't even in sight yet and a long way from
taking Rome back from me. You look too hard for the worst outcomes,
I fear. Tomorrow evening your haste may seem ridiculous as we put
old Sulla's head on a spike, but no matter. Go. Buy a wedding robe
and presents. Have all the bills sent to me." He patted Gaius on
the back.
"Oh, and see Catia on the way out—a lady
of mature years who makes uniforms for the men. She will think of a
few things and where to get them in so short a time. Go!"
Gaius left, chuckling.
As soon as he had gone, Marius summoned his aide
with a shout and spread the scrolls out on the table, anchoring the
edges with smooth lead weights.
"Right, lad," he said to the soldier. "Summon
the centurions for another meeting. I want to hear any fresh ideas,
no matter how bizarre. What have I missed? What does Sulla
plan?"
"Perhaps you have already thought of everything,
General."
"No man can think of everything; all we can do
is to be ready for anything." Marius waved the man away on his
errand.
* * *
Gaius found Cabera throwing dice with
two of Marius's legionaries. The old man was engrossed in the game,
and Gaius controlled his impatience as he made another throw and
clapped his ancient hands together in pleasure. Coins were passed
over and Gaius took his arm before another round could begin.
"I spoke to Marius. He can arrange the ceremony
for dawn tomorrow. I need help today to get everything ready."
Cabera looked carefully at him as he tucked his
winnings into his ragged brown robe. He nodded to the soldiers and
one of them shook hands a little ruefully before walking away.
"I look forward to meeting this girl who has had
such an impact on you. I suppose she is terribly beautiful?"
"Of course! She is a young goddess. Sweet brown
eyes and golden hair. You cannot possibly imagine."
"No. I was never young. I was born a wrinkled
old man, to the surprise of my mother," Cabera answered seriously,
making Gaius laugh. He felt drunk with excitement, with the
threatening shadow of Sulla's arrival pushed right to the back of
his mind.
"Marius has given me the purse strings, but the
shops close so early. We have no time to waste. Come on!" Gaius
pulled Cabera by the arm and the old man chuckled, enjoying the
enthusiasm.
As evening darkened over the city,
Marius left the centurions and walked out to make another
inspection of the wall defenses. He stretched as he walked, and
felt and heard his back clicking, sore from bending over the plans
for so many hours. A warning voice in his mind reminded him of how
foolish it was to walk around in this city after dark, even with
the curfew still in place. He dismissed it with a shrug. Rome would
never hurt him. She loved her son too dearly, he knew.
As if in response to his thoughts, he felt the
freshening warm wind on his face, drying the sweat that had seeped
from him in the cramped barracks. When Sulla was disposed of, he
would see about building a greater palace for the Rome legion.
There was a slum area adjoining the barracks that could be
flattened by senatorial order. He saw it in his mind and imagined
entertaining foreign leaders in the great halls. Dreams, but
pleasant as he walked through the silent streets, with only the
clack-clack of his sandals breaking the perfect
stillness.
He could see the silhouettes of his men against
the star-filled night sky long before he reached them. Some were
still and some walked their prescribed, overlapping routes at
random. At a glance, he could see they were alert. Good men. Who
knew what awaited them the next time night fell? He shrugged again
to himself and was glad no one could see him in the dim streets.
Sulla would come and he would be met with steel. There was no point
in worrying and Marius took a deep, cleansing breath, putting it
all away inside him. He smiled cheerfully as the first of many
sentries stopped him.
"Good lad. Hold that spear steady now, a
pilum is a fearful weapon in a strong grip. That's it. I
thought I would take a tour of this section. Can't stand the
waiting, you know. Can you?"
The sentry saluted gravely. "I don't mind it,
sir. You may pass."
Marius clapped his hand against the sentry's
shoulder. "Good man. They won't get past you."
"No, sir."
The legionary watched him go and nodded to
himself. The old man was still hungry.
Marius climbed the steps to the new wall his
legion had constructed over and around the old gates of Rome. It
was a solid and massive construction of heavy interlocking blocks
with a wide walkway at the top, where a smaller wall would protect
his men from archers. Marius rested his hands on the smooth stone
and looked out into the night. If he were Sulla, how would he take
the city?
Sulla's legions had huge siege engines, heavy
crossbows, stone throwers, and catapults. Marius had used each type
and feared them all. He knew that, as well as large stones to
batter the wall, Sulla could load his machines with smaller shot
that would rip through defenders too slow to duck. He would use
fire, launching barrels of rock oil over the wall to ignite the
inner buildings. Enough barrels and the men on the wall would be
lit from behind, easy targets for archers. Marius had cleared some
wooden buildings away from the wall, his men dismantling homes
quickly and efficiently. Those he could not move had a huge supply
of water at the ready, with trained teams to deal with it. It was a
new idea for Rome and one he would have to look into when the
battle was over. Every summer, fires gutted houses in the city,
sometimes spreading to others before being stopped by a wide street
or a thick stone wall. A small group ready with water could...
He knuckled his eyes. Too much time spent
thinking and planning. He hadn't slept for more than a few hours
for weeks, and the drain was beginning to tell on even his
vitality.
The wall would have to be scaled with ladders.
It was strong, but Roman legions were practiced in taking
fortresses and castles. The techniques were almost mundane now.
Marius muttered to himself, knowing the nearest sentry was too far
away to hear his voice.
"They have never fought Romans, especially
Romans in defense of their own city. That is our true advantage. I
know Sulla, but he knows me. They have the mobility, but we have
the stronghold and the morale. My men are not attacking
beloved Rome, after all."
Cheered by his thoughts, Marius walked on over
the section of wall. He spoke to each man and, recalling names here
and there, asked them about their progress and promotions and loved
ones. There wasn't a hint of weakness in any he spoke to. They were
like hard-eyed hunting dogs, eager to be killing for him.
By the time he had walked the section and
descended back into the dark streets below, Marius felt lifted by
the men's simple faith in him. He would see them through. They
would see him through. He hummed a military tune to himself as he
strolled back to the barracks, and his heart was light.
CHAPTER
27
Gaius Julius Caesar smiled, despite
the feeling of anxious weakness that fluttered in his stomach. With
the help of Marius's seamstress, he had sent servants off to buy
and organize for most of the night. He'd known the ceremony would
have to be simple and was astonished at so many members of the
nobilitas in attendance on a cold morning. The senators had come,
bringing families and slaves to the temple of Jupiter. Every glance
that met his was followed by a smile, and the soft odors of flowers
and burning scentwood was strong in the air. Marius and Metella
were there at the entrance of the marble temple, and Metella was
dabbing tears from her eyes. Gaius nodded to them both nervously as
he waited for his bride to arrive. He twitched the sleeves of his
marriage robe, cut low around his neck to reveal a single amethyst
on a slender gold chain.
He wished Marcus were there. It would have
helped to have someone who really knew him. Everyone else was part
of the world he was growing into: Tubruk, Cabera, Marius, even
Cornelia herself. With a pang, he realized that to make it all seem
real, he needed someone there who could meet his eye and know the
whole journey to that point. Instead, Marcus was away in foreign
lands, the wild adventurer he always wanted to be. By the time he
returned, the wedding day would just be a memory that he could
never share.
It was cool in the temple and for a moment Gaius
shivered, feeling his skin prickle as the hairs stood up. With his
back to the room, he felt alone and uncomfortable.
If his father had lived, he could have turned to
him as they all waited for Cornelia. They could have shared a
smile, or a wink that said "Look what I've done."
Gaius felt tears come into his eyes and he
looked up at the domed ceiling, willing them not to spill onto his
face. His father's funeral had been the end of his mother's moments
of peace. Tubruk had shaken his head when Gaius asked if she was
able to come. The old gladiator loved her as much as anyone, he
knew. Perhaps he always had.
Gaius cleared his throat and dragged his
thoughts back to the moment. He had to put childhood behind him.
There were many friends in the room, he told himself. Tubruk was
like an uncle with his gruff affection, and Marius and Metella
seemed to have accepted him without reserve. Marcus should have
been there. He owed him that.
Gaius hoped Cinna would be pleasant. He had not
spoken to the man since formally asking for Cornelia's hand to be
passed from father to husband. It had not been a happy meeting,
though the senator had kept his dignity for her sake. At least he
had been generous with the dowry for Cornelia. Cinna had handed him
the deeds to a large town house in a prosperous area of Rome. With
slaves and guards as part of the gift, Gaius had felt a worry ease
from him. She would be safe now, no matter what happened. He
frowned. He would have to get used to the new name, casting off the
old with the other trappings of youth. Julius. His father's name.
It had a good sound to the ear, though he guessed he would always
be Gaius to those he had known as a boy. His father had not lived
to see him adopt his adult name, and that saddened him. He wondered
if the old man could see his only son and hoped so, wishing for
just that one more moment to share pride and love.
He turned and smiled weakly at Cabera, who
regarded him with a sour expression, his thinning hair still
tousled from being roused at what he considered an ungodly hour. He
too was dressed in a new brown robe to mark the occasion, adorned
with a simple pewter brooch, a design of a fat-faced moon standing
proud on the metal. Julius recognized it as Alexandria's work and
smiled at Cabera, who scratched an armpit vigorously in response.
Julius kept smiling and after a few seconds, the ancient features
cracked in cheerful response, despite his worries.
The future was dark to Cabera as it always was
when he was a part of a particular destiny. The old man felt afresh
the irritation at being able to sense only the paths that had
little bearing on his own life, but even the scratch of his
misgivings couldn't prevent him taking pleasure in the youthful joy
he felt coming from Julius like a warm wave.
There was something wonderful about a wedding,
even one as quickly arranged as this one. Everyone was happy and
for at least this little while the problems to come could be
forgotten, if only until dark.
Julius heard footsteps sound on the marble
behind him, and he turned to see Tubruk leaving his seat to
approach the altar. The estate manager looked his usual self,
strong, brown, and healthy, and Julius clasped his arm, feeling it
as an anchor in the world.
"You looked a bit lost up here. How are you
feeling?" Tubruk asked.
"Nervous. Proud. Amazed so many turned up."
Tubruk looked with fresh interest at the crowd
and turned back with eyebrows raised. "Most of the power in Rome is
in this room. Your father would be proud of you. I'm proud of you."
He paused for a moment, unsure of whether to continue. "Your mother
did want to come, but she was just too weak."
Julius nodded and Tubruk punched his arm
affectionately before going back to his seat a few rows behind.
"In my village, we just take a girl by the hair
and pull her into our hut," Cabera muttered, shocking the priest
out of his beatific expression. Seeing this, the old man went on
cheerfully, "If it didn't work, you'd give her father a goat and
grab one of her sisters. Much simpler that way—no hard
feelings and free goat milk for the father. I had a herd of thirty
goats when I was a lad, but I had to give most of them away,
leaving me without enough to support myself. Not a wise decision,
but difficult to regret, no?"
The priest had flushed at these casual
references to barbarian practices, but Julius only chuckled.
"You old fraud. You just like to shock these
upright Roman citizens."
Cabera sniffed loudly. "Maybe," he admitted,
remembering the trouble he'd caused when he had tried to offer his
last goat up front for a night of pleasure. It had seemed like
sense at the time, but the girl's father had taken a spear from his
wall and chased the young Cabera up into the hills, where he had to
hide for three days and nights.
The priest eyed Cabera with distaste. He was
nobilitas himself, but in his religious role wore a cream toga with
a hood that left only his face bare. He waited patiently for the
bride with the others. Julius had explained that the ceremony must
be as simple as possible because his uncle would want to leave at
the earliest moment. The priest had scratched his chin in obvious
annoyance at this, before Julius slipped a small pouch of coins
into his robe as an "offering" to the temple. Even the nobilitas
had bills and debts. It would be a short service. After Cornelia
was brought in to be given away by her father, there would be
prayers to Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus. An augur had been paid gold
to predict wealth and happiness for them both. The vows would
follow and Julius would put a simple gold ring on her finger. She
would be his wife. He would be her husband. He felt sweat dampen
his armpits and tried to shrug away the nervousness.
He turned again and looked straight into the
eyes of Alexandria as she stood in a simple dress, wearing a brooch
of silver. There were tears sparkling in her gaze, but she nodded
at him and something eased within.
Soft music began at the back, swelling to fill
the vaulted ceiling like the incense smoke that spilled from the
censers. Julius looked round and caught his breath and everything
else was forgotten.
Cornelia was there, standing tall and straight
in a cream dress and thin golden veil, her hand on the arm of her
father, who was clearly unable to keep a beaming smile from his
face. Her hair had been tinted darker, and her eyes seemed of the
same warm color. At her throat was a ruby the size of a bird's egg,
held in gold against the lighter tone of her skin. She looked
beautiful and fragile. There was a small wreath on the crest of her
head, made from verbena and sweet marjoram flowers. He could smell
their scent as Cornelia and her father approached. Cinna let go of
her arm as they reached Julius, remaining a pace behind.
"I pass Cornelia into your care, Gaius Julius
Caesar," he said formally.
Julius nodded. "I accept her into my care." He
turned to her and she winked at him.
As they knelt, he caught again the scent of
flowers from her and couldn't stop himself glancing over to her
bowed head. He wondered if he would have loved her if he hadn't
known Alexandria, or if he had met her before he had gone to the
houses where women could be bought for a night or even an hour. He
hadn't been ready for this, not back then, a year and a lifetime
ago. The prayers were a peaceful murmur over their heads, and he
was content. Her eyes were soft as summer darkness.
The rest of the ceremony went in a blur for him.
The simple vows were spoken—"Where you go, there go I." He
knelt under the priests hands for what seemed like eternity, and
then they were out in the sunshine and the crowd was cheering and
shouting, "Felicitas!" and Marius was bidding him goodbye
with a great clap on his back.
"You're a man now, Julius. Or she will make you
one very soon!" he said loudly, with a twinkle in his eye. "You
have your father's name. He would be proud of you."
Julius returned the grip strongly. "Do you want
me on the walls now?"
"I think we can spare you for a few hours.
Report to me at four this afternoon. Metella will have finished
crying about then, I think."
They grinned at each other like boys, and Julius
was left in a space for a moment, alone with his bride in a crowd
of well-wishers. Alexandria walked up to him and he smiled,
suddenly nervous. Her dark hair was bound with wire and the sight
of her made his throat feel tight. There was so much history in
those dark eyes.
"That's a beautiful brooch you are wearing," he
said.
She reached up and tapped it with her hand.
"You'd be surprised at how many people have asked about it this
morning. I already have some orders."
"Business on my wedding day!" he exclaimed, and
she nodded without embarrassment.
"May the gods bless your house," she said
formally.
She moved away and he turned to find Cornelia
looking at him quizzically. He kissed her.
"She is very beautiful. Who is she?" she said,
her voice betraying a touch of worry.
"Alexandria. She is a slave at Marius's
house."
"She doesn't act like a slave," Cornelia replied
dubiously.
Julius laughed. "Do I hear jealousy?"
Cornelia did not smile and he took her hands
gently in his.
"You are all I want. My beautiful wife. Come to
our new home and I'll show you."
Cornelia relaxed as he kissed her, deciding to
find out everything she could about the slave girl with the
jewelry.
The new house was bare of furniture
and slaves. They were the only ones there and their voices echoed.
The bed was a present from Metella, made of carved, dark wood. At
least there was a mattress over the slats, and soft linen.
For a few minutes, they seemed clumsy,
self-conscious with the weight of the new titles.
"I think you might remove my toga, wife," Julius
said, his voice light.
"I shall, husband. You could unbind my hair,
perhaps."
Then their old passion returned and the
clumsiness was forgotten through the afternoon, as the heat built
outside.
Julius panted, his hair wet with perspiration.
"I will be tired out tonight," he said between breaths.
A light frown creased Cornelia's forehead.
"You'll be careful?"
"Not at all, I shall throw myself into conflict.
I may start a battle myself, just to impress you."
Her fingers traced a line down his chest,
dimpling the smooth skin. "You could impress me in other ways."
He groaned. "Not right now I can't, but give it
a little time."
Her eyes glinted mischievously as she moved her
delicate fingers.
"I might be too impatient to wait. I think I can
awaken your interest."
After a few moments, he groaned again, crumpling
the sheets under his clenching fists.
At four o'clock, Julius was hammering
at the barracks door, only to be told the general was back up on
the walls, walking section after section. Julius had exchanged his
toga for a legionary's simple uniform of cloth and leather. His
gladius was held to his belt and he carried a helmet under one arm.
He felt slightly light-headed after the hours spent with Cornelia,
but he found he was able to leave that longing in a compartment
inside himself. He would return to her as the young lover, but at
that moment he was a soldier, nephew of Marius, trained by Renius
himself.
He found Marius talking to a group of his
officers and stood a few paces away, looking over the preparations.
Marius had split his legion into small mobile groups of sixteen
men, each with assigned tasks, but more flexible than having each
century man the wall. All the scouts reported Sulla making a
straight line for the city, with no attempt to feint or confuse. It
looked as if Sulla was going to risk a direct attack, but Marius
still suspected some other plan to make itself evident as the army
hove into view. He finished giving his final orders and gripped
hands with each of his officers before they went to their posts.
The sun had dropped past the zenith point and there were only a few
hours until evening began.
He turned to his nephew and grinned at the
serious expression.
"I want you to walk the wall with me, as fresh
eyes. Tell me anything you could improve. Watch the men, their
expressions, the way they hold themselves. Judge their morale."
Julius still looked grim and Marius sighed in
exasperation.
"And smile, lad. Raise their spirits." He leaned
in closer. "Many of these men will be dead by morning. They are
professionals, but they will still know fear. Some won't be happy
about facing our own people in war, though I have tried to have the
worst of those moved back from the first assault wall. Say a few
words to as many as you can, not long conversations, just notice
what they are doing and compliment them on it. Ask them their names
and then use the name in your reply to them. Ready?"
Julius nodded, straightening his spine. He knew
that the way he presented himself to others affected how they saw
him. If he strode in with shoulders and spine straight, men would
take him seriously. He remembered his father telling the boys how
to lead soldiers.
"Keep your head high and don't apologize unless
you absolutely have to. Then do it once, loudly and clearly. Never
whine, never plead, never gush. Think before you speak to a man
and, when you have to, use few words. Men respect the silent; they
despise the garrulous."
Renius had taught him how to kill a man as
quickly and efficiently as possible. He was still learning how to
win loyalty.
They walked slowly along a section of wall,
stopping and speaking to each soldier and spending a few minutes
longer with the leader of the section, listening to ideas and
suggestions and complimenting the men on their readiness.
Julius caught glances and held them as he
nodded. The soldiers acknowledged him, tension evident. He stopped
by one barrel-chested little man adjusting a powerful metal
crossbow, set into the stone of the wall itself.
"What's the range?"
The soldier saluted smartly. "With the wind
behind you, three hundred paces, sir."
"Excellent. Can the machine be aimed?"
"A little, nothing precise at the moment. The
workshop is working on a moving pedestal."
"Good. It looks a deadly thing indeed."
The soldier smiled proudly and wiped a rag over
the winch mechanism that would wind the heavy arms back to their
locking slot.
"She, sir. Something as dangerous as this has to
be female."
Julius chuckled as he thought of Cornelia and
his aching muscles.
"What is your name, soldier?"
"Trad Lepidus, sir."
"I will look to see how many of the enemy she
takes down, Lepidus."
The man smiled again. "Oh, it will be a few,
sir. No one is coming into my city without the permission of the
general, sir."
"Good man."
Julius moved on, feeling a touch more
confidence. If all the men were as steadfast as Trad Lepidus, there
couldn't be an army in the world that could take Rome. He caught up
with his uncle, who was accepting a drink from a silver flask and
spluttering over the contents.
"Sweet Mars! What's in this, vinegar?"
The officer fought not to smile. "I daresay you
are used to better vintages, sir. The spirit is a little raw."
"Raw! Mind you, it is warming," Marius said,
tilting the flask up once more. Finally, he wiped his mouth with
the back of his hand. "Excellent. Send a chit to the quartermaster
in the morning. I think a small flask for officers would be just
the thing against the chill of winters nights."
"Certainly, sir," the man replied, frowning
slightly as he tried to calculate the profits he would make as the
sole supplier to his own legion. The answer obviously pleased him
and he saluted smartly as Julius passed.
Finally, Marius reached the flight of stone
steps down to the street that marked the end of the section. Julius
had spoken or nodded or listened to every one of a hundred or so
soldiers on that part of the wall. His facial muscles felt stiff
and yet he felt a touch of his uncle's pride. These were good men
and it was a great thing to know they were ready to lay down their
lives at your order. Power was a seductive thing, and Julius
enjoyed the reflected warmth of it from his uncle. He felt a
mounting excitement as he waited with his city for Sulla to arrive
and darkness to come.
Narrow wooden towers had been placed
at intervals all round the city. As the sun set, a lookout shouted
from one and the word was passed at a fierce speed. The enemy was
on the horizon, marching toward the city. The gates were closed
against them.
"At last! The waiting was chafing on me," Marius
bellowed, charging out of his barracks as the warning horns were
sounded across the city, long wailing notes.
The reserves took their positions. Those few
Romans still on the streets ran for their homes, bolting and
barricading their doors against the invaders. The people cared
little for who ruled the city as long as their families were
safe.
The Senate meetings had been postponed that day,
and the senators too were in their palatial houses, dotted around
the city. Not one of them had taken the roads to the west, though a
few had sent their families away to country estates rather than
leave them at risk. A few rose with tight smiles, standing at
balconies and watching the horizon as the horns moaned across the
darkening city. Others lay in baths or beds and had slaves ease
muscles that tightened from fear. Rome had never been attacked in
its history. They had always been too strong. Even Hannibal had
preferred to meet Roman legions on the field rather than assault
the city itself. It had taken a man like Scipio to take his head
and that of his brother. Would Marius have the same ability, or
would it be Sulla who held Rome in his bloody hand at the end? One
or two of the senators burned incense at their private altars for
their household gods. They had supported Marius as he tightened his
grip on Rome, forced to take his side in public. Many had staked
their lives on his success. Sulla had never been a forgiving
man.
CHAPTER
28
Torches were lit all around the city
as night fell. Julius wondered what it would look like to the gods
as they looked down, a great gleaming eye in the black vastness of
the land. We look up as they look down, he thought. He stood
with Cabera on ground level, listening to the news as it was
shouted down from the wall lookouts and relayed along and deep into
the city, a vein of information for those who could see and hear
nothing. Over it, despite the nearby noises, he could make out the
distant tramp of thousands of armored men and horses on the move.
It filled the soft night and grew louder as they approached.
There was no doubt now. Sulla was bringing his
legion right up the Via Sacra to the gates of the city, with no
attempt at subterfuge. The lookouts reported a torch-lit snake of
men stretching for miles back in the darkness, with the tail
disappearing over hills. It was a marching formation for friendly
lands, not a careful approach to close with an enemy. The
confidence of such a casual march made many raise eyebrows and
wonder what on earth Sulla was planning. One thing was for certain:
Marius was not the man to be cowed by confidence.
* * *
Sulla clenched his fists in excitement
as the gates and walls of the fortress city began to glow with the
reflected light of his legion. Thousands of fighting men and half
as many again in support marched on through the night. The noise
was rhythmic and deafening, the crash of feet on the stone road
echoing back and around the city and the night. Sulla's eyes
sparkled in the flames of torches and he casually raised his right
hand. The signal was relayed, great horns wailing into the
darkness, setting off responses all the way down the great snake of
soldiers.
Stopping a moving legion required skill and
training. Each section had to halt to order, or a pileup would
result, with the precision lost in chaos. Sulla turned and looked
back down the hill, nodding with satisfaction as each century
became still, their torches held in unwavering hands. It took
almost half an hour from the first signal to the end, but at last,
they all stood on the Via Sacra and the natural silence of the
countryside seemed to flow back over them. His legion waited for
orders, gleaming gold.
Sulla swept his gaze over the fortifications,
imagining the mixed feelings of the men and citizens inside. They
would be wondering at his halt, whispering nervously to each other,
passing the news back to those who could not see the great
procession. The citizens would hear his echoing horns and be
expecting attack at any moment.
He smiled. Marius too would be chafing, waiting
for the next move. He had to wait; that was the key weakness of the
fortified position—they could only defend and play a passive
role.
Sulla bided his time, signaling for cool wine to
be brought to him. As he did so, he noticed the rather rigid
posture of a torch carrier. Why was the man so tense? he wondered.
He leaned forward in his saddle and noticed the thin trickle of
boiling hot oil that had escaped the torch and was creeping toward
the slaves bare hand. Sulla watched the man's eyes as they flicked
forward and back to the burning liquid. Was there a touch of flame
in the trickle? Yes, the heat would be terrible; it would stick as
it burned the man. Sulla observed with interest, noting the sweat
on the man's forehead and having a private bet with himself as to
what would happen when the heat touched the skin.
He was a believer in omens and at such a moment,
before the gates of Rome herself, he knew the gods would be
watching. Was this a message from them, a signal for Sulla to
interpret? Certainly he was beloved of the gods, as his exalted
position showed. His plans were made, but disaster was always
possible with a man like Marius. The flickering flames on the oil
touched the slave's skin. Sulla raised an eyebrow, his mouth
quirking with surprise. Despite the obvious agony of it, the man
stood still as rock, letting the oil run on past his knuckles and
continue its course into the dust of the road. Sulla could see the
flames light his hand with a gentle yellow glow yet still the
fellow did not move!
"Slave!" he called.
The man turned to face his master.
Pleased, Sulla smiled at his steadiness. "You
are relieved. Bathe that hand. Your courage is a good omen for
tonight."
The man nodded gratefully, extinguishing the
tiny flames with the grasp of his other palm. He scuttled off,
red-faced and panting at the release. Sulla accepted a cool goblet
graciously and toasted the walls of the city, his eyes hooded as he
tipped it back and tasted the wine. Nothing to do now but wait.
Marius gripped the lip of the heavy
wall with irritation.
"What is he doing?" he muttered to himself. He
could see the legion of Sulla stretching away into the distance,
halted not more than a few hundred paces from the gate that opened
onto the Via Sacra. Around him his men waited, as tense as
himself.
"They are just outside missile range, General,"
a centurion observed.
Marius had to control a flare of temper. "I
know. If they cross inside it, begin firing at once. Hit them with
everything. They'll never take the city in that formation."
It made no sense! Only a broad front stood a
chance against a well-prepared enemy. The single-point spearhead
march stood no chance of breaching the defenses. He clenched his
fist in anger. What had he missed?
"Sound the horns the moment anything changes,"
he ordered the section leader, and strode back through the ranks to
the steps leading to the city street below.
Julius, Cabera, and Tubruk waited patiently for
Marius to come over, watching him as he checked in with his
advisers, who had nothing new to offer, judging by the shaking of
heads. Tubruk loosened his gladius in his scabbard, feeling the
light nerves that always came before bloodshed. It was in the air
and he was glad he had stayed on through the hot day.
Gaius—no, Julius now—had almost sent him home to the
estate, but something in the ex-gladiator's eyes had prevented the
order.
Julius wished the band of friends could have
been complete. He would have appreciated Renius's advice and
Marcus's odd sense of humor. As well as that, if it did come to a
fight, there were few better to have at your side. He too loosened
his sword, rattling the blade against the metal lip of the scabbard
a few times to clear it of any obstructions. It was the fifth time
he had done so in as many minutes, and Cabera clapped a hand to his
shoulder, making him start a little.
"Soldiers always complain about the waiting. I
prefer it to the killing, myself." In truth, he felt the swirling
paths of the future pressing heavily on him and was caught between
the desire to get Julius away to safety and the urge to climb up
onto the wall to meet the first assault. Anything to make the paths
resolve into simple events!
Julius scanned the walls, noting the number and
positions of men, the smooth guard changes, the test runs of the
ballistae and army-killer weapons. The streets were silent as Rome
held its breath, but still nothing moved or changed. Marius was
stamping around, roaring orders that would have been better left to
the trusted men in the chain of command. It seemed the tension was
affecting even him.
The endless chains of runners were finally
still. There was no more water to be carried, and the stockpiles of
arrows and shot were all in position. Only the breathless footsteps
of a messenger from another part of the wall broke the tension
every few minutes. Julius could see the worry on Marius's face,
made almost worse by the news of no other attack. Could Sulla
really be willing to risk his neck in a legal entry to the city?
His courage would win admirers if he walked up to the gates
himself, but Julius was sure he would be dead, killed by an
"accidental" arrow as he approached. Marius would not leave such a
dangerous snake alive if he came within bow shot.
His thoughts were interrupted as a robed
messenger jostled by him. In that moment, the scene changed. Julius
watched in dawning horror as the men on the closest section of the
wall were suddenly overwhelmed from behind, by their own
companions. So intent were they on the legion waiting outside that
scores fell in a few seconds. Water carriers dropped the buckets
they held and sank daggers into the soldiers nearest them, killing
men before they even realized they were under attack.
"Gods!" he whispered. "They're already
inside!"
Even as he bared his gladius and felt rather
than saw Tubruk do the same, he saw a flaming arrow lit calmly from
a brazier and sent soaring into the night. As it arced upward, the
silence of murder was broken. From outside the walls, Sulla's
legion roared as if hell had broken open and came on.
In the darkness of the street below, Marius had
had his back to the wall when he noticed the stricken expression of
a centurion. He spun in time to see the man clawing at the air,
impaled on a long dagger that had been thrust into his back.
"What is it? Blood of the gods..." He pulled in
a great gasp of air to rally the nearest sections and, as he did,
saw a flaming arrow sweep out into the ink blackness of the
starless night.
"To me! First-Born to the gate! Hold the gate!
Sound full warning! They come!"
His voice cracked out, but the horn blowers were
lying in pools of their own blood. One still struggled with his
assailants, hanging on to the slim bronze tube despite the vicious
stabbing his body was taking. Marius drew the sword that had been
in his family for generations. His face was black with rage. The
two men died and Marius raised the horn to his own lips, tasting
the blood that had spattered onto the metal.
All around him in the darkness, other horns
answered. Sulla had won the first few moments, but he vowed it
wasn't over yet.
Julius saw the group dressed as
messengers were all armed and converging on where Marius stood with
a bloody horn and his bright sword already dark with blood. The
wall loomed behind him, flickering with torch shadows.
"With me! They're going for the general in the
confusion," he barked to Tubruk and Cabera, charging the back of
the group as he shouted.
His first blow took one of the running men in
the neck as they slowed to negotiate struggling groups of fighters.
Finally Marius's men seemed to have woken up to the fact that the
enemy was disguised, but the fighting was difficult, and in the
flashing colors and blows of combat, no man knew which of the
groups were friends and which were enemies. It was a devastating
ploy, and inside the walls everything was chaos.
Julius ripped his blade across a leg muscle,
crashing his running feet over the body as it collapsed and feeling
satisfaction as he felt the bones shift and break under his
sandals. At first he was surprised at the group not standing to
fight, but he quickly realized they had orders to assassinate
Marius and were careless of any other dangers.
Tubruk brought down another with a leap that had
them both sprawling on the hard cobbles. Cabera took one more with
a dagger throw that caught Sulla's man in the side and sent him
staggering. Julius let his blade scythe out as he clattered past
and felt a satisfying shock up his arm as it connected and slid
free.
Ahead, Marius stood alone and other, black-clad
figures converged on him. He roared defiance as he saw them coming,
and suddenly Julius knew he was too late. More than fifty men were
charging at the general. All his soldiers in the area were dead or
dying. One or two still screamed their frustration, but they too
could not reach his uncle.
Marius spat blood and phlegm and raised his
sword menacingly.
"Come on, boys. Don't keep me waiting," he
growled through clenched teeth, anger keeping despair at bay.
Julius felt a hard fist jerk at his collar and
drag him to a stop. He roared in anger and felt his sword arm
batted away as he spun to face the threat. He found himself looking
into Tubruks stern face.
"No, boy. It's too late. Get out while you
can."
Julius struggled in the grip, swearing with
incoherent rage. "Let go! Marius is—"
"I know. We can't save him." Tubruks face was
cold and white. "His men are too far away. We've been overlooked
for a moment, but there's too many of them. Live to avenge him,
Gaius. Live."
Julius swiveled in the grip and fifty feet away
saw Marius go down under a heaving mass of bodies, some of which
were loose and boneless, already dead from his blows. The others
held clubs, he saw, and they were striking wildly at the general,
beating him to the ground in mindless ferocity.
"I can't run," Julius said.
Tubruk swore. "No. But you can retreat. This
battle is lost. The city is lost. Look, Sulla's traitors are on the
gates themselves. The legion will be on us if we don't move now.
Come on." Without waiting for further argument, Tubruk grabbed the
young man under the armpits and began pulling him away, with Cabera
taking the other arm.
"We'll get the horses and cross the city to one
of the other gates. Then on to the coast and a legion galley. You
must get clear. Few who have supported Marius will be alive in the
morning," Tubruk continued grimly.
The young man went almost limp in his grasp and
then stiffened in fear as the night came alive with more black
shapes surrounding them. Swords were pressed up to their throats
and Julius tensed for the pain to come as an order broke the
night.
"Not these. I know them. Sulla said to keep them
alive. Get the ropes."
They struggled, but there was nothing they could
do.
Marius felt his sword pulled from his
grasp and heard the clatter as it was thrown on the stones almost
distantly. He felt the thudding blows of clubs not as pain but
simply impacts, knocking his head from side to side in the crush of
bodies. He felt a rib snap with an icicle of pain and then his arm
twisted and his shoulder dislocated with a rip. He pulled up to
consciousness and sank again as someone stamped on his fingers,
breaking them. Where were his men? Surely they would be coming to
save his life. This was not how it was meant to be, how he had seen
his end. This was not the man who entered Rome at the head of a
great Triumph and wore purple and threw silver coins to the people
that loved him. This was a broken thing that wheezed blood and life
out onto the sharp stones and wondered if his men would ever come
for him, who loved them all as a father loves his children.
He felt his head pulled back and expected a
blade to follow across his exposed throat. It didn't come, and
after long seconds of agony, his eyes focused on the forbidding
black mass of the Sacra gate. Figures swarmed over it and bodies
draped it in obscene costume. He saw the huge bar lifted by teams
of men and then the crack of torchlight that shone through it. The
great gate swung open and Sulla's legion stood beyond, the man
himself at the head, wearing a gold circlet to bind back his hair
and a pure white toga and golden sandals. Marius blinked blood out
of his eyes and in the distance heard a renewed crash of arms as
the First-Born poured in from all over the city to save their
general.
They were too late. The enemy was already within
and he had lost. They would burn Rome, he knew. Nothing could stop
that now. His holding troops would be overwhelmed and there would
be bloody slaughter, with the city raped and destroyed. Tomorrow,
if Sulla still lived, he would inherit a mantle of ashes.
The grip in Marius's hair tightened to bring his
head higher, a distant pain amongst all the others. Marius felt a
cold anger for the man who strode so mightily toward him, yet it
was mixed with a touch of respect for a worthy enemy. Was not a man
judged by his enemies? Then truly Marius was great. His thoughts
wandered away and back, fogged by the heavy blows. He lost
consciousness, he thought only for a few seconds, coming to as a
brutal-faced soldier slapped his cheeks, grimacing at the blood
that came off onto his hands. The man began to wipe them on his
filthy robe, but a strong, clear voice sounded.
"Be careful, soldier. Your hands have the blood
of Marius on them. A little respect is due, I believe."
The man gaped at the conqueror, clearly unable
to comprehend. He took a few paces away into the growing crowd of
soldiers, holding his hands stiffly away from his body.
"So few understand, do they, Marius? Just what
it is to be born to greatness?" Sulla moved so that Marius could
look him in the face. His eyes sparkled with a glittering
satisfaction that Marius had hoped never to see. Looking away, he
hawked up blood from his throat and allowed it to dribble onto his
chin. There was no energy to spit, and he had no desire to exchange
dry wit in the moments before his death. He wondered if Sulla would
spare Metella and knew he probably wouldn't. Julius—he hoped
he had escaped, but he too was probably one of the cooling corpses
that surrounded them all.
The sounds of battle swelled in the background,
and Marius heard his name being chanted as his men fought through
to him. He tried not to feel hope; it was too painful. Death was
coming in seconds. His men would see only his corpse.
Sulla tapped his teeth with a fingernail, his
face thoughtful.
"You know, with any other general I would simply
execute him and then negotiate with the legion to cease
hostilities. I am, after all, a consul and well within my rights.
It should be a simple enough matter to allow the opposing forces to
withdraw outside the city and lead my men into the city barracks in
their place. I do believe, though, that your men will carry on
until the last man stands, costing hundreds more of my own in the
process. Are you not the people's general, beloved of the
First-Born?" He tapped his teeth again and Marius strove to
concentrate and ignore the pain and weariness that threatened to
drag him back down to darkness.
"With you, Marius, I must make a special
solution. This is my offer. Can he hear me?" he asked one of the
men Marius could not see. More slaps woke him from his stupor.
"Still with us? Tell your men to accept my legal
authority as consul of Rome. The Primigenia must surrender and my
legion be allowed to deploy into the city without incident or
attack. They are in anyway, you know. If you can deliver this, I
will allow you to leave Rome with your wife, protected by my honor.
If you refuse, not one of your men will be left alive. I will
destroy them from street to street, from house to house, along with
all who have ever shown you favor or support, their wives,
children, and slaves. In short, I will wipe your name from the
annals of the city, so that no man will live who would have called
you friend. Do you understand, Marius? Pull him to his feet and
support him. Fetch the man water to ease his throat."
Marius heard the words and tried to hold them in
his swirling, leaden thoughts. He didn't trust Sulla's honor
farther than he could spit, but his legion would be saved. They
would be sent far from Rome, of course, given some degrading task
of guarding tin mines in the far north against the painted savages,
but they would be alive. He had gambled and lost. Grim despair
filled him, blunting the sharpness of the pain as broken bones
shifted in the rough grip of Sulla's men, men who would not have
dared lay a finger on him only a year before. His arm hung slack,
feeling numb and detached from him, but that didn't matter anymore.
A last thought stopped him from speaking at once. Should he delay
in the hope that his men could win through and turn the situation
to his advantage? He turned his head and saw the mass of Sulla's
men fanning out to secure the local streets and realized the chance
for a quick retaliation had gone. From now on, it would be the
messiest, most vicious kind of fighting, and most of his legion was
still on the walls around the city, unable to engage. No.
"I agree. My word on it. Let the nearest of my
men see me, so that I may pass the order on to them."
Sulla nodded, his face twisted with suspicion.
"Thousands will die if you tell untruth. Your wife will be tortured
to death. Let there be an end to this. Bring him forward."
Marius groaned with pain as he was dragged away
from the shadow of the wall, to where the clash of arms was
intense.
Sulla nodded to his aides. "Sound the
disengage," he snapped, his voice betraying the first touch of
nerves since Marius had seen him. The horns sounded the pattern and
at once the first and second rows took two paces back from the
enemy, holding position with bloody swords.
Marius's legion had left the walls on the
southeast side of the city, swarming through the streets. They
massed down every alley and road, eyes bright with rage and
bloodlust. Behind them, every second, more gathered as the city
walls were stripped of defenders. As Marius was propped up to
speak, a great howl went up from the men, an animal noise of
vengeance. Sulla stood his ground, but the muscles tightened around
his eyes in response. Marius took a deep breath to speak and felt
the press of a dagger by his spine.
"First-Born." Marius's voice was a croak, and he
tried again, finding strength. "First-Born. There is no dishonor.
We were not betrayed but attacked by Sulla's own men left behind.
Now, if you love me, if you have ever loved me, kill them all
and burn Rome!"
He ignored the agony of the dagger as it tore
into him, standing strong before his men for one long moment as
they roared in fierce joy. Then his body collapsed.
"Fires of hell!" Sulla roared as the First-Born
surged forward. "Form fours. Melee formation and engage. Sixth
company to me. Attack!" He drew his sword as the closest company
clustered round to protect him. Already he could smell blood and
smoke on the air, and dawn was still hours away.
CHAPTER
29
Marcus looked over the parapet,
straining his eyes at the distant campfires of the enemy. It was a
beautiful land, but there was nothing soft in it. The winters
killed the old and weak, and even the scrub bushes had a wilted,
defeated look as they clung to the steep crags of the mountain
passes. After more than a year as a hill scout, his skin was a dark
brown and his body was corded with wiry muscle. He had begun to
develop what the older soldiers called the "itch," the ability to
smell out an ambush, to spot a tracker, and to move unseen over
rocks in the dark. All the experienced trackers had the itch, and
those who hadn't acquired it after a year never would—and
would never be first rate, they claimed.
Marcus had first been promoted to command eight
men after he successfully spotted an ambush by blueskin tribesmen,
directing his scouts around and behind the waiting enemy. His men
had cut them to pieces and only afterward did anyone remark that
they had followed his lead without argument. It had been the first
time he had seen the wild nomads up close, and the sight of their
blue-dyed faces still slid into his dreams after bad food or cheap
wine.
The policy of the legion was to control and
pacify the area, which in practice meant a blanket permission to
kill as many of the savages as they could. Atrocities were common.
Roman guards were lost and found staked out, their entrails exposed
to the brutal sun. Mercy and kindness were quickly burned away in
the heat, dust, and flies. Most of the actions were minor—on
such broken and hostile terrain, there could be none of the
set-piece battles so beloved of the Roman legionaries. The patrols
went out and came back with a couple of heads or a few men short.
It seemed to be a stalemate, with neither side having the strength
for extermination.
After twelve months of this, the raids on the
supply caravans suddenly became more frequent and more brutal.
Along with a number of other units, Marcus's men had been added to
the supply guards, to make sure the water barrels and salted
provisions reached their most isolated outposts.
It had always been clear that these buildings
were barbs under the skin of the tribespeople, and attacks on the
small stone forts in the hills were common. The legion rotated the
men stationed there at regular intervals, and many came back to the
permanent camp with grisly stories of heads thrown over the
parapets or words of blood found on the walls when the sun
rose.
At first the duties of caravan guard had not
been onerous for Marcus. Five of his eight men were experienced,
cool hands and completed their duties without fuss or complaint. Of
the other three, Japek complained constantly, seeming not to care
that he was disliked by the others, Rupis was close to retirement
and had been broken back to the ranks after some failure of
command, and the third was Peppis. Each presented different
problems, and Renius had only shaken his head when asked for
advice.
"They're your men, you sort it out" had been his
only words on the subject.
Marcus had made Rupis his second, in charge of
four of the men, in the hope that this would restore a little of
his pride. Instead, he seemed to take some obscure insult from this
and practically sneered whenever Marcus gave him an order. After a
little thought, Marcus had ordered Japek to write down every one of
his complaints as they occurred to him, forming a catalogue that he
would allow Japek to present to their centurion back at the
permanent camp. The man was famous for not suffering fools, and
Marcus was glad to note that not a single complaint had gone down
on the parchment he had provided from the legion stores. A small
triumph, perhaps, but Marcus was struggling to learn the skills of
dealing with people, or, as Renius put it, making them do what you
want without being so annoyed that they do it badly. When he
thought about it, it made Marcus smile that the only teacher he'd
ever had for diplomacy was Renius.
Peppis was the kind of problem that couldn't be
resolved with a few words or a blow. He had made a promising start
at the permanent barracks, growing quickly in size and bulk with
good food and exercise. Unfortunately, he had a tendency to steal
from the stores, often bringing the items to Marcus, which had
caused him a great deal of embarrassment. Even being forced to
return everything he took and a brief but solid lashing had failed
to cure Peppis of the habit, and eventually the Bronze Fist
centurion, Leonides, had sent the boy to Marcus with a note that
read, Your responsibility. Your back.
The guard duty had started well, with the kind
of efficiency Marcus had begun to take for granted but which he
guessed was not the standard all over the empire. They had set off
one hour before dawn, trailing along the paths into the dark
granite hills. Four flat ox carts had been loaded with tightly
lashed barrels and thirty-two soldiers detailed for guard duty.
They were under the command of an old scout named Peritas, who had
twenty years of experience under his belt and was no one's fool.
Altogether, they were a formidable force to be trundling through
the winding hill paths, and although Marcus had felt hidden eyes on
them almost from the beginning, that was a feeling you quickly
became used to. His unit had been given the task of scouting ahead,
and Marcus was leading two of his men up a steep bank of loose
stone and dried moss when they came face-to-face with about fifty
painted, blue-skinned figures, fully armed for war.
For a few seconds, both groups merely gaped at
each other, and then Marcus had turned and scrambled back down the
slope, his two companions only slightly slower. Behind them a great
yell went up, making unnecessary the need to call any warning to
the caravan. The blue-skins poured over the lip of the hidden ledge
and fell on the caravan guards with their long swords held high and
wild screams rending the mountain air.
The legionaries had not paused to gape. As the
blue-skins charged, arrows were fitted to bowstrings and a humming
wave of death passed over the heads of Marcus and his men, giving
them time to reach the path and turn to face the enemy. Marcus
remembered having drawn his gladius and killing a warrior who had
screamed at him right up to the moment when Marcus chopped his
blade into the creature's throat.
For a moment, the legionaries were overwhelmed.
Their strength was in units, but on the ragged path it was every
man for himself and little chance to link shields with anyone else.
Nonetheless, Marcus saw that each of the Romans was standing and
cutting, their faces grim and unyielding before the blue horror of
the tribe. More men fell on both sides and Marcus found himself
with his back to a cart, ducking under a sword cut to bury his
shorter blade in a heaving blue stomach and ripping it out to the
side. The intestines seemed bright yellow against the blue dye,
some part of him noted as he defended against two more. He took one
hand off at the wrist and sliced another warrior in the groin as he
tried to leap onto the cart. The snarling tribesman fell back into
the choking dust, and Marcus stamped down on him blindly while
slicing the bicep of the next. It seemed to last a long time, and
when they finally broke and raced away up the banks into cover,
Marcus was surprised to see the sun where it had been when they
attacked. Only a few minutes had passed at most. He looked round
for his unit and was relieved to see faces he knew well, panting
and splashed with blood, but alive.
Many had not been so lucky. Rupis would never
sneer again. He lay with his legs sprawled against one of the
carts, a wide red smile opened in his throat. Twelve others had
been butchered in the attack, and around them lay almost thirty of
the still blue bodies, dribbling blood onto their land. It was a
grim sight and the flies were already arriving in droves for the
feast.
As Marcus called for Peppis to bring him a flask
of water, Peritas began setting the guards again and called the
commanders to him for a quick report. Marcus took the flask from
Peppis and trotted to the head of the column.
Peritas looked as if the heat and dust had baked
all moisture out of him over the years, leaving only a sort of hard
wood and eyes that peered out at the world with amused
indifference. Of the whole group, he was the only one who was
mounted. He nodded as Marcus saluted.
"We could turn back, but my guess is we've seen
the worst they have to offer at the moment. I think if we took the
bodies back, that would be a little victory for the savages, so we
go on. Strap the dead to the carts and change the guards over. I
want the freshest men on lookout, just in case of more trouble.
Well done, those men who surprised the enemy and made them show
themselves early. Probably saved a few Roman lives. It's only
thirty miles to the hill fort, so we had better press on.
Questions?"
Marcus looked at the horizon. There was nothing
to ask. Men died and were cremated and sent back to Rome. That was
army life. Those who survived received promotions. He hadn't
realized there was as much luck involved as there seemed to be, but
Renius had nodded when asked and pointed out that although the gods
may well have heroic favorites, an arrow doesn't care who it
kills.
The real trouble started when the
depleted company reached the last few miles of the journey. They
had begun to see blueskins watching them from the undergrowth, a
flash of color here and there. They hadn't the numbers to send a
unit to attack, and the blueskins had never used missile weapons,
so the legionaries just ignored the tribesmen and kept a good grip
on their swords.
The closer they came to the fort, the more of
the enemy they could see. At least twenty of them were keeping pace
on a higher level than the path, using the trees and undergrowth
for cover, but occasionally coming out into the open to hoot and
jeer at the grim soldiers of Rome. Peritas frowned as his horse
trotted on and kept his hand on his sword hilt.
Marcus kept expecting a spear to be thrown. He
imagined one of the blue warriors sighting on him and could
practically feel the spot between his shoulder blades where the
point would land. They certainly carried spears, but seemed to
avoid throwing them, or at least had in the past. It didn't stop
the spot itching, though. He began willing the fort to be close and
at the same time dreading what they might find. More than one tribe
must be gathered; certainly none of the men had ever seen so many
blueskins in one place before. If any of them lived to report back
to the rest of the legion, someone would have to warn them that the
tribes had grown in confidence and numbers.
At last they rounded a turn in the track and saw
the last segment of the journey, half a mile of steeply rising path
up to a small fortress on a gray hill. Roaming the flat lands
around the outcropping were more of the blue men. Some were even
camped in sight of the fortress and watched the caravan with
slitted eyes. Footfalls on rock could be heard behind them, and
rocks dislodged by scrambling bare feet spattered and bounced
against the ground. With every man on edge, they had begun the slow
climb to the fort, the ox drivers waving and cracking their whips
nervously.
Marcus could see no lookouts and began to feel a
sense of dull fear. They wouldn't make it—and what would they
find if they did?
The slow march continued until they were close
enough to see the details of the fort. Still there was no one on
the ramparts, and Marcus knew with a sinking heart that no one
could be alive inside. He had his sword drawn and was swinging it
nervously as he walked.
Suddenly a great howl went up from every
blueskin around. Marcus risked a glance back down the path and saw
what must have been a hundred of the warriors charging at them.
Peritas rode down the line of legionaries.
"Abandon the wagons! Make for the fort. Go!" he
shouted, and suddenly they were running. The howls increased in
savage joy behind them as the drivers leapt off and sprinted the
last hundred feet. Marcus held his sword away from his body and
ran, not daring to look back again. He could hear the slap of hard
bare feet and the high screaming of a blueskin attack too close for
comfort. He saw the gate come up and was through it with a knot of
shoving, heaving soldiers, turning immediately to yell
encouragement to the slower men.
Most made it. Only two men, either too tired or
too scared to make the sprint, were run down, turning in the last
moment like trapped animals and spitted with many blades. Wet red
metal was raised in defiance as the survivors shut and barred the
gate, and Peritas was off his horse and shouting to search and
secure the fort. Who could understand the sick reasoning of the
savages? Perhaps they had more men waiting inside, just for the
pleasure of picking them off when they thought they had reached
safety.
The fort was empty, however, except for the
bodies. A Fifty manned each fort, with twenty horses. Man and beast
lay where they had been killed and then mutilated. Even the horses
had their stinking guts spread over the stone floor, and clouds of
blue-black flies buzzed into the air as they were disturbed. Two
men vomited as the smell hit them, and Marcus's heart sank even
more. They were trapped, with only disease and death in the future.
Outside, the blueskins chanted and whooped.
CHAPTER
30
Before night fell, Peritas had the
bodies of the legionaries locked in an empty basement store. The
dead horses proved a more difficult problem. All weapons had been
stripped from the fort, and there wasn't an axe to be found
anywhere. The slippery carcasses could be lifted by five or six of
the men working at once, but not carried up the stone steps to be
put over the ramparts. In the end, Peritas had stacked the heavy,
limp bodies against the gate to slow down attackers. It was the
best they could hope for. No one expected to make it through the
night, and fear and resignation hung heavily on all of them. Up on
the walls, Marcus watched the campfires with narrowed eyes.
"What I don't understand," he muttered to
Peppis, "is why we were allowed back into the fort. They have taken
it once and they must have lost some lives, so why not cut us down
on the trail?"
Peppis shrugged. "They're savages, sir. Perhaps
they enjoy a challenge, or humiliating us." He carried on with his
task of sharpening blades on a worn concave whetstone. "Peritas
says we will be missed when we don't get back by morning and
they'll send out a strike force by tomorrow evening, perhaps even
earlier. We don't have to hold out for long, but I don't think the
blueskins will give us that kind of time." He continued wiping the
stone along a silver blade.
"I think we could hold this place for a day or
so. They have the numbers, granted, but that's all they have. Mind
you, they did take it once."
Marcus paused as a chant began in the near
darkness. If he strained his eyes, he could see dancing figures
silhouetted against the flames of the fires.
"Someone is having a good time tonight," he
muttered. His mouth watered. The fort well had been poisoned with
rotting flesh, and everything else edible had been removed. Truth
to tell, if the reinforcements didn't get to them in a day or two,
thirst would do the blueskins' job for them. Perhaps they intended
the Romans to die with dry throats in the burning sun. That would
match the cruel tales he had heard about them, given a fresh airing
amongst the nervous soldiers as night fell on the fort.
Peppis peered over the wall into the gloom and
snorted. "There's one of them peeing against the wall down there,"
he said, his voice caught between outrage and amusement.
"Watch yourself, don't lean out or put your head
up too high," Marcus replied as he pressed his own head closer to
the rough stone, trying to peer over the edge while exposing as
little of himself as possible.
Astonishingly close and directly below them was
a swaying blueskin holding his parts and spraying the fort with
dark urine in short sweeping arcs. The grinning figure caught sight
of the movement above and jumped, recovering quickly. He waved a
hand at the pair who watched him and waggled his privates in their
direction.
"He's had a little too much to drink, I'd say,"
Marcus murmured, grinning despite himself. He watched the man pull
a bloated wineskin around his body and suck on the mouth of it,
spilling more than he took in. Blearily, the blueskin shoved in the
stopper on his third attempt and gestured up again, calling out
something in his slushy tongue.
Tiring of their lack of response, he took two
steps and fell flat on his face.
Marcus and Peppis watched him. He was still.
"Not dead; I can see his chest moving. Dead
drunk maybe," Peppis whispered. "It's bound to be a trap. Devious,
the blueskins are, everyone says."
"Maybe, but I can only see one of them and I can
take one. We could do with that wine. I know I could, anyway,"
Marcus replied. "I'm going down there. Fetch me a rope. I can drop
over the wall and climb back up before there's any real
danger."
Peppis scurried off on his errand and Marcus
focused on the prone figure and the surrounding ground. He weighed
the risks and then smiled sardonically. They were all going to die
in the night or at dawn, so what did the risks matter? The problem
receded and he felt his tension relax. There was something about
almost certain death that was quite calming in its way. At least he
would have a drink. That wine sack had looked full enough to give
nearly all of them a cupful.
Peppis tied up his end of the rope and sent the
rest uncoiling silently down the twenty-foot drop. Marcus made sure
his gladius was secure and ruffled the hair of the lad.
"See you soon," he whispered, putting one leg
over the parapet and disappearing into the gloom below. The dark
was so complete that Peppis could barely make him out as he crept
toward the still figure, the gladius drawn and ready in his
hand.
Marcus felt the itch again and clenched his jaw.
Something was wrong with the scene and it was too late to avoid the
trap. He reached out a foot to stir the drunken blueskin and wasn't
surprised when the man suddenly sprang up. Marcus took his throat
out before the expression of triumph could fully form. Then two
more blue men rose out of the dirt. It was their presence he'd
sensed, hidden in shallow graves and lying perfectly still for
hours with almost inhuman discipline. They had probably dug
themselves in to wait before the Roman caravan even appeared,
Marcus realized as he attacked. They were not wild savages, but
warriors.
There seemed to be just the three of them, young
men out for status or a first kill. They had risen with swords in
their hands, and his first backhand blow was blocked with a loud
ring of metal that made Marcus wince. There would be more of them
coming. He had to get clear before the whole blueskin army
arrived.
Marcus's blade slid along the dust-covered
warrior's and clashed against a crude bronze guard. The man leered
and Marcus punched him in the stomach with his other fist, ripping
the blade back and through him as he doubled over in pained
surprise. He collapsed as his neck veins parted, and hit the ground
wretchedly.
The third was not as skilled as his companion,
but Marcus could hear shouts and knew time was running out. His
haste made him careless and he ducked late on a wild slash that
nicked his ear and scored a line in his scalp.
He slid to his left and punched the blade into
the man's heart through the blue-stained ribs from the side. As the
warrior fell with a gurgling cry, Marcus could hear the slap of
running feet he remembered so vividly from the afternoon scramble
into the fort. It was too late to run for the rope, so he turned
and detached the wineskin from the first body, pulling out the
stopper and taking a deep draft as the night around him filled with
swords and blue shadows.
They formed a circle around him, swords ready,
eyes bright even in the darkness. Marcus eased the wine bag to his
feet and held his gladius high. They made no move and he saw eyes
roam over the bodies. Long seconds stretched in silence, then one
of them stepped forward, large, bald, and blue, and carrying a
long, curved blade.
The warrior pointed off into the distance and
gestured at Marcus. Marcus shook his head and pointed back at the
fort. Someone jeered, but a curt hand signal from the man cut their
noise off. The warrior stepped forward fearlessly, his sword
pointed at Marcus's throat. With his other arm he pointed again at
the campfires and then at the young Roman. The circle tightened
silently and Marcus could feel the closeness of the men behind
him.
"Tortured to death over the fire it is, then,"
he said, pointing to the campfires himself.
The big blue warrior nodded, his eyes never
leaving Marcus. He spoke a few words of command and another warrior
placed his hand on Marcus's sword blade, gently removing it from
his grip.
"Oh, unarmed and tortured to
death—I didn't understand at first," Marcus continued,
forcing his voice to pleasant tones and knowing they didn't
understand. He smiled and they smiled back at him.
They left the fort behind in the darkness, and
it was probably just his imagination that he caught a glimpse of
Peppis's face outlined against the sky for a moment when he looked
back.
They walked with strutting confidence
into the blueskin camp with their prisoner. Marcus could see they
were readying themselves for war. Weapons were stacked in bundles
and the warriors danced and howled at the fires, spitting what must
have been raw alcohol, judging by the blue flames that burst and
flickered as the streams of liquid hit them. They whooped and
wrestled and more than one sat slathering a pale mud onto his arms
and face—the source, Marcus guessed, of the blue dye.
He barely had time to take all this in before he
was shoved to his knees at the side of the bonfire and a crude clay
cup of clear spirit was pressed into his hands. His eyes watered as
he caught the evaporating fumes, but he swallowed it all and then
fought not to choke. It was powerful liquor and he waved away the
offer of another cup, wanting to keep a clear head. His guards
settled on the ground all around him and seemed to be commenting on
his clothes and manners to each other. Certainly it involved much
pointing and laughing. Marcus ignored them, wondering if there
would be a chance to run. He eyed the swords of the warriors
nearest him, noting how they were removed from belts and laid on
the scrub grass near to hand. He might be able to grab one...
Horns blew and interrupted his concentration. As
everyone looked toward the source of the sound, Marcus stole one
more look at the closest blade and saw the warrior's hand was
resting on it. As his gaze traveled upward, he met the man's eyes
and chuckled wryly as the burly warrior shook his head and smiled,
revealing brown and rotting teeth.
The horn was held by the first old blueskin
Marcus had seen. He must have been fifty, and unlike the hard,
muscular bodies of the young fighters, he had a heavy belly that
bowed out his robe and jiggled as he moved skinny arms. He must
have been a leader, as the warriors reacted to his shouted commands
with speed. Three handy-looking types unsheathed their long swords
and nodded to friends in the circle. Small drums were produced and
a fast rhythm sounded. The three men stood relaxed as the rhythm
filled the night, and then they moved, faster than Marcus would
have believed possible. The swords were like bars of dawn light,
and the moves were fluid, flowing into one another, so unlike the
Roman sequences that Marcus had learned.
He could see the fight was staged, more a dance
than a contest of violence. The men spun and leapt and their swords
hummed as they cut the hot night air.
Marcus watched entranced to the end as the men
once again resumed their relaxed positions and the drumming ceased.
The warriors whooped and Marcus joined them without embarrassment,
tensing as the old man walked over to him.
"Do you like? They are skillful?" the man said
in a heavy accent.
Marcus covered his confusion and agreed, his
expression carefully blank.
"These men took your little fort. They are the
Krajka, the best of us, yes?"
Marcus nodded.
"Your men fought well, but the Krajka train when
they stand, yes, as young children? We will take back all your ugly
forts this way, yes? Stone from stone and ashes scattered? We will
do this."
"How many... Krajka are there?" Marcus
asked.
The old man smiled, showing only three teeth in
black gums. "Not enough. We practice on those came with you today.
Other warriors need to see how you people fight, yes?"
Marcus looked at him in disbelief. The future
was clearly bleak for those left in the fort. They had been allowed
to make the safety of the walls just so the young blueskins could
blood themselves against reduced defenders. It was chilling. The
legion believed the blueskins to be close to animals in
intelligence. Any captured prisoners went berserk, biting through
ropes and killing themselves on anything sharp if they couldn't
escape. This evidence of careful planning—and one who spoke a
civilized language—would wake them up to a threat they didn't
treat seriously enough.
"Why didn't the men kill me?" Marcus asked. He
fought to remain calm as the old man leaned closer to his face and
sour breath washed over him.
"They very impressed. Three men you kill with
short sword. Kill like man, not with bow or spear throwing. They
bring you to show to me, as a strange thing, yes?"
A curiosity, a Roman good at killing. He guessed
what had to come next before the old man spoke.
"Not good to have young warriors admire Roman.
You fight Krajka, yes? If win, you go back to fort. If Krajka kill
you, then all men see and know hope for future days, yes?"
Marcus agreed. There was nothing else to do. He
looked into the flames and wondered if they would let him use his
gladius.
* * *
Blueskins had come over from all the
other campfires, leaving them barely defended. Marcus realized the
men in the fort could not be aware of the opportunity. They would
still see the spots of light in the mountain darkness and not know
the bulk of them had trotted over to see the contest.
Marcus was allowed to stand and a circle was
marked out with daggers stuck into the soil. The blueskins gathered
outside the line, some balancing friends on their shoulders so they
could see. Whichever way Marcus turned, he could see a heaving wall
of blue flesh and grinning yellow teeth. He noticed how many of the
eyes were pink-rimmed and decided it must be something in the dye
that irritated the skin. The older, potbellied blueskin stepped
into the circle and gravely handed Marcus his gladius, stepping
back warily. Marcus ignored him. You didn't need the scouts eye to
sense the hostility here. Lose and be cut to pieces to show their
superiority, win and be torn apart by the mob. For a fleeting
moment, he wondered what Gaius would do and had to smile at the
thought. Gaius would have killed the leader as soon as he handed
over the sword. It couldn't get any worse, after all.
The leader was still visible, his belly sticking
into the circle space, but somehow it didn't seem right to run over
and stick the old devil. Perhaps they would let him go. He looked
around at the faces again and shrugged. Not very likely.
A low cheer built as one of the Krajka came
through the circle, with the warriors parting briefly and then
shoving their way back into position to get a good view. Marcus
looked him up and down. He was much taller than the average
blueskin and had a good three inches on Marcus, even after the
growth he'd put on since leaving Rome. He was bare-chested and
muscles shifted easily under the painted skin. Marcus guessed they
were probably about equal in reach. His own arms were long, with
powerful wrists from hours of sword practice. He knew he had a
chance, no matter how good the man was. Renius still worked with
him every day, and Marcus was running out of opponents to give him
a challenge in the practices.
He watched the way the tall man moved and
walked. He looked into his eyes and found no give. The man didn't
smile and wouldn't understand insults anyway. He walked around the
edge of the circle, always staying out of reach in case Marcus
tried a wild attack. Marcus turned on the spot, watching him all
the time until he took up his position on the opposite side, twenty
feet away. Tactics, tactics. Renius said never to stop thinking.
The point was to win, not to be fair. Marcus winced as the man drew
a long sword that reached from his hip to the ground, a shining
length of polished bronze. There was the edge. He hadn't really
noticed before, but the blueskins were using bronze weapons and a
hard iron gladius would soon take the edge off it, if he could
survive the first few blows. His thoughts raced. Bronze blunted. It
was softer than iron.
The man walked closer and loosened his bare
shoulders. He was wearing only leggings over bare feet and looked
supremely athletic, moving like a great cat.
Marcus called to the leader, "If I kill him, I
walk free, yes?"
A great jeer went up from the crowd, making him
wonder how many understood the language. The old blueskin nodded,
smiling, and signaled with his hand to begin.
Marcus jumped as drums sounded over the chatter
of the crowd. His opponent relaxed visibly as the rhythms were
pounded out. Marcus watched him lower into a fighter's stance, the
sword held out unwavering. The extra inches on the blade would give
him the advantage in reach, Marcus thought, rolling his shoulders.
He held up his hand and took a step back to remove his tunic. It
was a relief to be free of it in the stifling heat, made worse by
the nearby fire and the sweating crowd. The drumming intensified
and Marcus focused his gaze on the man's throat. It unnerved some
opponents. He became utterly still while the other swayed gently.
Two different styles.
The Krajka barely seemed to move, but Marcus
felt the attack and shifted aside, making the bronze blade miss
him. He didn't engage the gladius with the blade, trying to judge
the man's speed.
A second cut, a smooth continuation of the
first, came at his face, and Marcus brought his gladius up
desperately with a ring of metal. The blades slid together and he
felt fresh sweat prickle on his hairline. The man was fast and
fluid, with killing strikes that seemed only flicks and feints.
Marcus blocked another low cut into his stomach and stepped and
punched forward into the blue body.
It was not there and he went sprawling on the
hard ground. He got up quickly, noting the fact that the Krajka
stood well back to let him. This was not to be a quick kill then.
Marcus nodded to him, his jaw clenched. Feel no anger, he told
himself, nor shame. He remembered Renius's words. It does not
matter what happens in battle as long as the enemy lies at your
feet at the end of it.
The Krajka skipped lightly forward to meet him.
At the last second, the bronze sword flicked out and Marcus was
forced to duck under it. This time he didn't follow through with a
lunge under the blow and saw the man's readiness to reverse his
sword into a downward slash. He had fought Romans before!
The thought flashed into Marcus's head. This man knew their style
of fighting, perhaps he had even learned it with a few of the
legionaries who had disappeared over previous months, before
killing them.
It was galling. Everything he had been taught
came from Renius, a Roman-trained soldier and gladiator. He had no
other style to fall back on. The Krajka was clearly a master of his
art.
The bronze sword licked out and Marcus blocked
it. He focused on the lightly pulsing blue throat and could still
see the shifting arms and sinuous moves of the body. He let one
blow slide by him and stepped away from another, judging the
distance perfectly. In the space, he struck like a snake and scored
a thin line of red in the Krajka's side.
The crowd fell suddenly silent, shocked. The
Krajka looked puzzled and took two sliding steps away from Marcus.
He frowned and Marcus saw he had not felt the scratch. He pressed
his hand to the red line and looked at it, his face blank. Then he
shrugged and danced in again, his bronze sword a blur in the light
and shadows.
Marcus felt the rhythm of the movements and
began working against the flowing style, breaking the smoothness,
causing the Krajka to jump back from a sword held out rigidly and
again when Marcus's hard sandals cracked against his toes.
Marcus advanced, knowing his opponent's
confidence was wavering. Each step was accompanied by a blow that
became another, a flowing pattern that mimicked the style the
Krajka employed against him. The gladius became an extension of his
arm, a thorn in his hand that required just a touch to kill. The
Krajka let a throat cut pass a hairbreadth from his skin, and
Marcus could feel the hot gaze above his own. The man was angry
that he had not won easily. Another blow was blocked and once again
the bare feet were crunched under hard Roman sandals.
The Krajka gave out a strangled groan of pain
and spun, leaping into the air like a spirit, as Marcus had seen
the others do before. It was a move from the dance and the bronze
sword whirled with him, coming out of the spin unseen and slicing
Marcus's skin across the chest. The crowd roared, and as the man
landed, Marcus reached up and caught the bronze blade with his bare
left hand.
The Krajka looked in astonishment into Marcus's
eyes and found for the first time in the whole battle that they
were looking back at him, cold and black. He froze under that gaze
and the hesitation killed him. He felt the iron gladius enter his
throat from the front and the pouring wetness of blood that stole
his strength. He would have liked to pull his blade back, cutting
the fingers away like overripe stalks, but there was no strength
left and he dropped into a boneless sprawl at Marcus's feet.
Marcus breathed slowly and picked up the bronze
sword, noting the twisted and buckled edge where he had caught it.
He could feel blood trickle over his knuckles from the cut on his
palm, but was able to move the fingers stiffly. He waited then for
the crowd to rush in and kill him.
They were silent for some time and in that
silence the old blueskin's voice called out harsh-sounding
commands. Marcus kept his eyes on the ground and the swords loose
in his hands. He was aware of footsteps and turned as the old
blueskin took his arm. The man's eyes were dark with astonishment
and something else.
"Come. I keep my word. You go back to friends.
We come for you all in morning."
Marcus nodded, scarcely daring to believe it was
true. He looked for something to say.
"He was a fine fighter, the Krajka. I have never
fought better."
"Of course. He was my son." The man seemed older
as he spoke, as if years were settling on his shoulders and
weighing him down. He led Marcus outside the circle and into the
open and pointed into the night.
"Walk home now."
He stayed silent as Marcus handed him the bronze
blade and walked away into the dark.
The fort wall was black in the
darkness as Marcus approached. While he was still some distance
away, he whistled a tune so that the soldiers would hear him and
not put a crossbow bolt into his chest as he drew close.
"I'm alone! Peppis, throw that rope back down,"
he called into the silence.
There was scrambling inside as the others moved
to peer over the edge.
A head appeared above him in the gloom and
Marcus recognized the sour features of Peritas.
"Marcus? Peppis said the 'skins had you."
"They did, but they let me go. Are you going to
throw a rope down to me or not?" Marcus snapped. It was colder away
from the fires and he held his damaged hand in his armpit to keep
the stiff fingers warm. He could hear whispered conversations above
and cursed Peritas for his cautious ways. Why would the tribesmen
set a trap when they could just wait for them all to die of
thirst?
Finally, a rope came slithering over the wall
and he pulled himself up it, his arms burning with tiredness. At
the top, there were hands to help pull him onto the inner wall
ledge, and then he was almost knocked from his feet by Peppis, who
threw his arms around him.
"I thought they was going to eat you," the boy
said. His dirty face was streaked where he had been crying, and
Marcus felt a pang of sorrow that he had brought the boy to this
dismal place for his last night.
He reached out a hand and ruffled his hair
affectionately. "No, lad. They said I was too stringy. They like
them young and tender."
Peppis gasped in horror and Peritas chuckled.
"You have all night to tell us what happened. I don't think anyone
will sleep. Are there many of them out there?"
Marcus looked at the older man and understood
what couldn't be said openly in front of the boy.
"There's enough," he replied, his voice low.
Peritas looked away and nodded to himself.
As dawn broke, Marcus and the others
waited grimly for the assault, bleary-eyed from lack of sleep.
Every man of them stood on the walls, swinging their heads
nervously at the slightest movement of a bird or rabbit down on the
scrubland. The silence was frightening, but when a sword falling
over interrupted it, more than a few swore at the soldier who'd let
it slip.
Then, in the distance, they heard the brassy
horns of a Roman legion, echoing in the hills. Peritas jogged along
the narrow walkway inside the walls and cheered as they watched
three centuries of men come out of the mountain trails at a
double-speed march.
It was only a few minutes before a voice
sounded, "Approaching the fort," and the gates were thrown
open.
The legion commanders had not been slow in
sending out a strike force when the caravan was late returning.
After the recent attacks, they wanted a show of strength and had
marched through the dark hours over rough terrain, making twenty
miles in the night.
"Did you see any sign of the blueskins?" Peritas
asked, frowning. "There were hundreds around the fort when we
arrived. We were expecting an attack."
A centurion shook his head and pursed his lips.
"We saw signs of them, smoldering campfires and rubbish. It looks
like they all moved out in the night. There is no accounting for
the way savages think, you know. One of their magic men probably
saw an unlucky bird or some kind of omen."
He looked around at the fort and caught the
stench of the bodies.
"Looks like we have work to do here. Orders are
to man this place until relieved. I'll send a Fifty back with you
to permanent camp. No one moves without a heavy armed force from
now on. This is hostile territory, you know."
Marcus opened his mouth to reply and Peritas
turned him deftly around with an arm on his shoulder, sending him
off with a gentle push.
"We know," he said, before turning away to ready
his men for the march home.
CHAPTER
31
The street gang was already draped in
expensive bolts of cloth, stolen from a shop or seamstress. They
carried clay vessels that sloshed red wine onto the stone street as
they wove and staggered along.
Alexandria peered out of the locked gates of
Marius's town house, frowning.
"The filth of Rome," she muttered to herself.
With all the soldiers in the city engaged in battle, it had not
taken long for those who enjoyed chaos to come out onto the
streets. As always, it was the poor who suffered the most. Without
guards of any kind, houses were broken into and everything of value
carried away by yelling, jeering looters.
Alexandria could see one of the bolts of cloth
was splashed with blood, and her fingers itched for a bow to send a
shaft into the man's drunken mouth.
She ducked back behind the gatepost as they went
past, wincing as a burly hand reached out to rattle the gate,
testing for weakness. She gripped the hammer she had taken from
Bant's workshop. If they tried to climb the gates, she was ready to
crack someone's head. Her heart thudded as they paused and she
could hear every slurred word between them.
"There's a whorehouse on Via Tantius, lads. We
could get a little free trade," came a rough voice.
"They'll have guards, Brac. I wouldn't leave a
post like that, would you? I'd make sure I got paid for my service
as well. Those whores would be glad to have a strong man protecting
them. What we want is another nice little wife with a couple of
young daughters. We'll offer to look after them while the husband's
away."
"I'm first, though. I didn't get much of a turn
last time," the first voice said.
"I was too much for her, that's why. After me, a
woman don't want another."
The laughter was coarse and brutal and
Alexandria shuddered as they moved away.
She heard light footsteps behind her and spun,
raising the hammer.
"It's all right, it's me," Metella said, her
face pale. She had heard the end of it. Both women had tears in
their eyes.
"Are you certain about this, mistress?"
"Quite certain, Alexandria, but you'll have to
run. It will be worse if you stay here. Sulla is a vengeful man and
there is no reason for you to be caught up in his spite. Go and
find this Tabbic. You have the paper I signed?"
"Of course. It is the dearest thing I own."
"Keep it safe. The next few months will be
difficult and dangerous. You will need proof you are a free woman.
Invest the money Gaius left for you and stay safe until the city
legion has restored order."
"I just wish I could thank him."
"I hope you have the chance one day." Metella
stepped up to the bars and unlocked them, looking up and down the
street. "Go quickly now. The road is clear for the moment, but you
must hurry down to the market. Don't stop for anything, you
understand?"
Alexandria nodded stiffly, not needing to be
told after what she had heard. She looked at Metella's pale skin
and dark eyes and felt fear touch her.
"I just worry about you in this great house, all
alone. Who will look after you, with the house empty?"
Metella held up a hand in a gentle gesture.
"Have no fear for me, Alexandria. I have friends who will spirit me
away from the city. I will find a warm foreign land and retire
there, away from all the intrigue and pains of a growing city.
Somewhere ancient appeals to me, where all the struggle of youth is
but a distant memory. Stay to the main street. I can't relax until
the last of my family is safely away."
Alexandria held her gaze for a second, her eyes
bright with tears. Then she nodded once and passed through the
gates, closing them firmly behind her and hurrying away.
Metella watched her go, feeling every one of her
years in comparison to the young girl's light steps. She envied the
ability of the young to start anew, without looking back at the
old. Metella kept her in sight until she turned a street corner,
and then looked inward to her empty, echoing home. The great house
and gardens were empty at last.
How could Marius not be here? It was an eerie
thought. He had been gone so often on long campaigns, yet always
returned, full of life and wit and strength. The idea that he would
not return once more for her was an ugly wound that she would not
examine. It was too easy to imagine that he was away with his
legion, conquering new lands or building huge aqueducts for foreign
kings. She would sleep and, when she awoke, the awful sucking pain
inside her would be gone and he would be there to hold her.
She could smell smoke on the air. Ever since
Sulla's attack on the city three days before, there had been fire,
raging untended from house to house and street to street. It had
not reached the stone houses of the rich yet, but the fire that
roared in Rome would consume them all eventually, piling ashes on
ashes until there was nothing left of dreams.
Metella looked out at the city that sloped away
from the hill. She leaned against a marble wall and felt its
coolness as a comfort against the thick heat. There were vast black
plumes of churning smoke lifting into the air from a dozen points
and spreading into a gray layer, the color of despair. Screams
carried on the wind as the marauding soldiers fought without mercy
and the raptores on the streets killed or raped anything that
crossed their path.
She hoped Alexandria would get through safely.
The house guards had deserted her the morning they heard of
Marius's death. She supposed she was lucky they had not murdered
her in her bed and looted the house, but the betrayal still stung.
Had they not been treated fairly and well? What was left to stand
on in a world where a man's oath could vanish in the first warm
breeze?
She had lied to Alexandria, of course. There was
no way out of the city for her. If it was dangerous to send a young
slave girl on a journey of only a few streets, it was impossible
for a well-known lady to transport her wealth past the wolves that
roamed the roads of Rome, looking for just such opportunities.
Perhaps she could have disguised herself as a slave, even traveled
with one of the slaves. With luck, they might have got out alive,
though she thought it more than likely that they would have been
hurt and abused and left for the dogs somewhere. There had been no
law in Rome for three days, and to some that was a heady freedom.
If she had been younger and braver, she might have taken the risk,
but Marius had been her courage for too long.
With him, she could stand the sniggers of
society ladies as they discussed her childless state behind her
back. With him, she could face the world with an empty womb and
still smile and not give way to screaming. Without him, she could
not dare the streets alone and start again as a penniless
refugee.
Metal-studded sandals ran past the gates and
Metella felt a shiver start in her shoulders and run through her.
It would not be long before the fighting reached this area and the
looters and murderers that moved with Sulla would be breaking down
the iron gates of Marius's old city home. She had received reports
for the first two days, until her messengers too had deserted her.
Sulla's men had poured into the city, taking and holding street
after street, using the advantage that Marius had created for them.
With the First-Born spread all around the city walls, they could
not bring the bulk of their forces against the invader for most of
the first night of fighting, and by then Sulla had dug in and was
content to continue a creeping battle, dragging his siege engines
through the streets to smash barricades and lining the roads behind
him with the heads of Marius's men. It was said the great temple of
Jupiter had been burned, with flames so hot that the marble slabs
cracked and exploded, bringing down the columns and the heavy
pillars, spilling them onto the piazza with thunderous reports. The
people said it was an omen, that the gods were displeased with
Sulla, but still he seemed to be winning.
Then her reports had ended, and at night she
knew that the rhythmic victory chants echoing across Rome were not
from the throats of the First-Born.
Metella reached up to her shoulder and took hold
of the strap there, lifting it away from her skin. She shrugged it
off and reached for the other. In a moment, her dress slipped into
a puddle of material and she stepped naked from it, her back to the
gates as she walked through the arches and doors, deeper into the
house. The air felt cooler on her uncovered skin and she shivered
again, this time with a touch of pleasure. How strange it was to be
naked in these formal rooms!
As she walked, she slipped bangles from her
hands and rings from her fingers, placing the handful of precious
metal on a table. Marius's wedding ring she kept, as she had
promised him that she would never take it off. She loosed her hair
from the bands and let it spill down her back in a wave, tossing
her head to make the crimps and curls fall out.
She was barefoot and clean as she entered the
bathing hall and felt the steam coat her with the tiniest trace of
gleaming moisture. She breathed it in and let the warmth fill her
lungs.
The pool was deep and the water freshly heated,
the last task of the departing slaves and servants. She let out a
small sigh as she stepped down into the clear pool, made dark blue
by the mosaic base. For a few seconds, she closed her eyes and
thought back over the years with Marius. She'd never minded the
long periods he spent away from Rome and their home with the
First-Born. Had she known how short the time would be, she would
have gone with him, but it was not the moment for pointless
regrets. Fresh tears slid from under her eyelids without effort or
any release of tension.
She remembered when he was first commissioned
and his pleasure at each rise in rank and authority. He had been
glorious in his youth and the lovemaking had been joyous and wild.
She had been an innocent girl when the muscular young soldier had
proposed. She hadn't known about the ugly side of life, about the
pain as year after year passed without children to bring her joy.
Each one of her friends had pressed out screaming child after
child, and some of the babies broke her heart just to look at them,
just from the sudden emptiness. Those were the years when Marius
had spent more and more time away from her, unable to cope with her
rages and accusations. For a while she had hoped he would have an
affair, and she had told him that she would even accept a child
from such a union as her own.
He had taken her head tenderly in his hands and
kissed her softly. "There is only you, Metella," he had said. "If
fate has taken this one pleasure from us, I won't spit in her
eye."
She had thought she would never be able to stop
the sobs that pulled at her throat. Finally he had lifted her up
and taken her to bed, where he was so gentle she cried once more,
at the end. He had been a good husband, a good man.
She reached over to the side of the pool without
opening her eyes. Her fingers found the thin iron knife she had
left there. One of his, given after his century had held a hill
fort for a week against a swarming army of savages. She gripped the
blade between two fingers and guided it blindly down to her wrist.
She took a deep breath and her mind was numb and filled with
peace.
The blade cut, and the strange thing was, it
didn't really hurt. The pain was a distant thing, almost unnoticed
as her inner eye relived old summers.
"Marius." She thought she'd said the name aloud,
but the room was still and silent and the blue water had turned
red.
Cornelia frowned at her father.
"I will not leave here. This is my home
and it is as safe as anywhere else in the city at the moment."
Cinna looked about him, noting the heavy gates
that blocked off the town house from the street outside. The house
he had given as her dowry was a simple one of only eight rooms, all
on one floor. It was a beautiful home, but he would have preferred
an ugly one with a high brick wall around it.
"If a mob comes for you, or Sulla's men, looking
to rape and destroy..." His voice shook with suppressed emotion as
he spoke, but Cornelia held firm.
"I have guards to handle a mob, and nothing in
Rome will stop Sulla if the First-Born cannot," Cornelia replied.
Her voice was calm, but inside, doubts nagged at her. True, her
father's home was built like a fortress, but this belonged to her
and to Julius. It was where he would look for her, if he
survived.
Her fathers voice rose almost to a screech. "You
haven't seen what the streets are like! Gangs of animals looking
for easy targets. I couldn't go out myself without my guards. Many
homes have been set on fire or looted. It is chaos." He rubbed his
face with his hands and his daughter saw that he hadn't shaved.
"Rome will come through it, Father. Didn't you
want to move out to the country when the riots were going on a year
ago? If I had left then, I would not have met Julius and I would
not be married."
"I wish I had left!" Cinna snapped, his voice
savage. "I wish I had taken you away then. You would not be here,
in danger, with..."
She stepped closer to him and put her hand out
to touch his cheek. "Calm, Father, calm. You will hurt yourself
with all your worries. This city has seen upheavals before. It will
pass. I will be safe. You should have shaved." There were tears in
his eyes and she stepped into a crushing hug.
"Gently, old man. I am delicate now."
Her father straightened his arms, looking at her
questioningly. "Pregnant?" he asked, his voice rough with
affection.
Cornelia nodded.
"My beautiful girl," he said, gathering her in
again, but carefully.
"You will be a grandfather," she whispered into
his ear.
"Cornelia," he said. "You must come now. My
house is safer than this. Why take such a risk? Come home."
The word was so powerful. She wanted to let him
take her to safety, wanted very much to be a little girl again, but
could not. She shook her head, smiling tightly to try to take away
the sting of rejection.
"Leave more guards if it will make you feel
happy, but this is my home now. My child will be born here, and
when Julius is able to return to the city, he will come here
first."
"What if he has been killed?"
She closed her eyes against the sudden stab of
pain, feeling tears sting under the lids. "Father, please.. .Julius
will come back to me. I... I am sure of it."
"Does he know about the child?"
She kept her eyes closed, willing the weakness
to pass. She would not start sobbing, though part of her wanted to
bury her head in her father's chest and let him carry her away.
"Not yet."
Cinna sat on a bench next to a trickling pool in
the garden. He remembered the conversations with the architect when
he had been readying the house for his daughter. It seemed such a
long time ago. He sighed.
"You defeat me, girl. What will I tell your
mother?"
Cornelia sat next to him. "You will tell her
that I am well and happy and going to give birth in about seven
months. You will tell her that I am preparing my home for the
birth, and she will understand that. I will send messengers to you
when the streets are quiet again and... that we have enough food
and are in good health. Simple."
Her fathers voice was cracking slightly as he
tried to find a note of firmness. "This Julius had better be a good
husband to you—and a good father. I will have him whipped if
he isn't. Should have done it when I heard he was running about on
my roof after you."
Cornelia wiped a hand over her eyes, pressing
the worry back inside her. She forced herself to smile. "There's no
cruelty in you, Father, so don't try and pretend there is."
He grimaced, and the silence stretched for long
moments.
"I will wait another two days and then I will
have my guards take you home."
Cornelia pressed a hand on her father's arm.
"No. I am not yours anymore. Julius is my husband and he will
expect me to be here."
Then the tears could no longer be held back and
she began to sob. Cinna pulled her to him and embraced her
tightly.
Sulla frowned as his men raced to
secure the main streets, which would give them access to the great
forum and the heart of the city. After the first bloody scramble,
the battle for Rome had gone well for him, with area after area
taken with quick, brutal skirmishes and then held against an enemy
in disarray. Before the sun had risen fully, most of the lower east
quarter of Rome was under his control, creating a large area in
which they could rest and regroup. Then tactical problems had
arisen. With his controlled areas expanding in a line, he had fewer
and fewer men to hold the border and knew he was always in danger
from any sort of attack that massed men against a section where his
were spread thinly.
Sulla's advance slowed and orders flowed ever
more swiftly from him, moving units around or making them hold. He
knew he had to have a secure base before he asked for any kind of
surrender. After Marius's last words to them, Sulla accepted that
there was a chance his soldiers would fight to the last
man—their loyalty was legendary even in a system where such
loyalty was fostered and nurtured. He had to make them lose hope,
and a slowing advance would not do that.
Now he was standing in an open square at the top
of the Caelius hill. All the massed streets behind him back to the
Caelimontana gate were his. The fires had been put out and his
legion was entrenched from there all the way to Porta Raudusculana
at the southern tip of the city walls.
In the small square were nearly a hundred of his
men, split into groups of four. Each man had volunteered and he was
touched by it. Was this what Marius felt when his men offered their
lives for him?
"You have your orders. Keep moving and cause
havoc. If you are outnumbered, get away until you can attack again.
You are my luck and the luck of the legion. Gods speed you."
As one, they saluted him and he returned it, his
arm stiff. He expected most to be dead within the hour. If it had
been night, they would have been more useful, but in the bright
daylight they were little better than a distraction. He watched the
last group of four squeeze through the barricade and hare off along
a side street.
"Have Marius's body wrapped and placed in cool
shadow," Sulla said to a nearby soldier. "I cannot say when I will
have the leisure to organize a proper funeral for him."
A sudden flight of arrows was launched from two
or three streets away. Sulla watched the arc with interest, noting
the most likely site for the archers and hoping a few of his
four-man squads were in the area. The black shafts passed overhead
and then all around them, shattering on the stone of the courtyard
Sulla had adopted as a temporary command post. One of his
messengers dropped with a barbed arrow through his chest, and
another screamed, though he seemed not to have been touched. Sulla
frowned.
"Guard. Take that messenger somewhere close and
flog him. Romans don't scream or faint at the sight of blood. Make
sure I can see a little of his on his back when you return."
The guard nodded and the messenger was borne
away in silence, terrified lest his punishment be increased.
A centurion ran up and saluted. "General. This
area is secure. Shall I sound the slow advance?"
Sulla stared at him. "I chafe at the pace we are
setting. Sound the charge for this section. Let the others catch us
up as they may."
"We will be exposed, sir, to flanking attacks,"
the man stammered.
"Question an order of mine again in war and I
will have you hanged like a common criminal."
The man paled and spun to give the order.
Sulla ground his teeth in irritation. Oh, for an
enemy who would meet him on an open field. This city fighting was
unseen and violent. Men ripping each other with blades out of sight
in distant alleyways. Where were the glorious charges? The singing
battle weapons? But he would be patient and he would eventually
grind them down to despair. He heard the charge horn sound and saw
his men lift their barricades and prepare to carry them forward. He
felt his blood quicken with excitement. Let them try to flank him,
with so many of his squads mingling out there to attack from
behind.
He smelled fresh smoke on the air and could see
flames lick from high windows in the streets just ahead. Screams
sounded above the eternal clash of arms, and desperate figures
climbed out onto stone ledges, thirty, forty feet above the
sprawling melee below. They would die on the great stones of the
roadways. Sulla saw one woman lose her grip and fall headfirst onto
the heavy curb. It broke her into a twisted doll. Smoke swirled in
his nostrils. One more street and then another.
His men were moving quickly.
"Forward!" he urged, feeling his heart beat
faster.
Orso Ferito spread a map of Rome on a
heavy wooden table and looked around at the faces of the centurions
of the First-Born.
"The line I have marked is how much territory
Sulla has under his control. He fights on an expanding line and is
vulnerable to a spear-point attack at almost any part of it. I
suggest we attack here and here at the same time." He indicated the
two points on the map, looking round at the other men in the room.
Like Orso, they were tired and dirty. Few had slept more than an
hour or two at a time in the previous three-day battle, and like
their men, they were close to complete exhaustion.
Orso himself had been in command of five
centuries when he had witnessed Marius's murder at the hands of
Sulla. He had heard his general's last shout and he still burned
with rage when he thought of smug Sulla shoving a blade into a man
Orso loved more dearly than his own father.
The following day had been chaos, with hundreds
dying on both sides. Orso had kept control over his own men,
launching short and bloody attacks and then withdrawing before
reserves could be brought up. Like many of Marius's men, he was not
highborn and had grown up on the streets of Rome. He understood how
to fight in the roads and alleys he had scrambled along as a boy,
and before dawn on the second day he had emerged as the unofficial
leader of the First-Born.
His influence was felt immediately as he began
to coordinate the attacks and defenses. Some streets Orso would let
go as strategically unimportant. He ordered the occupants out of
houses, set the fires, and had his men withdraw under arrow cover.
Other streets they fought for again and again, concentrating their
available forces on preventing Sulla from breaking through. Many
had been lost, but the headlong rush into the city had been slowed
and stopped in many areas. It would not be over quickly now, and
Sulla had a fight on his hands.
Whatever Orso's mother had called him, he had
always been Orso, the bear, to his men. His squat body and most of
his face was covered in black, wiry hair, right up onto his cheeks.
His slab-muscled shoulders were matted with dried blood, and like
the others in the room who had been forced to give up their Roman
taste for cleanliness, he stank of smoke and old sweat.
The meeting room had been chosen at random, a
kitchen in someone's town house. The group of centurions had walked
in off the street and spread the map out. The owner was upstairs
somewhere. Orso sighed as he looked at the map. Breakthroughs were
possible, but they would need the luck of the gods to beat Sulla.
He looked around at the faces at the table again and was hard put
not to wince at the hope he saw reflected there. He was no Marius,
he knew that. If the general had remained alive to be in this room,
they would have had a fighting chance. As it was...
"They have no more than twenty to fifty men at
any given point on the line. If we break through quickly, with two
centuries at each position, we should be able to cut them to pieces
before reinforcements arrive."
"What then? Go for Sulla?" one of the centurions
asked. Marius would have known his name, Orso acknowledged to
himself.
"We can't be sure where that snake has
positioned himself. He is quite capable of setting up a command
tent as a decoy for assassins. I suggest we pull straight back out,
leaving a few men in civilian clothes to watch for an opportunity
to take him."
"The men won't be pleased. It is not a crushing
victory and they want one."
Orso snapped back his ire. "The men are
legionaries of the finest damn legion in Rome. They will do as
they're told. This is a game of numbers, if it is a game at all.
They have more. We control similar ground with far fewer men. They
can reinforce faster than we can and... they have a far more
experienced commander. The best we can do is to destroy a hundred
of their men and pull out, losing as few of ours as possible. Sulla
still has the same problem of defending a lengthening line."
"We have the same problem, to some extent."
"Not half as badly. If they break through, it is
into the vast city, where they can be flanked with ease and cut
off. We are still in control of the larger area by far. When we
break their line, it will be straight into the heart of their
territory."
"Where they have their men, Orso. I am not
convinced your plan will work," the man continued.
Orso looked at him. "What is your name?"
"Bar Gallienus, sir."
"Did you hear what Marius called out before he
was killed?"
The man reddened slightly. "I did, sir."
"So did I. We are defending our city and her
inhabitants from an illegal invader. My commander is dead. I have
assumed temporary command until the current crisis is over. Unless
you have something useful to add to the discussion, I suggest you
wait outside and I'll let you know when we are finished. Is that
clear?" Although Orso's voice remained calm and polite throughout
the exchange, all the men in the room could feel the anger coming
off him like a physical force. It took a little courage not to edge
away.
Bar Gallienus spoke quietly. "I would like to
stay."
Orso clapped a hand on his shoulder and looked
away from him. "Anything we have that can launch a missile,
including every man with a bow, will mass at those two points, one
hour from now. We will hit them with everything and then two
centuries will charge their defenses on my signal. I will lead the
attack through the old market area, as I know it well. Bar
Gallienus will lead the other. Any questions?"
There was silence at the table. Gallienus looked
Orso in the eye and nodded his agreement.
"Then gather your legionaries, gentlemen. Let's
make the old man proud. 'Marius' is the shout. The signal will be
three short blasts. One hour."
Sulla stepped back from the bloodied
men panting in front of him. Of the hundred he had sent into the
fray hours before, only eleven had made it back to report, and
these were wounded, every one.
"General. The mobile squads were only partially
successful," a soldier said, trying hard to stand erect over the
weakness of his heaving lungs. "We did a lot of damage in the first
hour and at a guess took down more than fifty of the enemy in small
skirmishes. Where possible, we caught them alone or in pairs and
overwhelmed them as you suggested. Then the word must have gone out
and we found ourselves being tracked through the streets. Whoever
was directing them must know the city very well. Some of us took to
the roofs, but there were men waiting up there." He paused for
breath again and Sulla waited impatiently for the man to calm
himself.
"I saw several of the men brought down by women
or children coming out of the houses with knives. They hesitated to
kill civilians and were cut to pieces. My own squad was lost to a
similar group of First-Born who had removed their outer armor and
carried only short swords. We had been running a long time and they
cornered us in an alleyway. I—"
"You said you had information to report. It was
clear from the beginning that the mobile groups would do only
limited damage. I had hoped to spread fear and chaos, but it seems
there is a semblance of discipline left in the First-Born. One of
Marius's seconds must have taken overall tactical control. He will
be looking to strike back quickly. Did your men see any signs of
this?"
"Yes, General. They were bringing men up quietly
through the streets. I do not know when or where they will attack,
but there will be some sort of skirmish soon."
"Hardly worth eighty of my men, but useful
enough to me. Get yourselves to the surgeons. Centurion!" he
snapped at a man nearby. "Get every man up to the barricades. They
will try to break through. Triple the men on the line."
The centurion nodded and signaled to the
messengers to carry the news to the outposts of the line.
Suddenly the sky turned black with arrow shafts,
a stinging, humming swarm of death. Sulla watched them fall. He
clenched his fists and tightened his jaw as they whirred toward his
position. Men around him threw themselves down, but he stood
straight and unblinking with his eyes glittering.
The shafts rained and shattered around him, but
he was untouched. He turned and laughed at his scrambling advisers
and officers. One was on his knees, pulling at an arrow in his
chest and spilling blood from his mouth. Two others stared glassily
at the sky, unmoving.
"A good omen, don't you think?" he said, still
smiling.
Ahead, somewhere in the city, a horn blew three
short blasts and a roar rose in response. Sulla heard one name
chanted above the noise and for a moment knew doubt.
"Ma-ri-us!" howled the First-Born. And they came
on.
CHAPTER
32
Alexandria hammered at the door of the
little jeweler's shop. There had to be someone there! She knew he
could have left the city as so many others had done, and the
thought that she might be just drawing attention to herself made
her go pale. Something scraped in the street nearby, like a door
opening.
"Tabbic! It's me, Alexandria! Gods, open up,
man!" She let her arm fall, panting. Shouts came from nearby and
her heart thudded wildly.
"Come on. Come on," she whispered.
Then the door was wrenched aside and Tabbic
stood glaring, a hatchet held tightly in his hand. When he saw her,
he looked relieved and something of the anger faded.
"Get in, girl. The animals are out tonight," he
said gruffly. He looked up and down the street. It seemed deserted,
though he could feel eyes on him.
Inside, she was faint from relief. "Metella...
sent me, she..." she said.
"It's all right, girl. You can explain later.
The wife and kids are upstairs putting a meal together. Go up and
join them. You're safe here."
She paused for a moment and turned to him,
unable to hold it in. "Tabbic. I have papers and everything. I'm
free."
He leaned close and looked her in the eyes, a
smile beginning. "When were you anything else? Get upstairs now. My
wife will be wondering what all the fuss is about."
There was nothing in the battle
manuals for assaulting a broken barricade set across a city street.
Orso Ferito simply roared his dead general's name and launched
himself up the litter of broken carts and doors into the arms of
the enemy. Two hundred men came behind him.
Orso buried his gladius in the first throat he
saw and only missed being cut by slipping on the shifting barricade
and rolling down the other side. He came up swinging and was
rewarded with a satisfying crunch of bone. His men were all around
him, hacking and cutting onward. Orso couldn't tell how well they
were doing or how many had died. He only knew that the enemy was in
front of him and he had a sword in his hand. He roared and cut a
man's arm from his shoulder as it was raising a shield to block
him. He grabbed the shield with the limp arm falling out of the
grip and used it to shoulder-charge two men from his path,
trampling over them. One of them stabbed upward and he felt a
warmth rush over his legs but paid it no attention. The area was
clear, but the end of the street was filling with men. Orso saw
their captain sound the charge and met it at full speed across the
open space. He knew in that moment how it felt to be a berserker in
one of the savage nations they had conquered. It was a strange
freedom. There was no pain, only an exhilarating distance from fear
or exhaustion.
More men went under his sword and the First-Born
carried all before them, cutting and dealing death on bright
metal.
"Sir! The side streets. They have more
reinforcements!"
Orso almost shook off the hand tugging at his
arm, but then his training came to the fore. "Too many of them.
Back, lads! We've cut them enough for now!" He raised his sword in
triumph and began to run back the way they had come, panting even
as he noted the numbers of Sulla's dead. More than a hundred, if he
was any judge.
Here and there were faces he had known. One or
two stirred feebly and he was tempted to stop for them, but behind
came the crash of sandals on stone and he knew they had to reach
the barricades or be routed with their backs to them.
"On, lads. Ma-ri-us!"
The cry was answered from all around and then
again they were climbing. At the top, Orso looked back and saw the
slowest of his men being brought down and trampled. Most had made
it clear and as he turned to run down the other side, the
First-Born archers fired again over his men's heads, sending more
bodies to die on the stone road, screaming and writhing. Orso
chuckled as he ran, his sword drooping from the exhaustion that was
threatening to unman him. He ducked inside a building and stood
gasping, his hands braced on his knees. The cut in his thigh was
bad and blood ran freely. He felt light-headed and could only
mumble as hands took him onward away from the barricade.
"Can't stop here, sir. The archers can only
cover us until they run out of arrows. Have to keep going a road or
two farther. Come on, sir."
He registered the words, but wasn't sure if he
had responded. Where had his energy gone? His leg felt weak. He
hoped Bar Gallienus had done as well.
Bar Gallienus lay in his own blood,
with Sulla's sword pressing against his throat. He knew he was
dying and tried to spit at the general, but could not raise more
than a sputter of liquid. His men had found a freshly reinforced
century over the barricade and had very nearly been broken on the
first assault. After minutes of furious fighting, they had breached
the wall of piled stone and wood and thrown themselves into the
mass of soldiers beyond. His men had taken many with them, but it
was simply too much. The line had not been thin at all.
Bar smiled to himself, revealing bloody teeth.
He knew Sulla could reinforce quickly. It was a shame he
wouldn't have the chance to mention this to Orso. He hoped the
hairy man had done better than he had, or the legion would be
leaderless again. Foolhardy to risk himself on such a venture, but
too many of them had died in that dreadful first day of havoc and
execution. He'd known Sulla would reinforce.
"I think he's dead, sir," Bar heard a voice
say.
He heard Sulla's voice reply, "A pity. He has
the strangest expression. I wanted to ask him what he was
thinking."
Orso snarled at the centurion who
tried to help him stand. His leg ached and he had a crutch under
one shoulder, but he was in no mood to be helped.
"No one came back?" he asked.
"We lost both centuries. That section had been
reinforced just before we charged it, sir. It doesn't look like
that tactic will work again."
"I was lucky then," Orso grunted. No one met his
eye. He had been, to hit a section of the wall where the strength
was low. Bar Gallienus must have laughed to see himself proved
right about that. It was a shame he couldn't buy the man a
drink.
"Sir? Do you have any other orders?" asked one
of the centurions.
Orso shook his head. "Not yet. But I will have
when I know where we stand."
"Sir." The younger man hesitated.
Orso swung to face him. "What is it? Spit it
out, lad."
"Some of the men are talking of surrender. We
are down to half strength and Sulla has the supply routes to the
sea. We cannot win and—"
"Win? Who said we were going to win? When I saw
Marius die, I knew we couldn't win. I realized then that Sulla
would break the back of the First-Born before enough could gather
to cause him any real difficulty. This isn't about winning, boy,
it's about fighting for a just cause, following orders and honoring
a great man's life and death."
He looked at the men around the room. Only a few
couldn't meet his eyes and he knew he was among friends. He smiled.
How would Marius have put it?
"A man can wait a lifetime for a moment like
this and never see one. Some just grow old and wither, never
getting their chance. We will die young and strong and I wouldn't
have it any other way."
"But, sir, perhaps we could break out of the
city. Head for the mountains..."
"Come outside. I am not going to waste a great
speech on you buggers."
Orso grunted and hobbled out of the door. In the
street were a hundred or so of the First-Born, weary and dirty,
with bandages wrapped around cuts. They looked defeated already and
that thought gave him the words.
"I am a soldier of Rome!" His voice, by nature
deep and rough, carried across them, stiffening backs.
"All I ever wanted was to serve my time and
retire to a nice little plot of land. I didn't want to lose my life
on some foreign ground and be forgotten. But then I found myself
serving with a man who was more father to me than my own father
ever was, and I saw his death and I heard his words and I thought,
Orso, this may be where you stand, old son. And maybe that's
enough, after all.
"Anyone here think they will live forever? Let
other men plant cabbages and grow dry in the sun. I will die like a
soldier, on the streets of the city I love, in her defense."
His voice dropped a little, as if he were
imparting a secret. The men leaned close and more joined the
growing crowd.
"I understand this truth. Few things are worth
more than dreams or wives, pleasures of the flesh or even children.
Some things are, though, and that knowledge is what makes us men.
Life is just a warm, short day between long nights. It grows dark
for everyone, even those who struggle and pretend they will always
be young and strong."
He pointed to a mature soldier, slowly flexing
his leg as he listened.
"Tinasta! I see you testing that old knee of
yours. Did you think age would ease the pain of it? Why wait until
it buckles from weakness and have younger men shoulder you aside?
No, my friends, my brothers. Let us go while the light is still
strong and the day is still bright."
A young soldier raised his head and called out,
"Will we be remembered?"
Orso sighed, but smiled. "For a while, son, but
who remembers the heroes of Carthage or Sparta today? They
know how they ended their day. And that is enough. That is
all there ever is."
The young man asked quietly, "Is there no chance
then that we can win?"
Orso limped over to him, using the crutch for
support. "Son. Why don't you get out of the city? A few of you
could break off if you slipped past the patrols. You don't have to
stay."
"I know, sir." The young man paused. "But I
will."
"Then there is no need to delay the inevitable.
Gather the men. Everyone in position to attack Sulla's barricades.
Let anyone go who wants to, with my blessing. Let them find other
lives somewhere and never tell anyone they once fought for Rome
when Marius died. One hour, gentlemen. Gather your weapons one more
time."
Orso looked around him while the men stood and
checked their blades and armor as they had been trained to do. More
than a few clapped him on the shoulder as they went to their
positions, and he felt his heart would burst with pride.
"Good men, Marius," he muttered to himself.
"Good men."
CHAPTER
33
Cornelius Sulla sat idly on a throne
of gold, resting on a mosaic of a million black and white tiles.
Near the center of Rome, his estate had been untouched by the
rioting, and it was a pleasure to be back and in power once
more.
Marius's legion had fought almost to the last
man, as he had predicted they would. Only a few had tried to run at
the end, and Sulla had hunted them down without mercy. Vast fire
trenches lined the outer walls of the city, and he had been told
that the thousands of bodies would burn for days or even weeks
before the ashes were finally cold. The gods would notice such a
sacrifice to save their chosen city, he was sure.
Rome would need to be cleaned when the fires
were out. There wasn't a wall anywhere that had not been speckled
with the oily ash that floated in and stung the eyes of the
people.
He had denounced the Primigenia as traitors,
with their lands and wealth forfeit to the Senate. Families had
been dragged out onto the streets by neighbors jealous of their
possessions. Hundreds more had been executed and still the work
went on. It would be a bitter mark on the glorious history of the
seven hills, but what choice had he had?
Sulla mused to himself as a slave girl
approached with a cup of ice-cold fruit juice. It was too early in
the day for wine and there were so many still to see and to
condemn. Rome would rise again in glory, he knew, but for that to
happen the last of the friends and supporters of Marius—the
last of Sulla's enemies—had to be ripped from the good,
healthy flesh.
He winced as he sipped from the gold cup and ran
a finger over his swollen eye and the ridges of a purpling gash
along his right cheek. It had been the hardest fight of his life,
making the campaign against Mithridates look rather pallid in
comparison.
Marius's death came into his mind again, as it
had so frequently in recent days. Impressive. The body had been
saved from the fires. Sulla considered having a statue of the man
standing at the top of one of the hills. It would show his own
greatness in being able to honor the dead. Or he could just have it
thrown into the pits with the others. It wasn't important.
The room where he sat was almost empty. A domed
roof showed a pattern of Aphrodite in the Greek style. She looked
down on him with love, a beautiful naked woman, with her hair
wrapped around her. He wanted those who met him to know he was
loved by the gods. The slave girl and her pitcher stood paces from
him, ready to refill his cup at a gesture. The only other presence
in the room was his torturer, who stood nearby with a small brazier
and the grisly tools of his trade laid out on a table in front of
him. His leather apron was already spattered from the morning's
work, and still there was more to do.
Bronze doors, almost as large as those that
opened onto the Senate, boomed as they were struck with a mailed
gauntlet. They opened to reveal two of his legionaries dragging in
a burly soldier with his wrists and feet tied. They pulled him
across the shining mosaic toward Sulla, and he could see the man's
face was already battered, his nose broken. A scribe walked behind
the soldiers and consulted a sheaf of parchment for details.
"This one is Orso Ferito, master," the scribe
intoned. "He was found under a pile of Marius's men and has been
identified by two witnesses. He led some of the traitors in the
resistance."
Sulla stood lithely and walked to the figure,
signaling for the guards to let him fall. He was conscious, but a
dirty cloth gag prevented anything more than animal grunts from
him.
"Cut the gag away. I would question him," Sulla
ordered, and the deed was done quickly and brutally, a blade
bringing fresh blood and a groan from the prostrate man. "You led
one of the attacks, didn't you? Are you that one? My men were
saying you had taken over after Marius. Are you that man?"
Orso Ferito looked up with a sparkle of hatred.
His gaze played over the bruise and cut on Sulla's face, and he
smiled, revealing teeth broken and bloody. The voice seemed dragged
from some deep well as it croaked out, "I would do it again."
"Yes. So would I," Sulla replied. "Put out his
eyes and then hang him." He nodded to the torturer, who removed a
sliver of hot iron from the brazier, holding the darker end in
heavy clamps. Orso struggled as his arms were bound with leather
straps, his muscles writhing. The torturer was impassive as he
brought the metal close enough to singe the lashes, then pressed it
in, rewarded with a soft, grunting, animal sound.
Sulla drained his cup without tasting the juice.
He looked on without pleasure, congratulating himself for his lack
of emotion. He was not a monster, he knew, but the people expected
a strong leader and that is what they would get. As soon as the
Senate could reconvene, he would declare himself dictator and
assume the power of the old kings. Then Rome would see a new
era.
The unconscious Ferito was dragged away to be
executed, and Sulla had only a few minutes alone before the door
boomed again and fresh soldiers entered with the little scribe.
This time, he knew the young man who stumbled between them.
"Julius Caesar," he said. "Captured at the very
height of the excitement, I believe. Let him stand, gentlemen; this
is not a common man. Remove his gag—gently."
He looked at the young lad and was pleased to
note how he straightened. His face bore some bruising, but Sulla
knew his men would have been wary of risking their general's
displeasure with too much damage before judgment. He stood tall, a
fraction under six feet, and his body was well muscled and
sun-dark. Blue eyes looked coldly out from his face and Sulla could
feel the force of the man coming at him, seeming to fill the room
till it was just the two of them, soldiers, torturer, scribe, and
slave all forgotten.
Sulla tilted his head back slightly and his
mouth stretched and opened into a pleased expression.
"Metella died, I am sorry to say. She took her
own life before my men could break in and save her. I would have
let her go, but you... you are a different problem. Did you know
the old man captured with you escaped? He seems to have slipped his
bonds and freed the other. Most unusual companions for a young
gentleman." He saw the spark of interest in the other's face.
"Oh, yes. I have men out looking for the pair,
but no luck at present. If my men had tied you with them, I daresay
you would be free by now. Fate can be a fickle mistress—your
membership in the nobilitas leaves you here while those gutter scum
run free."
Julius said nothing. He did not expect to live
an hour longer and suddenly saw that nothing he could say would
have meaning or use. Raging at Sulla would only amuse him and
pleading would arouse his cruelty. He remained silent and
glared.
"What do we have on him, scribe?" Sulla spoke to
the man with the parchment.
"Nephew of Marius, son of Julius. Both dead.
Mother Aurelia, still alive, but deranged. Owns a small estate a
few miles outside the city. Considerable debts to private houses,
sums undisclosed. Husband of Cornelia, Cinna's daughter, married on
the morning of the battle."
"Ah," Sulla said, interrupting. "The heart of
the matter. Cinna is no friend of mine, though he is too wily to
have supported Marius openly. He is wealthy; I understand why you
would want the support of the old man, but surely your life is
worth more.
"I will offer you a simple choice. Put this
Cornelia aside and swear loyalty to me and I will let you live. If
not, my torturer here is heating his tools once again. Marius would
want you to live, young man. Make the right choice."
Julius glared his anger. What he knew of Sulla
didn't help him. It could be a cruel trick to make him deny those
he loved before executing him anyway.
As if sensing his thoughts, Sulla spoke again.
"Divorce Cornelia and you will live. Such a simple act will shame
Cinna, weakening him. You will go free. These men are all witnesses
to my word as ruler of Rome. What is your answer?"
Julius held himself perfectly still. He hated
this man. He had killed Marius and crippled the Republic his father
had loved. No matter what he lost, the answer was clear and the
words had to be said.
"My answer is no. Make an end of it."
Sulla blinked in surprise and then laughed out
loud. "What a strange family! Do you know how many men have died in
this very room over the last few days? Do you know how many have
been blinded, castrated, and scarred? Yet you scorn my mercy?" He
laughed again and the sound was harsh under the echoing dome.
"If I let you go free, will you try to kill
me?"
Julius nodded. "I will devote my remaining years
to that end."
Sulla grinned at him in genuine pleasure. "I
thought so. You are fearless, and the only one of the nobilitas to
refuse a bargain of mine." Sulla paused for a moment, raising his
hand to signal to the torturer, who stood ready. Then his hand
dropped listlessly.
"You may go free. Leave my city before sunset.
If you come back while I live, I will have you killed without trial
or audience. Cut his ropes, gentlemen. You have bound a free man."
He chuckled for a moment, then was still as the ropes fell in
twisted circles by Julius's feet. The young man rubbed his wrists,
but his expression was as still as stone.
Sulla stood from his throne. "Take him to the
gates and let him walk." He turned to look Julius in the eye. "If
anyone ever asks you why, tell them it was because you remind me of
myself and perhaps I have killed enough men today. That's all."
"What about my wife?" Julius called as his arms
were taken again by the guards.
Sulla shrugged. "I may take her as a mistress,
if she learns to please me."
Julius struggled wildly, but could not break
free as he was dragged out.
The scribe lingered by the door. "General? Is
that wise? He is Marius's nephew, after all...."
Sulla sighed and accepted another cup of cold
liquid from the slave girl. "Gods save us from little men. I
gave you my reason. I have achieved anything I ever wanted and
boredom looms. It is good to leave a few dangers to threaten
me."
His gaze focused far away. "He is an impressive
young man. I think there may be two of Marius inside him."
The scribe's expression showed he understood
none of it. "Shall I have the next one brought in, Consul?"
"No more today. Are the baths heated? Good, the
Senate leaders will be dining with me tonight and I want to be
fresh."
Sulla always had his pool as hot as he
could possibly stand it. It relaxed him wonderfully. His only
attendants were two of his house slave girls, and he rose naked out
of the water without self-consciousness in front of them. They too
were naked, except for bangles of gold on their wrists and around
their necks.
Both had been chosen for their full figures, and
he was pleased as he allowed them to rub the water from his body.
It was good for a man to look on beautiful things. It raised the
spirit above the level of the beasts.
"The water has brought my blood to the surface,
but I feel sluggish," he murmured to them, walking a few paces to a
long massage bench. It was soft under him and he felt himself relax
completely. He closed his eyes, listening to the two young women as
they tied the thin, springy wands of the birch tree, gathered fresh
that morning and still green.
The two slaves stood over his heat-flushed body.
Each held a long bunch of the cut branches, almost like a brush,
three feet long. At first they almost caressed him with the birch
twigs, leaving faint white marks on his skin.
He groaned slightly and they paused.
"Master, would you like it harder?" one of them
asked timidly. Her mouth was bruised purple from his attentions the
night before, and her hands trembled slightly.
He smiled without opening his eyes and stretched
out on the bench. It was splendidly invigorating. "Ah yes," he
replied dreamily. "Lay on, girls, lay on."
CHAPTER
34
Julius stood with Cabera and Tubruk at
the docks, his face gray and cold. In contrast, as if to mock the
grim events of his life, the day was hot and perfect, with only a
light breeze coming off the sea to bring relief to the dust-stained
travelers. It had been a hectic flight from the stinking city. At
first he had been alone and on a sway-backed pony that was all he
could buy for a gold ring. Grimacing, he had skirted around the
firepits filled with flesh and trotted onto the main stone road
west to the coast.
Then he heard a familiar hail and saw his
friends step out from the trees ahead. It had been a joyous reunion
to find each other alive, though the mood darkened as they told
their stories.
Even in that first moment, Julius could see
Tubruk had lost some of his vitality. He looked gaunt and dirty and
told briefly of how they had lived as animals in streets where
every sort of horror happened in the day and grew worse at night,
where screams and shouts were the only clues. He and Cabera had
agreed to wait a week on the road to the coast, hoping Julius could
win free.
"After that," Cabera said, "we were going to
steal some swords and cut you out."
Tubruk laughed in response and Julius could see
they had grown closer in their time together. It failed to lighten
his mood. Julius told them of Sulla's whimsical cruelty and his
fists clenched in fresh anger as the words spilled from him.
"I will come back to Rome. I will cut off his
balls if he touches my wife," he said quietly at the end.
His companions could not hold his gaze for long,
and even Cabera's usual humor had vanished for a while.
"He has the pick of women in Rome, Gaius,"
Tubruk murmured. "He's just the sort of man who likes to twist the
knife a little. Her father will keep her safe, even get her out of
Rome if there's a danger. That old man would set his guards on
Sulla himself if there was a threat to her. You know this."
Julius nodded, his eyes distant, needing to be
persuaded. At first, he had wanted to try to get to her under cover
of night, but the curfew was back, and moving in the streets would
mean instant death.
At least Cabera had managed to get hold of a few
valuable items in the days he had spent on the streets with Tubruk.
A gold armlet he had found in ashes bought them horses and bribes
to pass the wall guards. The drafts that Julius still carried
against his skin were too large to change outside a city, and it
was infuriating to have to rely on a few bronze coins when paper
wealth was so close but useless to them. Julius was not even sure
that Marius's signature would make them good anymore, but guessed
the wily general would have thought of that. He had prepared for
almost anything.
Julius had spent a couple of their valuable
coins sending letters, giving each to legionaries on their way back
to the city or outward to the coast and Greece.
Cornelia would know he was safe, at least, but
it would be a long time before he could see her again. Until he
could return with strength and support, he was not able to return
at all, and the bitterness of it twisted and ate at him, leaving
him empty and tired. Marcus would hear of the disaster in Rome and
not come blindly back to look for him when his term of service
ended. That was only a small comfort. As never before, he felt the
loss of his friend.
A thousand other regrets taunted him as they
came into his mind, too painful to be allowed to take root. The
world had changed fundamentally for the young man. Marius could not
be dead. The world was empty without him.
Weary after days on the road, the
three men trotted their horses into the bustling coastal port west
of Rome. Tubruk spoke first, after they had dismounted and tied
their horses to a post outside an inn.
"The flags of three legions are here. Your
papers will get you a commission in any of them. That one is based
in Greece, that one in Egypt, and the last is on a trade run up to
the north." Tubruk spoke calmly, showing his knowledge of the
empire's movements had not waned in the time he had spent running
the estate.
Julius felt uncomfortable and exposed on the
docks, yet this was not a decision to be hurried. If Sulla changed
his mind, even now there could be armed men on their way to kill
them or bring them back to Rome.
Tubruk could not give much advice. True, he had
recognized the banners of the legions, but he knew he was fifteen
years out of date when it came to the reputations of the officers.
He felt frustrated to have to put such a serious decision in the
hands of the gods. At least two years of Julius's life would be
spent with whichever unit they decided upon, and they could end up
flipping coins.
"I like the sound of Egypt, myself," Cabera
said, looking wistfully across the sea. "It is a long time since I
shook its dust from my sandals." He could feel the future bending
around the three of them. Few lives had such simple choices, or
maybe all did but most could not see them when they came. Egypt,
Greece, or the north? Each beckoned in different ways. The lad must
make a choice on his own, but at least Aegyptus was hot.
Tubruk studied the galleys rocking at their
moorings, looking for one to rule out. Each was guarded by alert
legionaries, and men swarmed over the wallowing vessels, repairing,
scrubbing, or refitting after voyages all over the world.
He shrugged. He assumed that after the fuss had
died down and Rome was peaceful, he would return to the estate.
Someone had to keep the place alive.
"Marcus and Renius are in Greece. You could meet
up with them there if you wanted," Tubruk ventured, turning to
watch the road for dust raised by trackers.
"No. I haven't achieved anything, except to be
married and run out of Rome by my enemy," Julius muttered.
"Your uncle's enemy," Cabera corrected.
Julius turned slowly to the old man, his gaze
unwavering. "No. He is my enemy now. I will see him dead, in
time."
"In time, perhaps," Tubruk said. "Today you need
to get away and learn to be a soldier and an officer. You are
young. This is not the end of you, or your career." Tubruk held his
gaze for a second, thinking how much like his father Julius was
becoming.
Eventually, the younger man nodded briefly
before turning away. He examined the ships again.
"Egypt it is. I always wanted to see the land of
the pharaohs."
"A fine choice," Cabera said. "You will love the
Nile, and the women are scented and beautiful." The old man was
pleased to see Julius smile for the first time since they had been
captured in the night. It was a good omen, he thought.
Tubruk gave a boy a small coin to hold their
horses for an hour and the three men walked toward the galley ship
that bore an Egyptian legion's flags. As they approached, the busy
action of workers became even more apparent.
"Looks like they're getting ready to ship out,"
Tubruk noted, jerking his thumb at barrels of supplies being loaded
by slaves. Salted meat, oil, and fish swung over the narrow strip
of water into the arms of sweating slaves on board, each one noted
and crossed off a slate with typical Roman efficiency. Tubruk
whistled to one of the guards, who stepped over to them.
"We need to speak to the captain. Is he aboard?"
Tubruk asked.
The soldier gave them a quick appraisal and
appeared to be satisfied, despite the dust of the road. Tubruk and
Julius, at least, looked like soldiers.
"He is. We'll be casting off on the noon tide. I
can't guarantee he'll see you."
"Tell him Marius's nephew is here, fresh from
the city. We'll wait," Tubruk replied.
The soldier's eyebrows rose a fraction and his
gaze slid over to Julius. "Right you are, sir. I'll let him know
immediately."
The man took a step to the dockside and walked
the narrow plank bridge onto the deck of the galley. He disappeared
behind the raised wooden structure that dominated the ship and,
Julius guessed, must house the captain's quarters. While they
waited, Julius noted the features of the huge vessel, the oar-holes
in the side that would be used to move them out of harbor and in
battle to give them the speed to ram enemy vessels, the huge square
sails that were waiting to be raised for the wind.
The deck was clear of loose objects, as befitted
a Roman war vessel. Everything that might cause injury in rough
seas was lashed down securely. Steps led to the lower levels at
various places in the planking, and each could be secured with a
bolted hatch to prevent heavy waves from crashing down after the
crew. It looked like a well-run ship, but until he met the captain,
he wouldn't know how things would be for the next two years of his
life. He could smell tar and salt and sweat, the scents of an alien
world he did not know. He felt strangely nervous and almost laughed
at himself.
Out of the deck shadows came a tall man in the
full uniform of a centurion. He looked hard and neat, with gray
hair cut short to his head and his breastplate shined to a bright
bronze glow in the sun. His expression was watchful as he crossed
the planks to the dockside and greeted the three waiting men.
"Good day, gentlemen. I am Centurion Gaditicus,
nominal captain of this vessel for the Third Partica legion. We
cast off on the next tide, so I cannot spare you a great deal of
time, but the name of Consul Marius carries a lot of weight, even
now. State your business and I'll see what I can do."
Straight to the point, without fuss. Julius felt
himself warming to the man. He reached into his tunic and brought
out the packet of papers Marius had given him. Gaditicus took them
and broke the seal with his thumb. He read quickly, with a frown,
nodding occasionally.
"These were written before Sulla was back in
control?" he asked, his eyes still on the parchment.
Julius felt the desire to lie, but guessed he
was being tested by this man. "They were. My uncle did not...
expect Sulla to be successful."
Gaditicus's eyes were unwavering as he measured
the young man in front of him. "I was sorry when I heard he was
lost. He was a popular man and good for Rome. These papers were
signed by a consul—they are perfectly valid. However, I am
within my rights to refuse you a berth until your personal position
vis-a-vis Cornelius Sulla is made clear to me. I will take
your word if you are a truthful man."
"I am, sir," Julius replied.
"Are you wanted for criminal offenses?"
"I am not."
"Are you avoiding scandal of any sort?"
"No."
Again the man held his gaze for a few seconds,
but Julius did not look away. Gaditicus folded the papers and
placed them inside his own clothing.
"I will allow you to take the oath, on the
lowest officer's rank of tesserarius. Advancement will come
quickly if you show ability; slowly or not at all if you don't.
Understood?"
Julius nodded, keeping his face impassive. The
days of high life in Roman society were over. This was the steel in
the empire that allowed the city to relax in softness and joy. He
would have to prove himself again, this time without the benefit of
a powerful uncle.
"These two, how do they fit in?" Gaditicus
asked, motioning toward Tubruk and Cabera.
"Tubruk is my estate manager. He will be
returning. The old man is Cabera, my... servant. I would like him
to accompany me."
"He's too old for the oars, but we'll find work
for him. No one loafs on any ship I run. Everyone works.
Everyone."
"Understood, sir. He has some skill as a
healer."
Cabera had taken on a slightly glassy-eyed
expression, but agreed after a pause.
"That will serve. Will you be signing on for two
years or five?" Gaditicus asked.
"Two, to begin with, sir." Julius kept his voice
firm. Marius had warned him not to devote his life to soldiering
under long contracts, but to keep his options open to gain a wider
experience.
"Then welcome to the Third Partica, Julius
Caesar," Gaditicus said gruffly. "Now get on board and see the
quartermaster for your bunk and supplies. I'll see you in two hours
for the oath taking."
Julius turned to Tubruk, who reached across and
gripped his hand and wrist.
"Gods favor the brave, Julius," the old warrior
said, smiling. He turned to Cabera. "And you, keep him away from
strong drink, weak women, and men who own their own dice.
Understand?"
Cabera made a vulgar sound with his mouth,
"I own my own dice," he replied.
Gaditicus pretended not to notice the exchange
as he once again crossed the planks onto his ship.
The old man felt the future settle as the
decision was made, and a spot of tension in his skull disappeared
almost before he had realized it was there. He could sense the
sudden lift in Julius's spirits and felt his own mood perk up. The
young never worried about the future or the past, not for long. As
they boarded the galley, the dark and bloody events in Rome seemed
to belong to a different world.
Julius stepped onto the moving deck and pulled a
deep breath into his lungs.
A young soldier, perhaps in his early twenties,
stood nearby with a sly look on his face. He was tall and solid
with a pocked and pitted face bearing old acne scars.
"I thought it must be you, mudfish," he said. "I
recognized Tubruk on the dock."
For a moment, Julius didn't recognize the man.
Then it clicked. "Suetonius?" he exclaimed.
The man stiffened slightly. "Tesserarius
Prandus, to you. I am watch commander for this century. An
officer."
"You're signing on as one of those, aren't you,
Julius?" Cabera said clearly.
Julius looked at Suetonius. On this day, he
hadn't the patience to mind the man's feelings.
"For now," he replied to Cabera, then turned to
his old neighbor. "How long have you been in that rank?"
"A few years," Suetonius replied,
stiffening.
Julius nodded. "I'll have to see if I can do
better than that. Will you show me to my quarters?"
Anger at the offhand manner colored Suetonius's
features. Without another word, he turned away from them, striding
over the decks.
"An old friend?" Cabera muttered as they
followed.
"No, not really." Julius didn't say any more and
Cabera didn't press for details. There would be time enough at sea
to hear them all.
Inwardly Julius sighed. Two years of his life
would be spent with these men, and it would be hard enough without
having Suetonius there to remember him as a smooth-faced urchin.
The unit would range right across the Mediterranean, holding Roman
territories, guaranteeing safe sea trade, perhaps even taking part
in land or sea battles. He shrugged at his thoughts. His experience
in the city had shown that there was no point worrying about the
future—it would always be a surprise. He would become older
and stronger and would rise in rank. Eventually he would be strong
enough to return to Rome and look Sulla in the eye. Then they would
see.
With Marcus standing at his side, there would be
a reckoning, and a payment taken for Marius's death.
CHAPTER
35
Marcus waited patiently in the outer
chamber of the camp prefects rooms. To pass the time before he was
admitted to the meeting to determine his future, he read the letter
from Gaius again. It had been traveling for many months and had
been carried from hand to hand by legionaries passing closer and
closer to Illyria. Finally, it had been included in a bundle of
orders for the Fourth Macedonia and passed on to the young
officer.
Marius's death had come as a terrible blow.
Marcus had wanted to be able to show the general that his faith in
him had been well founded. He had wanted to thank him as a man, but
that was impossible now. Although he had never met Sulla, he
wondered if the consul would be a danger for himself and
Gaius—Julius now.
He smiled at the news of the marriage and winced
at the brief lines about Alexandria, guessing much more than Julius
had revealed. Cornelia sounded like an angel to hear Julius write
of her. It was really the only piece of good news in the whole
thing.
His thoughts were interrupted by the heavy door
to the inner rooms opening. A legionary came out and saluted.
Marcus rose and returned the gesture smartly.
"The prefect will see you now," the man
said.
Marcus nodded and marched into the room,
standing to attention the regulation three feet from the prefects
oak table, bare except for a wine jug, inkpot, and some neatly
arranged parchment.
Renius was there, standing in the corner with a
cup of wine. Leonides too, the centurion of the Bronze Fist. Carac,
the camp prefect, rose as the young man entered, and gestured to
him to sit. Marcus lowered himself onto a heavy chair and sat
rigidly.
"At your ease, legionary. This is not a
court-martial," Carac muttered, his gaze wandering over the papers
on his desk.
Marcus tried to relax his bearing a little.
"Your two years are up in a week, as you are no
doubt aware," Carac said.
"Yes, sir," Marcus replied.
"Your record has been excellent to date. Command
of a contubernium, successful actions against local tribesmen.
Winner of the Bronze Fist sword tourney last month. I hear the men
respect you, despite your youth, and regard you as dependable in a
crisis—some would say especially in a crisis. One officer's
opinion was that you do well enough from day to day, but stand out
in battle or difficulty. A valuable trait in a young officer suited
to active legion life. It is perhaps to your benefit that the
empire is expanding. There will be active work for you anywhere
should you so desire it."
Marcus nodded cautiously and Carac motioned to
Leonides.
"Your centurion speaks well of you and the way
you have curbed the thefts of that boy... Peppis. There was some
talk at first of whether you could merge your individuality into a
legion, but you have been honest and obviously loyal to the Fourth
Macedonia. In short, lad, I would like you to sign on again, with
promotion to command a Fifty. More pay and status, with time to
train for sword tourneys if necessary. What do you say?"
"May I speak freely, sir?" Marcus asked, his
heart thudding in his chest.
Carac frowned. "Of course," he replied.
"It is a generous offer. The two years with
Macedonia have been happy ones for me. I have friends here.
However... Sir, I grew up on the estate of a Roman who was not my
father. His son and I were like brothers, and I swore I would
support him, be his sword when we were men." He could feel Renius's
gaze on him as he continued. "He is with the Third Partica at
present, a naval legion, with a little more than a year left to
serve. When he returns to Rome, I would like to join him there,
sir."
"Renius has explained some of the history
between this... Gaius Julius and yourself. I understand loyalty of
this nature very well. It is what makes us more than beasts in the
field, perhaps." Carac smiled in a cheerful way and Marcus looked
at the other two quickly, surprised not to see the censure he had
feared.
Leonides spoke up, his voice calm and low. "Did
you think we would not understand? Son, you are very young. You
will serve in many legions before they parcel you off with a farm.
Most important of all, though, is that you serve Rome, constantly
and without complaint. We three have devoted our lives to that
aim—to see her safe and strong, envied by the world."
Marcus looked round at the three of them and
caught Renius smiling as he covered his mouth with the wine cup.
Together they were the personification of what he had hoped to be
as a young boy, linked by beliefs and loyalty and blood into
something unbreakable.
Carac reached over for a document on thick
parchment.
"Renius was convinced this would be the only way
to keep you in the legion long enough to take part in the Graeca
sword competition this winter. It indentures you for a year and a
day." He passed it over and Marcus felt his throat tighten with
emotion.
He had expected to have to hand back his
officer's equipment and collect his pay before beginning a lonely
journey back to Italy. To have this offered to him when the future
had seemed so bleak was like a gift from the gods. He wondered how
much Renius had had to do with it and decided suddenly that he
didn't care. He wanted to stay on with the Macedonia and in truth
had felt torn between the loyalty to his childhood friend and the
satisfaction he had found with his own family, the legion.
Now he had a year longer to grow and prosper.
His eyes widened slightly as he read the complex Latin of the
document. Carac noticed it.
"You see we have included the promotion. You
will command a Fifty under Leonides, directly responsible to his
optio, Daritus. I suggest you begin the post with an open
mind. Fifty men is not eight—the problems will be new to you
and the training for war involves complex skills. It will be a hard
and challenging year, but I think you might enjoy it."
"I will, sir. Thank you. It is an honor."
"An honor earned, young man. I heard about what
happened in the blueskin camp. The information you brought back has
helped us to reformulate our policy toward them. Who knows, we may
even trade with them after a few years." Carac was clearly enjoying
being the bringer of good news to the young man, and Renius looked
on approvingly.
This will be my year, Marcus vowed to
himself as he read the document to the end, noting how many ounces
of oil and salt he was allowed to draw from the stores, what his
allowance for repairs and damages was, and so on. The new post had
a hundred things he had to learn and quickly. The pay was a vast
improvement as well. He knew Julius's family would support him if
asked, but the thought that he might be dependent on charity when
he returned to Rome had rankled. Now he would be able to save a
little and have a few gold coins for the return.
A thought struck him.
"Will you be staying on with the Macedonia?" he
asked Renius.
The warrior shrugged and sipped his wine.
"Probably, I like the company here. Mind you, I am way past
retirement age as it is. Carac has to fiddle the pay figures every
time he sends them in. I'd like to see what Sulla has done to the
place. Oh, I heard he had Rome in the bulletins. I wouldn't mind
checking he's looking after the old girl properly, and unlike you,
I'm not under contract, as sword master."
Carac sighed. "I would like to see Rome again.
It's been fourteen years since I was last posted there, but I knew
that's how it would be when I joined." He poured cups of wine for
all of them, refilling Renius's as it was held out.
"A toast to Rome, gentlemen, and to the next
year."
They stood and knocked the cups together with
easy smiles, each one of them a long way from home.
Marcus put his cup down, took up the quill from
the inkpot, and signed his full name on the formal document.
Marcus Brutus, he wrote.
Carac reached over the desk and took his right
arm in a solid grip.
"A good decision, Brutus."
Historical
Note
There is very little historical
information on the earliest years of Julius Caesar's life. As far
as possible, I have given him the sort of childhood that a young
boy from a minor Roman family could have had. Some of his skills
can be inferred from later accomplishments, of course. For example,
swimming saved his life in Egypt, when he was fifty-two years old.
The biographer Suetonius said that he had great skill with swords
and horses as well as surprising powers of endurance, preferring to
march rather than ride and going bareheaded in all weathers. I am
sorry to say that Renius is fictional, though it was customary to
employ experts in various fields. We know of one tutor from
Alexandria who taught Caesar rhetoric, and we can read Cicero's
reluctant praise of Caesar's ability to speak skillfully and
movingly when needed. His father died when Julius was only fifteen,
and it is true that Julius married Cinna's daughter Cornelia
shortly afterward, apparently for love.
Although Marius was an uncle on his father's
side rather than Aurelia's as I have it, the general was very much
the sort of character presented here. In flagrant opposition to law
and custom, he was consul seven times in all. Where previously it
was possible to join a legion only if a man owned land and had an
income from it, Marius abolished that qualification and enjoyed
fanatical loyalty from his soldiers. It was Marius who made the
eagle the symbol of all Roman legions.
The civil war between Sulla and Marius forms a
major part of this book, but I found it necessary to simplify the
action for dramatic purposes. Cornelius Sulla did worship
Aphrodite, and parts of his lifestyle scandalized even the tolerant
Roman society. However, he was an extremely able general who had
once served under Marius in an African campaign for which they both
claimed credit. The two men disliked each other intensely.
When Mithridates rebelled against Roman
occupation in the east, both Marius and Sulla wanted to move
against him, seeing the campaign as an easy one and a chance to
gain great riches. In part from personal motives, Sulla led his men
against Rome and Marius in 88 B.C., claiming that he would "free it
from tyrants." Marius was forced to flee to Africa, returning later
with the army he had gathered there. The Senate was simply unable
to cope with such powerful leaders and allowed him back, declaring
Sulla an enemy of the state while he was away fighting Mithridates.
Marius was elected consul for the last time, but died during his
term, leaving the dithering Senate in a difficult situation. They
sought peace at first, but Sulla was in a strong position, after a
crushing victory in Greece. He did let Mithridates live, but
confiscated vast wealth, looting ancient treasures. I compressed
these years, having Marius dying in the first attack, which may be
an unfairly quick ending for such a charismatic man.
When Sulla returned from the Greek campaign, he
led his armies to quick victory against those loyal to the Senate,
finally marching on the city again in 82 B.C. He demanded the role
of Dictator and it was in this role that he met Julius Caesar for
the first time, when he was brought before Sulla as one of those
who had supported Marius. Despite the fact that Julius flatly
refused to divorce Cornelia, Sulla did not have him killed. The
Dictator is reported to have said that he saw "many Mariuses in
this Caesar," which if true is something of an insight into the
man's character, as I hope I have explored in this book.
Sulla's time as Dictator was a brutal period for
the city. The unique position he held and abused had been designed
as an emergency measure for times of war, similar in concept to
martial law in modern democracies. Before Sulla, the strictest time
limits had accompanied the title, but he managed to avoid these
restrictions and scored a fatal wound on the Republic by doing so.
One of the laws he passed forbade armed forces approaching the
city, even for the traditional Triumph parades. He died at age
sixty and for a while it looked as if the Republic might flower
again into its old strength and authority. In Greece at this time,
there was a twenty-two-year-old man called Caesar who would make
this impossible. After all, Marius and Sulla had shown the
fragility of the Republic when faced with determined ambition. We
can only speculate how the young Caesar was affected when he heard
Marius say, "Make room for your general," and watched the jostling
crowd cut down in full view of the Senate house. The histories of
these characters, especially those written shortly after the
period, by Plutarch and Suetonius, make astonishing reading. In
researching the life of Caesar, the question that kept coming up
was "How did he do that?" How did a young man recover from the
disaster of being on the losing side in a civil war to the point
where his very surname came to mean king? Both tsar and
kaiser are derived from that name and were still being used
two thousand years later.
The histories can be a little bare at times,
though I would recommend Caesar by Christian Meier to any
reader interested in the details I had to omit here. There are so
many fascinating incidents in this life that it has been a great
pleasure putting flesh to them. The events of the second book are
even more astonishing.
C. IGGULDEN
About the
Author
CONN IGGULDEN taught English for seven years
before becoming a full-time writer. He is married with a son and
lives in Hertfordshire, England. Emperor: The Gates of Rome
is his first novel.
Conn Iggulden - Emperor (The Gates of Rome)
Praise for
EMPEROR
THE GATES OF ROME
"What Robert Graves did for Claudius, Conn
Iggulden now does for the most famous Roman Emperor of them all.
This novel is a vibrant blending of historical fact and fiction. If
only all history lessons could be this thrilling."
—William Bernhardt
"The Gates of Rome is a big, sumptuous
feast of a novel that's so vividly written I could hear the clang
of swords and smell the scent of spice in the air. It had me
enthralled from start to finish."
—Tess Gerritsen
"An absorbing portrait of ancient Roman life and
history, well written and full of suspense."
—Kirkus Reviews
EMPEROR: GATES OF ROME
A Dell Book
PUBLISHING HISTORY
Delacorte Press hardcover edition
published January 2003
Dell international mass market
edition / September 2003
Published by
Bantam Dell
A Division of Random House,
Inc.
New York, New York
This is a work of fiction. Names,
characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the
author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to
actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely
coincidental.
All rights reserved
Copyright © 2003 by Conn
Iggulden
Cover design and hand lettering by
Craig DeCamps
Library of Congress Catalog Card
Number: 2002071517
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If you purchased this book without
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OPM 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
1
To my son Cameron and to my brother Hal,
the other member of the Black Cat Club
Acknowledgments
Without the help and support of a
number of people, this book would have never been started or
finished. I would like to thank Victoria, who has been a constant
source of help and encouragement. Also, the editors at
HarperCollins, who steered it through the process without too much
pain. Any mistakes that remain are, unfortunately, my own.
Also, Richard, who helped to cook the raven and
made Marcus possible. Finally, my wife, Ella, who had more faith
than I did and made the way seem easy.
EMPEROR
The Gates of
Rome
CHAPTER
1
The track in the woods was a wide
causeway to the two boys strolling down it. Both were so dirty with
thick, black mud as to be almost unrecognizable as human. The
taller of the two had blue eyes that seemed unnaturally bright
against the cracking, itching mud that plastered him.
"We're going to be killed for this, Marcus," he
said, grinning. In his hand, a sling spun lazily, held taut with
the weight of a smooth river pebble.
"Your fault, Gaius, for pushing me in. I told
you the riverbed wasn't dry all the way."
As he spoke, the shorter boy laughed and shoved
his friend into the bushes that lined the path. He whooped and ran
as Gaius scrambled out and set off in pursuit, sling whirring in a
disc.
"Battle!" he shouted in his high, unbroken
voice.
The beating they would get at home for ruining
their tunics was far away, and both boys knew every trick to get
out of trouble—all that mattered was charging through the
woodland paths at high speed, scaring birds. Both boys were
barefoot, already with calluses developing, despite not having seen
more than eight summers.
"This time, I'll catch him," Gaius panted to
himself as he ran. It was a mystery to him how Marcus, who had the
same number of legs and arms, could yet somehow make them move
faster than he could. In fact, as he was shorter, his stride should
have been a little less, surely?
The leaves whipped by him, stinging his bare
arms. He could hear Marcus taunting him up ahead, close. Gaius
showed his teeth as his lungs began to hurt.
Without warning, he broke into a clearing at
full tilt and skidded to a sudden, shocked stop. Marcus was lying
on the ground, trying to sit up and holding his head in his right
hand. Three men—no, older boys—were standing there,
carrying walking staffs.
Gaius groaned as he took in his surroundings.
The chase had carried the two boys off his fathers small estate and
into their neighbors' part of the woods. He should have recognized
the track that marked the boundary, but he'd been too caught up in
catching Marcus for once.
"What do we have here? A couple of little
mudfish, crawled up out of the river!"
It was Suetonius who spoke, the eldest son of
the neighboring estate. He was fourteen and killing time before he
went into the army. He had the sort of trained muscles the two
younger boys hadn't begun to develop. He had a mop of blond hair
over a face speckled with white-headed eruptions that covered his
cheeks and forehead, with a sprinkling of angry-looking red ones
disappearing under his praetexta tunic. He also had a long,
straight stick, friends to impress, and an afternoon to while
away.
Gaius was frightened, knowing he was out of his
depth. He and Marcus were trespassing—the best they could
expect was a few blows, the worst was a beating with broken bones.
He glanced at Marcus and saw him try to stagger to his feet. He'd
obviously been belted with something as he ran into the older
boys.
"Let us go, Tonius, we're expected back."
"Speaking mudfish! We'll make our
fortune, boys! Grab hold of them, I have a roll of twine for tying
up pigs that will do just as well for mudfish."
Gaius didn't consider running, with Marcus
unable to get away. This wasn't a game—the cruelty of the
boys could be managed if they were treated carefully, talked to
like scorpions, ready to strike without warning.
The two other boys approached with their staffs
held ready. They were both strangers to Gaius. One dragged Marcus
to his feet and the other, a hefty, stupid-looking boy, rammed his
stick into Gaius's stomach. He doubled up in agony, unable to
speak. He could hear the boy laughing as he cramped and groaned,
trying to curl into the pain.
"There's a branch that will do. Tie their legs
together and string them up to swing. We can see who's the best
shot with javelins and stones."
"Your father knows my father," Gaius spat out as
the pain in his stomach lessened.
"True—doesn't like him though. My father
is a proper patrician, not like yours. Your whole family could be
his servants if he wanted. I'd make that mad mother of yours scrub
the tiles."
At least he was talking. The thug with the
horsehair twine was intent on tying knots at Gaius's feet, ready to
hoist him into the air. What could he say to bargain? His father
had no real power in the city. His mothers family had produced a
couple of consuls—that was it. Uncle Marius was a powerful
man, so his mother said.
"We are nobilitas—my uncle Marius
is not a man to cross..."
There was a sudden high-pitched yelp as the
string over the branch went tight and Marcus was swung into the air
upside down.
"Tie the end to that stump. This fish next,"
Tonius said, laughing gleefully.
Gaius noted that the two friends followed his
orders without question. It would be pointless trying to appeal to
one of them.
"Let us down, you spot-covered pus-bag!" Marcus
shouted as his face darkened with the rush of blood.
Gaius groaned. Now they would be killed, he was
sure.
"You idiot, Marcus. Don't mention his spots; you
can see he must be sensitive about them."
Suetonius raised an eyebrow and his mouth opened
in astonishment. The heavyset boy paused in throwing the twine over
a second branch.
"Oh, you have made a mistake, little fish.
Finish stringing that one up, Decius, I'm going to make him bleed a
little."
Suddenly, the world tilted sickeningly and Gaius
could hear the twine creak and a low whistle in his ears as his
head filled with blood. He rotated slowly and came round to see
Marcus in a similar predicament. His nose was a little bloody from
being knocked down the first time.
"I think you've stopped my nosebleed, Tonius.
Thanks." Marcus's voice trembled slightly and Gaius smiled at his
bravery.
When he'd first come to live with them, the
little boy had been naturally nervous and a little small for his
age. Gaius had shown him around the estate and they'd ended up in
the hay barn, right at the top of the stacked sheaves. They had
looked down at the loose pile far bebw and Gaius had seen Marcus's
hands tremble.
"I'll go first and show you how it's done,"
Gaius had said cheerfully, launching himself feetfirst and
whooping.
Below, he'd looked up at the edge for a few
seconds, waiting to see Marcus appear. Just as he'd thought it
would never happen, a small figure shot into the air, leaping high.
Gaius had scrambled out of the way as Marcus crashed into the hay,
winded and gasping.
"I thought you were too scared to do it," Gaius
had said to the prone figure blinking in the dust.
"I was," Marcus had replied quietly, "but I
won't be afraid. I just won't."
The hard voice of Suetonius broke into Gaius's
spinning thoughts: "Gentlemen, meat must be tenderized with
mallets. Take your stations and begin the technique, like so."
He swung his stick at Gaius's head, catching him
over the ear. The world went white, then black, and when he next
opened his eyes everything was spinning as the string twisted. For
a while, he could feel the blows as Suetonius called out,
"One-two-three, one-two-three..."
He thought he could hear Marcus crying and then
he passed out to the accompaniment of jeers and laughter.
He woke and went back under a couple
of times in the daylight, but it was dusk when he was finally able
to stay conscious. His right eye was a heavy mass of blood, and his
face felt swollen and caked in stickiness. They were still upside
down and swinging gently as the evening breeze came in from the
hills.
"Wake up, Marcus—Marcus!"
His friend didn't stir. He looked terrible, like
some sort of demon. The crust of crumbling river mud had been
broken away, and there was now only a gray dust, streaked with red
and purple. His jaw was swollen, and a lump stood out on his
temple. His left hand was fat and had a bluish tinge in the failing
light. Gaius tried to move his own hands, held by the twine. Though
painfully stiff, they both worked and he set about wriggling them
free. His young frame was supple and the burst of fresh pain was
ignored in the wave of worry he felt for his friend. He had to be
all right, he had to be. First, though, Gaius had to get down.
One hand came free and he reached down to the
ground, scrabbling in the dust and dead leaves with his fingertips.
Nothing. The other hand came free and he widened his area of
search, making his body swing in a slow circle. Yes, a small stone
with a sharp edge. Now for the difficult part.
"Marcus! Can you hear me? I'm going to get us
down, don't you worry. Then I'm going to kill Suetonius and his fat
friends."
Marcus swung gently in silence, his mouth open
and slack. Gaius took a deep breath and readied himself for the
pain. Under normal circumstances, reaching up to cut through a
piece of heavy twine with only a sharp stone would have been
difficult, but with his abdomen a mass of bruises, it felt like an
impossible task.
Go.
He heaved himself up, crying out with the pain
from his stomach. He jackknifed up to the branch and gripped it
with both hands, lungs heaving with the effort. He felt weak and
his vision blurred. He thought he would vomit, and could do no more
than just hold on for a few moments. Then, inch by inch, he
released the hand with the stone and leaned back, giving himself
enough room to reach the twine and saw at it, trying not to catch
his skin where it had bitten into the flesh.
The stone was depressingly blunt and he couldn't
hold on for long. Gaius tried to let go before his hands slipped so
he could control the fall back, but it was too hard.
"Still got the stone," he muttered to himself.
"Try again, before Suetonius comes back."
Another thought struck him. His father could
have returned from Rome. He was due back any day now. It was
growing dark and he would be worried. Already, he could be out
looking for the two boys, coming nearer to this spot, calling their
names. He must not find them like this. It would be too
humiliating.
"Marcus? We'll tell everyone we fell. I don't
want my father to know about this."
Marcus creaked round in a circle, oblivious.
Five times more, Gaius spasmed up and sawed at
the twine before it parted. He hit the ground almost flat and
sobbed as his torn and tortured muscles twitched and jumped.
He tried to ease Marcus to the ground, but the
weight was too much for him and the thump made him wince.
As Marcus landed, he opened his eyes at the
fresh pain.
"My hand," he whispered, his voice cracking.
"Broken, I'd say. Don't move it. We have to get
out of here in case Suetonius comes back or my father tries to find
us. It's nearly dark. Can you stand?"
"I can, I think, though my legs feel weak. That
Tonius is a bastard," Marcus muttered. He did not try to open his
swollen jaw, but spoke through fat and broken lips.
Gaius nodded grimly. "True—we have a score
to settle there, I think."
Marcus smiled and winced at the sting of opening
cuts. "Not until we've healed a bit, though, eh? I'm not up to
taking him on at the moment."
Propping each other up, the two boys staggered
home in the darkness, walking a mile over the cornfields, past the
slave quarters for the field workers and up to the main buildings.
As expected, the oil lamps were still lit, lining the walls of the
main house.
"Tubruk will be waiting for us; he never
sleeps," Gaius muttered as they passed under the pillars of the
outer gate.
A voice from the shadows made them both
jump.
"A good thing too. I would have hated to miss
this spectacle. You are lucky your father is not here; he'd have
taken the skin off your backs for returning to the villa looking
like this. What was it this time?"
Tubruk stepped into the yellow light of the
lamps and leaned forward. He was a powerfully built ex-gladiator,
who'd bought the position of overseer to the small estate outside
Rome and never looked back. Gaius's father said he was one in a
thousand for organizing talent. The slaves worked well under him,
some from fear and some from liking. He sniffed at the two young
boys.
"Fall in the river, did we? Smells like it."
They nodded happily at this explanation.
"Mind you, you didn't pick up those stick marks
from a river bottom, did you? Suetonius, was it? I should have
kicked his backside for him years ago, when he was young enough for
it to make a difference. Well?"
"No, Tubruk, we had an argument and fought each
other. No one else was involved and even if there had been, we
would want to handle it ourselves, you see?"
Tubruk grinned at this from such a small boy. He
was forty-five years of age, with hair that had gone gray in his
thirties. He had been a legionary in Africa in the Third Cyrenaica
legion, and had fought nearly a hundred battles as a gladiator,
collecting a mass of scars on his body. He put out his great spade
of a hand and rubbed his square fingers through Gaius's hair.
"I do see, little wolf. You are your father's
son. You cannot handle everything yet, though; you are just a
little lad, and Suetonius—or whoever—is shaping into a
fine young warrior, so I hear. Mind yourselves, his father is too
powerful to be an enemy in the Senate."
Gaius drew himself up to his full height and
spoke as formally as he knew how, trying to assert his position.
"It is luck, then, that this Suetonius is in no way attached
to ourselves," he replied.
Tubruk nodded as if he had accepted the point,
trying not to grin.
Gaius continued more confidently: "Send Lucius
to me to look at our wounds. My nose is broken and almost certainly
Marcus's hand is the same."
Tubruk watched them totter into the main house
and resumed his post in the darkness, guarding the gate on first
watch, as he did each night. It would be full summer soon and the
days would be almost too hot to bear. It was good to be alive with
the sky so clear and honest work ahead.
The following morning was an agony of
protest from muscles, cuts, and joints; the two days after that
were worse. Marcus had succumbed to a fever that the physician said
entered his head through the broken bone of his hand, which swelled
to astonishing proportions as it was strapped and splinted. For
days he was hot and had to be kept in darkness, while Gaius fretted
on the steps outside. Almost exactly one week after the attack in
the woods, Marcus was lying asleep, still weak, but recovering.
Gaius could still feel pain as he stretched his muscles, and his
face was a pretty collection of yellow and purple patches, shiny
and tight in places as they healed. It was time, though: time to
find Suetonius.
As he walked through the woods of the family
estate, his mind was full of thoughts of fear and pain. What if
Suetonius didn't show up? There was no reason to suppose that he
made regular trips into the woods. What if the older boy was with
his friends again? They would kill him, no doubt about it. Gaius
had brought a bow with him this time, and practiced drawing it as
he walked. It was a man's bow and too large for him, but he found
he could plant the end in the ground and pull an arrow back enough
to frighten Suetonius, if the boy refused to back down.
"Suetonius, you are a pus-filled bag of dung. If
I catch you on my father's land, I will put an arrow through your
head."
He spoke aloud as he went along. It was a
beautiful day to walk in the woods, and he might have enjoyed it if
it weren't for his serious purpose in being there. This time, too,
he had his brown hair oiled tight against his head and clean,
simple clothes that allowed him easy movements and an unrestricted
draw.
He was still on his side of the estate border,
so Gaius was surprised when he heard footsteps up ahead and saw
Suetonius and a giggling girl appear suddenly on the wide track.
The older boy didn't notice him for a moment, so intent was he on
grappling with the girl.
"You're trespassing," Gaius snapped, pleased to
hear his voice come out steady, even if it was high. "You're on my
father's estate."
Suetonius jumped and swore in shock. As he saw
Gaius plant one end of the bow in the path and understood the
threat, he began to laugh.
"A little wolf now! A creature of many forms, it
seems. Didn't you get enough of a beating last time, little
wolf?"
The girl seemed very pretty to Gaius, but he
wished she would go away and lose herself. He had not imagined a
female present for this encounter and felt a new level of danger
from Suetonius.
Suetonius put a melodramatic arm around the
girl.
"Careful, my dear. He is a dangerous fighter. He
is especially dangerous when upside down—then he is
unstoppable!" He laughed at his own joke and the girl joined
in.
"Is he that one you mentioned, Tonius? Look at
his angry little face!"
"If I see you here again, I'll put an arrow
through you," Gaius said quickly, the words tumbling over
themselves. He pulled the shaft back a few inches. "Leave now or I
will strike you down."
Suetonius had stopped smiling as he weighed up
his chances.
"All right then, parvus lupus, I'll give
you what you seem to want."
Without warning, he rushed at him, and Gaius
released the arrow too quickly. It struck the tunic of the older
boy but fell away without piercing. Suetonius yelled in triumph and
stepped forward with his hands outstretched and his eyes cruel.
Gaius whipped the bow up in panic, hitting the older boy on the
nose. Blood spurted and Tonius roared in rage and pain, his eyes
filling with tears. As Gaius raised the bow again, Tonius seized it
with one hand and Gaius's throat with the other, carrying him back
six or seven paces with the sheer fury of his charge.
"Any other threats?" he growled as his grip
tightened. Blood poured from his nose and stained his praetexta
tunic. He wrenched the bow away from Gaius's grasp and set about
him with it, raining blows, but all the time keeping hold of his
throat.
He's going to kill me and pretend it was an
accident, Gaius thought desperately. I can see it in his
eyes. I can't breathe.
He pummeled at the larger boy with his own
fists, but his reach was not enough to do any real damage. His
vision lost color, becoming like a dream; his ears ceased to hear
sound. He lost consciousness as Tonius threw him down onto the wet
leaves.
Tubruk found Gaius on the path about
an hour later and woke him by pouring water onto his bruised and
battered head. Once again, his face was a crusted mess. His barely
scabbed eye had filled with blood, so that his vision was dark on
that side. His nose had been rebroken and everything else was a
bruise.
"Tubruk?" he murmured, dazed. "I fell out of a
tree."
The big mans laugh echoed in the closeness of
the dense woods.
"You know, lad, no one doubts your courage. It's
your ability to fight I'm not too sure about. It's time you were
properly trained before you get yourself killed. When your father
is back from the city, I'll raise it with him."
"You won't tell him about... me falling from the
tree? I hit a lot of branches on the way down." Gaius could taste
blood in his mouth, leaking back from the broken nose.
"Did you manage to hit the tree at all? Even
once?" Tubruk asked, looking at the scuffed leaves and reading the
answers for himself.
"The tree has a nose like mine, I'd say." Gaius
tried to smile, but vomited into the bushes instead.
"Hmmm. Is this the end of it, do you think? I
can't let you carry on and see you crippled or dead. When your
father is away in the city, he expects you to begin to learn your
responsibilities as his heir and a patrician, not an urchin
involved in pointless brawls." Tubruk paused to pick up a battered
bow from the undergrowth. The string had snapped and he tutted.
"I should tan your backside for stealing this
bow as well."
Gaius nodded miserably.
"No more fights, understand?" Tubruk pulled him
to his feet and wiped away some of the mud from the track.
"No more fights. Thank you for coming to get
me," Gaius replied.
The boy tottered and almost fell as he spoke,
and the old gladiator sighed. With a quick heave, he lifted the boy
up to his shoulders and carried him down to the main house,
shouting "Duck!" when they came to low branches.
Except for the splinted hand, Marcus
was back to his usual self by the following week. He was shorter
than Gaius by about two inches, brown-haired and strong-limbed. His
arms were a little out of proportion, which he claimed would make
him a great swordsman when he was older because of the extra reach.
He could juggle four apples and would have tried with knives if the
kitchen slaves hadn't told Aurelia, Gaius's mother. She had
screamed at him until he promised never to try it. The memory still
made him pause whenever he picked up a blade to eat.
When Tubruk had brought the barely conscious
Gaius back to the villa, Marcus was out of bed, having crept down
to the vast kitchen complex. He'd been in the middle of dipping his
fingers into the fat-smeared iron pans when he heard the voices and
trotted past the rows of heavy brick ovens to Lucius's
sickroom.
As always when they hurt themselves, Lucius, a
physician slave, tended to the wounds. He looked after the estate
slaves as well as the family, binding swellings, applying maggot
poultices to infections, pulling teeth with his pliers, and sewing
up cuts. He was a quiet, patient man who always breathed through
his nose as he concentrated. The soft whistle of air from the
elderly physician's lungs had come to mean peace and safety to the
boys. Gaius knew that Lucius would be freed when his father died,
as a reward for his silent care of Aurelia.
Marcus sat and munched on bread and black fat as
Lucius set the broken nose yet again.
"Suetonius beat you again then?" he asked.
Gaius nodded, unable to speak or to see through
watering eyes.
"You should have waited for me, we could have
taken him together."
Gaius couldn't even nod. Lucius finished probing
the nasal cartilage and made a sharp pull, to set the loose piece
in line. Fresh blood poured over the day's clotted mixture.
"By the bloody temples, Lucius, careful! You
almost had my nose right off then!"
Lucius smiled and began to cut fresh linen into
strips to bind around the head.
In the respite, Gaius turned to his friend. "You
have a broken, splinted hand and bruised or cracked ribs. You
cannot fight."
Marcus looked at him thoughtfully. "Perhaps.
Will you try again? He'll kill you if you do, you know."
Gaius gazed at him calmly over the bandages as
Lucius packed up his materials and rose to leave.
"Thanks, Lucius. He won't kill me because I'll
beat him. I simply need to adjust my strategy, that's all."
"He's going to kill you," repeated Marcus,
biting into a dried apple, stolen from the winter stores.
A week later to the day, Marcus rose
at dawn and began his exercises, which he believed would stimulate
the reflexes needed to be a great swordsman. His room was a simple
cell of white stone, containing only his bed and a trunk with his
personal possessions. Gaius had the adjoining room and, on his way
to the toilet, Marcus kicked the door to wake him up. He entered
the small room and chose one of the four stone-rimmed holes that
led to a sewer of constantly running water, a miracle of
engineering that meant there was little or no smell, with the night
soil washing out into the river that ran through the valley. He
removed the capstone and pulled up his night shift.
Gaius had not stirred when he returned, and he
opened the door to chide him for his laziness. The room was empty
and Marcus felt a surge of disappointment.
"You should have taken me with you, my friend.
You didn't have to make it so obvious that you didn't need me."
He dressed quickly and set out after Gaius as
the sun cleared the valley rim, lighting the estates even as the
field slaves bent to work in the first session.
What mist there was burned off rapidly, even in
the cooler woods. Marcus found Gaius on the border of the two
estates. He was unarmed.
As Marcus came up behind him, Gaius turned, a
look of horror on his face. When he saw it was his friend, he
relaxed and smiled.
"Glad you came, Marcus. I didn't know what time
he'd arrive, so I've been here awhile. I thought you were him for a
moment."
"I'd have waited with you, you know. I'm your
friend, remember. Also, I owe him a beating as well."
"Your hand is broken, Marcus. Anyway, I owe him
two beatings to your one."
"True, but I could have jumped on him from a
tree, or tripped him as he ran in."
"Tricks don't win battles. I will beat him with
my strength."
For a moment, Marcus was silenced. There was
something cold and unforgiving in the usually sunny boy he
faced.
The sun rose slowly, shadows changed. Marcus sat
down, at first in a crouch and then with his legs sprawled out in
front of him. He would not speak first. Gaius had made it a contest
of seriousness. He could not stand for hours, as Gaius seemed
willing to do. The shadows moved. Marcus marked their positions
with sticks and estimated that they had waited three hours when
Suetonius appeared silently, walking along the path. He smiled a
slow smile when he saw them and paused.
"I am beginning to like you, little wolf. I
think I will kill you today, or perhaps break your leg. What do you
think would be fair?"
Gaius smiled and stood as tall and as straight
as he could. "I would kill me. If you don't, I will keep fighting
you until I am big and strong enough to kill you. And then I will
have your woman, after I have given her to my friend."
Marcus looked in horror as he heard what Gaius
was saying. Maybe they should just run. Suetonius squinted at the
boys and pulled a short, vicious little blade from his belt.
"Little wolf, mudfish—you are too stupid
to get angry at, but you yap like puppies. I will make you quiet
again."
He ran at them. Just before he reached the pair,
the ground gave way with a crack and he disappeared from sight in a
rush of air and an explosion of dust and leaves.
"Built you a wolf trap, Suetonius," Gaius
shouted cheerfully.
The fourteen-year-old jumped for the sides, and
Gaius and Marcus spent a hilarious few minutes stamping on his
fingers as he tried to gain a purchase in the dry earth. He
screamed abuse at them and they slapped each other on the back and
jeered at him.
"I thought of dropping a big rock in on you,
like they do with wolves in the north," Gaius said quietly when
Suetonius had been reduced to sullen anger. "But you didn't kill
me, so I won't kill you. I might not even tell anyone how we
dropped Suetonius into a wolf trap. Good luck in getting out."
Suddenly, he let rip with a war whoop, quickly
followed by Marcus, their cries and ecstatic yells disappearing
into the woods as they pelted away, on top of the world.
As they pounded along the paths, Marcus called
over his shoulder, "I thought you said you'd beat him with your
strength!"
"I did. I was up all night digging that
hole."
The sun shone through the trees and they felt as
if they could run all day.
Left alone, Suetonius scrabbled up the sides,
caught an edge, and heaved himself over and out. For a while, he
sat there and contemplated his muddy praetexta and breeches. He
frowned for most of the way home, but as he cleared the trees and
came out into the sunshine, he began to laugh.
CHAPTER
2
Gaius and Marcus walked behind Tubruk
as he paced out a new field for ploughing. Every five paces, he
would stretch out a hand and Gaius would pass him a peg from a
heavy basket. Tubruk himself carried twine wrapped in a great ball
around a wooden spindle. Ever patient, he would tie the twine
around a peg and then hand it to Marcus to hold while he hammered
it into the hard ground. Occasionally, Tubruk would sight back
along the lengthening line at the landmarks he had noted and grunt
in satisfaction before carrying on.
It was dull work and both boys wanted to escape
down to the Campus Martius, the huge field just outside the city
where they could ride and join in the sports.
"Hold it steady," Tubruk snapped at Marcus as
the boy's attention wandered.
"How much longer, Tubruk?" Gaius asked.
"As long as it takes to finish the job properly.
The fields must be marked out for the ploughman, then the posts
hammered in to set the boundary. Your father wants to increase the
estate revenues, and these fields have good soil for figs, which we
can sell in the city markets."
Gaius looked around him at the green and golden
hills that made up his father's land.
"Is this a rich estate then?"
Tubruk chuckled. "It serves to feed and clothe
you, but we don't have enough land to plant much barley or wheat
for bread. Our crops have to be small and that means we have to
concentrate on the things the city wants to buy. The flower gardens
produce seeds that are crushed to make face oils for highborn city
ladies, and your father has purchased a dozen hives to house new
swarms of bees. You boys will have honey at every meal in a few
months, and that brings in a good price as well."
"Can we help with the hives when the bees come?"
Marcus spoke up, showing a sudden interest.
"Perhaps, though they take careful handling. Old
Tadius used to keep bees before he became a slave. I hope to use
him to collect the honey. Bees don't like to have their winter
stores stolen away from them, and it needs a practiced hand. Hold
that peg steady now—that's a stade, 625 feet. We'll turn a
corner here."
"Will you need us for much longer, Tubruk? We
were hoping to take ponies into the city and see if we can listen
to the Senate debate."
Tubruk snorted. "You were going to ride into the
Campus, you mean, and race your ponies against the other boys. Hmm?
There's only this last side to mark out today. I can have the men
set the posts tomorrow. Another hour or two should see us
finished."
The two boys looked at each other glumly. Tubruk
put down his spindle and mallet and stretched his back with a sigh.
He tapped Gaius on the shoulder gently.
"This is your land we're working on, remember.
It belonged to your father's father, and when you have children, it
will belong to them. Look at this."
Tubruk crouched down on one knee and broke the
hard ground with the peg and mallet, tapping until the churned,
black soil was visible. He pressed his hand into the earth and
gripped a handful of the dark substance, holding it up for their
inspection.
Gaius and Marcus looked bemused as he crumbled
the dirt between his fingers.
"There have been Romans standing where we are
standing for hundreds of years. This dirt is more than just earth.
It is us, the dust of the men and women who have gone before
us. You came from this and you will go back to it. Others will walk
over you and never know you were once there and as alive as they
themselves."
"The family tomb is on the road to the city,"
Gaius muttered, nervous in the face of Tubruks sudden
intensity.
The old gladiator shrugged. "In recent years,
but our people have been here for longer than there was ever a city
there. We have bled and died in these fields in long-forgotten
wars. We will again perhaps, in wars in years to come. Put your
hand into the ground."
Reaching out to the reluctant boy, he took
Gaius's hand and pushed it into the broken soil, closing the
fingers over as he withdrew it.
"You hold history, boy. Land that has seen
things we cannot. You hold your family and Rome in your hand. It
will grow crops for us and feed us and make money for us so that we
can enjoy luxuries. Without it, we are nothing. Land is everything,
and wherever you travel in the world, only this soil will be truly
yours. Only this simple black muck you hold will be home to
you."
Marcus watched the exchange, his expression
serious. "Will it be home to me as well?"
For a moment, Tubruk did not answer, instead
holding Gaius's gaze as the boy gripped the soil tightly in his
hand. Then he turned to Marcus and smiled.
"Of course, lad. Are you not Roman? Is not the
city as much yours as anyone's?" The smile faded and he returned
his gaze to Gaius. "But this estate is Gaius's own and one day he
will be master of it and look down on shaded fig groves and buzzing
hives and remember when he was just a little lad and all he wanted
was to show new tricks on his pony to the other boys of the Campus
Martius."
He did not see the sadness that came onto
Marcus's face for a moment.
Gaius opened his hand and placed the earth back
in the broken spot Tubruk had made, pressing it down
thoughtfully.
"Let us finish the marking then," he said, and
Tubruk nodded as he rose to his feet.
The sun was going down as the two boys
crossed one of the Tiber bridges that led to the Campus Martius.
Tubruk had insisted they wash and change into clean tunics before
setting out, but even at that late hour the vast space was still
full of the young of Rome, gathered in groups, throwing discuses
and javelins, kicking balls to each other and riding ponies and
horses with shouted encouragement. It was a noisy place and the
boys loved to watch the wrestling tournaments and chariot
practices.
Young as they were, they were both confident in
the high saddles that gripped them at the groin and buttocks,
holding them secure through maneuvers. Their legs hung long over
the ribs of the steeds, gripping tight in the turns for added
stability.
Gaius looked around for Suetonius and was
pleased not to see him in the crowds. They hadn't met again after
trapping him in the wolf pit, and that was how Gaius wanted to
leave it—with the battle won and over. Further skirmishes
could only mean trouble.
He and Marcus rode up to a group of children
near their own age and hailed them, dismounting with a leg flung
over the pony's side. No one they knew was there, but the group
parted as they approached, and the mood was friendly, their
attention on a man with a discus gripped in his right hand.
"That's Tani. He's the champion of his legion,"
one boy muttered aloud to Gaius.
As they watched, Tani launched himself, spinning
on the spot and releasing the disc at the setting sun. There were
whistles of appreciation as it flew, and one or two of the boys
clapped.
Tani turned to them. "Take care. It'll be coming
back this way in a moment."
Gaius could see another man run to the fallen
disc and pick it up before spinning it into flight once more. This
time, the discus was released at a wide angle and the crowd
scattered as it soared toward them. One boy was slower than the
rest, and when the discus hit and skipped, it caught him in the
side with a thump, even as he tried to dodge. He fell winded, and
groaned as Tani ran up to his side.
"Good stop, lad. Are you all right?"
The boy nodded, clambering to his feet but still
holding his side in pain. Tani patted him on the shoulder, stooping
smoothly to pick up the fallen discus. He returned to his spot to
throw again.
"Anyone racing horses today?" Marcus asked.
A few turned and weighed him up, casting gazes
at the sturdy little pony Tubruk had chosen for him.
"Not so far. We came to watch the wrestling, but
it finished an hour ago." The speaker indicated a trampled space
nearby where a square had been marked out on the grassy ground. A
few men and women stood in clusters nearby, talking and eating.
"I can wrestle," Gaius broke in quickly, his
face lighting up. "We could have our own competition."
The group murmured interest. "Pairs?"
"All at once—last one standing is the
winner?" Gaius replied. "We need a prize, though. How about we all
put in what money we have and last one standing takes the
collection?"
The boys in the crowd discussed this and many
began to search in their tunics for coins, giving them to the
largest, who walked with confidence as the pile of coins grew in
his hands.
"I'm Petronius. There's about twenty
quadrantes here. How much have you got?"
"Any coins, Marcus? I have a couple of bronze
bits." Gaius added them to the boy's handful and Marcus added three
more.
Petronius smiled as he counted again. "A fair
collection. Now, as I'm taking part, I'll need someone to hold it
for me until I win." He grinned at the two newcomers.
"I'll hold it for you, Petronius," a girl said,
accepting the coins into her smaller hands.
"My sister, Lavia," he explained.
She winked at Gaius and Marcus, a smaller but
still stocky version of her brother.
Chatting cheerfully, the group made their way
over to the marked square, and only a few remained on the outside
to watch. Gaius counted seven other boys in addition to Petronius,
who began limbering up confidently.
"What rules?" Gaius said as he stretched his own
legs and back.
Petronius gathered the group together with a
gesture. "No punching. If you land on your back, you are out. All
right?"
The boys agreed grimly, the mood becoming
hostile as they eyed each other.
Lavia spoke from the side: "I'll call start. All
ready?"
The contestants nodded. Gaius noted that a few
other people were wandering over, always ready to view or bet on a
contest in whatever form. The air smelled cleanly of grass and he
felt full of life. He scuffed his feet and remembered what Tubruk
had said about the soil. Roman earth, fed with the blood and bones
of his ancestors. It felt strong under his feet and he set himself.
The moment seemed to hold, and nearby he could see Tani the discus
champion spin and release again, his discus flying high and
straight over the Campus Martius. The sun was reddening as it sank,
giving a warm cast to the tense boys in the square.
"Begin!" Lavia shouted.
Gaius dropped to one knee, spoiling a lunge that
went over his head. He shoved up then, with all the strength of his
thighs, taking another boy off his feet and leaving him flat on the
dusty grass. As Gaius rose, he was hammered from the side, but spun
as he fell so that his unknown attacker hit the ground first, with
Gaius's weight knocking the wind from him.
Marcus was locked in a grip with Petronius,
their hands tight on each other's armpits and shoulders. Another
struggling combatant was shoved blindly into Petronius and the pair
fell roughly, but Gaius's moment of inattention was punished by an
arm circling his neck from behind and tightening on his windpipe.
He kicked out backward and raked his sandals down someone's shin,
hacking back with an elbow at the same time. He felt the grip
loosen but then they were both sent sprawling by a knot of fighting
boys. Gaius hit the ground hard and scrambled to get to the side of
the square, even as a foot clouted into his cheek, splitting the
skin.
Anger swelled for a moment, but he saw his
attacker hadn't even registered him, and he retired to the edge of
the square, cheering on Marcus, who had regained his feet.
Petronius was down and out, knocked cold, and only Marcus and two
others were still in the competition. The crowd that had gathered
to watch were yelling encouragement and making side bets. Marcus
grabbed one of the pair by the crotch and neck and tried to lift
him into the air for throwing. The boy struggled wildly as his feet
came off the ground, and Marcus staggered with him just as the last
gripped him around his own chest and knocked him over backward in a
heaving pile of limbs.
The stranger came to his feet with a whoop and
took a circuit of the square with his hands held high. Gaius could
hear Marcus laughing and breathed deeply in the summer air as his
friend stood up, brushing off the dust. In the middle distance,
beyond the vast Campus, Gaius could see the city, built on seven
ancient hills centuries before. All around him were the shouts and
cries of his people, and underneath his feet, his land.
In hot darkness, lit only by a
crescent moon that signaled the month coming to a close, the two
boys made their way in silence over the fields and paths of the
estate. The air was filled with the smell of fruit and flowers, and
crickets creaked in the bushes. They walked without speaking until
they reached the place where they had stood with Tubruk earlier in
the day, at the corner of the peg-marked line of a new field.
With the moon giving so little light, Gaius had
to feel along the twine until he came to the broken spot at the
corner, and then he stood and drew a slim knife from his belt,
taken from the kitchens. Concentrating, he drew the sharp blade
across the ball of his thumb. It sank in deeper than he had
intended and blood poured out over his hand. He passed the blade to
Marcus and held the thumb high, slightly worried by the injury and
hoping to slow the bleeding.
Marcus drew the knife along his own thumb, once,
then twice, creating a scratch from which he squeezed a few
swelling beads of blood.
"I've practically cut my thumb off here!" Gaius
said irritably.
Marcus tried to look serious, but failed. He
held out his hand and they pressed them together so that the blood
mingled in the darkness. Then Gaius pushed his bleeding thumb into
the broken ground, wincing. Marcus watched him for a long moment
before copying the action.
"Now you are a part of this estate as well and
we are brothers," Gaius said.
Marcus nodded and in silence they began the walk
back to the sprawling white buildings of the estate. Invisibly in
the darkness, Marcus's eyes brimmed and he wiped his hand over them
quickly, leaving a smear of blood on his skin.
Gaius stood on the top of the estate
gates, shading his eyes against the bright sun as he looked toward
Rome. Tubruk had said his father would be returning from the city,
and he wanted to be the first to see him on the road. He spat on
his hand and ran it through his dark hair to smooth it down.
He enjoyed being away from the chores and cares
of his life. The slaves below rarely looked up as they passed from
one part of the estate buildings to another, and it was a peculiar
feeling to watch and yet be unobserved: a moment of privacy and
quiet. Somewhere, his mother would be looking for him to carry a
basket for her to collect fruit, or Tubruk would be looking for
someone to wax and oil the leather harnesses of the horses and oxen
or perform one of a thousand other little tasks. Somehow, the
thought of all those things he was not doing raised his spirits.
They couldn't find him and he was in his own little place, watching
the road to Rome.
He saw the dust trail and stood up on the
gatepost. He wasn't sure. The rider was still far away, but there
weren't too many estates that could be reached from their road, and
the chances were good.
After another few minutes he was able to see the
man on the horse clearly and let out a whoop, scrambling to the
ground in a rush of arms and legs. The gate itself was heavy, but
Gaius threw his weight against it and it creaked open enough for
him to squeeze through and run off down the road to meet his
father.
His child's sandals slapped against the hard
ground and he pumped his arms enthusiastically as he raced toward
the approaching figure. His father had been gone for a full month,
and Gaius wanted to show him how much he had grown in the time.
Everyone said so.
"Tata!" he called, and his father heard
and reined in as the boy ran up to him. He looked tired and dusty,
but Gaius saw the beginnings of a smile crease against the blue
eyes.
"Is this a beggar or a small bandit I see on the
road?" his father said, reaching out an arm to lift his son to the
saddle.
Gaius laughed as he was swung into the air and
gripped his father's back as the horse began a slower walk up to
the estate walls.
"You are taller than when I saw you last," his
father said, his voice light.
"A little. Tubruk says I am growing like
corn."
His father nodded in response and there was a
friendly silence between them that lasted until they reached the
gates. Gaius slid off the horse's back and heaved the gate wide
enough for his father to enter the estate.
"Will you be home for long this time?"
His father dismounted and ruffled his hair,
ruining the spit-smoothness he'd worked at.
"A few days, perhaps a week. I wish it were
more, but there is always work to be done for the Republic." He
handed the reins to his son. "Take old Mercury here to the stables
and rub him down properly. I'll see you again after I have
inspected the staff and spoken to your mother."
Gaius's open expression tightened at the mention
of Aurelia, and his father noticed. He sighed and put his hand on
his sons shoulder, making him meet his gaze.
"I want to spend more time away from the city,
lad, but what I do is important to me. Do you understand the word
'Republic'?"
Gaius nodded and his father looked
skeptical.
"I doubt it. Few enough of my fellow senators
seem to. We live an idea, a system of government that allows
everyone to have a voice, even the common man. Do you realize how
rare that is? Every other little country I have known has a king or
a chief running it. He gives land to his friends and takes money
from those who fall out with him. It is like having a child loose
with a sword.
"In Rome, we have the rule of law. It is not yet
perfect or even as fair as I would like, but it tries to be, and
that is what I devote my life to. It is worth my life—and
yours too when the time comes."
"I miss you, though," Gaius replied, knowing it
was selfish.
His father's gaze hardened slightly, then he
reached out to ruffle Gaius's hair once more.
"And I miss you too. Your knees are filthy and
that tunic is more suitable for a street child, but I miss you too.
Go and clean yourself up—but only after you have rubbed
Mercury down."
He watched his son trudge away, leading the
horse, and smiled ruefully. He was a little taller. Tubruk
was right.
In the stables, Gaius rubbed the flanks of his
father's horse, smoothing away sweat and dust and thinking over his
fathers words. The idea of a republic sounded very fine, but being
a king was clearly more exciting.
Whenever Gaius's father, Julius, had
been away for a long absence, Aurelia insisted on a formal meal in
the long triclinium. The two boys would sit on children's
stools next to the long couches, on which Aurelia and her husband
would recline barefoot, with the food served on low tables by the
household slaves.
Gaius and Marcus hated the meals. They were
forbidden to chatter and sat in painful silence through each
course, allowing the table servants only a quick rub of their
fingers between dipping them into the food. Although their
appetites were large, Gaius and Marcus had learned not to offend
Aurelia by eating too quickly and so were forced to chew and
swallow as slowly as the adults while the evening shadows
lengthened.
Bathed and dressed in clean clothes, Gaius felt
hot and uncomfortable with his parents. His father had put aside
the informality of their meeting on the road and now talked with
his wife as if the two boys did not exist. Gaius watched his mother
closely when he could, looking for the trembling that would signal
one of her fits. At first, they had terrified him and left him
sobbing, but after years an emotional callousness had grown, and
occasionally he even hoped for the trembling so that he and Marcus
would be sent from the table.
He tried to listen and be interested in the
conversation, but it was all about developments in the laws and
city ordinances. His father never seemed to come home with exciting
stories of executions or famous street villains.
"You have too much faith in the people, Julius,"
Aurelia was saying. "They need looking after as a child needs a
father. Some have wit and intelligence, I agree, but most have to
be protected..." She trailed off and silence fell.
Julius looked up and Gaius saw a sadness come
into his face, making Gaius look away, embarrassed, as if he had
witnessed an intimacy.
"Relia?"
Gaius heard his father's voice and looked back
at his mother, who lay like a statue, her eyes focused on some
distant scene. Her hand trembled and suddenly her face twisted like
a child's. The tremor that began in her hand spread to her whole
body, and she twisted in spasm, one arm sweeping bowls from the low
table. Her voice I erupted violently from her throat, a torrent of
screeching sound that made the boys wince.
Julius rose smoothly from his seat and took his
wife in his arms.
"Leave us," he commanded, and Gaius and Marcus
went out with the slaves, leaving behind them the man holding the
twisting figure.
The following morning, Gaius was woken
by Tubruk shaking his shoulder.
"Get up, lad. Your mother wants to see you."
Gaius groaned, almost to himself, but Tubruk
heard.
"She is always quiet after a... bad night."
Gaius paused as he pulled clothes on. He looked
up at the old gladiator.
"Sometimes I hate her."
Tubruk sighed gently. "I wish you could have
known her as she was before the sickness began. She used to sing to
herself all the time, and the house was always happy. You have to
think that your mother is still there, but can't get out to you.
She does love you, you know."
Gaius nodded and smoothed his hair down
carelessly.
"Has my father gone back to the city?" he asked,
knowing the answer. His father hated to feel helpless.
"He left at dawn," Tubruk replied.
Without another word, Gaius followed him through
the cool corridors to his mother's rooms.
She sat upright in bed, her face freshly washed
and her long hair braided behind her. Her skin was pale, but she
smiled as Gaius entered, and he was able to smile back.
"Come closer, Gaius. I am sorry if I scared you
last night."
He came into her arms and let her hold him,
feeling nothing. How could he tell her he wasn't scared anymore? He
had seen it too many times, each worse than the last. Some part of
him knew that she would get worse and worse, that she was already
leaving him. But he could not think of that—better to keep it
inside, to smile and hug her and walk away untouched.
"What are you going to do today?" she asked as
she released him.
"Chores with Marcus," he replied.
She nodded and seemed to forget him. He waited
for a few seconds and, when there was no further response, turned
and walked from the room.
When the tiny space in her thoughts faded and
she focused again on the room, it was empty.
* * *
Marcus met him at the gates, carrying
a bird net. He looked into his friend's eyes and made his tone
light and cheerful.
"I feel lucky today. We'll catch a
hawk—two hawks. We'll train them and they'll sit on our
shoulders, attacking on our command. Suetonius will run when he
sees us."
Gaius chuckled and cleared his mind of thoughts
of his mother. He missed his father already, but the day was going
to be a long one and there was always something to do in the woods.
He doubted Marcus's idea of hawk-catching would work, but he would
go along with it until the day was over and all the paths had been
walked.
The green gloom almost made them miss the raven
that sat on a low branch, not far from the sunlit fields. Marcus
froze as he saw it first and pressed a hand against Gaius's
chest.
"Look at the size of it!" he whispered,
unwrapping his bird net.
They crouched down and crept forward, watched
with interest by the bird. Even for a raven it was large, and it
spread heavy black wings as they approached, before almost hopping
to the next tree with one lazy flap.
"You circle around," Marcus whispered, his voice
excited. He backed this up with circling motions of his fingers,
and Gaius grinned at him, slipping into the undergrowth to one
side. He crept around in a large circle, trying to keep the tree in
sight while checking the path for dry twigs or rustling leaves.
When Gaius emerged on the far side, he saw the
raven had changed trees again, this time to a long trunk that had
fallen years before. The gentle slope of the trunk was easy to
climb, and Marcus had already begun to inch up it toward the bird,
at the same time trying to keep the net free for throwing.
Gaius padded closer to the base of the tree. Why
doesn't it fly away? he thought, looking up at the raven. It cocked
its large head to one side and opened its wings again. Both boys
froze until the bird seemed to relax, then Marcus levered himself
upward again, legs dangling on each side of the thick trunk.
Marcus was only feet from the bird when he
thought it would fly off again. It hopped about on the trunk and
branches, seemingly unafraid. He unfolded the net, a web of rough
twine usually used for holding onions in the estate kitchens. In
Marcus's hands, it had instantly become the fearsome instrument of
a bird catcher.
Holding his breath, he threw it, and the raven
took off with a scream of indignation. It flapped its wings once
again and landed in the slender branches of a young sapling near
Gaius, who ran at it without thinking.
As Marcus scrambled down, Gaius shoved at the
sapling and felt the whole thing give with a sudden crack, pinning
the bird in the leaves and branches on the ground. With Gaius
pressing it all down, Marcus was able to reach in and hold the
heavy bird, gripping it tightly in his two hands. He raised it
triumphantly and then hung on desperately as the raven struggled to
escape.
"Help me! He's strong," Marcus shouted, and
Gaius added his own hands to the struggling bundle. Suddenly an
agonizing pain shot through him. The beak was long and curved like
a spear of black wood. It jabbed at his hand, catching and gripping
the piece of soft flesh between thumb and first finger.
Gaius yelped. "Get it off. It's got my hand,
Marcus." The pain was excruciating and they panicked together, with
Marcus fighting to hold his grip while Gaius tried to lever the
vicious beak off his skin.
"I can't get it off, Marcus."
"You'll have to pull it," Marcus replied grimly,
his face red with the effort of holding the enraged bird.
"I can't, it's like a knife. Let it go."
"I'm not letting it go. This raven is
ours. We caught it in the wild, like hunters."
Gaius groaned with pain.
"It caught us, more like." His fingers waved in
agony and the raven let go without warning, trying to snap at one
of them. Gaius gasped in relief and backed off hurriedly, holding
his hands against his groin and doubling over.
"He's a fighter, anyway," Marcus said with a
grin, shifting his grip so the searching head couldn't find his own
flesh. "We'll take him home and train him. Ravens are intelligent,
I've heard. He'll learn tricks and come with us when we go to the
Campus Martius."
"He needs a name. Something warlike," Gaius
replied, in between sucking his torn skin.
"What's the name of that god who goes round as a
raven or carries one?"
"I don't know, one of the Greek ones, I think.
Zeus?"
"That's an owl, I think. Someone has an
owl."
"I don't remember one with a raven, but Zeus is
a good name for him."
They smiled at each other and the raven went
quiet, looking around him with apparent calmness.
"Zeus it is, then."
They walked back over the fields to the estate,
with the bird held firmly in Marcus's grasp.
"We'll have to find somewhere to hide him," he
said. "Your mother doesn't like us catching animals. You remember
when she found out about the fox?"
Gaius winced, looking at the ground. "There's an
empty chicken coop next to the stables. We could put him in there.
What do ravens eat?"
"Meat, I think. They scavenge battlefields,
unless that's crows. We can get a few scraps from the kitchens and
see what he takes, anyway. That won't be a problem."
"We'll have to tie twine to his legs for the
training, otherwise he'll fly off," Gaius said thoughtfully.
Tubruk was talking to three carpenters who were
to repair part of the estate roof. He spotted the boys as they
walked into the estate yard, and motioned them over to him. They
looked at each other, wondering if they could run, but Tubruk
wouldn't let them get more than a few paces, for all his apparent
inattention as he turned back to the workers.
"I'm not giving Zeus up," Marcus whispered
harshly.
Gaius could only nod as they approached the
group of men.
"I'll come along in a few minutes," Tubruk
instructed as the men walked to their tasks. "Take the tiles off
the section until I get there."
He turned to the boys. "What's this? A raven?
Must be a sick one if you caught it."
"We trapped him in the woods. Followed him and
brought him down," Marcus said, his voice defiant.
Tubruk smiled as if he understood, and reached
out to stroke the bird's long beak. Its energy seemed to have gone
and it panted almost like a dog, revealing a slender tongue between
the hard blades.
"Poor thing," Tubruk muttered. "Looks terrified.
What are you going to do with him?"
"His name's Zeus. We're going to train him as a
pet, like a hawk."
Tubruk shook his head once, slowly. "You can't
train a wild bird, boys. A hawk is raised from a chick by an
expert, and even they stay wild. The best trainer can lose one
every now and then if it flies too far from him. Zeus is fully
grown. If you keep him, he'll die."
"We can use one of the old chicken coops," Gaius
insisted. "There's nothing in there now. We'll feed him and fly him
on a string."
Tubruk snorted. "Do you know what a wild bird
does if you keep him locked up? He can't stand walls around him.
Especially a tiny space like one of the chicken coops. It will
break his spirit and, day by day, he will pull his own feathers out
in misery. He won't eat, he'll just hurt himself until he dies.
Zeus here will choose death over captivity. The kindest thing you
can do for him is to let him go. I don't think you could have
caught him unless he was sick, so he might be dying anyway, but at
least let him spend his last days in the woods and the air, where
he belongs."
"But..." Marcus fell silent, looking at the
raven.
"Come on," Tubruk said. "Let's go out into the
fields and watch him fly."
Glumly, the boys looked at each other and
followed him back out of the gates. Together, they stood gazing
down the hill.
"Set him free, boy," Tubruk said, and something
in his voice made them both look at him.
Marcus raised and opened his hands, and Zeus
heaved himself into the air, spreading large black wings and
fighting for height. He screamed frustration at them until he was
just a dot in the sky over the woods. Then they saw him descend and
disappear.
Tubruk reached out and held the necks of the two
boys in his rough hands.
"A noble act. Now there are a number of chores
to do, and I couldn't find you earlier, so they've piled up waiting
for your attention. Inside."
He steered the boys through the gate into the
courtyard, taking a last look over the fields toward the woods
before he followed them.
CHAPTER
3
That summer saw the start of the boys'
formal education. From the beginning, they were both treated
equally, with Marcus also receiving the training necessary to run a
complex estate, albeit a minor one. In addition to continuing the
formal Latin that had been drummed into them since birth, they were
taught about famous battles and tactics as well as how to manage
men and handle money and debts. When Suetonius left to be an
officer in an African legion the following year, both Gaius and
Marcus had begun to learn Greek rhetoric and the skills of debate
that they would need if, as young senators later on, they ever
chose to prosecute or defend a citizen on a matter of law.
Although the three hundred members of the Senate
met only twice each lunar month, Gaius's father, Julius, remained
in Rome for longer and longer periods as the Republic struggled to
deal with new colonies and its swiftly growing wealth and power.
For months, the only adults Gaius and Marcus would see were Aurelia
and the tutors, who arrived at the main house at dawn and left with
the sun sinking behind them and denarii jingling in their pockets.
Tubruk was always there too, a friendly presence who stood no
nonsense from the boys. Before Suetonius had left, the old
gladiator had walked the five miles to the main house of the
neighboring estate and waited eleven hours, from dawn to dusk, to
be admitted to see the eldest son of the house. He didn't tell
Gaius what had transpired, but had returned with a smile and
ruffled Gaius's hair with his big hand before going down to the
stables to see to the new mares as they came into season.
Of all the tutors, Gaius and Marcus enjoyed the
hours with Vepax the best. He was a young Greek, tall and thin in
his toga. He always arrived at the estate on foot and carefully
counted the coins he earned before walking back to the city. They
met with him for two hours each week in a small room Gaius's father
had set aside for the lessons. It was a bare place, with a
stone-flagged floor and unadorned walls. With the other tutors,
droning through the verses of Homer and Latin grammar, the two boys
often fidgeted on the wooden benches, or drifted in concentration
until the tutor noticed and brought them back with sharp smacks
from the cane. Most were strict and it was difficult to get away
with much with only the two of them to take up the master's
attention. One time, Marcus had used his stylus to draw a picture
of a pig with a tutor's beard and face. He had been caught trying
to show it to Gaius and had to hold out his hand for the stick,
suffering miserably through three sharp blows.
Vepax didn't carry a cane. All he ever had with
him was a heavy cloth bag full of clay tablets and figures, some
blue and some red to show different sides. By the appointed hour,
he would have cleared the benches to one side of the room and set
out his figures to represent some famous battle of the past. After
a year of this, their first task was to recognize the structure and
name the generals involved. They knew Vepax would not limit himself
to Roman battles; sometimes the tiny horses and legionary figures
represented Parthia or ancient Greece or Carthage. Knowing Vepax
was Greek himself, the boys had pushed the young man to show them
the battles of Alexander, thrilled by the legends and what he had
achieved at such a young age. At first, Vepax had been reluctant,
not wanting to be seen to favor his own history, but he had allowed
himself to be persuaded and showed them every major battle where
records and maps survived. For the Greek wars, Vepax never opened a
book, placing and moving each piece from memory.
He told the boys the names of the generals and
the key players in each conflict as well as the history and
politics when they had a direct bearing on the day. He made the
little clay pieces come alive for Marcus and Gaius, and every time
it came to the end of the two hours, they would look longingly at
them as he packed them away in his bags, slowly and carefully.
One day, as they arrived, they found most of the
little room covered in the clay characters. A huge battle had been
set out and Gaius counted the blue characters quickly, then the
red, multiplying it in his head as he had been taught by the
arithmetic tutor.
"Tell me what you see," Vepax said quietly to
Gaius.
"Two forces, one of more than fifty thousand,
the other nearly forty. The red is... the red is Roman, judging by
the heavy infantry placed to the front in legion squares. They are
supported by cavalry on the right and left wings, but they are
matched by the blue cavalry facing them. There are slingers and
spearmen on the blue side, but I can't see any archers, so missile
attacks will be over a very short range. They seem roughly matched.
It should be a long and difficult battle."
Vepax nodded. "The red side is indeed Roman,
well-disciplined veterans of many battles. What if I told you the
blues were a mixed group, made up of Gauls, Spaniards, Numidians,
and Carthaginians? Would that make a difference to the
outcome?"
Marcus's eyes gleamed with interest. "It would
mean we were looking at Hannibal's forces. But where are his famous
elephants? Didn't you have elephants in your bag?" Marcus looked
hopefully over at the limp cloth sack.
"It is Hannibal the Romans were facing, but by
this battle, his elephants had died. He managed to find more later
and they were terrifying at the charge, but here he had to make do
without them. He is outnumbered by two legions. His force is mixed
where the Roman one is unified. What other factors might affect the
outcome?"
"The land," Gaius cried. "Is he on a hill? His
cavalry could smash—"
Vepax waved a hand gently. "The battle took
place on a plain. The weather was cool and clear. Hannibal should
have lost. Would you like to see how he won?"
Gaius stared at the massed pieces. Everything
was against the blue forces. He looked up.
"Can we move the pieces as you explain?"
Vepax smiled. "Of course. Today I will need both
of you to make the battle move as it did once before. Take the
Roman side, Gaius. Marcus and I will take Hannibal's force."
Smiling, the three faced each other over the
ranks of figures.
"The battle of Cannae, 126 years ago. Every man
who fought in the battle is dust, every sword rusted away, but the
lessons are still there to be learned."
Vepax must have brought every clay soldier and
horse he had to form this battle, Gaius realized. Even with each
piece representing five hundred, they took up most of the available
room.
"Gaius, you are Aemilius Paulus and Terentius
Varro, experienced Roman commanders. Line by line you will advance
straight at the enemy, allowing no deviation and no slackness in
discipline. Your infantry is superb and should do well against the
ranks of foreign swordsmen."
Thoughtfully, Gaius began moving his infantry
forward, group by group.
"Support with your cavalry, Gaius. They must not
be left behind or you could be flanked."
Nodding, Gaius brought the small clay horses up
to engage the heavy cavalry Hannibal commanded.
"Marcus, our infantry must hold. We will
advance to meet them, and our cavalry will engage theirs on the
wings, holding them."
Heads bowed, all three moved figures in silence
until the armies had shifted together, face-to-face. Gaius and
Marcus imagined the snorts of the horses and the war cries
splitting the air.
"And now, men die," Vepax murmured. "Our
infantry begin to buckle in the center as they meet the
best-trained enemy they have ever faced." His hands flew out and
switched figure after figure to new positions, urging the boys
along as they went.
On the floor in front of them, the Roman legions
pushed back Hannibal's center, which buckled before them, close to
rout.
"They cannot hold," Gaius whispered, as he saw
the great crescent bow that grew deeper as the legions forced
themselves forward. He paused and looked over the whole field. The
cavalry were stationary, held in bloody conflict with the enemy.
His mouth dropped as Marcus and Vepax continued to move pieces and
suddenly the plan was clear to him.
"I would not go farther in," he said, and
Vepax's head came up with a quizzical expression.
"So soon, Gaius? You have seen a danger that
neither Paulus nor Varro saw until it was too late. Move your men
forward, the battle must be played out." He was clearly enjoying
himself, but Gaius felt a touch of irritation at having to follow
through moves that would lead to the destruction of his armies.
The legions marched through the Carthaginian
forces, and the enemy let them in, falling back quickly and without
haste, losing as few men as possible to the advancing line.
Hannibal's forces were moving from the back of the field to the
sides, swelling the trap, and, after what Vepax said was only a
couple of hours, the entire Roman force was submerged in the enemy
on three sides, which slowly closed behind them until they were
caught in a box of Hannibal's making. The Roman cavalry were still
held by equally skilled forces, and the final scene needed little
explanation to reveal the horror of it.
"Most of the Romans could not fight, trapped as
they were in the middle of their own close formations. Hannibal's
men killed all day long, tightening the trap until there was no one
left alive. It was annihilation on a scale rarely seen before or
since. Most battles leave many alive, at least those who run away,
but these Romans were surrounded on all sides and had nowhere to
flee to."
The silence stretched for long moments as the
two boys fixed the details in their minds and imaginations.
"Our time is up today, boys. Next week I will
show you what the Romans learned from this defeat and others at the
hands of Hannibal. Although they were unimaginative here, they
brought in a new commander, known for his innovation and daring. He
met Hannibal at the battle of Zama fourteen years later, and the
outcome was very different."
"What was his name?" Marcus asked excitedly.
"He had more than one. His given name was
Publius Scipio, but because of the battles he won against Carthage,
he was known as Scipio Africanus."
As Gaius approached his tenth
birthday, he was growing into an athletic, well-coordinated lad. He
could handle any of the horses, even the difficult ones that
required a brutal hand. They seemed to calm at his touch and
respond to him. Only one refused to let him remain in the saddle,
and Gaius had been thrown eleven times when Tubruk sold the beast
before the struggle killed one or the other of them.
To some extent, Tubruk controlled the purse of
the estate while Gaius's father was away. He could decide where the
profits from grain and livestock would be best spent, using his
judgment. It was a great trust and a rare one. It wasn't up to
Tubruk, however, to engage specialist fighters to teach the boys
the art of war. That was the decision of the father—as was
every other aspect of their upbringing. Under Roman law, Gaius's
father could even have had the boys strangled or sold into slavery
if they displeased him. His power in his household was absolute,
and his goodwill was not to be risked.
Julius returned home for his son's birthday
feast. Tubruk attended him as he bathed away the dust of the
journey in the mineral pool. Despite being ten years older than
Tubruk, the years sat well on his sun-dark frame as he eased
through the water. Steam rose in wisps as a sudden rush of fresh
hot water erupted from a pipe into the placid waters of the bath.
Tubruk noted the signs of health to himself and was pleased. In
silence, he waited for Julius to finish the slow immersion and rest
on the submerged marble steps near the inflow pipe, where the water
was shallow and warmest.
Julius lay back against the coldness of the pool
ledges and raised an eyebrow at Tubruk. "Report," he said, and
closed his eyes.
Tubruk stood stiffly and recited the profits and
losses of the previous month. He kept his eyes fixed on the far
wall and spoke fluently of minute problems and successes without
once referring to notes. At last, he came to the end and waited in
silence. After a moment, the blue eyes of the only man who'd ever
employed him without owning him opened once again and fixed him
with a look that had not been melted by the heat of the pool.
"How is my wife?"
Tubruk kept his face impassive. Was there a
point in telling this man that Aurelia had worsened still further?
She had been beautiful once, before childbirth had left her close
to death for months. Ever since Gaius had come into the world, she
had seemed unsteady on her feet, and no longer filled the house
with laughter and flowers that she would pick herself out in the
far fields.
"Lucius attends her well, but she is no
better.... I have had to keep the boys away some days, when the
mood has come on her."
Julius's face hardened and a heat-fattened vein
in his neck started twitching with the load of angry blood.
"Can the doctors do nothing? They take my aureus
pieces without a qualm, but she worsens every time I see her!"
Tubruk pressed his lips together in an
expression of regret. Some things must simply be borne, he knew.
The whip falls and hurts and you must quietly wait for it to fall
no more.
Sometimes she would tear her clothes into rags
and sit huddled in a corner until hunger drove her out of her
private rooms. Other days, she would be almost the woman he had met
when he first came to the estate, but given to long periods of
distraction. She would be discussing a crop and suddenly, as if
another voice had spoken, she would tilt her head to listen, and
you might as well have left the room for all she remembered
you.
Another rush of hot water disturbed the
slow-dripping silence, and Julius sighed like escaping steam.
"They say the Greeks have much learning in the
area of medicine. Hire one of those and dismiss the fools who do
her so little good. If any of them claim that only their skills
have kept her from being even worse, have him flogged and dumped on
the road back to the city. Try a midwife. Women sometimes
understand themselves better than we do—they have so many
ailments that men do not."
The blue eyes closed again and it was like a
door shutting on an oven. Without the personality, the submerged
frame could have been any other Roman. He held himself like a
soldier, and thin white lines marked the scars of old actions. He
was not a man to be crossed, and Tubruk knew he had a ferocious
reputation in the Senate. He kept his interests small, but guarded
those interests fiercely. As a result, the powermongers were not
troubled by him and were too lazy to challenge the areas where he
was strong. It kept the estate wealthy and they would be able to
employ the most expensive foreign doctors that Tubruk could find.
Wasted money, he was sure, but what was money for if not to use it
when you saw the need?
"I want to start a vineyard on the southern
reaches. The soil there is perfect for a good red."
They talked over the business of the estate and,
again, Tubruk took no notes, nor felt the need after years of
reporting and discussing. Two hours after he had entered, Julius
smiled at last.
"You have done well. We prosper and stay
strong."
Tubruk nodded and smiled back. In all the talk,
not once had Julius asked after his own health or happiness. It was
a relationship of trust, not between equals, but between an
employer and one whose competence he respected. Tubruk was no
longer a slave, but he was a freedman and could never have the
total confidence of those born free.
"There is another matter, a more personal one,"
Julius continued. "It is time to train my son in warfare. I have
been distracted from my duty as a father to some extent, but there
is no greater exercise to a man's talents than the upbringing of
his son. I want to be proud of him and I worry that my absences,
which are likely to get worse, will be the breaking of the
boy."
Tubruk nodded, pleased at the words. "There are
many experts in the city, trainers of boys and the young men of
wealthy families."
"No. I know of them and some have been
recommended to me. I have even inspected the products of this
training, visiting city villas to see the young generation. I was
not impressed, Tubruk. I saw young men infected with this new
philosophical learning, where too much emphasis is placed on
improving the mind and not enough on the body and the heart. What
good is the ability to play with logic if your fainting soul
shrinks away from hardship? No, the fashions in Rome will produce
only weaklings, with few exceptions, as I see it. I want Gaius
trained by people on whom I can depend—you, Tubruk. I'd trust
no other with such a serious task."
Tubruk rubbed his chin, looking troubled. "I
cannot teach the skills I learned as a soldier and gladiator, sir.
I know what I know, but I don't know how to pass it on."
Julius frowned in annoyance, but didn't press
it. Tubruk never spoke lightly.
"Then spend time making him fit and hard as
stone. Have him run and ride for hours each day, over and over
until he is fit to represent me. We will find others to teach him
how to kill and command men in battle."
"What about the other lad, sir?"
"Marcus? What about him?"
"Will we train him as well?"
Julius frowned further and he stared off into
the past for a few seconds.
"Yes. I promised his father when he died. His
mother was never fit to have the boy; it was her running away that
practically killed the old man. She was always too young for him.
The last I heard of her, she was little better than a party whore
in one of the inner districts, so he stays in my house. He and
Gaius are still friends, I take it?"
"Like twin stalks of corn. They're always in
trouble."
"No more. They will learn discipline from now
on."
"I will see to it that they do."
Gaius and Marcus listened outside the
door. Gaius's eyes were bright with excitement at what he'd heard.
He grinned as he turned to Marcus and dropped the smile as he saw
his friends pale face and set mouth.
"What's wrong, Marc?"
"He said my mother's a whore," came the hissing
reply. Marcus's eyes glinted dangerously and Gaius choked back his
first joking reply.
"He said he'd heard it—just a rumor. I'm
sure she isn't."
"They told me she was dead, like my father. She
ran away and left me." Marcus stood and his eyes filled with tears.
"I hope she is a whore. I hope she's a slave and dying of
lung-rot." He spun round and ran away, arms and legs flailing in
loose misery.
Gaius sighed and rejected the idea of going
after him. Marcus would probably go down to the stables and sit in
the straw and the shadows for a few hours. If he was followed too
soon, there would be angry words and maybe blows. If he was left,
it would all go with time, the change of mood coming without
warning as his quick thoughts settled elsewhere.
It was his nature and there was no changing it.
Gaius pressed his head again to the crack between the door and the
frame that allowed him to hear the two men talk of his future.
"...unchained for the first time, so they say.
It should be a mighty spectacle. All of Rome will be there. Not all
the gladiators will be indentured slaves—some are freedmen
who have been lured back with gold coins. Renius will be there, so
the gossips say."
"Renius—he must be ancient by now! He was
fighting when I was a young man myself," Julius muttered in
disbelief.
"Perhaps he needs the money. Some of the men
live too richly for their purses, if you understand me. Fame would
allow him large debts, but everything has to be paid back in the
end."
"Perhaps he could be hired to teach
Gaius—he used to take pupils, I remember. It has been so
long, though. I can't believe he'll be fighting again. You will get
four tickets then; my interest is definitely aroused. The boys will
enjoy a trip into the city proper."
"Good—though let us wait until after the
lions have finished with ancient Renius before we offer him
employment. He should be cheap if he is bleeding a little," Tubruk
said wryly.
"Cheaper still if he's dead. I'd hate to see him
go out. He was unstoppable when I was young. I saw him fight in
exhibitions against four or five men. One time they even
blindfolded him against two. He cut them down in two blows."
"I saw him prepare for those matches. The cloth
he used allowed in enough light to see the outlines of shapes. That
was all the edge he needed. After all, his opponents thought he was
blind."
"Take a big purse for hiring trainers. The
circus will be the place to find them, but I will want your eye for
the sound of limb and honor."
"I am, as always, your man, sir. I will send a
message tonight to collect the tickets on the estate purse. If
there is nothing else?"
"Only my thanks. I know how skillfully you keep
this place afloat. While my senatorial colleagues fret at how their
wealth is eroded, I can be calm and smile at their discomfort." He
stood and shook hands in the wrist grip that all legionaries
learned.
Tubruk was pleased to note the strength still in
the hand. The old bull had a few years in him yet.
Gaius scrambled away from the door and ran down
to see Marcus in the stables. Before he had gone more than a little
way, he paused and leaned against a cool white wall. What if he was
still angry? No, surely the prospect of circus tickets—with
unchained lions no less!—surely this would be enough to burn
away his sorrow. With renewed enthusiasm and the sun on his back,
he charged down the slopes to the outbuildings of teak and lime
plaster that housed the estate's supply of workhorses and oxen.
Somewhere, he heard his mother's voice calling his name, but he
ignored it, as he would a bird's shrill scream. It was a sound that
washed over him and left him untouched.
The two boys found the body of the
raven close to where they had first seen it, near the edge of the
woods on the estate. It lay in the damp leaves, stiff and dark, and
it was Marcus who saw it first, his depression and anger lifting
with the find.
"Zeus," he whispered. "Tubruk said he was sick."
He crouched by the track and reached out a hand to stroke the
still-glossy feathers. Gaius crouched with him. The chill of the
woods seemed to get through to both of them at the same time, and
Gaius shivered slightly.
"Ravens are bad omens, remember," he
murmured.
"Not Zeus. He was just looking for a place to
die."
On an impulse, Marcus picked up the body again,
holding it in his hands as he had before. The contrast saddened
both of them. All the fight was gone and now the head lay limply,
as if held only by skin. The beak hung open and the eyes were
shriveled, hollow pits. Marcus continued to stroke the feathers
with his thumb.
"We should cremate him—give him an
honorable funeral," said Gaius. "I could run back to the kitchens
and fetch an oil lamp. We could build a pyre for him and pour some
of the oil over it. It would be a good send-off for him."
Marcus nodded and placed Zeus carefully on the
ground. "He was a fighter. He deserves something more than just
being left to rot. There's a lot of dry wood around here. I'll stay
to make the pyre."
"I'll be as quick as I can," Gaius replied,
turning to run. "Think of some prayers or something."
He sprinted back to the estate buildings, and
Marcus was left alone with the bird. He felt a strange solemnity
come upon him, as if he were performing a religious rite. Slowly
and carefully, he gathered dry sticks and built them into a square,
starting with thicker branches that were long dead and building on
layers of twigs and dry leaves. It seemed right not to rush.
The woods were quiet as Gaius returned. He too
was walking slowly, shielding the small flame of an oily wick where
it protruded from an old kitchen lamp. He found Marcus sitting on
the dry path, with the black body of Zeus lying on a neat pile of
dead wood.
"I'll have to keep the flame going while I pour
the oil, so it could flare up quickly. We'd better say the prayers
now."
As the evening darkened, the flickering yellow
light of the lamp seemed to grow in strength, lighting their faces
as they stood by the small corpse.
"Jupiter, head of all the gods, let this one fly
again in the underworld. He was a fighter and he died free," Marcus
said, his voice steady and low.
Gaius readied the oil for pouring. He held the
wick clear, avoiding the little flame, and poured on the oil,
drenching the bird and the wood in its slipperiness. Then he
touched the flame to the pyre.
For long seconds, nothing happened except for a
faint sizzling, but then an answering flame spread and blazed with
a sickly light. The boys stood and Gaius placed the lamp on the
path. They watched with interest as the feathers caught and burned
with a terrible stink. The flames flickered over the body, and fat
smoked and sputtered in the fire. They waited patiently.
"We could gather the ashes at the end and bury
them, or spread them around in the woods or the stream," Gaius
whispered.
Marcus nodded in silence.
To help the fire, Gaius poured on the rest of
the oil from the lamp, extinguishing its small light. Flames grew
again and most of the feathers had been burned away, except for
those around the head and beak, which seemed obstinate.
Finally, the last of the oil burned to nothing
and the fire sank to glowing embers.
"I think we've cooked him," whispered Gaius.
"The fire wasn't hot enough."
Marcus took a long stick and poked at the body,
now covered in wood ash but still recognizably the raven. The stick
knocked the smoking thing right out of the ashes, and Marcus spent
a few moments trying to roll it back in without success.
"This is hopeless. Where's the dignity in this?"
he said angrily.
"Look, we can't do any more. Let's just cover
him in leaves."
The two boys set about gathering armfuls and
soon the scorched raven was hidden from view. They were silent as
they walked back to the estate, but the reverent mood was gone.
CHAPTER
4
The circus was arranged by Cornelius
Sulla, a rising young man in the ranks of Roman society. The king
of Mauretania had entertained the young senator while he commanded
the Second Alaudae legion in Africa. To please him, King Bocchus
sent a hundred lions and twenty of his best spearmen to the
capital. With these as a core, Sulla had put together a program for
five days of trials and excitement.
It was to be the largest circus ever arranged in
Rome, and Cornelius Sulla had his reputation and status assured by
the achievement. There were even calls raised in the Senate for
there to be a more permanent structure to hold the games. The
wooden benches bolted and pegged together for great events were
unsatisfactory and really too small for the sort of crowds that
wanted to see lions from the dark, unknown continent. Plans for a
vast circular amphitheater capable of holding water and staging sea
battles were put forward, but the cost was huge and they were
vetoed by the peoples tribunes as a matter of course.
Gaius and Marcus trotted behind the two older
men. Since Gaius's mother had become unwell, the boys were rarely
allowed into the city proper anymore, as she fretted and rocked in
misery at the thought of what could happen to her son in the
vicious streets. The noise of the crowd was like a blow, and their
eyes were bright with interest.
Most of the Senate would travel to the games in
carriages, pulled or carried by slaves and horses. Gaius's father
scorned this and chose to walk through the crowds. That said, the
imposing figure of Tubruk beside him, fully armed as he was, kept
the plebeians from shoving too rudely.
The mud of the narrow streets had been churned
into a stinking broth by the huge throng, and after only a short
time their legs were spattered almost to the knees by filth, their
sandals covered. Every shop heaved with people as they passed, and
there was always a crowd ahead and a mob behind pushing them on.
Occasionally, Gaius's father would take side streets when the roads
were blocked completely by shopkeepers' carts carrying their wares
around the city. These were packed with the poor, and beggars sat
in doorways, blind and maimed, with their hands outstretched. The
brick buildings loomed over them, five and six stories high, and
once, Tubruk put a hand out to hold Marcus back as a bucket of
slops was poured out of an open window into the street below.
Gaius's father looked grim, but walked on
without stopping, his sense of direction bringing them through the
dark maze back onto the main streets to the circus. The noise of
the city intensified as they grew close, with the shouted cries of
hot-food sellers competing with the hammering of coppersmiths and
bawling, screaming children who hung, snot-nosed, on their mothers'
hips.
On every street corner, jugglers and conjurors,
clowns and snake charmers performed for thrown coins.
That day, the pickings were slim, despite the
huge crowds. Why waste your money on things you can see every day
when the amphitheater was open?
"Stay close to us," Tubruk said, bringing the
boys' attention back from the colors, smells, and noise. He laughed
at their wide-mouthed expressions. "I remember the first time I saw
a circus—the Vespia, where I was to fight my first battle,
untrained and slow, just a slave with a sword."
"You won, though," Julius replied, smiling as
they walked.
"My stomach was playing me up, so I was in a
terrible mood."
Both men laughed.
"I'd hate to face a lion," Tubruk continued.
"I've seen a couple on the loose in Africa. They move like horses
at the charge when they want to, but with fangs and claws like iron
nails."
"They have a hundred of the beasts and two shows
a day for five days, so we should see ten of them against a
selection of fighters. I am looking forward to seeing these black
spearmen in action. It will be interesting to see if they can match
our javelin throwers for accuracy," Julius said.
They walked under the entrance arch and paused
at a series of wooden tubs filled with water. For a small coin,
they had the mud and smell scrubbed from their legs and sandals. It
was good to be clean again. With the help of an attendant, they
found the seats reserved for them by one of the estate slaves,
who'd traveled in the previous evening to await their arrival. Once
they were seated, the slave stood to walk the miles back to the
estate. Tubruk passed him another coin to buy food for the journey,
and the man smiled cheerfully, pleased to be away from the
back-breaking labor of the fields for once.
All around them sat the members of the patrician
families and their slaves. Although there were only three hundred
representatives in the Senate, there must have been close to a
thousand others in that section. Rome's lawmakers had taken the day
off for the first battles of the five-day run. The sand was raked
smooth in the vast pit; the wooden stands filled with thirty
thousand of the classes of Rome. The morning heat built and built
into a wall of discomfort, largely ignored by the people.
"Where are the fighters, Father?" Gaius asked,
searching for signs of lions or cages.
"They are in that barn building over there. You
see where the gates are? There."
He opened a folded program, purchased from a
slave as they went in.
"The organizer of the games will welcome us and
probably thank Cornelius Sulla. We will all cheer for Sulla's
cleverness in making such a spectacle possible. Then there are four
gladiatorial combats, to first blood only. One will follow that is
to the death. Renius will give a demonstration of some sort and
then the lions will roam 'the landscapes of their Africa,' whatever
that means. Should be an impressive show."
"Have you ever seen a lion?"
"Once, in the zoo. I have never fought one,
though. Tubruk says they are fearsome in battle."
The amphitheater fell quiet as the gates opened
and a man walked out dressed in a toga so white it almost
glowed.
"He looks like a god," Marcus whispered.
Tubruk leaned over to the boy. "Don't forget
they bleach the cloth with human urine. There's a lesson in there
somewhere."
Marcus looked at Tubruk in surprise for a
moment, wondering if a joke had been made of some kind. Then he
forgot about it as he tried to hear the voice of the man who had
strode to the center of the sand. He had a trained voice, and the
bowl of the amphitheater acted as a perfect reflector. Nonetheless,
part of his announcement was lost as people shuffled or whispered
to their friends and were shushed.
"...welcome that is due... African beasts...
Cornelius Sulla!"
The last was said in crescendo and the audience
cheered dutifully, more enthusiastically than Julius or Tubruk had
been expecting. Gaius heard the words of the old gladiator as he
leaned in close to his father.
"He may be a man to watch, this one."
"Or to watch out for," his father replied with a
meaningful look.
Gaius strained to see the man who rose from his
seat and bowed. He too wore a simple toga, with an embroidered hem
of gold. He was sitting close enough for Gaius to see this really
was a man who looked like a god. He had a strong, handsome face and
golden skin. He waved and sat down, smiling at the pleasure of the
crowds.
Everyone settled back for the main excitement,
conversations springing up all around. Politics and finance were
discussed. Cases being argued in law were raked and chewed over by
the patricians. They were still the ultimate power in Rome and
therefore the world. True, the people's tribunes, with their right
to veto agreements, had taken some of the edge off their authority,
but they still had the power of life and death over most of the
citizens of Rome.
The first pair of fighters entered wearing
tunics of blue and black. Neither was heavily armored, as this was
a display of speed and skill rather than savagery. Men did die in
these contests, but it was rare. After a salute to the organizer
and sponsor of the games, they began to move, short swords held
rigid and shields moving in hypnotic rhythms.
"Who will win, Tubruk?" Gaius's father suddenly
snapped.
"The smaller, in the blue. His footwork is
excellent."
Julius summoned one of the runners for the
circus betting groups and gave over a gold aureus coin, receiving a
tiny blue plaque in return. Less than a minute later, the smaller
man sidestepped an overextended lunge and drew his knife lightly
over the other's stomach as he stepped through. Blood spilled as
over the lip of a cup, and the audience erupted with cheers and
curses. Julius had earned two aurei for the one he'd wagered, and
he pocketed the profit cheerfully. For each match that followed, he
would ask Tubruk who would win as they began to feint and move. The
odds sank after the start, of course, but Tubruk's eye was
infallible that day. By the fourth match, all nearby spectators
were craning to catch what Tubruk said and then shouting for the
betting slaves to take their money.
Tubruk was enjoying himself.
"This next one is to the death. The odds favor
the Corinthian fighter, Alexandros. He has never been stopped, but
his opponent, from the south of Italy, is also fearful and has
never been beaten to first blood. I cannot choose between them at
this point."
"Let me know as soon as you can. I have ten
aurei ready for the wager—all our winnings and my original
stakes. Your eye is perfect today."
Julius summoned the betting slave and told him
to stand close. No one else in the area wanted to bet, as they all
felt the luck of the moment and were content to wait for the signal
from Tubruk. They watched him, some with held breath, poised for
the first signal.
Gaius and Marcus looked at the crowd.
"They are a greedy lot, these Romans," Gaius
whispered, and they grinned at each other.
The gates opened again and Alexandros and Enzo
entered. The Roman, Enzo, wore a standard set of mail covering his
right arm from hand to neck and a brass helmet above the darker
iron scales. He carried a red shield with his left hand. His only
other garments were a loincloth and wrappings of linen around his
feet and ankles. He had a powerful physique and carried few scars,
although one puckered line marked his left forearm from wrist to
elbow. He bowed to Cornelius Sulla and saluted the crowd first,
before the foreigner.
Alexandros moved well, balanced and assured as
he came to the middle of the amphitheater. He was identically
dressed, although his shield was stained blue.
"They are not easy to tell apart," Gaius said.
"In the armor, they could be brothers."
His father snorted. "Except for the blood in
them. The Greek is not the same as the Italian. He has different
and false gods. He believes things that no decent Roman would ever
stand for." He spoke without turning his head, intent on the men
below.
"But will you bet on such a man?" Gaius
continued.
"I will if Tubruk thinks he will win," came the
response, accompanied by a smile.
The contest would begin with the sounding of a
ram's horn. It was held in copper jaws in the first row of seats,
and a short bearded man was waiting with his lips to it. The two
gladiators stepped close to each other and the horn sound wailed
out across the sand.
Before Gaius could tell whether the sound had
stopped, the crowd was roaring and the two men were hammering blows
at each other. In the first few seconds, strike after strike
landed, some cutting, some sliding from steel made suddenly
slippery with bright blood.
"Tubruk?" came his fathers voice.
Their area of the stands was torn between
watching the fantastic display of savagery and getting in on the
bet.
Tubruk frowned, his chin on his bunched fist.
"Not yet. I cannot tell. They are too even."
The two men broke apart for a moment, unable to
keep up the pace of the first minute. Both were bleeding and both
were spattered with dust sticking to their sweat.
Alexandros rammed his blue shield up under the
other's guard, breaking his rhythm and balance. His sword arm came
up and over, looking for a high wound. The Italian scrambled back
without dignity to escape the blow, and his shield fell in the dust
as he did so. The crowd hooted and jeered, embarrassed by their
man. He rose again and attacked, perhaps stung by the comments of
his countrymen.
"Tubruk?" Julius laid his hand on the man's arm.
The fight could be over in seconds, and if there was an obvious
advantage to one of the fighters, the betting would cease.
"Not yet. Not... yet..." Tubruk was a study in
concentration.
On the sand, the area around the fighters was
speckled darkly where their blood had dripped. Both paced to the
left and then the right, then rushed in and cut and sliced, ducked
and blocked, punched and tried to trip the other. Alexandros caught
the Italian's sword on his shield. It was partially destroyed in
the force of the blow, and the blade was trapped by the softer
metal of the blue rectangle. Like the other, it too was wrenched to
the sand, and both men faced each other sideways, moving like crabs
so that their arm-mail would protect them. The swords were nicked
and blunted and the exertions in the raging Roman heat were
beginning to tell on their strength.
"Put it all on the Greek, quickly," Tubruk
said.
The betting slave looked for approval to the
owner behind him. Odds were whispered and the bets went on, with
much of the crowd taking a slice.
"Five to one against on Alexandros—could
have been a lot better if we'd gone earlier," Julius muttered as he
watched the two fighters below.
Tubruk said nothing.
One of the gladiators lunged and recovered too
fast for the other. The sword whipped back and into his side,
causing a gout of blood to rush. The riposte was viciously fast and
sliced through a major leg muscle. A leg buckled and as the man
went down, his opponent hacked into his neck, over and over, until
he was thumping at a corpse. He lay in the mixing blood as it was
sucked away by the dry sand, and his chest heaved with the pain and
exertion.
"Who won?" Gaius asked frantically. Without the
shields it wasn't clear, and a murmur went around the seats as the
question was repeated over and over. Who had won?
"I think the Greek is dead," the betting slave
said.
His master thought it was the Roman, but until
the victor rose and removed his helmet, no one could be sure.
"What happens if they both die?" Marcus
asked.
"All bets are off," replied the owner and
financier of the betting slave. Presumably he had a lot of money
riding on the outcome as well. Certainly he looked as tense as
anyone there.
For maybe a minute, the surviving gladiator lay
exhausted, his blood spilling. The crowd grew louder, calling on
him to rise and take off the helmet. Slowly, in obvious pain, he
grasped his sword and pushed himself up on it. Standing, he swayed
slightly and reached down to take a handful of sand. He rubbed the
sand into his wound, watching as it fell away in soft red clumps.
His fingers too were bloody as he raised them to remove the
helmet.
Alexandros the Greek stood and smiled, his face
pale with loss of blood. The crowd threw abuse at the swaying
figure. Coins glittered in the sun as they were thrown, not to
reward, but to hurt. With curses, money was exchanged all around
the amphitheater, and the gladiator was ignored as he sank to his
knees again and had to be helped out by slaves.
Tubruk watched him go, his face unreadable. "Is
he a man to see about training?" Julius asked, ebullient as his
winnings were counted into a pouch.
"No—he won't last out the week, I should
think. Anyway, there was little schooling in his technique, just
good speed and reflexes."
"For a Greek," said Marcus, trying to join
in.
"Yes, good reflexes for a Greek," Tubruk
replied, his mind far away.
While the sand was being raked clean,
the crowd continued with their business, although Gaius and Marcus
could see one or two spectators reenacting the gladiators' blows
with shouts and mock cries of pain. As they waited, the boys saw
Julius tap Tubruk on his arm, bringing to his attention a pair of
men approaching through the rows. Both seemed slightly out of place
at the circus, with their togas of rough wool and their skins
unadorned by metal jewelry.
Julius stood with Tubruk, and the boys copied
them. Gaius's father put out his hand and greeted the first to
reach them, who bowed his head slightly on contact.
"Greetings, my friends. Please take a seat. This
is my son and another boy in my care. I'm sure they can spend a few
minutes buying food?"
Tubruk handed a coin to both of them and the
message was clear. Reluctantly, they moved off between the rows and
joined a queue at a food stall. They watched as the four men bent
their heads close and talked, their voices lost in the crowd.
After a few minutes, as Marcus was buying
oranges, Gaius saw the two newcomers thank his father and take his
hand again. Then each moved over to Tubruk, who put coins in their
hands as they left.
Marcus had bought an orange for each of them,
and when they'd returned to their seats, he handed them out.
"Who were those men, Father?" Gaius asked,
intrigued.
"Clients of mine. I have a few bound to me in
the city," Julius replied, skinning his orange neatly.
"But what do they do? I have never seen them
before."
Julius turned to his son, registering the
interest. He smiled. "They are useful men. They vote for
candidates I support, or guard me in dangerous areas. They carry
messages for me, or... a thousand other small things. In return,
they get six denarii a day, each man."
Marcus whistled. "That must add up to a
fortune."
Julius transferred his attention to Marcus, who
dropped his gaze and fiddled with the skin of his orange.
"Money well spent. In this city, it is good to
have men I can call on quickly, for any sudden task. Rich members
of the Senate may have hundreds of clients. It is part of our
system."
"Can you trust these clients of yours?" Gaius
broke in.
Julius grunted. "Not with anything worth more
than six denarii a day."
Renius entered without announcement.
One moment, the spectators were chatting amongst themselves with
the dirty sand ring empty, and the next a small door opened and a
man walked out of it. At first, he wasn't noticed, then people
pointed and began to stand.
"Why are they cheering so loudly?" Marcus asked,
squinting at the lone figure standing in the burning sun.
"Because he has come back one more time. Now you
will be able to say you saw Renius fight when you have children of
your own," Tubruk replied, smiling.
Everyone around them seemed lit up by the
spectacle. A chant began and swelled: "Ren-i-us... Ren-i-us." The
noise drowned out all the shuffling of feet and rustling clothing.
The only sound in the world was his name.
He raised his sword in salute. Even from a
distance, it was clear that age had not yet taken a good twisting
grip on him.
"Looks good for sixty. Belly's not flat, though.
Look at that wide belt," Tubruk muttered almost to himself. "You've
let yourself go a little, you silly old fool."
As the old man received the plaudits of the
crowd, a single file of fighting slaves entered the sandy ring.
Each wore a cloth around his loins that allowed free movement and
carried a short gladius. No shields or armor could be seen.
The Roman crowd fell quiet as the men formed a diamond with Renius
at the center. There was a moment of stillness and then the animal
enclosure opened.
Even before the cage was dragged out onto the
sand, the short, hacking roars could be heard. The crowd whispered
in anticipation. There were three lions pacing the cage as it was
dragged out by sweating slaves. Through the bars they were obscene
shapes: huge humped shoulders, heads and jaws tapering back to
hindquarters almost as an afterthought. They were created to crush
out life with massive jaws. They swiped with their paws in
unfocused rage as the cage was jarred and finally came to rest.
Slaves lifted hammers aloft to knock out the
wooden pegs that held the front section of the cage. The crowd
licked dry lips. The hammers fell, and the iron lattice dropped
onto the sand, an echo clearly heard in the silence. One by one,
the great cats moved out of the cage, revealing a speed and
sureness of step that was frightening.
The largest roared defiance at the group of men
that faced it across the sand. When they made no move, it began to
pace up and down outside the cage, watching them all the while. Its
companions roared and circled and it settled back onto its
haunches.
Without a signal, without a warning, it ran at
the men, who shrank back visibly. This was death coming for
them.
Renius could be heard barking out commands. The
front of the diamond, three brave men, met the charge, swords
ready. At the last moment, the lion took off in a rushing leap and
smashed two of the slaves from their feet, striking with a paw on
each chest. Neither moved, as their chests were shards and daggers
of bone. The third man swung and hit the heavy mane, doing little
damage. The jaws closed on his arm in a snap like the strike of a
snake. He screamed and carried on screaming as he staggered away,
one hand holding the pumping red remains of the other wrist. A
sword scraped along the lion's ribs and another cut a hamstring so
that the rear quarters went suddenly limp. This served only to
enrage the beast and it snapped at itself in red confusion. Renius
growled a command and the others stepped back to allow him the
kill.
As he landed the fatal blow, the other two lions
attacked. One caught the head of the wounded man who had wandered
away. A quick crack of the jaws and it was over. That lion settled
down with the corpse, ignoring the other slaves as it bit into the
soft abdomen and began to feed. It was quickly killed, speared on
three blades in the mouth and chest.
Renius met the charge of the last to his left.
His protecting slave was tumbled by the strike and over him came
the snapping rage that was the male cat. Its paws were striking and
great dark claws stood out like spear points, straining to pierce
and tear. Renius balanced himself and struck into the chest. A
wound opened with a rush of sticky dark blood, but the blade
skittered off the breastbone and Renius was struck by a shoulder,
only luck letting the jaws snap where he had been. He rolled and
came up well, still with sword in hand. As the beast checked and
turned back on him, he was ready and sent his blade into the armpit
and the bursting heart. The strength went out of it in the instant,
as if the steel had lanced a boil. It lay and bled into the sand,
still aware and panting, but become pitiful. A soft moan came from
deep within the bloody chest as Renius approached, drawing a dagger
from his belt. Reddish saliva dribbled onto the sand as the torn
lungs strained to fill with air.
Renius spoke softly to the beast, but the words
could not be heard in the stands. He lay a hand on the mane and
patted it absently, as he would a favorite hound. Then he slipped
the blade into the throat and it was over.
The crowd seemed to draw breath for the first
time in hours and then laughed at the release of tension. Four men
were dead on the sand, but Renius, the old killer, still stood,
looking exhausted. They began to chant his name, but he bowed
quickly and left the ring, striding to the shadowed door and into
darkness.
"Get in quickly, Tubruk. You know my highest
price. A year, mind—a full year of service."
Tubruk disappeared into the crowds and the boys
were left to make polite conversation with Julius. However, without
Tubruk to act as a catalyst, the conversation died quickly. Julius
loved his son, but had never enjoyed talking to the young. They
prattled and knew nothing of decorum and self-restraint.
"He will be a hard teacher, if his reputation is
accurate. He was once without equal in the empire, but Tubruk tells
the stories better than I."
The boys nodded eagerly and determined to press
Tubruk for the details as soon as they had the opportunity.
The seasons had turned toward autumn
on the estate before the boys saw Renius again, dismounting from a
gelding in the stone yard of the stables. It was a mark of his
status that he could ride like an officer or a member of the
Senate. Both of them were in the hay barn adjoining, and had been
jumping off the high bales onto the loose straw. Covered in hay and
dust, they were not fit to be seen and peered out at the visitor
from a corner. He glanced around as Tubruk came to meet him, taking
the reins.
"You will be received as soon as you are
refreshed from your journey."
"I have ridden less than five miles. I am
neither dirty nor sweating like an animal. Take me in now, or I'll
find the way myself," snapped the old soldier, frowning.
"I see you have lost none of your charm and
lightness of manner since you worked with me."
Renius didn't smile and for a second the boys
expected a blow or a violent retort.
"I see you have not yet learned manners to your
elders. I expect better."
"Everyone is younger than you. Yes, I can
see how you would be set in your ways."
Renius seemed to freeze for a second, slowly
blinking. "Do you wish me to draw my sword?"
Tubruk was still, and Marcus and Gaius noticed
for the first time that he too wore his old gladius in a
scabbard.
"I wish you only to remember that I am in charge
of the running of the estate and that I am a free man, like
yourself. Our agreement benefits us both; there are no favors being
done here."
Renius smiled. "You are correct. Lead on then to
the master of the house. I would like to meet the man who has such
interesting types working for him."
As they left, Gaius and Marcus looked at each
other, eyes aglow with excitement.
"He will be a hard taskmaster, but will quickly
become impressed at the talent he has on his hands..." Marcus
whispered.
"He will realize that we will be his last great
work, before he drops dead," Gaius continued, caught up in the
idea.
"I will be the greatest swordsman in the land,
aided by the fact that I have stretched my arms every night since I
was a baby," Marcus went on.
"The Fighting Monkey, they will call you!" Gaius
declared in awe.
Marcus threw hay at his face and they grabbed
each other with mock ferocity, rolling around for a second until
Gaius ended up on top, sitting heavily on his friends chest.
"I will be the slightly better swordsman, too
modest to embarrass you in front of the ladies."
He struck a proud pose and Marcus shoved him off
into the straw again. They sat panting and lost in dreams for a
moment.
At length, Marcus spoke: "In truth, you will run
this estate, like your father. I have nothing and you know my
mother is a whore... no, don't say anything. We both heard your
father say it. I have no inheritance save my name, and that is
stained. I can only see a bright future in the army, where at least
my birth is noble enough to allow me high position. Having Renius
as my trainer will help us both, but me most of all."
"You will always be my friend, you know. Nothing
can come between us." Gaius spoke clearly, looking him in the
eye.
"We will find our paths together."
They both nodded and gripped hands for a second
in the pact. As they let go, Tubruk's familiar bulk appeared as he
stuck his head into the hayloft.
"Get yourselves cleaned up. Once Renius has
finished with your father, he'll want some sort of inspection."
They stood slowly, nervousness obvious in their
movements.
"Is he cruel?" Gaius asked.
Tubruk didn't smile. "Yes, he is cruel. He is
the hardest man I have ever known. He wins battles because the
other men feel pain and are frightened of death and dismemberment.
He is more like a sword than a man, and he will make you both as
hard as himself. You will probably never thank him—you will
hate him—but what he gives you will save your lives more than
once."
Gaius looked at him questioningly. "Did you know
him before?"
Tubruk laughed, a short bark with no humor. "I
should say so. He trained me for the ring, when I was a slave."
His eyes flashed in the sun as he turned, and
then he was gone.
* * *
Renius stood with his feet
shoulder-width apart and his hands clasped behind his back. He
frowned at the seated Julius.
"No. If anyone interferes, I will leave on that
hour. You want your son and the whore's whelp to be made into
soldiers. I know how to do that. I have been doing it, one way or
another, all my life. Sometimes they only learn as the enemy
charges, sometimes they never learn, and I have left a few of those
in shallow foreign graves."
"Tubruk will want to discuss their progress with
you. His judgment is usually first rate. He was, after all, trained
by you," Julius said, still trying to regain the initiative he felt
he had lost.
This man was an overwhelming force. From the
moment he entered the room, he had dominated the conversation.
Instead of setting out the manner of his son's teaching, as he had
intended, Julius found himself on the defensive, answering
questions about his estate and training facilities. He knew better
now what he did not have than what he did.
"They are very young, and..."
"Any older would be too late. Oh, you can take a
man of twenty and make him a competent soldier, fit and hard. A
child, though, can be fashioned into a thing of metal, unbreakable.
Some would say you have already left it too late, that proper
training should commence at five years. I am of the opinion that
ten is the optimum to ensure the proper development of muscle and
lung capacity. Earlier can break their spirits; later and their
spirits are too firmly in the wrong courses."
"I agree, to some ext—"
"Are you the real father of the whore's boy?"
Renius spoke curtly but quietly, as if inquiring after the
weather.
"What? Gods, no! I—"
"Good. That would have been a complication. I
accept the year contract then. My word is given. Get the boys out
into the stable yard for inspection in five minutes. They saw me
arrive, so they should be ready. I will report to you quarterly in
this room. If you cannot make the appointment, be so good as to let
me know. Good day."
He turned on his heel and strode out. Behind
him, Julius blew air out of puffed cheeks in a mixture of amazement
and contentment.
"Could be just what I wanted," he said, and
smiled for the first time that morning.
CHAPTER
5
The first thing they were told was
that they would get a good night's sleep. For eight hours, from
before midnight to dawn, they were left alone. At all other times,
they were being taught, or toughened, or cramming food into their
mouths in hasty, snatched breaks of only minutes.
Marcus had had the excitement knocked out of him
on that first day, when Renius took his chin in his leathery hand
and peered at him.
"Weak spirited, like his mother was."
He'd said no more at the time, but Marcus burned
with the humiliating thought that the old soldier he wanted so much
to like him might have seen his mother in the city. From the first
moment, his desire to please Renius became a source of shame to
him. He knew he had to excel at the training, but not in such a way
that the old bastard would approve.
Renius was easy to hate. From the first, he
called Gaius by his name, while only referring to Marcus as "the
boy" or "the whore's boy." Gaius could see it was deliberate, some
attempt to use their hatred as a tool to improve them. Yet he could
not help but feel annoyance as his friend was humbled over and over
again.
A stream ran through the estate, carrying cold
water down to the sea. One month after his arrival, they had been
taken down to the water before noon. Renius had simply motioned to
a dark pool.
"Get in," he said.
They'd looked at each other and shrugged.
The cold was numbing from the first moments.
"Stay there until I come back for you" was the
command called over his shoulder as Renius walked back up to the
house, where he ate a light lunch and bathed, before sleeping
through the hot afternoon.
Marcus felt the cold much more than his friend.
After only a couple of hours, he was blue around the face and
unable to speak for shivering. As the afternoon wore on, his legs
went numb and the muscles of his face and neck ached from
shivering. They talked with difficulty, anything to take their
minds off the cold. The shadows moved and the talk died. Gaius was
nowhere near as uncomfortable as his friend. His limbs had gone
numb long before, but breathing was still easy, whereas Marcus was
sipping small breaths.
The afternoon cooled unnoticed outside the
eternal chill of the shaded section of fast-flowing water. Marcus
rested with his head leaning to one side or the other, with an eye
half submerged and slowly blinking, seeing nothing. His mind could
drift until his nose was covered, when he would splutter and raise
himself straight again. Then he would dip once more as the pain
worsened. They had not spoken for a long time. It had become a
private battle, but not against each other. They would stay until
they were called for, until Renius came back and ordered them to
climb out.
As the day fled, they both knew that they could
not climb out. Even if Renius appeared at that moment and
congratulated them, he would have to drag them out himself, getting
wet and muddy in the process if the gods were watching at all.
Marcus slipped in and out of waking, coming back
with a sudden start and realizing he had somehow drifted away from
the cold and the darkness. He wondered then if he would die in the
river.
In one of those dreaming dozes, he felt warmth
and heard the welcoming crackle of a good log fire. An old man
prodded the burning wood with his toe, smiling at the sparks. He
turned and seemed to notice the boy watching him, white and
lost.
"Come closer to the warm, boy, I'll not hurt
ye."
The old man's face carried the wrinkles and dirt
of decades of labor and worry. It was scarred and seamed like a
stitched purse. The hands were covered in rope veins that shifted
under the skin as the swollen knuckles moved. He was dressed like a
traveling man, with patched clothes and a dark red cloth wrapping
his throat.
"What do we have here? A mudfish! Rare for these
parts, but good eating on one, they say. You could cut a leg off
and feed us both. I'd stop the bleeding, boy, I'm not without
tricks."
Huge eyebrows bristled and rose in interest at
the thought. The eyes glittered and the mouth opened to reveal soft
gums, wet and puckered. The man patted his pockets and the shadows
copied his movements, flapping on dark yellow walls that were lit
only by the flames.
"Hold still, boy, I have a knife with a saw edge
for you..." A hand like rough stone was pressed over his whole
face, suddenly larger than a hand had any right to be.
The old man's breath was warm on his ear,
smelling foully of rotting teeth.
He awoke choking and heaving dryly. His stomach
was empty and the moon had risen. Gaius was beside him still, his
face barely above the black glass water, head nodding in and out of
the darkness.
It was enough. If the choice was to fail or to
die, then he would fail and not mind the consequences. Tactically,
that was the better choice. Sometimes, it is better to retreat and
marshal your forces. That was what the old man wanted them to know.
He wanted them to give up and was probably waiting somewhere
nearby, waiting for them to learn this most important of
lessons.
Marcus didn't remember the dream, except for the
fear of being smothered, which he still felt. His body seemed to
have lost its familiar shape and just sat, heavy and waterlogged
beneath the surface. He had become some sort of soft-skinned,
bottom-dwelling fish. He concentrated and his mouth hung slackly,
dribbling back water as cold as himself. He swayed forward and
brought up his arm to hold a root. It was the first time a limb had
cleared the water in eleven hours. He felt the cold of death on him
and had no regrets. True, Gaius was still there, but they would
have different strengths. Marcus would not die to please some
poxed-up old gladiator.
He slithered out, an inch at a time, mud
plastering his face and chest as he dragged himself to the bank.
His bloated stomach did seem buoyant in the water, as if filled
from within. The sensation as his full weight finally came to bear
on the hard ground was one of ecstasy. He lay and began to shudder
in spasmodic fits of retching. Yellow bile trickled weakly out of
his lips and mixed with the black mud. The night was quiet and he
felt as if he'd just crawled out of the grave.
Dawn found him still there and a shadow blocking
the pale sun. Renius stood there and frowned, not at Marcus, but at
the tiny pale figure of the boy still in the water, eyes closed and
lips blue. As Marcus watched him, he saw a sudden spasm of worry
cross the iron face.
"Boy!" snapped the voice they had already come
to loathe. "Gaius!"
The figure in the water lolled in the moving
current, but there was no response. A muscle in Renius's jaw
clenched and the old soldier stepped up to his thighs into the
pool, scooping up the ten-year-old and throwing him over his
shoulder as if the boy were a puppy. The eyes opened with the
sudden movement, but there was no focus. Marcus rose as the old man
strode away with his burden, obviously heading back to the house.
He tottered after, muscles protesting.
Behind them, Tubruk stood in the shadows of the
opposite bank, still hidden from sight by the foliage as he had
been all night. His eyes were narrowed and as cold as the
river.
Renius seemed to be fueled by a
constant anger. After months of training, the boys had not seen him
smile except in mockery. On bad days, he rubbed his neck as he
snapped at them, and gave the impression that his temper was
cracking every second. He was worst in the midday sun, when his
skin would mottle with irritation at the slightest mistake.
"Hold the stone straight in front!" he barked at
Marcus and Gaius as they sweated in the heat. The task that
afternoon was to stand with arms outstretched in front, with a rock
the size of a fist held in their hands. It had been easy at
first.
Gaius's shoulders were aching and his arms felt
loose. He tried to tense the muscles, but they seemed out of his
control. Perspiring, he watched the stone drop by a hand's width
and felt a stripe of pain over his stomach as Renius struck with a
short whip. His arms trembled and muscles shuddered under the pain.
He concentrated on the rock and bit his lip.
"You will not let it fall. You will welcome the
pain. You will not let it fall."
Renius's voice was a harsh chant as he paced
around the boys. This was the fourth time they had raised the
stones, and each time was harder. He barely allowed them a minute
to rest their aching arms before the order to raise came again.
"Cease," Renius said, watching to see that they
controlled the descent, his whip held ready. Marcus was breathing
heavily and Renius curled his lip.
"There will come a time when you think you can't
stand the pain any more and men's lives will depend on it. You
could be holding a rope others are climbing, or walking forty miles
in full kit to rescue comrades. Are you listening?"
The boys nodded, trying not to pant with
exhaustion, just pleased he was talking instead of ordering the
stones up again.
"I have seen men walk themselves to death,
falling onto the road with their legs still twitching and trying to
lift them. They were buried with honor.
"I have seen men of my legion keep rank and move
in formation, holding their guts in with one hand. They were buried
with honor." He paused to consider his words, rubbing the back of
his neck as though he had been stung.
"There will be times when you want to simply sit
down, when you want to give up. When your body tells you it is done
and your spirit is weak.
"These are false. Savages and the beasts of the
field break, but we go on.
"Do you think you are finished now? Are your
arms hurting you? I tell you that you will raise that rock another
dozen times this hour and you will hold it. And another dozen if
you let one fall below a hand's width."
A slave girl was washing dust from a wall at the
side of the courtyard. She never looked at the boys, though
occasionally she jumped slightly as the old gladiator barked a
command. Gaius saw she looked exhausted herself, but he had noticed
she was attractive, with long dark hair and a loose slave shift.
Her face was delicate, with a pair of dark eyes and a full mouth
pressed into a line by the concentration of her work. He thought
her name was Alexandria.
As Renius spoke, she bent low to dip the cloth
in the bucket and paused to wash the dirt from the material. Her
shift gaped as she pressed the cloth into the water, and Gaius
could see the smooth skin of her neck running down to the soft
curves of her breasts. He thought he could see right down to the
skin of her stomach and imagined her nipples gently grazing against
the rough cloth as she moved.
In that moment, Renius was forgotten, despite
the pain in his arms.
The old man stopped speaking and turned on his
heel to see what was distracting the boys from their lesson. He
growled as he saw the slave and crossed to her with three quick
strides, taking her arm in a cruel grip that made her cry out. His
voice was a bellow.
"I am teaching these children a lesson that will
save their lives, and you are flashing your paps at them like a
cheap whore!"
The girl cowered from his anger, pulling as far
as she could reach from the held wrist.
"I... I..." she stammered, seeming dazed, but
Renius swore and took her by the hair. She winced in pain and he
swung her to face the boys.
"I don't care if there are a thousand of these
behind my back. I am teaching you to concentrate!"
In one brutal move, he flicked her legs away
with a sweep of his foot and she fell. Still holding her hair,
Renius raised his whip in his other hand and brought it down
sharply, in sequence with his words.
"You will not distract these boys
while I teach."
The girl was crying as Renius let her go. She
crawled a couple of paces, then came up to a crouch and ran from
the yard, sobbing.
Marcus and Gaius looked dumbfounded at Renius as
he turned back to them. His expression was murderous.
"Close your mouths, boys. This was never a game.
I will make you good enough and hard enough to serve the Republic
after I am gone. I will not allow weakness of any kind. Now raise
the stones and hold them until I say to cease."
Once again, the boys raised their arms, not even
daring to exchange glances.
* * *
That evening, when the estate was
quiet and Renius had departed for the city, Gaius delayed his usual
exhausted collapse into sleep to visit the slave quarters. He felt
guilty being there and kept an eye out for Tubruk's shadow, though
he couldn't quite have explained why.
The household slaves slept under the same roof
as the family, in a wing of simple rooms. It was not a world he
knew and he felt nervous as he walked along the darkening
corridors, wondering whether he should knock at doors, or call her
name, if it really was Alexandria.
He found her sitting on a low ledge outside an
open door. She seemed lost in thought and he cleared his throat
gently as he recognized her. She scrambled to her feet in fright
and then held herself still, looking at the floor. She had cleaned
the dust of the day from her skin, and it was smooth and pale in
the evening light. Her hair was tied back with a scrap of cloth,
and her eyes were wide with darkness.
"Is your name Alexandria?" he said quietly.
She nodded.
"I came to say sorry for today. I was watching
you at your chores and Renius thought you were distracting us."
She stood perfectly still in front of him and
kept her gaze on the floor at his feet. The silence stretched for a
moment and he blushed, unsure how to continue.
"Look, I am sorry. He was cruel."
Still she said nothing. Her thoughts were
pained, but this was the son of the house. I am a slave, she
longed to say. Every day is pain and humiliation. You have
nothing to say to me.
Gaius waited for a few more moments and then
walked away, wishing he hadn't come.
Alexandria watched him leave, watched the
confident walk and the developing strength that Renius was bringing
out. He would be as vicious as that old gladiator when he was
older. He was free and Roman. His compassion came from his youth,
and that was fast being burned away in the training yard. Her face
was hot with the anger she had not dared show. It was a small
victory not to have talked to him, but she cherished it.
Renius reported their progress at the
end of each quarter-year. On the evening before the appointed day,
Gaius's father would return from his lodgings in the capital and
receive Tubruk's summary of the estates wealth. He would see the
boys and spend a few minutes extra with his son. The following day,
he would see Renius at dawn and the boys would sleep in, grateful
for the slight break in their routine.
The first report had been frustratingly
short.
"They have made a beginning. Both have some
spirit," Renius had stated flatly.
After a long pause, Julius realized that there
was to be no further comment.
"They are obedient?" he asked, wondering at the
lack of information. For this he'd paid so much gold?
"Of course," Renius replied, his expression
baffled.
"They, er... they show promise?" Julius battled
on, refusing to allow this conversation to go the way of the last
one, but again feeling as if he were addressing one of his old
tutors instead of a man in his employ.
"A beginning has been made. This work is not
accomplished quickly."
"Nothing of value ever is," Julius replied
quietly.
They looked at each other calmly for a moment
and both nodded. The interview was at an end. The old warrior shook
hands with a brief touch of dry skin in a quick, hard grip and
left. Julius remained standing, gazing at the door that closed
behind his exit.
Tubruk thought the training methods were
dangerous and had mentioned an incident where the boys could have
drowned without supervision. Julius grimaced. He knew that to
mention the worry to Renius would be to sever their agreement.
Preventing the old murderer from going too far would rest with the
estate manager.
Sighing, he sat down and thought about the
problems he faced in Rome. Cornelius Sulla had continued to rise in
power, bringing some towns in the south of the country into the
Roman fold and away from their merchant controllers. What was the
name of that last? Pompeii, some sort of mountain town. Sulla kept
his name in the mind of the vacuous public with such small
triumphs. He commanded a group of senators with a web of lies,
bribery, and flattery. They were all young and brought a shudder to
the old soldier as he thought of some of them. If this was what
Rome was coming to, in his lifetime...!
Instead of taking the business of empire
seriously, they seemed to live only for sordid pleasures of the
most dubious kinds, worshipping at the temple of Aphrodite and
calling themselves the "New Romans." There were few things that
still caused outrage in the temples of the capital, but this new
group seemed intent on finding the limits and breaking them, one by
one. One of the people's tribunes had been found murdered, one who
opposed Sulla whenever possible. This would not have been too
remarkable in itself; he had been found in a pool, made red by a
swiftly opened vein in his leg, a not-uncommon mode of death. The
problem was that his children too had been found killed, which
looked like a warning to others. There were no clues and no
witnesses. It was unlikely the murderer would ever be found, but
before another tribune could be elected, Sulla had forced through a
resolution that gave a general greater autonomy in the field. He
had argued the need himself and was eloquent and passionate in his
persuasion. The Senate had voted and his power had grown a little
more, while the power of the Republic was nibbled away.
Julius had so far managed to stay neutral, but
as he was related by marriage to another of the power players, his
wife's brother Marius, he knew eventually that sides would have to
be chosen. A wise man could see the changes coming, but it saddened
him that the equalities of the Republic were felt as chains by more
and more of the hotheads in the Senate. Marius too felt that a
powerful man could use the law rather than obey it. Already he had
proven this by making a mockery of the system used to elect
consuls. Roman law said that a consul could only be elected once by
the Senate and must then step down from the position. Marius had
recently secured his third election with martial victories against
the Cimbri tribes and the Teutons, whom he had smashed with the
Primigenia legion. He was still a lion of the emerging Rome, and
Julius would have to find the protection of his shadow if Cornelius
Sulla continued to grow in power.
Favors would be owed and some of his autonomy
would be lost if he threw his colors into the camp of Marius, but
it might be the only wise choice. He wished he could consult his
wife and listen to her quick mind dissect the problem as she used
to do. Always she could see an angle on a problem, or a point of
view that no one else could see. He missed her wry smile and the
way she would press her palms against his eyes when he was tired,
bringing a wonderful coolness and peace...
He moved quietly through the corridors to
Aurelia's rooms and paused outside the door, listening to her long,
slow breaths, barely audible in the silence.
Carefully, he entered the room and crossed over
to the sleeping figure, kissing her lightly on the brow. She didn't
stir and he sat by the bed, watching her.
Asleep, she seemed the woman he remembered. At
any moment, she could wake and her eyes would fill with
intelligence and wit. She would laugh to see him sitting there in
the shadows and pull back the covers, inviting him in to the warmth
of her.
"Who can I turn to, my love?" he whispered. "Who
should I support and trust to safeguard the city and the Republic?
I think your brother Marius cares as little for the idea as Sulla
himself." He rubbed his jaw, feeling the stubble.
"Where does safety lie for my wife and my son?
Do I throw in my house to the wolf or the snake?"
Silence answered him and he shook his head
slowly. He rose and kissed Aurelia, imagining just for one moment
more that, if her eyes opened, someone he knew would be looking
out. Then he left quietly, shutting the door softly behind him.
When Tubruk walked his watch that evening, the
last of the candles had guttered out and the rooms were dark.
Julius still sat in his chair, but his eyes were closed and his
chest rose and fell slowly, with a soft whistle of air from his
nose. Tubruk nodded to himself, pleased he was getting some rest
from worry.
The following morning, Julius ate with
the two boys, a small breaking of the fast with bread, fruit, and a
warm tisane to counter the dawn chill. The depressive thoughts of
the day before had been put aside and he sat straight, his gaze
clear.
"You look healthy and strong," he said to the
pair of them. "Renius is turning you into young men."
They grinned at each other for a second.
"Renius says we will soon be fit enough for
battle training. We have shown we can stand heat and cold and have
begun to find our strengths and weaknesses. All this is internal,
which he says is the foundation for external skill." Gaius spoke
with animation, his hands moving slightly with his words.
Both boys were clearly growing in confidence,
and Julius felt a pang for a moment that he was not able to see
more of their growth. Looking at his son, he wondered if he would
come home to a stranger one day.
"You are my son. Renius has trained many, but
never a son of mine. You will surprise him, I think." Julius looked
at Gaius's incredulous expression, knowing the boy was not used to
praise or admiration.
"I will try to. Marcus will surprise him too, I
expect."
Julius did not look at the other boy at the
table, although he felt his eyes. As if he were not present, he
answered, wanting the point to be remembered and annoyed at Gaius's
attempt to bring his friend into the conversation.
"Marcus is not my son. You carry my name and my
reputation with you. You alone."
Gaius bowed his head, embarrassed and unable to
hold his fathers strangely compelling gaze. "Yes, Father," he
muttered, and continued to eat.
Sometimes he wished there were other children,
brothers or sisters to play with and to carry the burden of his
father's hopes. Of course, he would not give up the estate to them,
that was his alone and always had been, but occasionally he felt
the pressure as an uncomfortable weight. His mother especially,
when she was quiet and placid, would croon to him that he was all
the children she had been allowed, one perfect example of life. She
often told him that she would have liked daughters to dress and
pass on her wisdom to, but the fever that had struck her at his
birth had taken that chance away.
Renius came into the warm kitchen. He wore open
sandals with a red soldier's tunic and short leggings that ended on
his calves, stretched tight over almost obscenely large muscles,
the legacy of life as an infantryman in the legions. Despite his
age, he seemed to burn with health and vitality. He halted in front
of the table, his back straight and his eyes bright and
interested.
"With your permission, sir, the sun is rising
and the boys must run five miles before it clears the hills."
Julius nodded and the two boys stood quickly,
waiting for his dismissal.
"Go—train hard," he said, smiling. His son
looked eager, the other—there was something else there in
those dark eyes and brows. Anger? No, it was gone. The pair raced
off and the two men were once again left alone. Julius indicated
the table.
"I hear you are intending to begin battle school
with them soon."
"They are not strong enough yet; they may not be
this year, but I am not just a fitness instructor to them, after
all."
"Have you given any thought to continuing their
training after the year contract is up?" Julius asked, hoping his
casual manner masked his interest.
"I will retire to the country next year. Nothing
is likely to change that."
"Then these two will be your last
students—your last legacy to Rome," Julius replied.
Renius froze for a second and Julius let no
trace of his emotions betray itself on his face.
"It is something to think about," Renius said at
last, before turning on his heel and going into the gray dawn
light.
Julius grinned wolfishly behind him.
CHAPTER
6
As officers, you will ride to the
battle, but fighting from horseback is not our chief strength.
Although we use cavalry for quick, smashing attacks, it is the
footmen of the twenty-eight legions that break the enemy. Every man
of the 150,000 legionaries we have in the field at any given moment
of any day can walk thirty miles in full armor, carrying a pack
that is a third his own weight. He can then fight the enemy,
without weakness and without complaint."
Renius eyed the two boys who stood in the heat
of the noon sun, returned from a run and trying to control their
breathing. More than three years he had given them, the last he
would ever teach. There was so much more for them to learn! He
paced around them as he spoke, snapping the words out.
"It is not the luck of the gods that has given
the countries of the world into the palms of Rome. It is not the
weakness of the foreign tribes that leads them to throw themselves
onto our swords in battle. It is our strength, greater and
deeper than anything they can bring to the field. That is our first
tactic. Before our men even reach the battle, they will be
unbreakable in their strength and their morale. More, they will
have a discipline that the armies of the world can bloody
themselves against without effect.
"Each man will know that his brothers at his
side will have to be killed to leave him. That makes him stronger
than the most heroic charge, or the vain screams of savage tribes.
We walk to battle. We stand and they die."
Gaius's breathing slowed and his lungs ceased to
clamor for oxygen. In the three years since Renius had first
arrived at his father's villa, he had grown in height and strength.
Approaching fourteen years of age, he was showing signs of the man
he would one day be.
Burned the color of light oak by the Roman sun,
he stood easily, his frame slim and athletic, with powerful
shoulders and legs. He could run for hours round the hills and
still find reserves for a burst of speed as his father's estate
came into view again.
Marcus too had undergone changes, both
physically and in his spirit. The innocent happiness of the boy he
had been came and went in flashes now. Renius had taught him to
guard his emotions and his responses. He had been taught this with
the whip and without kindness of any kind for three long years. He
too had well-developed shoulders, tapering down into lightning-fast
fists that Gaius could not match anymore. Inside him, the desire to
stand on his own, without help from his line or the patronage of
others, was like a slow acid in his stomach.
As Renius watched, both boys became calm and
stood to attention, watching him warily. It was not unknown for him
to suddenly strike at an exposed stomach, testing, always testing
for weakness.
"Gladii, gentlemen—fetch your swords."
Silently, they turned away and collected the
short swords from pegs on the training yard wall. Heavy leather
belts were buckled around their waists, with a leather "frog"
attached, a holder for the sword. The scabbard slid snugly into the
frog, tightly held by lacing so that it would remain immobile if
the blade was suddenly drawn.
Properly attired, they returned to the attention
position, waiting for the next order.
"Gaius, you observe. I will use the boy to make
a simple point." Renius loosened his shoulders with a crack and
grinned as Marcus slowly drew the gladius.
"First position, boy. Stand like a soldier, if
you can remember how."
Marcus relaxed into the first position, legs
shoulder-width apart, body slightly turned from full frontal, sword
held at waist height, ready to strike for the groin, stomach, or
throat, the three main areas of attack. Groin and neck were
favorites, as a deep cut there would mean the opponent bled to
death in seconds.
Renius shifted his weight, and Marcus's point
wavered to follow the movement.
"Slashing the air again? If you do that, I'll
see it and pattern you. I only need one opening to cut your throat
out, one blow. Let me guess which way you're going to shift your
weight and I'll cut you in two." He began to circle Marcus, who
remained relaxed, his eyebrows raised over a face blank of
expression. Renius continued to talk.
"You want to kill me, don't you, boy? I can
feel your hatred. I can feel it like good wine in my
stomach. It cheers me up, boy, can you believe that?"
Marcus attacked in a sudden move, without
warning, without signal. It had taken hundreds of hours of drill
for him to eliminate all his "tells," his telegraphing tensions of
muscle that gave away his intentions. No matter how fast he was, a
good opponent would gut him if he signaled his thoughts before each
move.
Renius was not there when the stabbing lunge
ended. His gladius pressed up against Marcus's throat.
"Again. You were slow and clumsy as usual. If
you weren't faster than Gaius, you'd be the worst I'd ever
seen."
Marcus gaped and, in a split second, the
sun-warmed gladius was pressed against his inner thigh, by the big
pulsing vein that carried his life.
Renius shook his head in disgust. "Never
listen to your opponent. Gaius is observing, you are
fighting. You concentrate on how I am moving, not the words I
speak, which are simply to distract you. Again."
They circled in the shadows of the yard.
"Your mother was clumsy in bed at first."
Renius's sword snaked out as he spoke and was snapped aside with a
bell ring of metal. Marcus stepped in and pressed his blade against
the leathery old skin of Renius's throat. His expression was cold
and unforgiving.
"Predictable," Marcus muttered, glaring into the
cold blue eyes, nettled nonetheless.
He felt a pressure and looked down to see a
dagger held in Renius's left hand, touching him lightly on the
stomach. Renius grinned.
"Many men will hate you enough to take you with
them. They are the most dangerous of all. They can run right onto
your sword and blind you with their thumbs. I've seen that done by
a woman to one of my men."
"Why did she hate him so much?" Marcus asked as
he took a pace away, sword still ready to defend.
"The victors will always be hated. It is the
price we pay. If they love you, they will do what you want, but
when they want to do it. If they fear you, they will do your will,
but when you want them to. So, is it better to be loved or
feared?"
"Both," Gaius said seriously.
Renius smiled. "You mean adored and respected,
which is the impossible trick if you are occupying lands that are
only yours by right of strength and blood. Life is never a simple
problem from question to answer. There are always many
answers."
The two boys looked baffled and Renius snorted
in irritation.
"I will show you what discipline means. I will
show you what you have already learned. Put your swords away and
stand back to attention."
The old gladiator looked the pair over with a
critical eye. Without warning, the noon bell sounded and he
frowned, his manner changing in an instant. His voice lost the snap
of the tutor and, for once, was low and quiet.
"There are food riots in the city, did you know
that? Great gangs that destroy property and stream away like rats
when someone is brave enough to draw a sword on them. I should be
there, not playing games with children. I have taught you for two
years longer than my original agreement. You are not ready, but I
will not waste any more of my evening years on you. Today is your
last lesson." He stepped over to Gaius, who stared resolutely
ahead.
"Your father should have met me here and heard
my report. The fact that he is late for the first time in three
years tells me what?"
Gaius cleared his dry throat. "The riots in Rome
are worse than you believed."
"Yes. Your father will not be here to see this
last lesson. A pity. If he is dead and I kill you, who will inherit
the estate?"
Gaius blinked in confusion. The man's words
seemed to jar with his reasonable tone. It was as if he were
ordering a new tunic.
"My uncle Marius, although he is with the
Primigenia legion—the First-Born. He will not be
expecting—"
"A good standard, the Primigenia, did well in
Egypt. My bill will be sent to him. Now I will indulge you as the
current master of the estate, in your father's absence. When you
are ready, you will face me for real, not a practice, not to first
blood, but an attack such as you might face if you were walking the
streets of Rome today, among the rioters.
"I will fight fairly, and if you kill me you may
consider yourself to have graduated from my tutelage."
"Why kill us after all the time you have—"
Marcus spluttered, breaking discipline to speak without
permission.
"You have to face death at some point. I cannot
continue to train you, and there is a last lesson to be learned
about fear and anger."
For a moment, Renius looked unsure of himself,
but then his head straightened and the "Snapping Turtle," as the
slaves called him, was back, his intensity and energy
overpowering.
"You are my last pupils. My reputation as I go
into retirement hangs on your sorry necks. I will not let you go
improperly trained, so that my name is blackened by your deeds. My
name is something I have spent my life protecting. It is too late
to consider losing it now."
"We would not embarrass you," Marcus muttered,
almost to himself.
Renius rounded on him. "Your every stroke
embarrasses me. You hack like a butcher attacking a bull carcass in
a rage. You cannot control your temper. You fall for the simplest
trap as the blood drains from your head! And you!" He turned
to Gaius, who had begun to grin. "You cannot keep your thoughts
from your groin long enough to make a Roman of you. Nobilitas? My
blood runs cold at the thought of boys like you carrying on my
heritage, my city, my people."
Gaius dropped the grin at the reference to the
slave girl that Renius had whipped in front of them for distracting
the boys. It still shamed him and a slow anger began to grow as the
tirade continued.
"Gaius, you may choose which of you will duel
first. Your first tactical decision!" Renius turned and strode away
onto the fighting square laid out in mosaic on the training ground.
He stretched his leg muscles behind them, seemingly oblivious to
their dumbstruck gazes.
"He has gone mad," Marcus whispered. "He'll kill
us both."
"He is still playing games," Gaius said grimly.
"Like with the river. I'm going to take him. I think I can do it.
I'm certainly not going to refuse the challenge. If this is how I
show him that he has taught me well, then so be it. I will thank
him in his own blood."
Marcus looked at his friend and saw his
resolution. He knew that, as much as he didn't want either of them
to fight Renius, it was he who had the better chance. Neither could
win outright, but only Marcus had the speed to take the old man
with him into the void.
"Gaius," he murmured. "Let me go first."
Gaius looked him in the eye, as if to gauge his
thoughts. "Not this time. You are my friend. I do not want to see
him kill you."
"Nor I you. Yet I am the faster of us—I
have a better chance."
Gaius loosened his shoulders and smiled tightly.
"He is only an old man, Marcus. I'll be back in a moment."
Alone, Gaius took up his position. Renius
watched him through eyes narrowed against the sun.
"Why did you choose to fight first?"
Gaius shrugged. "All lives end. I chose to. That
is enough."
"Aye, it is. Begin, boy. Let's see if you have
learned anything."
Gently, smoothly, they began to move around each
other, gladii held out and flat-bladed, catching the sun.
Renius feinted with a sudden shift of a
shoulder. Gaius read the feint and forced the old man back a step
with a lunge. The blades clashed and the battle began. They struck
and parried, came together in a twist of heaving muscle, and the
old warrior threw the young boy backward and left him sprawling in
the dust.
For once, Renius didn't mock him, his face
remaining impassive. Gaius rose slowly, balanced. He could not win
with strength.
He took two quick steps forward and brought the
blade up in a neat slice, breaking past the defense and cutting
deeply into the mahogany skin of Renius's chest. The old man
grunted in surprise as the boy pressed the attack without pause,
cut after cut. Each was parried with tiny shifts of weight and
movements of the blade. The boy would clearly tire himself in the
sun and be ready for the butcher's knife.
Sweat poured into Gaius's eyes. He felt
desperate, unable to think of new moves that might work against
this hard-eyed thing of wood that read and parried him so easily.
He flailed and missed, and, as he overbalanced, Renius extended his
right arm, sinking the blade into the exposed lower abdomen.
Gaius felt his strength go. His legs seemed weak
sticks and folded beyond his control under him, rubbery and
painless. Blood spattered the dust, but the colors had gone from
the courtyard, replaced by the thump of his heartbeat and flashes
in his eyes.
Renius looked down and Gaius could see his eyes
shine with moisture. Was the old man crying?
"Not... good... enough," the old gladiator spat.
Renius stepped forward, his eyes full of pain.
The brightness of the sun was blocked by a dark
bar of shadow as Marcus slid his sword under the sagging throat
skin of the old warrior. One step behind Renius, he could see the
old man stiffen in surprise.
"Forgotten me?" It would be the work of a single
thought to pull the blade back sharply and end the vicious old man,
but Marcus had glanced at the body of his friend and knew the life
was pouring out of him. He allowed the rage to build inside him for
a moment, and the chance for a quick death disappeared as Renius
stepped smoothly away and brought up his bloody sword again. His
face was stone, but his eyes shone.
Marcus began his attack, in past the guard and
out before the old man had a chance to move. If he had been trying
for a fatal blow, it would have landed, as the old man held
immobile, his face rigid with tension. As it was, the blow was
simply a loosener and the life in the old man came back with a
rush.
"Can't you even kill me when I hold still for
the strike?" Renius snapped as he began to circle again, keeping
his right side to Marcus.
"You were always a fool—you have a fools
pride," Marcus almost growled at him, forced to pay attention to
this man as his friend died in the heat, alone.
He attacked again, his thought become deeds, no
reflection or decision, simply blows and moves, unstoppable. Red
mouths opened on the old body, and Marcus could hear the spatter of
blood on the dust like spring rain.
Renius had no time to speak again. He defended
desperately, his face showing shock for a second before settling
into his gladiatorial mask. Marcus moved with extraordinary grace
and balance, too fast to counter, a warrior born.
Again and again, the old man only knew he had
stopped a blow when he heard the clash of metal as his body moved
and reacted without conscious thought. His mind seemed detached
from the fight.
His thoughts spoke in a dry voice: I am an
old fool. This one may be the best I have trained, but I have
killed the other—that was a mortal blow.
His left arm hung, flapping obscene and loose,
the shoulder muscle sliced. The pain was like a hammer and he felt
sudden exhaustion slam into him, like the years catching up with
him at last. The boy had never been this fast before; it was as if
the sight of his friend dying had opened doors within him.
Renius felt his strength desert him in one
despairing sigh. He had seen so many at this point where the spirit
cannot take the flesh further. He warded off the battered blade of
the gladius without energy, batting it away for what he knew would
be the last time.
"Cease, or I will drop you where you stand,"
came a new voice, quiet, but carrying somehow through the courtyard
and house.
Marcus didn't pause. He had been trained not to
react to taunts, and no one was taking this kill from him. He
tensed his shoulders to drive in the iron blade.
"This bow will kill you, boy. Put the sword
down."
Renius looked Marcus in the eyes, seeing madness
there for a moment. He knew the lad would kill him, and then
the light was gone and control had come back.
Even with the heat of his own blood warming his
limbs, the yard seemed cold to the old man as he watched Marcus
glide backward out of range and then turn to look at the newcomer.
Renius had rarely been so certain of his own death to come.
There was a bow, with a glinting arrowhead. An
old man, older than Renius, held the bow without a shiver of
muscle, despite the obvious heft of the draw. He wore a rough brown
robe and a smile that stretched over only a few teeth.
"No one has to die here today. I would know. Put
the weapon away and let me summon doctors and cool drinks for
you."
Reality came back to Marcus in a rush. The
gladius dropped from his hand as he spoke. "Gaius, my friend, is
injured. He may die. He needs help."
Renius sank onto one knee, unable to stand. His
sword fell from nerveless fingers and the red stain widened around
him as his head bowed. Marcus walked past him without a downward
glance, over to where Gaius lay.
"His appendix has been ruptured, I see," the old
man said over his shoulder.
"Then he is dead. When the appendix swells, it
is always fatal. Our doctors cannot remove the swollen thing."
"I have done it, once before. Summon the slaves
of the house to bear this boy inside. Fetch me bandages and heated
water."
"Are you a healer?" Marcus asked, searching the
man's eyes for hope.
"I have picked up a few things on my travels. It
is not over yet." Their eyes met.
Marcus looked away, nodding to himself. He
trusted the stranger, but could not have said why.
Renius slid onto his back, his chest barely
moving. He looked like what he was, a frail old brown stick of a
man, made hard but brittle in the Roman sun. As Marcus's gaze fell
on him, he tried to rise, shuddering with weakness.
Marcus felt a hand press down on his shoulder,
interrupting his rage as it grew again. Tubruk stood beside him,
his face black with anger. Marcus could feel the ex-gladiator's
hand shake slightly.
"Relax, boy. There'll be no more fighting. I
have sent for Lucius and Gaius's mothers doctor."
"You saw?" Marcus stammered.
Tubruk tightened his grip.
"The end of it. I hoped you would kill him," he
said grimly, looking over to where Renius bled. Tubruks expression
was hard as he turned back to the newcomer.
"Who are you, ancient? A poacher? This is a
private estate."
The old man stood slowly and met Tubruks eyes.
"Just a traveler, a wanderer," he said.
"Will he die?" Marcus interrupted.
"Not today, I think," the old man replied. "It
would not be right after I have arrived—am I not a guest of
the house now?"
Marcus blinked in confusion, trying to weigh the
reasonable sound of the words with the still-swirling pain and rage
inside him.
"I don't even know your name," he said.
"I am Cabera," the old man said softly. "Peace
now. I will help you."
CHAPTER
7
Gaius lifted into consciousness, woken
by angry voices in the room. His head pounded and he felt weak in
every bone. Pain from below his waist heaved in great waves, with
answering throbs at pulse points on his body. His mouth was dry and
he could not speak or keep his eyes open. The darkness was soft and
red and he tried to go back under, not yet willing to join the
conscious struggle again.
"I have removed the perforated appendix and tied
off the severed vessels. He has lost a great deal of blood, which
will take time to be replenished, but he is young and strong." A
stranger's voice—one of the estate doctors? Gaius didn't know
or care. As long as he wasn't going to die, they should just leave
him alone to get well.
"My wife's doctor says you are a charlatan." His
father's voice, no give in it.
"He would not operate on such a wound—so
you have lost nothing, yes? I have removed the appendix once
before; it is not a fatal operation. The only problem is the onset
of fever, which he must fight on his own."
"I was taught that it was always fatal. The
appendix swells and bursts. It cannot be removed as you might cut
off a finger." His father sounded tired, Gaius thought.
"Nevertheless, I have done so. I have also
bandaged the older man. He too will recover, although he will never
fight again, with the damage to his left shoulder. All will live
here. You should sleep."
Gaius heard footsteps cross his room and felt
the warm, dry skin of his father's palm on his damp forehead.
"He is my only child; how can I sleep, Cabera?
Would you sleep if it was your child?"
"I would sleep like a baby. We have done all
that we can. I will continue to watch over him, but you must get
your rest." The other voice seemed kind, but it did not have the
rounded tones of the physicians that tended his mother. There was a
trace of a strange accent, a mellifluous rhythm as he spoke.
Gaius sank into sleep again as if he held a dark
weight on his chest. The voices continued on the edge of hearing,
slipping in and out of fever dreams.
"Why have you not closed the wound with
stitches? I've seen a lot of battle wounds, but we close them and
bind them."
"This is why the Greeks dislike my methods. The
wound must have a drain for the pus that will fill it as the fever
strengthens. If I closed it tight, the pus would have nowhere to go
and poison his flesh. Then he would surely die, as most do. This
could save him."
"If he dies, I will cut your own appendix out
myself."
There was a cackle and a few words in a strange
language that echoed in Gaius's dreams.
"You would have a job finding it. Here is the
scar from when my father removed mine many years ago— with
the drain."
Gaius's father spoke with finality: "I will
trust your judgment then. You have my thanks and more if he
lives."
Gaius woke as a cool hand touched his
forehead. He looked into blue eyes, bright in skin the color of
walnut wood.
"My name is Cabera, Gaius. It is good to meet
you at last and at such a moment in your life. I have been
traveling for thousands of your miles. It is enough to make me
believe in the gods to have arrived here when I was needed.
No?"
Gaius couldn't respond. His tongue was thick and
solid in his mouth. As if reading his thoughts, the old man reached
over and brought a shallow bowl of water to his lips.
"Drink a little. The fever is burning the
moisture from your body."
The few drops slid into his mouth and loosened
the gummy saliva that had gathered there. Gaius coughed and his
eyes closed again. Cabera looked down at the boy and sighed for a
moment. He checked that there was no one around and then placed his
bony old hands over the wound, around the thin wood tube that still
dribbled sluggish fluid.
A warmth came from his hands that Gaius could
feel even in his dreams. He felt tendrils of heat spread up into
his chest and settle into his lungs, clearing away fluid.
The heat built until it was almost painful, and
then Cabera took his hands away and sat still, his breathing
suddenly harsh and broken.
Gaius opened his eyes again. He still felt too
weak to move, but the feeling of liquid moving inside him had gone.
He could breathe again.
"What did you do?" he murmured.
"Helped a little, yes? You needed a little help,
even after all my skills as a surgeon." The old face was deeply
lined with exhaustion, but his eyes still shone out from the dark
creases. The hand was pressed against his forehead again.
"Who are you?" Gaius whispered.
The old man shrugged. "I am still working on an
answer to that. I have been a beggar and the chief of a village. I
think of myself as a seeker after truths, with a new truth for each
place I reach."
"Can you help my mother?" Gaius kept his eyes
closed, but he could hear the soft sigh that came from the man.
"No, Gaius. Her problem is in her mind, or the
soul, perhaps. I can help a little with physical hurt, but nothing
more. It is much simpler. I am sorry. Sleep now, lad. Sleep is the
real healer, not I."
Darkness came, as if ordered.
When he woke again, Renius was sitting
on the bed, his face unreadable as always. As Gaius opened his
eyes, he took in the changed appearance of his teacher. His left
shoulder was heavily bound close to the body and there was a pallor
under the sun-darkened skin.
"How are you, lad? I can't tell you how good it
is to see you getting better. That old tribesman must be a miracle
worker." The voice at least was the same, curt and hard.
"I think he may be, yes. I'm surprised to see
you here after almost killing me," Gaius murmured, feeling his
heart pump faster as the memories came fresh. He felt sweat break
out on his forehead.
"I did not mean to cut you badly. It was a
mistake. I am sorry." The old man looked into his eyes for
forgiveness and found it there waiting for him.
"Don't be sorry. I am alive and you are alive.
Even you make mistakes."
"When I thought I'd killed you..." There was
pain in the old face.
Gaius struggled to sit up and found, to his
surprise, that his strength was growing. "You did not kill me. I
will always be proud to say it was you who trained me. Let there be
no more words on this. It is done."
For a second Gaius was struck by the
ridiculousness of a thirteen-year-old boy comforting the old
gladiator, but the words came easily as he realized he felt a
genuine affection for this man, especially now he could see him as
a man and not a perfect warrior, cut from some strange stone.
"Is my father still here?" he asked, hoping he
would be.
Renius shook his head. "He had to return to the
city, though he sat by your bed for the first few days, until we
were sure you were on the mend. The riots grow worse and Sulla's
legion has been recalled to establish order."
Gaius nodded and held out his clenched hand
before him. "I would like to be there, to see the legion come
through the gates."
Renius smiled at the young man's enthusiasm.
"Not this time, I think, but you will see more of the city when you
are well again. Tubruk is outside. Are you strong enough to see
him?"
"I feel much better, almost normal. How long has
it been?"
"A week. Cabera gave you herbs to keep you
asleep. Even so, you've healed incredibly quickly, and I've seen a
lot of wounds. That old man calls himself a seer. I think he does
have a little magic about him, that one. I'll call Tubruk."
As Renius rose, Gaius put out his hand. "Will
you be staying on?"
Renius smiled, but shook his head. "The training
is over. I am retiring to my own little villa, to grow old in
peace."
Gaius hesitated for a second. "Do you... have a
family?"
"I had one, once, but they are long gone. I will
spend my evenings with the other old men, telling lies and drinking
good red wine. I will keep an eye on your life, though. Cabera says
you are someone special, and I don't believe that old devil is
wrong very often."
"Thank you," Gaius said, unable to put into
words what the gladiator had given him.
Renius nodded and took his hand and wrist in a
firm grip. Then he was gone and the room felt suddenly empty.
Tubruk filled the doorway and smiled a slow
smile. "You look better. There is color in your cheeks."
Gaius grinned at him, beginning to feel like his
old self again. "I feel stronger. I have been lucky."
"No such thing. Cabera's responsible. He is an
amazing man. He must be eighty, but when your mother's latest
doctor complained about how you were treated, Cabera took him
outside and gave him a hiding. I haven't laughed so hard in a long
time. He has a lot of strength in those skinny arms and a fast
right cross as well. You should have seen it." He chuckled at the
memory, then his face became sober.
"Your mother wanted to see you, but we thought
it would... distress her too much until you were well. I'll bring
her in tomorrow."
"Now would be all right. I am not too
tired."
"No. You are still weak and Cabera says you
shouldn't be overworked with visitors."
Gaius's face showed mock surprise at Tubruk
taking advice from anyone.
Tubruk smiled again. "Well, as I said, he is an
amazing man, and after what he managed with you, what he says goes,
as far as your care is concerned. I only let Renius in here because
he is leaving today."
"I am glad you did. I would not have liked to
leave unfinished business."
"That's what I thought."
"I'm surprised you didn't take his head off,"
Gaius said cheerfully.
"I thought about it, but accidents happen in
training. He just went too far, that's all. For what it's worth,
he's proud of both of you. I think the old bastard developed a
liking for you, probably for your stubbornness— you're as bad
as he is, I think."
"How is Marcus?" Gaius asked.
"Itching to get in here, of course. You might
try to convince him it wasn't his fault. He says he should have
forced you to let him fight first, but—"
"It was my decision and I don't regret it. I
lived, after all."
Tubruk snorted. "Don't become overconfident. It
makes a man believe in the power of prayer to see you survive a
wound like that. If it weren't for Cabera, you would not have
survived it. You do owe him your life. Your father has been trying
to get him to accept some sort of reward, but he won't take
anything except his keep. I still don't really know why he is here.
He seems to believe... that we are moved by the gods like we throw
dice, and they wanted him to see the glorious city of Rome before
he was too old." The bluff freedman looked perplexed and Gaius
thought that it wouldn't help to mention his strange memory of the
heat from Cabera's hands. That would keep, no doubt.
"I will get some soup brought in. Would you like
some fresh bread with it?"
Gaius's stomach agreed wholeheartedly and Tubruk
left, smiling once again.
Renius gained the saddle of his
gelding with difficulty. His left arm felt useless, the pain more
than the simple ache of healing gashes he had known so many times
before.
He was pleased there were no servants or slaves
around to see his clumsiness. The great estate house seemed
deserted.
At last, he was able to grip the body of the
horse with his legs, allowing his muscles to support their weight.
Even with evening coming on, he would make it back to the city
before complete darkness. He sighed at the thought. What was there,
really, for him now? He would sell his town house, although the
prices had dropped during the rioting. Perhaps it would be better
to wait until the streets were quiet again. With Sulla leading his
legion into the city, there would be executions and public
floggings, but order would eventually be restored. It had happened
before. The Romans did not like war on their doorstep. They
thrilled to hear of broken armies of barbarians, but no one enjoyed
the brutality of martial law, with a curfew and the scarcity of
food that would inevitably—
He heard a sound behind him and his thoughts
were interrupted.
Marcus stood watching him, his face calm. "I
came to wish you goodbye."
Almost unconsciously, Renius noticed the
developed shoulders and the easy way of standing the boy had. He
would make a name for himself in some future the old warrior would
not be there to see.
A shiver touched him at the thought. No one
lives forever, not an Alexander, not a Scipio or a Hannibal, not
even a Renius.
"I am glad Gaius is healing," Renius replied
clearly.
"I know. I did not come to be angry at you, but
to apologize," Marcus said, looking at the sand at his feet.
Renius raised his eyebrows.
Marcus took a deep breath. "I am sorry I did not
kill you, you twisted, evil bastard. If our paths ever cross in
later years, I will take your throat out."
Renius swayed in the saddle, as if the words
were blows. He could feel the hatred and it cheered him up
immensely. Laughter threatened to overcome him as the little
cockerel made its threats, but he realized he could give a last
gift to his pupil, if he chose his words carefully.
"Such hatred will kill you, boy. And then you
won't be there to protect Gaius."
"I will always be there for him."
"No. Not until you can keep your temper. You
will die in some brawl in a stinking barroom, unless you can find
calm in yourself. You would have killed me, yes; at my age, my
stamina melts faster than I care to admit. But if we had met when I
was young, I would have cut through you faster than corn falls to
the knife. Remember that the next time you meet a young man with a
reputation to make." Renius grinned then and it was like seeing the
teeth of a shark, lips sliding back over a cruel expression.
"He may get the chance sooner than you think,"
Cabera said, coming out of the shadows.
"What? You were listening, you old devil?"
Renius said, still smiling, although his expression eased at the
sight of the healer, whom he had come to respect.
"Look to the city. You will not be going
anywhere tonight, I think," Cabera continued, his expression
serious.
Both Marcus and Renius turned to look out over
the hills. Although Rome was hidden by the rise of the land, an
orange glow grew brighter as they watched in horror.
"Jupiter's balls—they've set the city on
fire!" Renius spat. His beloved city.
For a moment, he thought of spurring the horse
away, knowing his place should be in the streets. Men knew his
face; he could help restore order. A cool hand touched his ankle
and he looked down into the face of old Cabera.
"I see the future occasionally. If you go there
now, you will be dead by dawn. This is truth."
Renius shifted his weight and the gelding
clopped its hooves on the sand, feeling his emotions.
"And if I stay?" he snapped.
Cabera shrugged. "You may die here too. The
slaves will be coming to loot this place. We don't have long
now.
Marcus gaped at the words. There were close to
five hundred slaves on the estate. If they all went wild, there
would be butchery. Without another word, he ran back into the
buildings, shouting for Tubruk to raise the alarm.
"Would you like a hand dismounting from that
fine gelding?" asked Cabera, his eyes wide and innocent.
Renius grimaced, suddenly able to muster his
usual anger despite the cheerful old man. "The gods don't tell us
what is going to happen," he said.
Cabera smiled wistfully. "I used to believe
that. When I was young and arrogant, I used to think I could
somehow read people, see their true selves and guess at what they
would do. It was years before I was humble enough to know it could
not be me. It isn't like glancing through a clear window. I just
look at you and toward the city and I feel death. Why not? Many men
have talents that could almost be magic to those without them.
Think of it like that if it makes you more comfortable. Come on.
You will be needed here tonight."
Renius snorted. "I suppose you have made a lot
of money with this talent of yours?"
"Once or twice I have, but money does not stay
with me. It steals out into the hands of wine merchants and loose
women and gamblers. All I have is my experiences, but they are
worth more than coin."
After a few moments of thought, Renius accepted
the helping hand and was not surprised to find it steady and
strong, not after seeing those skinny shoulders pull the heavy bow
in the training yard.
"You will have to hold my scabbard for me, old
man. I will be all right when my sword is out." He began to lead
the horse back into the stables, stroking its nose and murmuring
that they would ride later, when all the excitement was over. He
paused for a moment. "You can see the future?"
Cabera grinned and hopped from one foot to the
other, amused. "You want to know if you will live or die here,
yes?" he chattered. "That is what everyone asks."
Renius found his usual sourness coming back in
force. "No. I don't think I do want to know that. Keep it to
yourself, magician." He led the horse away without looking back,
his shoulders showing his irritation.
When he had gone, Cabera's face filled with
grief. He liked the man and was pleased to find that a sort of
decency still resided in Renius's heart, despite the fame and money
he had won in his life.
"Perhaps I should have let you go and wither
with the other old men, my friend," he muttered to himself. "You
might even have found happiness somewhere. Yet if you had left, the
boys would have been surely killed, so this is a sin I can live
with, I think." His eyes were bleak as he turned to the great gates
of the estate outer wall and began to push them closed. He wondered
if he too would die in this foreign land, unknown in his own. He
wondered if his father's spirit was close by and watching and
decided that it probably wasn't. His father at least had had the
sense not to sit in the cave and wait for the bear to come
home.
Galloping hoofbeats sounded in the
distance. Cabera held the main gate open as he watched the
approaching figure. Was it the first of the attackers or a
messenger from Rome? He cursed his vision that allowed him such
fragmentary glimpses into the future, and never anything that
involved himself. Here he was holding the door for the rider, so he
had had no warning. The clearest visions were those in which he
wasn't involved at all, which was probably meant to be a lesson
from the gods—one rather wasted on him, on the whole. He had
found that he could not live life as an observer.
A trail of dark dust followed the figure, barely
showing in the gloom of the gathering twilight.
"Hold the gate!" a voice commanded.
Cabera raised an eyebrow. What did the man think
he was doing?
Gaius's father, Julius, came thundering through
the opening. His face was red and his rich clothes were stained
with soot.
"Rome is on fire," he said as he jumped to the
ground. "But they will not get my home." In that moment, he
recognized Cabera and patted his shoulder in greeting.
"How is my son?"
"Doing well. I am..." Cabera trailed off as the
vigorous older version of Gaius strode away to organize the
defenses. Tubruk's name echoed around the internal corridors of the
estate.
Cabera looked puzzled for a moment. The visions
had changed a little—the man was a force of nature and might
just be enough to tip the balance in their favor.
His mind went blank again as he heard the shouts
rise in the fields. Muttering in frustration, Cabera climbed the
steps up to the estate wall, to use his eyes where his internal
vision had failed.
Darkness filled every horizon, but Cabera could
see pinpoint pricks of light moving in the fields, meeting and
multiplying like fireflies. Each would be a lamp or a torch held by
angry slaves, their blood warmed by the heat of the sky over the
capital. They were already marching toward the great estate.
CHAPTER
8
All the house servants and slaves
stayed loyal. Lucius, the estate doctor, unwrapped his bandages and
materials, spreading vicious-looking metal tools on a piece of
cloth on one of the wide kitchen tables. He collared two of the
kitchen boys as they were grabbing cleavers to help in the
battle.
"You two stay with me. You'll get your fill of
cutting and blood right here." They were reluctant, but Lucius was
more of an old family friend and his word had always been law to
them before. The lawlessness that was rife in Rome had not yet
spread to the estate.
Outside, Renius had everyone in the yard.
Grimly, he counted them. Twenty-nine men and seventeen women. "How
many of you have been in the army?" his voice rapped.
Six or seven hands rose.
"You men have priority for swords. The rest of
you go and find anything that will cut or crush. Run!"
The last word shocked the frightened men and
women out of their lethargy and they scattered. Those who had
already found weapons remained, their faces dark and full of
fear.
Renius walked up to one of them, a short, fat
cook with an enormous cleaver resting on his shoulder. "What's your
name?" he said.
"Caecilius," came the reply. "I'll tell my
children I fought with you when this is over."
"That you will. We don't have to break a full
assault. The attackers are out for easy targets to rape and rob. I
mean to make this estate a little too hard to crack for them to
bother with. How's your nerve?"
"Good, sir. I'm used to killing pigs and calves,
so I won't faint at a drop or two of blood."
"This is a little different. These pigs have
swords and clubs. Don't hesitate. Throat and groin. Find something
to block a blow—some sort of shield."
"Yes, sir, directly."
The man attempted to salute and Renius forced
himself to smile, biting back his temper at the sloppy manners. He
watched the fat figure run away into the buildings and wiped the
first beads of sweat from his brow. Strange that such men as that
should understand loyalty where so many others threw it aside at
the first hint of freedom. He shrugged. Some men would always be
animals and others would be... men.
Marcus walked out into the yard, his sword out
of its scabbard. He was smiling. "Would you like me to stand near
you, Renius? Cover your left side for you?"
"If I wanted help, puppy, I'd ask you. Until
that time, take yourself to the gate and keep a lookout. Call me
when you can see numbers."
Marcus snapped off a salute, much crisper than
that of the cook, yet held a little too long. Renius could sense
his insolence and considered breaking the boy's mouth for him. No,
right now he needed that stupid confidence of youth. He'd learn
soon enough what killing was like.
As the men returned, he sent them to positions
along the walls. They were far too few, but he believed what he had
said to Caecilius. The outbuildings would be burned, no doubt; the
granaries would probably go and the animals would be slaughtered,
but the main complex would not be worth the deaths it would take.
An army could take it in minutes, he knew—but these were
slaves, drunk on stolen wine and freedom that would vanish again
with the morning sun. One strong man with a good sword arm and a
ruthless temperament could handle a mob.
There was no sign yet of Julius or Cabera. No
doubt the former was putting on his breastplate and greaves, the
full uniform. But where had the old healer got to? That bow of his
would be a useful asset in the first few minutes of bloodshed.
The noise of the men on the walls was like a
flock of geese cackling in excited nervousness.
"Silence!" Renius snapped. "The next man to
speak will get back down here and face me."
In the sudden absence of chatter, they could
again hear the screams and yells of the slaves in the fields.
"We need to listen to what is going on outside.
Keep silent and stretch a few muscles. Keep a distance from the
next man along, so you can swing without cutting his head off."
The men shuffled apart from the little knots
that had formed out of a need for contact. The fear was in all
their eyes. Renius cursed to himself. Ten good men from his old
legion and he could hold this place until dawn. These were children
with sticks and knives. He took a deep breath as he tried to find
words to encourage them. Even the iron legions had needed speeches
to fire their blood, and they were confident of their skills.
"There is nowhere to run to. If the mob breaks
past you, everyone in this house will die. That is your
responsibility. You must not leave your position—we are
stretched thinly enough as it is. The wall is four feet
wide—one long pace. Learn it—if you take more than one
step back, you will fall."
He watched as the men shuffled around on the
wall, checking the width for themselves. His face hardened.
"I will keep fighters in the courtyard to deal
with any that get over the wall. Do not look down, even if you see
your friends being killed before you."
Cabera came out of the buildings, his bow
restrung in his hand. "This is how you inspire them? Your empire is
built on this sort of speech?" he muttered.
Renius frowned at him. "I have never lost a
battle. Not with my legion, not in the arena. I have never had a
man run or break under my command. If you run, you will pass me,
and I will not run."
"I won't run," Marcus said clearly, into the
silence.
Renius met his eyes, seeing a touch of the
madness he had witnessed before.
"Nor will I, Renius," said another.
The others all nodded and murmured that they
would sooner die, but still the faces of a few were puckered in
terror.
"Your children, your brothers, your fathers will
ask you if you did. Be sure you can look them all in the eye."
Heads nodded and shoulders lifted a little
straighter.
"Better," Cabera muttered again.
Julius moved easily through the open door onto
the courtyard. His breastplate and leggings were oiled and smooth.
His short scabbard swung as he walked. His face was a brutal mask
as an obvious rage burned inside. The men on the wall turned away
from him, looking out over the fields.
"I will take the head of every man from my
estate not within these walls," he growled.
Cabera shook his head quickly, not wanting to
disagree with the man while those on the wall were listening.
"Sir," he whispered. "They all have friends outside. Good men and
women who are trapped or unable to fight through to you. Such a
threat hurts their morale."
"It pleases me. Every man outside these walls
will be killed and I will pile their heads inside the gates! This
is my home and Rome is my city. We will cut out the filth that burn
the houses and scatter them on the wind! Do you hear me, little
man?" His internal fury built into incandescent rage. Renius and
Cabera stared at him as he climbed up the corner steps and walked
the length of the wall, shouting orders and noting sloppiness.
"For a man in politics, he has an unusual
approach to a problem," Cabera said quietly.
"Rome is full of men like him. That, my friend,
is why we have an empire, not empty speeches." Renius smiled his
shark smile and walked over to where the women waited in a quietly
murmuring group.
"What can we do?" asked a slave girl. He
recognized her as the one he had whipped so many months ago for
distracting the boys in their training. Her name was Alexandria, it
came back to him. While the others shrank from his gaze, as
befitted the rank of slaves of the house, she held his eyes and
waited for his answer.
"Fetch some knives. If anyone gets past the
wall, you must fall on them and keep stabbing until they are
dead."
A gasp came from a couple of the older women,
and one looked a little sick.
"Do you want to be raped and killed? Gods,
woman, I am not asking you to stand on the wall, just to protect
our backs. There are too few men to bring some down to protect you
as well!" He had no patience with their softness. Good for bed, but
when you had to depend on one... Gods!
Alexandria nodded. "Knives. The spare wood axe
is in the stable, unless someone has it. Go and search for some,
Susanna. Quickly now."
A matronly type, still looking pale, trotted off
on the errand.
"Can we carry water? Arrows? Fire? Is there
anything else we can do?"
"Nothing," Renius snapped, losing patience.
"Just make sure you kill anyone that lands in the yard. Put a knife
in their throat before they can regain their feet. It's a ten-foot
fall; there'll be a moment of weakness when you must strike."
"We won't let you down, sir," Alexandria
replied.
He held her gaze for a second longer, noting the
flash of hate that broke through the calm demeanor. He seemed to
have more enemies in this place than outside the walls!
"See you don't," he said curtly, and turned on
his heel.
The cook had returned with a large metal plate
strapped to his chest. His enthusiasm was embarrassing, but Renius
clapped him on the shoulder as he went to join the others.
Tubruk was standing with Cabera, holding a
strung bow in his large hands.
"Old Lucius is a fine shot with a bow, but he's
in the kitchens setting up for the wounded," he said, his face
grim.
"Get him out here. He can climb down later, when
he's done the job," Renius replied, without looking at him. He was
scanning the walls, noting the positions, looking for failing
nerves. They couldn't hold against a proper attack, so he prayed to
his household god that the slaves outside couldn't mount one.
"Will the slaves have bows?" he asked
Tubruk.
"One or two small ones for hares, perhaps.
There's not a decent bow on the estate except for this—and
Cabera's."
"Good. Otherwise, they could pick us all off.
We'll have to light the torches in the yard soon, to give them
light to kill by. It will silhouette the men, but they can't fight
in the dark, not this lot."
"They may surprise you, Renius. Your name has a
lot of power still. Remember the crowds at the games? Every man
here will have a story for all the generations of his family to
come, if he survives."
Renius snorted. "You'd better get to the wall;
there's a space on the far side."
Tubruk shook his head. "The others have accepted
you as leader, I know. Even Julius will listen to you once his
temper calms down. I will stay by Marcus, to protect him. With your
permission?"
Renius stared at him. Would nothing work
properly? Fat cooks, girls with knives, arrogant children? And now
his orders were to be ignored just before a fight? His right fist
lifted in a smashing uppercut that seemed to lift Tubruk up and
backward. He hit the dust unmoving and Renius ignored him, turning
to Cabera.
"When he awakes, tell him the boy can look after
himself. I know. Tell him to take his place or I will kill
him."
Cabera smiled, his eyes wide, but the old man's
face was like winter. In the distance, there was a sudden clamor of
metal beating on metal. Sound rose in a wave and chants filled the
black night. The torches were lit just as the first few slaves
reached the estate wall. Behind them were hundreds from Rome,
burning everything in their path.
CHAPTER
9
It very nearly ended before it had
begun. As Renius had thought, the wild-looking slaves that streamed
up to the estate walls had little idea of how to overcome armed
defenders and milled around, shouting and screaming. Although it
was a perfect opportunity for bowmen, Renius had shaken his head at
Cabera and Lucius, who watched with arrows ready and cold eyes.
There was still a chance the slaves would look for easier targets,
and a few arrows might fan their rage into white-hot
desperation.
"Open the gates!" someone shouted from the mass
of torchbearers. In the flickering light, it could have been a
festival if it were not for the brutal expressions of the
attackers. Renius watched them, weighing options. More and more
came from the rear. Clearly there were already more than a small
estate could support. Rogue slaves from Rome swelled the ranks with
nothing to lose, bringing hate and violence where reason might have
won the day. Those at the front were pushed forward and Renius
raised his arm, ready to have his two lonely archers send the first
shafts into the crowd. They could hardly miss at this range.
A man stepped forward. He was heavily muscled
and sported a thick black beard that made him look like a
barbarian. Probably, only days previously, he had been meekly
carrying rocks in a quarry, or training horses for some indulgent
master. Now his chest was splashed with someone else's blood and
his face was a sneer of hate, his eyes glimmering in the flames of
his torch.
"You on the walls. You are slaves like us. Kill
those who call themselves your betters. Kill them all and we will
welcome you as friends."
Renius dropped his arm and Cabera put a
feathered shaft through the man's throat.
In the moment of silence, Renius roared at the
crowd of slaves: "That is what you will get from me. I am Renius
and you will not pass here. Go home and wait for justice!"
"Justice like that?" came a scream of rage.
Another man ran to the walls and jumped for the high ledge. The
moment had arrived and suddenly the crowd howled and came forward
in a rush.
Few had swords. Most were armed, like the
defenders, with whatever they could find. Some had no weapons
except their frenzied rage, and Renius dispatched the first of
these with a slick blow to his neck, ignoring the quivering fingers
that scrabbled at his breastplate. All along the line, screams rose
above the crash of metal on metal and metal into flesh. Renius
could see Cabera drop his bow and raise a wicked-looking short
knife, with which he stabbed and leapt away, letting the bodies
fall back on their fellows. The old man stamped on fingers that
gained easier and easier holds on the wall as the bodies of the
dead served as props for new attackers.
Renius grew slightly light-headed and knew his
shoulder had torn again, feeling the sudden warmth from the
bandages accompanied by a blistering pain. He set his teeth against
it and slammed his gladius into a man's stomach, almost losing the
weapon in the slimy grip of his guts as he toppled backward.
Another took his place and another, and Renius could not see an end
to them. He took a blow from a length of timber that left him dazed
for a second. He staggered back, reeling, trying to find the energy
to lift the sword to meet the next one. His muscles ached and the
exhaustion he had felt fighting Marcus came back to hit him once
again.
"I am too old for this," he muttered, spitting
blood over his chin. There was a movement to his left and he swung
to meet it, too slowly. It was Marcus, grinning at him. He was
covered in blood and looked like a demon from the ancient
myths.
"I am a little worried about the speed of my low
guard. I wonder if you could observe it for me? Let me know where
the trouble is?"
As he spoke, he shoulder-barged a man as he
tried to straighten. The man fell badly, toppling backward onto his
head with a yell.
"I told you not to leave your position," Renius
gasped, trying not to show his weakness.
"You were going to be killed. That honor is
mine—not to be given away lightly to motherless scum like
these, I think!" He nodded over to the other side of the gate,
where the man Caecilius, known to most simply as Cook, was grinning
hugely, cutting around him with abandon.
"Come, pigs, come, cattle. I will cut you to
pieces." Underneath the fat there must have been muscle, for he
waved the enormous cleaver as if it were made of light wood.
"Cook is holding them without me. In fact, he is
having the time of his life," Marcus went on cheerfully.
Three men breasted the wall at once, leaping
from the pile of bodies that was now half as high as the top. The
first swung a sword at Marcus, who slid his own into the man's
chest from the side, letting the wild lunge carry the man onto the
cobbles of the yard below. The second he dispatched with a reverse
cut that caught the man at eye level, cutting into meat and bone.
He died instantly.
The third whooped with pleasure as he closed on
Renius. He knew the old man for who he was, and in his mind was
already telling the story to friends as Renius brought his sword up
under his guard, ripping into his chest.
Renius let the man fall, and the sword slid
clear. His left arm was hurting again, but this time it was a deep
ache. His chest pulsed with pain and he groaned.
"Are you hurt?" Marcus asked, without taking his
eyes off the wall.
"No. Get back to your post," Renius snapped, his
face suddenly gray.
Marcus looked at him for a long moment. "I think
I'll stay awhile longer," he said softly. More men surged over the
wall and his sword danced, licking from one throat to the next
unstoppably.
Gaius's father barely noticed those who fell
beneath his sword. He fought as he had been trained: thrust, guard,
reverse. The bodies piled most thickly at the foot of the gate, and
a little voice was telling him they should have broken by now. They
were only slaves. They did not have to pass this wall. Why didn't
they break? He would have the wall raised to the height of three
men when this was over.
It seemed as if they threw themselves onto his
sword, which wetted itself in their blood, drenching the wall and
gates with the gushing fluids, drenching him. His shoulders ached,
his arm was leaden. Only his legs were still strong beneath him.
They must break soon and look for easier targets, surely? Thrust,
guard, and reverse. He was locked in the legionary's rhythm of
death, but more and more were climbing the piles of flesh to get
into the estate. His sword had lost its edge on bone and blades,
and his first cut only scraped a man leaping at him. A dagger
punctured the hard muscle of his stomach and he grunted in agony,
whipping his sword through the man's jaw and dropping him.
Alexandria stood in the yard, in a pool of
darkness. The other women were crying softly to themselves. One was
praying. She could see Renius was exhausted and was disappointed
when the boy Marcus stepped in to save him. She wondered why he had
done it and widened her eyes at the contrast between them. On the
one side, the grizzled warrior, veteran of a thousand conflicts,
slow and in pain. On the other, Marcus, a smooth-moving murderer,
smiling as he brought death to the slaves that met his sword. It
did not matter if they had swords or clubs. He made them look
clumsy and then took away their strength in a slice or a blow. One
man clearly didn't realize he was dying. His blood poured from his
chest, but he still kept hacking away with a broken spear shaft,
his face manic.
Curious, Alexandria strained to see the man's
face, and she caught the stricken moment when he felt the pain and
saw the darkness coming.
All her life she had heard stories of men's
strength and glory, and they seemed to hang over this butchery like
golden ghosts, not quite fitting the reality. She looked for
moments of comradeship, of bravery in the face of death, but down
in the shadows, she could not see it.
The cook was enjoying the fight, that was
obvious. He had begun to sing some vulgar song about a market day
and pretty maids, thumping out the chorus with more volume than
tune, as he buried his cleaver in skulls and necks. Men fell from
his blade and his song grew more raucous as they dropped.
On her left, one of the defenders fell into the
yard from the walkway. He made no attempt to protect himself from
the impact, and his head smashed on the hard stone with a wet
sound. Alexandria shuddered and grabbed the shoulder of another
woman in the darkness. Whoever it was, was sobbing quietly to
herself, but there was no time for that.
"Quickly—they'll be coming through the
gap!" she hissed, pulling the other along with her, not trusting
herself to do the job alone.
As they moved, there was another crunching thud
from a different section of the wall. Screams of triumph sounded. A
man scrambled down, hanging for a moment before letting go and
falling the last couple of feet.
He spun, a wild, bloody nightmare, and as his
eyes lit up at the lack of defenders, Alexandria rammed her blade
up into his heart. Life escaped him with a sigh and another man hit
the cobbles nearby. The snap of his ankle was audible even over the
baying from outside the walls. The matronly Susanna, usually so
careful over the exact setting of the master's table at banquets,
slipped a skinning knife across his throat and walked away from him
as he shuddered and spasmed behind her.
Alexandria looked up at the bright ring of
torches above. At least they had light! How awful it was to die in
the dark.
"More torches here!" she yelled, hoping that
someone would answer.
Hands grabbed her from behind and her head was
wrenched to one side. She tensed for the agony that would come, but
the weight on her shoulders fell away suddenly and she turned to
see Susanna, her knife hand freshly covered in red wetness.
"Keep your spirits up, love. The night's not
over yet." Susanna smiled and the moment of panic passed for
Alexandria. She checked the yard with the others and barely winced
when another defender fell, this time screaming as he hit the yard.
Three men came through the gap he had left this time, with two more
visible as they struggled up over the slippery bodies.
All the women drew their knives and the
torchlight caught the blades, even down in the yard's blackness.
Before the men's eyes could adjust to the gloom, the women were on
them, gripping and stabbing.
Gaius came awake with a start. His
mother sat by the bed, holding a damp cloth. Its touch had awakened
him, and as he looked at her she pressed it to his forehead,
crooning gently to herself. In the distance, he could hear screams
and the clear sounds of battle. How had he remained asleep? Cabera
had given him a warm drink as the evening darkened. There must have
been something in it.
"What is going on, Mother? I can hear
fighting!"
Aurelia smiled at him sadly. "Shhh, my darling.
You must not excite yourself. Your life is slipping away and I have
come to make your last hours peaceful."
Gaius blanched a little. No, he felt weak, but
sound. "I am not dying. I am getting better. Now, what is happening
in the yard? I should get out there!"
"Shhh, shhh. I know they said you were getting
better, but I also know they lie to me. Now be still and I will
cool your brow for you."
Gaius looked at her in disbelief. All his life,
this shambling idiot had been coming to the fore, dragging away the
lively, quick-witted woman he missed. He winced in anticipation of
the screaming fit that would follow a wrong word from him.
"I want to feel the night air on my skin,
Mother. One last time. Please leave so that I may dress."
"Of course, my darling. I'll go back to my rooms
now that I have said goodbye to you, my perfect son." She giggled
for a moment and sighed as if she carried a great weight.
"Your father is out there getting himself killed
instead of looking after me. He has never looked after me properly.
We have not made love in years now."
Gaius didn't know what to say. He sat up and
closed his eyes against the weakness. He couldn't even hold his
hand in a fist, but he had to know what was going on. Gods, why
wasn't there someone around? Were they all out there? Tubruk?
"Please leave, Mother. I must dress. I want to
sit outside in my last moments."
"I understand, my love. Goodbye." Her eyes
filled with tears as she kissed his forehead, and then the little
room was empty again.
For a moment, he was tempted simply to fall back
on the pillows. His head felt thick and heavy and he guessed the
drug Cabera had given him would have kept him under till morning if
his mother hadn't had one of her ideas. Slowly, he swung his legs
out and pressed his feet against the floor. Weak. Clothes. One
thing at a time.
Tubruk knew they couldn't hold much
longer. He ran himself ragged trying to cover a gap where two other
men had once stood beside him. Again and again, he spun barely in
time to meet the attack of those who were creeping up on him as he
killed those in front. His breath came in wheezing gasps and, for
all his skill, he knew death was close.
Why would they not break? Damn all the gods to
hell, they must break! He cursed himself for not arranging for some
sort of fallback position, but there really was none. The walls
were the only defense the estate had, and these trembled on the
brink of being completely overwhelmed.
He slipped in blood and went down badly, the air
rushing out of him. A dagger punched into his side and a dirty bare
foot tried to crush his face, pressing his head down. He bit it and
distantly heard someone scream. He made it to one knee too late to
stop two scrambling figures dropping down into the yard. He hoped
the women could handle them. Gingerly he felt his side and winced
at the trickle of blood, watching it for air bubbles. There were
none and he could still breathe, though the air tasted like hot tin
and blood.
For a few moments, no one came at him and he was
able to look around the walls. Of the original twenty-nine, there
were fewer than fifteen left. They had worked miracles up on the
wall, but it wasn't going to be enough. Julius fought on,
despairing as his strength flowed from his wounds. He pulled the
dagger out of his flesh with a groan and instantly lost it in the
chest of the next man to face him. His breath was burning his
throat and he looked into the yard, seeing his son come out. He
smiled and the pride felt as if it would burst his chest. Another
blade entered him, shoved down into the gap between his breastplate
and his neck, deep into his lung. He spat blood and buried his
gladius into the attacker without seeing or knowing his face. His
arms dropped away and the sword fell from his grasp, clattering on
the stones of the courtyard below. He could only watch as the rest
came on.
Tubruk saw Julius collapse under a mass of
bodies that spilled past him over the narrow walkway and down into
the dark. He cried out his grief and rage, knowing he couldn't
reach him in time. Renius was still on his feet, but only Marcus's
care kept the old warrior from death, and even that blinding whirl
of blades was faltering as Marcus bled from wounds, his life
dribbling away in a score of gashes.
Gaius climbed up beside Tubruk, his face white
from the effort of dragging himself up the steps to the wall. His
gladius was out and he swung it as he reached the top, cutting into
a man levering himself up over the dark bodies. Tubruk slid his
blade into the man's ribs as Gaius swayed, but still the slave
wouldn't die. He flailed with a dagger and cut Gaius across the
face. Gaius hammered another blow at his neck and then the life was
gone. More faces appeared, shouting and cursing as they struggled
onto the slippery stones.
"Your father, Gaius."
"I know." Gaius's sword arm came up without a
quiver to block a spear, relic of some old battle. He stepped
inside its reach and took out the man's throat in a spray of bloody
wetness. Tubruk charged two more, making one drop over the edge,
but falling to his knees in the sticky mess of the floor as he did
so. Gaius cut the next down as he reversed his blade to plunge it
into Tubruk. Then he staggered back a pace, his face white under
the blood, his knees buckling. They waited together for the next
one up to the edge.
The night suddenly became brighter as the feed
barns were set alight, and still no new attacker came to end it for
him.
"One more," Tubruk swore through bloody lips. "I
can take one more with me. You should go down, you're not fit to
fight."
Gaius ignored him, his mouth a grim line. They
waited, but no one came. Tubruk edged closer to the outer wall and
looked over at the mangled limbs and broken carcasses that were
piled beneath the ledge, sprawled in slippery gore and glassy
expressions. There was no one there waiting for him with a dagger,
no one at all.
The light from the burning barns silhouetted
leaping figures as they capered around in the darkness. Tubruk
began to chuckle to himself, wincing as his lips split again.
"They've found the wine store," he said, and the
laughter could not be stopped, despite the wrenching pain it
brought.
"They are leaving!" Marcus growled,
amazed. He hawked and spat blood at the floor, wondering vaguely if
it was his own. He turned and grinned at Renius, seeing how he sat
slumped, propped against two carcasses. The old warrior just looked
at him, and for a moment Marcus began to remember his acid
dislike.
"I..." He paused and took two quick steps to the
old man. He was dying, that was obvious. Marcus pressed a hand made
black with blood and dirt onto Renius's chest, feeling the heart
flutter and miss. "Cabera! Over here, quickly!" he shouted.
Renius closed his eyes against the noise and the
pain.
Alexandria panted as if she were in
labor. She was exhausted and covered in blood, which she had never
imagined would be as sticky and foul as it actually was. They never
mentioned this in the stories either. The stuff was slippery for a
few moments, then gummed up your hands, making every surface tacky
to the touch. She waited for the next one to drop into the yard,
walking around almost drunkenly, her knife held in a stiff arm by
her side.
She stumbled over a body and realized it was
Susanna. She would never cut a goose again, or put fresh rushes
down in the kitchens, or feed scraps to stray puppies on her
shopping trips in Rome. This last thought brought clear-water tears
that ran through the mud and stink. Alexandria kept walking, kept
the patrol going, but no new enemies appeared, landing in the yard
like crows. No one came, but still she staggered on, unable to
stop. Two hours to dawn and she could still hear screaming in the
fields.
"Stay on the walls! No man leaves his
post until dawn," Tubruk bellowed around the yard. "They could
still be back."
He didn't think they would, though. The wine
store held the best part of a thousand wax-sealed amphorae. Even if
the slaves smashed a few, there should still be enough to keep them
happy until sunup.
After that final command was given, he wanted to
climb down himself to cross quickly to where Julius lay among the
dead, but someone had to hold the place.
"Go to your father, lad."
Gaius nodded once and descended, bracing himself
against the wall for support. The pain was agonizing. He could feel
that the operation incision had ripped open, and touching the area
left his fingers red and glistening. As he dragged himself back up
the stone steps to the defenders' positions, his wounds tore at his
will, but he held on.
"Are you dead, Father?" he whispered as he
looked down at the body. There could be no answer.
"Hold your positions, lads. It's over for now,"
Tubruk's voice snapped across the yard.
Alexandria heard the news and dropped the knife
onto the cobbles. Her wrists were being held by another slave girl
from the kitchens, saying something to her. She could not make out
the words over the screaming of the wounded, suddenly breaking into
what she had thought was silence.
I have been in silence and darkness
forever, she thought. I have seen hell.
Who was she again? The lines had blurred
somewhere in the evening, as she killed slaves who wanted freedom
as much as she did. The weight of it all bore her down to the
ground and she began to sob.
Tubruk could not resist any longer. He
limped down from his place on the wall and up again to where Julius
lay. He and Gaius looked down at the body without words.
Gaius tried to feel the reality of the man's
death. He could not. What lay on the floor was a broken thing, torn
and gashed, in spreading pools of a liquid that looked more like
oil than blood in the torchlight. His father's presence was
gone.
He spun round suddenly, his hand coming up to
ward something off.
"There was someone next to me. I could feel
someone standing there, looking down with me," he began to
babble.
"That would be him, all right. This is a night
for ghosts."
The feeling had gone, though, and Gaius
shivered, his mouth set tight against a grief that would drown
him.
"Leave me, Tubruk. And thank you."
Tubruk nodded, his eyes dark shadows as he
limped down the steps into the yard. Wearily, he climbed back up to
his old place on the wall and looked over each body he'd cut down,
trying to remember the details of each death. He could recognize
only a few and he soon gave that up and sat against a post, with
his sword between his legs, watching the waning flicker of fire
from the fields and waiting for the dawn.
Cabera placed his own palms over
Renius's heart.
"This is his time, I think. The walls inside him
are thin and old. Some are leaking blood where there should be
none."
"You healed Gaius. You can heal him," said
Marcus.
"He is an old man, lad. He was already weak and
I..." Cabera paused as he felt a hot blade touch his back. Slowly
and carefully, he turned his head to look at Marcus. There was
nothing to reassure him in the grim expression.
"He lives. Do your work, or I'll kill just one
more today."
At the words, Cabera could feel a shift and
different futures came into play, like gambling chips slotting into
position with a silent click. His eyes widened, but he said nothing
as he began to summon his energies for the healing. What a strange
young man who had the power to bend the futures around him! Surely
he had come to the right place in history. This was indeed a time
of flux and change, without the usual order and safe
progression.
He pulled an iron needle from the hem of his
robe and threaded it neatly and quickly. He worked with care,
sewing the bloody lips of slashed flesh together, remembering what
it was to be young, when anything seemed possible. As Marcus
watched, Cabera pressed his brown hands against Renius's chest and
massaged the heart. He felt it quicken and stifled an exclamation
as life came flooding back into the old body. He held his position
for a long time, until the etched pain eased from Renius's
expression and he looked as if he were merely asleep. As Cabera
rose to his feet, swaying with exhaustion, he nodded to himself as
if a point had been confirmed.
"The gods are strange players, Marcus. They
never tell us all their plans. You were right. He will see a few
more dawns and sunsets before the end."
CHAPTER
10
The fields were deserted by the time
the sun came over the horizon. Those who had broken into the wine
store were no doubt lying amongst the corn, still in the deep
slumber of drunkenness. Gaius looked out over the wall to see
sluggish smoke rising from the blackened ground. Scorched trees
stood stark and bare, and the winter grain still smoldered in the
skeletal wrecks of the feed barns.
It was a strangely peaceful scene, with even the
morning birds silent. The violence and emotions of the night before
were somehow distant when you were able to look out across the
fields. Gaius rubbed his face for a moment, then turned to walk
down the steps into the courtyard.
Brown stains spattered every white wall and
surface. Pools of blood congealed in corners and obscene smears
showed where the bodies had already been shifted, dragged outside
the gates to be taken to pits when carts could be arranged. The
defenders were laid out on clean cloths in cool rooms, their limbs
arranged for dignity. The others were simply thrown onto a growing
pile where arms and legs stuck out at angles. Gaius watched the
work and in the background heard the screams of the wounded as they
were stitched or made ready for amputation.
He burned with anger and had nowhere to unleash
it. He had been locked away for safety while everyone he loved
risked their lives and while his father had given his in defense of
his family and the estate. True, he had still been weak from the
operation, his scabs barely healed, but to be denied the chance to
help his father! There were no words, and when Cabera had come to
him to offer sympathy, Gaius ignored him until he went away. He sat
exhausted and trickled dust through his fingers, remembering
Tubruk's words years before and understanding them at last. His
land.
A slave approached, one whose name Gaius did not
know, but who bore wounds that showed he had been part of the
defense.
"The dead are all outside the gates, master.
Shall we find carts for them?"
It was the first time any man had addressed him
as anything but his own name. Gaius hardened his expression so as
not to reveal his surprise. His mind was full of pain and his voice
sounded as if from a deep pit.
"Bring lamp oil. I'll burn them where they
lie."
The slave ducked his head in acknowledgment and
ran for the oil. Gaius walked outside the gates and looked on the
ungainly mass of death. It was a grisly sight, but he could find no
sympathy in him. Each one there had chosen this end when they had
attacked the estate.
He doused the pile in oil, sloshing it over the
flesh and faces, into open mouths and unblinking eyes. Then he lit
it and found he couldn't watch the corpses burn after all. The
smoke brought back a memory of the raven he and Marcus had caught,
and he called a slave over to him.
"Fetch barrels from the stores and keep it
burning until they are ash," he said grimly. He went back inside as
the heat built and the smell followed him like an accusing
finger.
He found Tubruk lying on his side and biting
onto a piece of leather as Cabera probed a dagger wound in his
stomach in the great kitchen. Gaius watched for a while, but no
words were exchanged. He moved on, finding the cook sitting on a
step with a bloody cleaver still in his hand. Gaius knew his father
would have had words of encouragement for the man, who looked
desolate and lost. He himself could not summon up anything except
cold anger and stepped over the figure, who stared off into space
as if Gaius weren't there. Then he stopped. If his father would
have done it, then so would he.
"I saw you fight on the wall," he said to the
cook, his voice strong and firm at last.
The man nodded and seemed to gather himself. He
struggled to stand. "I did, master. I killed a great number, but I
lost count after a while."
"Well, I've just burned 149 bodies, so it must
have been many," Gaius said, trying to smile.
"Yes. No one got past me. I have never known
such luck. I was touched by the gods, I think. We all were."
"Did you see my father die?"
The cook stood and raised an arm as if to put it
on the boy's shoulder. At the last moment, he thought better of it
and turned the gesture into a wave of regret.
"I did. He took a great many with him and many
before. There were piles around him at the end. He was a brave man
and a good one."
Gaius felt his calm waver at the kind thought
and his jaw clenched. When he had overcome his surge of sorrow, he
spoke graciously: "He would be proud of you, I know. You were
singing when I caught a glimpse of you."
To his surprise, the man blushed deeply.
"Yes. I enjoyed the fight. I know there was
blood and death all around, but everything was simple, you see.
Anyone I could see was to be killed. I like things to be
clear."
"I understand," Gaius said, forcing a bleak
smile. "Rest now. The kitchens are open and soup will be brought
around soon."
"The kitchens! And I am here! I must go, master,
or the soup will be fit for nothing."
Gaius nodded and the man bolted off, leaving his
enormous cleaver resting against the step, forgotten. Gaius sighed.
He wished his own life were that simple, to be able to take on and
cast off roles without regret.
Lost in thought as he was, he didn't notice the
man's return until he spoke.
"Your father would be proud of you too, I think.
Tubruk says you saved him when he was exhausted at the end, and
with you injured as well. I would be proud if my son were as
strong."
Tears came unbidden to Gaius's eyes and he
turned away so the other would not see them. This was not the time
to be breaking apart, not when the estate was in a shambles and the
winter feed all burned. He tried to busy himself with the details,
but he felt helpless and alone and the tears came more strongly as
his mind touched again and again on his loss, like a bird pecking
at weeping sores.
* * *
"Ho there!" came a voice from outside
the main gate.
Gaius heard the cheerful tone and composed
himself. He was the head of the estate, a son of Rome and his
father, and he would not embarrass the old man's memory. He walked
the steps to the top of the wall, barely aware of the phantom
images that came rushing at him. Those were all from the dark. In
the sun the shadows had little reality.
At the top, he looked down on the bronze helmet
of a slim officer on a fine gelding that pawed the ground
restlessly as it waited. The officer was accompanied by a
contubernium of ten legionaries. Each man appeared alert and
smartly turned out. The officer looked up and nodded to Gaius. He
was around forty, tanned and fit-looking.
"We saw your smoke. Came to investigate in case
it was more of the slaves on the rampage. I see you've had trouble
here. My name is Titus Priscus. I am a centurion with Sulla's
legion, who have just blessed the city with their presence. My men
are ranging the countryside hereabouts, on cleanup and execution
detail. May I speak to the master of the estate?"
"That would be me," Gaius said. "Open the
gates," he called below.
Those words achieved what all the marauders of
the night before could not, and the heavy gates were pulled open,
allowing the men entry.
"Looks like you had it rough out here," Titus
said, all trace of cheerfulness gone from his voice and manner. "I
should have known from the pile of bodies, but... did you lose many
of your own?"
"Some. We held the walls. How is the city?"
Gaius was at a loss as to what to say to the man. Was he meant to
make polite conversation?
Titus dismounted and gave the reins to one of
his men.
"Still there, sir, although hundreds of wooden
houses went up and there are a few thousand dead in the streets.
Order has been restored for the moment, though I can't say it would
be safe to stroll out after dark. At the moment, we're rounding up
all the slaves we can find and crucifying one in ten to make an
example—Sulla's orders—on all the estates near
Rome."
"Make it one in three if they're on my land.
I'll replace them when things have settled. I don't like the
thought of letting anyone who fought against me last night go
without punishment."
The centurion looked at him for a second,
unsure. "Begging your pardon, sir, but are you able to give that
order? You'll excuse me checking, but, in the circumstances, is
there anyone to back you?"
For a second, anger flared in Gaius, but then he
remembered what he must look like to the man. There had been no
opportunity to clean himself up after Lucius and Cabera had
restitched and rebandaged his wounds. He was dirty and bloodstained
and unnaturally pale. He didn't know that his blue eyes were also
rimmed with red from the oily smoke and crying, and that only
something in his manner kept a seasoned soldier like Titus from
cuffing the boy for his insolence. There was something, though, and
Titus couldn't have said exactly what it was. Just a feeling that
this young man was not someone to cross lightly.
"I would do the same in your position. I will
fetch my estate manager, if the doctor is finished with him." Gaius
turned away without another word.
It would have been politeness to offer the men
refreshment, but Gaius was annoyed that he had to summon Tubruk to
establish his bona fides. He left them waiting.
Tubruk was at least clean and dressed in good,
dark clothing. His wounds and bandages were all concealed under his
woolen tunic and bracae—leather trousers. He smiled as
he saw the legionaries. The world was turning the right way up
again.
"Are you the only ones in this area?" he asked
without preamble or explanation.
"Er, no, but..." Titus began.
"Good." Tubruk turned to Gaius. "Sir, I suggest
you have these men send out a message that they will be delayed. We
need men to get the estate back in order."
Gaius kept his face as straight as Tubruk's,
ignoring Titus's expression. "Good point, Tubruk. Sulla has sent
them to help the outlying estates, after all. There is much work to
be done."
Titus tried again. "Here, now look..."
Tubruk noticed him once more. "I suggest you
take the message yourself. These others look fit enough for a
little hard labor. Sulla won't want you to abandon us to our
wreckage, I'm sure."
The two men faced each other and Titus sighed,
reaching up to remove his helmet.
"Never let it be said that I shirked a job of
work," he muttered. Turning to one of the legionaries, he jerked
his head toward the fields. "Get back out and join up with the
other units. Spread the word that I'll be held up here for a few
hours. Any slaves you find—tell them one in three, all
right?"
The man nodded cheerfully and took off. Titus
began to unbuckle his breastplate. "Right, where do you want my
lads to start?"
"You handle this, Tubruk. I'll go and check on
the others." Gaius turned away, showing his appreciation with a
quick grip of the other's shoulder as he left. What he wanted to do
was to go for a long walk in the woods by himself, or sit by the
river pool and settle his thoughts. That would come later, though,
after he had seen and spoken with every man and woman who had
fought for his family the night before. His father would have done
the same.
As he passed the stables, he heard a pulsing sob
from the darkness within. He paused, unsure whether he should
intrude. There was so much grief in the air, as well as inside him.
Those who had fallen had friends and relatives who had not expected
to begin this day alone. He stood for a moment longer, still
smelling the oily stink of the bodies he had fired. Then he went
into the cool shadow of the stalls. Whoever it was, their grief was
now his responsibility, their burdens were his to share. That was
what his father had understood and why the estate had prospered for
so long.
His eyes adjusted slowly after the morning
glare, and he peered into each stall to find the source of the
sounds. Only two held horses, and they nickered softly to him as he
reached and stroked their soft muzzles. His foot scraped against a
pebble and the sobbing ceased on the instant, as if someone were
holding their breath. Gaius waited, as still as Renius had taught
him to stand, until he heard the sigh of released air and knew
where the person was.
In the dirty straw, Alexandria sat with her
knees tight against her chin and her back to the far stone wall.
She looked up as he came into sight, and he saw that the dirt on
her face was streaked with tears. She was close to his own age,
maybe a year older, he recalled. The memory of her being flogged by
Renius came into his mind with a stab of guilt.
He sighed. He had no words for her. He crossed
the short distance and sat against the wall next to her, taking
care to leave space between them as he leaned back so that she
would not be threatened. The silence was calm and the smells and
feel of the stables had always been a comforting place to Gaius.
When he was very young, he too had escaped here to hide from his
troubles or from punishment to come. He sat, lost in memory for a
while, and it didn't seem awkward between them, though nothing was
said. The only sounds were the horses' movements and the occasional
sob that still escaped Alexandria.
"Your father was a good man," she whispered at
last.
He wondered how many times he would hear the
phrase before the day was over and whether he could stand it. He
nodded mutely.
"I'm so sorry," he said to her, feeling rather
than seeing her head come up to look at him. He knew she'd killed,
had seen her covered in blood down in the yard as he'd come out the
night before. He thought he understood why she was crying and had
meant to try to comfort her, but the words unlocked a rush of
sorrow in him and his eyes filled with tears. His face twisted in
pain as he bowed his head to his chest.
Alexandria looked at him in astonishment, her
eyes wide. Before she had time to think, she had reached over to
him and they were holding each other in the darkness, a blot of
private grief while the world went on in the sun outside. She
stroked his hair with one hand and whispered comfort to him as he
apologized over and over, to her, to his father, to the dead, to
those he had burned.
When he was spent, she began to release him, but
in the last fragment of time before he was too far, she pressed her
lips lightly on his, feeling him start slightly. She pulled away,
hugging her knees tightly, and, unseen in the shadows, her face
burned. She felt his eyes on her but couldn't meet them.
"Why did you...?" he muttered, his voice hoarse
and swollen from crying.
"I don't know. I just wondered what it would be
like."
"What was it like?" he replied, his voice
strengthening with amusement.
"Terrible. Someone will have to teach you to
kiss."
He looked at her, bemused. Moments before, he
had been drowning in a sorrow that would not diminish or wane in
him. Now he was noticing that beneath the dirt and wisps of straw
and smell of blood—beneath her own sadness—there was a
rare girl.
"I have the rest of the day to learn," he said
quietly, the words stumbling out past nervous blockages in his
throat.
She shook her head. "I have work to do. I should
be back in the kitchen."
In a smooth movement, she rose from her crouch
and left the stall, as if she were going to walk right away without
another word. Then she paused and looked at him.
"Thank you for coming to find me," she said, and
walked out into the sunlight.
Gaius watched her go. He wondered if she had
realized he had never kissed a girl before. He could still feel a
light pressure on his lips as if she had marked him. Surely she
hadn't meant "terrible"? He saw again the stiff way she had carried
herself as she left the stables. She was like a bird with a broken
wing, but she would heal with time and space and friends. He
realized he would as well.
Marcus and Tubruk were laughing at
something Cabera had said as Gaius came into the room. At the sight
of him, they all fell silent.
"I came... to thank you. For doing what you did
on the walls," Gaius began.
Marcus cut him off, stepping closer and grabbing
his hand. "You never need to thank me for anything. I owe more than
I could ever pay to your father. I was sorry to hear he fell at the
last."
"We came through. My mother lives, I live. He
would do it again if offered the chance, I know. You took some
wounds?"
"Toward the end. Nothing serious, though. I was
untouchable. Cabera says I will be a great fighter." Marcus broke
into a grin.
"Unless he gets himself killed, of course. That
would slow him down a little," Cabera muttered, busying himself
with applying wax to the wood of his bow.
"How is Renius?" Gaius asked.
Both seemed to pause for a second at the
question. Marcus looked evasive. There was something odd there,
Gaius thought.
"He'll live, but it will be a long time before
he's ever fit again," Marcus said. "At his age an infection would
be the end of him, but Cabera says he'll make it."
"He will," Cabera said firmly.
Gaius sighed and sat down. "What happens now?
I'm too young to take my father's place, to represent his interests
in Rome. In truth, I would not be happy running only the estate,
but I never had time to learn about the rest of his affairs. I
don't know who looked after his wealth, or where the deeds to the
land are." He turned to Tubruk. "I know you are familiar with some
of it and I would trust you to control the capital until I am
older, but what do I do now? Continue to hire tutors for Marcus and
myself? Life seems suddenly vague, without direction, for the first
time."
Cabera stopped polishing at this outburst.
"Everyone feels this at some time. Did you think I planned to be
here when I was a young boy? Life has a way of taking twists and
turns you did not expect. I would not have it any other way, for
all the pain it brings. Too much of the future is already set; it
is good that we cannot know every detail or life would become a
gray, dull sort of death."
"You will have to learn fast, that is all,"
Marcus continued, his face alight with enthusiasm.
"With Rome as it is? Who will teach me? This is
not a time of peace and plenty, where my lack of political skill
can be overlooked. My father was always very clear about that. He
said Rome was full of wolves."
Tubruk nodded grimly. "I will do what I can, but
already some will be looking at which estates have been weakened
and might be bought cheaply. This is not the time to be
defenseless."
"But I don't know enough to protect us!" Gaius
went on. "The Senate could take everything I own if I don't pay
taxes, for example, but how do I pay? Where is the money and where
do I take it and how much should I pay? Where are the names of my
father's clients? You see?"
"Be calm," Cabera said, beginning the slow
strokes along the wood of his bow again. "Think instead. Let us
begin with what you do have and not what you don't know."
Gaius took a deep breath and once again wished
his father were there to be the rock of certainty in his life.
"I have you, Tubruk. You know the estate, but
not the other dealings. None of us knows anything about politics or
the realities of the Senate."
He looked again at Cabera and Marcus. "I have
you two and I have Renius on hand, but none of us has even entered
the Senate chambers, and my father's allies are strangers to
us."
"Concentrate on what we have, otherwise
you will despair. So far you have named some very capable people.
Armies have been started with less. What else?"
"My mother and her brother Marius, but my father
always said he was the biggest wolf of them all."
"We need a big wolf right now, though. Someone
who knows the politics. He is your blood, you must go and see him,"
Marcus said quietly.
"I don't know if I can trust him," Gaius said,
his expression bleak.
"He will not desert your mother. He must help
you to keep control of the estate, if only for her," Tubruk
declared.
"True. He has a place in Rome I could visit.
There is no one else to help, so it must be him. He is a stranger
to me, though. Since my mother began her sickness, he has rarely
been to the estate."
"That will not matter. He will not turn you
away," Cabera said peacefully, eyeing the shine he had wrought in
the bow.
Marcus looked sharply at the old man. "You seem
very sure," he said.
Cabera shrugged. "Nothing is sure in this
world."
"Then it is settled. I will send a messenger
before me and visit my uncle," Gaius said, something of his gloom
lifting.
"I will come with you," Marcus said quickly.
"You are still recovering from your wounds and Rome is not a safe
place at the moment, you know."
Gaius smiled properly for the first time that
day.
Cabera muttered, as if to himself, "I came to
this land to see Rome, you know. I have lived in high mountain
villages and met tribes thought lost to antiquity on my travels. I
believed I had seen everything, but all the time people told me I
had to visit Rome before I died. I said to them, 'This lake is true
beauty,' and they would reply, 'You should see Rome.' They say it
is a wondrous place, the center of the world, yet I have never
stepped inside its walls."
Both boys smiled at the old man's transparent
subterfuge.
"Of course you will come. I consider you a
friend of the house. You will always be welcome anywhere I am, on
my honor," Gaius replied, his tone formal, as if repeating an
oath.
Cabera laid the bow aside and stood with his
hand outstretched. Gaius took it firmly.
"You too will always be welcome at my home
fires," Cabera said. "I like the climate around here, and the
people. I think my travels will wait for a little while."
Gaius released the grip, his expression
thoughtful. "I will need good friends around me if I am to survive
my first year of politics. My father described it as walking
barefoot in a nest of vipers."
"He seems to have had a colorful turn of phrase,
and not a high opinion of his colleagues," Cabera said, giving out
a dry chuckle. "We will tread lightly and stamp on the occasional
head as it becomes necessary."
All four smiled and felt the strength that comes
from such a friendship, despite the differences in age and
background.
"I would like to take Alexandria with us," Gaius
added suddenly.
"Oh, yes? The pretty one?" Marcus replied, his
face lighting up.
Gaius felt his cheeks grow red and hoped it
wasn't obvious. Judging by the expressions of the others, it
was.
"You will have to introduce me to this girl,"
Cabera said.
"Renius whipped her, you know, for distracting
us at practice," Marcus continued.
Cabera tutted to himself. "He can be charmless.
Beautiful women are a joy in life..."
"Look, I—" Gaius began.
"Yes, I'm sure you want her simply to hold the
horses or something. You Romans have such a way with women, it is a
wonder your race has survived."
Gaius left the room after a while, leaving
laughter behind him.
* * *
Gaius knocked at the door of the room
where Renius lay. He was alone for the moment, although Lucius was
nearby and had just been in to check the wounds and stitches. It
was dark in the room and at first Gaius thought the old man was
asleep.
He turned to leave rather than disturb the rest
he must need, but a whispering voice stopped him.
"Gaius? I thought it was you."
"Renius. I wanted to thank you." Gaius
approached the bed and drew up a chair beside the figure. The eyes
were open and clear and Gaius blinked as he took in the features.
It must have been the dim light, but Renius looked younger. Surely
not, yet there was no denying that some of the deep-seamed wrinkles
had lessened and a few black hairs could be seen at the temples,
almost invisible in the light, but standing out against the white
bristles.
"You look... well," Gaius managed.
Renius gave a short, hard chuckle. "Cabera
healed me and it has worked wonders. He was more surprised than
anyone, said I must have a destiny or something, to be so affected
by him. In truth, I feel strong, although my left arm is still
useless. Lucius wanted to take it off, rather than have it flapping
around. I... may let him, when the rest of me has healed."
Gaius absorbed this in silence, fighting back
painful memories.
"So much has happened in such a short time," he
said. "I am glad you are still here."
"I couldn't save your father. I was too far away
and finished myself. Cabera said he died instantly, with a blade in
his heart. Most likely, he wouldn't even have known it."
"It's all right. You don't need to tell me. I
know he would have wanted to be on that wall. I would have wanted
it too, but I was left in my room, and..."
"You got out, though, didn't you? I'm glad you
did, as it turned out. Tubruk says you saved him right at the end,
like a... reserve force." The old man smiled and coughed for a
while. Gaius waited patiently until the fit was over.
"It was my order to leave you out of it. You
were too weak for hours of fighting, and your father agreed with
me. He wanted you safe. Still, I'm glad you got out for the end of
it."
"So am I. I fought with Renius!" Gaius said, his
eyes brimming with tears, though he smiled.
"I always fight with Renius," muttered the old
man. "It isn't that much to sing about."
CHAPTER
11
The dawn light was cold and gray; the
skies clear over the estate lands. Horns sounded low and mournful,
drowning the cheerful birdsong that seemed so inappropriate for a
day marking the passing of a life. The house was stripped of
ornament save for a cypress branch over the main gate to warn
priests of Jupiter not to enter while the body was still
inside.
Three times the horns moaned and finally the
people chanted, "Conclamatum est"—"The sadness has
been sounded." The grounds inside the gates were filled with
mourners from the city, dressed in rough wool togas, unwashed and
unshaven to show their grief.
Gaius stood by the gates with Tubruk and Marcus
and watched as his father's body was brought out feetfirst and laid
gently in the open carriage that would take him to the funeral
pyre. The crowd waited, heads bowed in prayer or thought as Gaius
walked stiffly to the body.
He looked down into the face he had known and
loved all his life and tried to remember it when the eyes could
open and the strong hand reach out to grip his shoulder or ruffle
his hair. Those same hands lay still at his sides, the skin clean
and shining with oil. The wounds from the defense of the walls were
covered by the folds of his toga, but there was nothing of life
there. No rise and fall of breath; the skin looked wrong, too pale.
He wondered if it would be cold to the touch, but he could not
reach out.
"Goodbye, my father," he whispered, and almost
faltered as grief swelled in him. The crowd watched and he steadied
himself. No shame in front of the old man. Some of them would be
friends, unknown to him, but some would be carrion birds, come to
judge his weakness for themselves. He felt a spike of anger at this
and was able to smother the sadness. He reached out and took his
father's hand, bowing his head. The skin felt like cloth, rough and
cool under his grip.
"Conclamatum est," he said aloud, and the
crowd murmured the words again.
He stood back and watched in silence as his
mother approached the man who had been her husband. He could see
her shaking under her dirty wool cloak. Her hair had not been
tended by slaves and stood out in wild disarray. Her eyes were
bloodshot and her hand trembled as she touched his father for the
last time. Gaius tensed, and begged inside that she would complete
the ritual without disgrace. Standing so close, he alone could hear
the words she said as she bent low over the face of his father.
"Why have you left me alone, my love? Who will
now make me laugh when I am sad and hold me in the darkness? This
is not what we dreamed. You promised me you would always be there
when I am tired and angry with the world."
She began to sob in heaves and Tubruk signaled
to the nurse he'd hired for her. As with the doctors, she had
brought no physical improvement, but Aurelia seemed to draw comfort
from the Roman matron, perhaps simply from female companionship. It
was enough for Tubruk to keep her on, and he nodded as she took
Aurelia's arm gently and led her away into the darkened house.
Gaius breathed out slowly, suddenly aware of the
crowd again. Tears came into his eyes and were ignored as they
brimmed and held against his lashes.
Tubruk approached and spoke quietly to him. "She
will be all right," he said, but they both knew it wasn't true.
One by one, the other mourners came to pay their
respects to the body, and more than a few spoke to Gaius afterward,
praising his father and pressing him to contact them in the
city.
"He was always straight with me, even when
profit lay the other way," said one gray-haired man in a rough
toga. "He owned a fifth part of my shops in the city and lent me
the money to buy them. He was one of the rare ones you could trust
with anything, and he was always fair."
Gaius gripped his hand strongly. "Thank you.
Tubruk will make arrangements to discuss the future with you."
The man nodded. "If he is watching me, I want
him to see me being straight with his son. I owe him that and
more."
Others followed and Gaius was proud to see the
genuine sadness his father had left behind. There was a world in
Rome that the son had never seen, but his father had been a decent
man and that mattered to him, that the city was a little poorer
because his father would no longer walk the streets.
One man was dressed in a clean toga of good
white wool, standing out in the crowd of mourners. He did not pause
at the carriage, but came straight to Gaius.
"I am here for Marius the consul. He is away
from the city, but wanted to send me to let you know your father
will not be forgotten by him."
Gaius thanked him politely, his mind working
furiously. "Send the message that I will call on Consul Marius when
he is next in the city."
The man nodded. "Your uncle will receive you
warmly, I am sure. He will be at his town house three weeks from
today. I will let him know." The messenger made his way back
through the crowd and out of the gates, and Gaius watched him
go.
Marcus moved to his shoulder, his voice low.
"Already you are not so alone as you were," he said.
Gaius thought of his mother's words. "No. He has
set my standard and I will meet it. I will not be a lesser man when
I lie there and my son greets those who knew me. I swear it."
Into the dawn silence came the low voices of the
praeficae women, singing softly the same phrases of loss
over and over. It was a mournful sound and the world was filled
with it as the horses pulled the carriage with his father out of
the gates in slow time, with the people falling in behind, heads
bowed.
In only a few minutes the courtyard was empty
again, and Gaius waited for Tubruk, who had gone inside to check on
Aurelia.
"Are you coming?" Gaius asked him as he
returned.
Tubruk shook his head. "I will stay to serve
your mother. I don't want her alone at this time."
Tears came again into Gaius's eyes and he
reached out for the older man's arm.
"Close the gates behind me, Tubruk. I don't
think I can do it."
"You must. Your father is gone to the tomb and
you must follow, but first the gates must be shut by the new
master. It is not my place to take yours. Close up the estate for
mourning and go and light the funeral pyre. These are your last
tasks before I will call you master. Go now."
Words would not come from his throat and Gaius
turned away, pulling the heavy gates shut behind him. The funeral
procession had not gone far with their measured step, and he walked
after them slowly, his back straight and his heart aching.
The crematorium was outside the city, near the
family tomb. For decades, burials within the walls of Rome had been
forbidden as the city filled every scrap of available space with
buildings. Gaius watched in silence as his father's body was laid
on a high pyre that hid him from view in the center of it. The wood
and straw were soaked with perfumed oils, and the odor of flowers
hung heavily in the air as the praeficae changed their dirge to one
of hope and rebirth. Gaius was brought a sputtering torch by the
man who had prepared his father's body for the funeral. He had the
dark eyes and calm face of a man used to death and grief, and Gaius
thanked him with distant politeness.
Gaius approached the pyre and felt the gaze of
all the mourners on him. He would show them no public weakness, he
vowed to himself. Rome and his father watched to see if he would
falter, but he would not.
Close, the smell of the perfumes was almost
overpowering. Gaius reached out with a silver coin and opened his
father's loose mouth, pressing the metal against the dry coolness
of the tongue. It would pay the ferryman, Charon, and his father
would reach the quiet lands beyond. He closed the mouth gently and
stood back, pressing the smoking torch against the oily straw
stuffed between the branches at the base of the pyre. A memory of
the smell of burning feathers slipped into his mind and was gone
before he could identify it.
The fire grew quickly, with popping twigs and a
crackle that was loud against the soft songs of the praeficae.
Gaius stepped back from the heat as his face reddened, and held the
torch limply in his hand. It was the end of childhood while he was
yet a child. The city called him and he did not feel ready. The
Senate called him and he was terrified. But he would not fail his
father's memory and would meet the challenges as they came. In
three weeks, he would leave the estate and enter Rome as a citizen,
a member of the nobilitas.
At last, he wept.
CHAPTER
12
"Rome—the largest city in the
world," Marcus said, shaking his head in wonder as they passed into
the vast paved expanse of the forum. Great bronze statues gazed
down on the small group as they walked their horses through the
bustling pedestrians.
"You don't realize how big everything is until
you get up close," Cabera replied, his usual confidence muted. The
pyramids of Egypt seemed larger in his memory, but the people there
looked always to the past with their tombs. Here, the great
structures were for the living and he felt the optimism of it.
Alexandria too seemed awed, though in part it
was at how much everything had changed in the five years since
Gaius's father had bought her to work in his kitchens. She wondered
if the man who had owned her mother was somewhere still in the city
and shuddered as she recalled his face, remembering how he had
treated them. Her mother had never been free and died a slave after
a fever struck her and several others in the slave pens beneath one
of the sale houses. Such plagues were fairly common and the big
slave auctions were accustomed to passing over a few bodies each
month, accepting a few coins for them from the ash makers. She
remembered, though, and the waxen stillness of her mother still
pressed against her arms in dreams. She shuddered again and shook
her head as if to clear it.
I will not die a slave, she thought to
herself, and Cabera turned to look at her, almost as if he had
heard the thought. He nodded and winked and she smiled at him. She
had liked him from the first. He was another who didn't quite fit,
wherever he found himself.
I will learn useful skills and make things to
sell, and I will buy myself free, she thought, knowing the
glory of the forum was affecting her and not caring. Who wouldn't
dream in a place that looked as if it had been built by gods? You
could see how to make a hut, just by looking at it, but who could
imagine these columns being raised? Everything was bright and
untouched by the filth she remembered, narrow dirty streets and
ugly men hiring her mother by the hour, with the money going to the
owner of the house.
There were no beggars or whores in the forum,
only well-dressed, clean men and women, buying, selling, eating,
drinking, arguing politics and money. On each side, the eye was
filled with gargantuan temples in rich stone; huge columns with
their heads and feet gilded; great arches erected for military
triumphs. Truly, this was the beating heart of empire. Each of them
could feel it. There was a confidence here, an arrogance. While
most of the world scrubbed in the dirt still, these people had
power and astonishing wealth.
The only sign of the recent troubles was the
grim presence of legionaries standing to attention at every corner,
watching the crowds with cold eyes.
"It is meant to make a man feel small," Renius
muttered.
"But it does not!" Cabera countered, gaping
around him. "It makes me feel proud that man can build this. What a
race are we!"
Alexandria nodded silently. It showed that
anything could be achieved—even, perhaps, freedom.
Small boys advertised their masters' wares from
hundreds of tiny shops along the edges: barbers, carpenters,
butchers, stonemasons, gold and silver jewelers, potters, mosaic
makers, rug weavers—the list was endless, the colors and
noises a blur.
"That is the temple of Jupiter, on the
Capitoline hill. We will come back and make a sacrifice when we
have seen your uncle Marius," Tubruk said, relaxed and smiling in
the morning sun. He was leading the group and raised his arm to
halt them.
"Wait. That man's path will cross ours. He is a
senior magistrate and must not be hindered."
The others drew up and halted.
"How do you know who he is?" Marcus asked.
"Do you see the man beside him? He is a lictor,
a special attendant. Do you see that bundle on his shoulder? Those
are wooden rods for scourging and a small axe for beheading. If the
magistrate were bumped by one of our horses, say, he could order a
death on the spot. He needs neither witnesses nor laws to apply.
Best to avoid them completely, if we can."
In silence, they all watched the man and his
attendant as they crossed the plaza, seemingly unaware of the
attention.
"A dangerous place for the ignorant," Cabera
whispered.
"Everywhere is, in my experience," Renius
grunted from the back.
Past the forum, they entered lesser streets that
abandoned the straight lines of the main ones. Here, there were
fewer names on the intersections. The houses were often four or
even five stories high, and Cabera, in particular, gaped at
these.
"The view they must have! Are they very
expensive, these top houses?"
"Apartments, they are called, and no, they are
the cheapest," said Tubruk. "They have no running water at that
height and are in great danger from fire. If one starts on the
bottom floor, those at the top rarely get out. You see how the
windows are so small? That is to keep out the sun and rain, but it
also means you can't jump from them."
They wound their way through the heavy
stepping-stones that crossed the sunken roads at intervals. Without
these, the fastidious pedestrians would have had to step down into
the slippery muck left by horses and donkeys. The wheels of carts
had to be set a regulation width apart so that they could cross in
the gaps, and Cabera nodded to himself as he watched the
process.
"This is a well-planned city," he said. "I have
never seen another like it."
Tubruk laughed. "There is no other like it. They
say Carthage was of similar beauty, but we destroyed that more than
fifty years ago, sowing the land with salt so that it could never
again rise in opposition to us."
"You speak almost as if a city is a living
thing," Cabera replied.
"Is it not? You can feel the life here. I could
feel her welcoming me as I came through the gate. This is my home,
as no other house can be."
Gaius too could feel the life around him.
Although he had never lived within the walls, it was his home as it
was Tubruk's—maybe more so, as he was nobilitas, born free
and of the greatest people in the world. My people built
this, he thought. My ancestors put their hands on these
stones and walked these streets. My father may have stood at that
corner, and my mother could have grown up in one of the gardens I
can glimpse off the main street.
His grip on the reins relaxed and Cabera looked
at him and smiled, sensing the change of mood.
"We are nearly there," Tubruk said. "At least
Marius's house is well away from the smell of dung in the streets.
I don't miss that, I can assure you."
They turned off the busy road and walked the
horses up a steep hill and a quieter, cleaner street.
"These are the houses of the rich and powerful.
They have estates in the country but mansions here, where they
entertain and plot for more power and even more wealth," Tubruk
continued, his voice blank enough of emotion to make Gaius glance
at him. The houses were sealed from the public gaze by iron gates,
taller than a man. Each was numbered and entered by a small door
for those on foot. Tubruk explained that this was only the least
part; the buildings went back and back, from private baths to
stables to great courtyards, all hidden from the vulgar
plebeians.
"They set great store by privacy in Rome,"
Tubruk said. "Perhaps it is part of living in a city. Certainly, if
you were just to drop in at a country estate, you would be unlikely
to cause offense, but here you must make appointments and announce
yourself and wait and wait until they are ready to receive you.
This is the one. I will tell the gatekeeper we have arrived."
"I'll leave you here then," Renius said. "I must
go to my own house and see if it has been damaged in the
rioting."
"Do not forget the curfew. Be inside as the sun
sets, my friend. They are still killing everyone left on the
streets after dark."
Renius nodded. "I'll watch out."
He turned his horse away and Gaius reached out
to put a hand on his good right arm.
"You're not leaving? I thought..."
"I must check my house. I need to think alone
for a while. I don't feel ready to settle down with the other old
men, not anymore. I will be back tomorrow dawn to see you and...
well, tomorrow dawn it is." He smiled and rode away.
As he trotted down the hill, Gaius noted again
the darkness of his hair and the energy that filled the man's
frame. He turned and looked at Cabera, who shrugged.
"Gatekeeper!" Tubruk shouted. "Attend to
us."
After the heat of the Roman streets,
the cool stone corridors that led into the house grounds were a
welcome relief. The horses and bags had been whisked away, and the
four visitors were taken into the first building, beckoned on by an
elderly slave.
They stopped at a door of gold wood and the
slave opened it, gesturing inside.
"You will find all you need, Master Gaius.
Consul Marius has given you leave to wash and change after your
journey. You are not expected to appear before him until sunset,
three hours from now, when you will dine. Shall I show your
companions the way to the servants' rooms?"
"No. They will stay with me."
"As you wish, master. Shall I take the girl to
the slave quarters?"
Gaius nodded slowly, thinking. "Treat her with
kindness. She is a friend of my house."
"Of course, sir," replied the man, motioning to
Alexandria.
She flashed a glance at Gaius and the expression
was unreadable in her dark eyes.
Without another word, the quiet little man left,
his sandals making no noise on the stone floor. The others looked
at one another, each taking some form of comfort from the company
of friends.
"I think she likes me, that one," Marcus mused
to himself.
Gaius looked at him in surprise and Marcus
shrugged. "Lovely legs, as well." He went in to their quarters,
chuckling, leaving Gaius stupefied behind him.
Cabera whistled softly as he entered the room.
The ceiling was forty feet from the mosaic floor, and a series of
brass rafters crossed and recrossed the space. The walls were
painted in the dark reds and oranges that they had seen so often
since entering the city, but the floor was the thing that caught
the attention, even before they looked up at the vault of a roof.
It was a series of circles, gripping a marble fountain in the
middle of the huge room. Each circle contained running figures,
racing to catch the one in front and frozen in the attempt. The
outer circles were figures from the markets, carrying their wares,
then, as the eye followed the circles inward, different aspects of
society could be seen. There were the slaves, the magistrates, the
members of the Senate, legionaries, doctors. One circle contained
only kings, naked except for their crowns. The innermost ring,
forming a belt around the actual fountain, contained pictures of
the gods, and they alone were still. They stood looking up at all
the running hordes that sprinted around but could never leap from
one circle to another.
Gaius walked across the rings to the fountain
and drank, using a cup that rested on the marble edge. In truth, he
was tired, and impressed as he was by the beauty of the room, the
most important fact was that no food or couches were included in
the splendor. The others followed him through an arch into the next
room.
"This is more like it," Marcus said cheerfully.
A polished table was laid with food: meat, bread, eggs, vegetables,
and fish. Fruit was piled in bowls of gold. Soft couches stood
around invitingly, but another door led onward and Gaius could not
resist looking.
The third room had a deep pool in the center.
The water steamed invitingly and bare wooden benches lined the
walls, piled high with soft white cloths. Robes hung from stands by
the water, and four male slaves stood by low tables, ready to give
massages if needed.
"Excellent," Tubruk said. "Your uncle is a fine
host, Gaius. I am for a bath first, before I eat." As he spoke, he
began to pull off his clothes. One of the slaves walked to him and
held out an arm for the garments as they were removed. When Tubruk
was naked, the slave disappeared with them out of the only door. A
few moments later, another entered and took up his place at the
tables.
Tubruk lowered himself completely into the
water, holding his breath as he slid below the surface and relaxing
every muscle in the heat. By the time he surfaced, Gaius and Marcus
had scrambled out of their garments, flung them at another slave,
and plunged into the opposite end, naked and laughing.
A slave held his arm out for Cabera's clothes,
and the old man frowned at him. Then he sighed and began stripping
the robe from his skinny body.
"Always new experiences," he said as he eased
into the water, wincing.
"Shoulders, lad," Tubruk called to one of the
attendants.
The man nodded and knelt at the side of the
pool, pressing his thumbs into Tubruk's muscles, unknotting the
stresses that had been there since the slave attack on the
estate.
"Good," Tubruk sighed, and began to doze, lulled
by the heat.
Marcus was first out onto the massage table,
lying on the smooth cloth and steaming in the colder air. The
nearest slave detached some instruments from his belt, almost like
a set of long brass keys. He poured warm olive oil on liberally and
then began to scrape Marcus's wet skin as if he were skinning a
fish, working the dirt of the journey off the surface and wiping a
surprising amount of black filth onto a cloth at his waist. Then he
rubbed the skin dry and poured a little more oil on for the
massage, beginning great sweeping strokes along the spine.
Marcus groaned with satisfaction. "Gaius, I
think I'm going to like it here," he muttered through slack
lips.
Gaius lay in the water and let his mind drift
free. Marius might not want to have the two boys around. He had no
children of his own and the gods knew it was a difficult time for
the Republic. All the fragile freedoms his father had loved were
coming under threat with soldiers on every corner. As consul,
Marius was one of the two most powerful men in the city, but with
Sulla's legion on the streets, his power became a fiction, his life
at Sulla's whim. Yet how could Gaius protect his father's interests
without his uncle's help? He had to be introduced to the Senate,
sponsored by another. He could not just take his father's old
place; they would throw him out and that would be the end of
everything. Surely the blood tie to his mother would be worth a
little help, but Gaius could not be sure. Marius was the golden
general who had dropped in on his sister occasionally when Gaius
was small. But the visits had become fewer and fewer as her illness
progressed, and it had been years since the last visit.
"Gaius?" Marcus's voice interrupted his
thoughts. "Come and have a massage. You're thinking too much
again."
Gaius grinned at his friend and rose from the
water. It did not occur to him to be embarrassed at his nakedness.
No one was.
"Cabera? Ever had a massage?" he asked as he
passed the old man, whose eyes were drooping.
"No, but I'll try anything once," Cabera
replied, wading toward the steps.
"You're in the right city then," Tubruk said
with a chuckle, eyes closed.
Clean and cool in fresh clothes and
with the edge taken off their hunger, the four were escorted to
Marius at sundown. As a slave, Alexandria did not accompany them,
and for a moment Gaius was disappointed. When she was with them, he
hardly knew what to say to her, but when she was gone his mind
filled with clever pieces of wit that he could never quite remember
to say later. He had not brought up the kiss in the stables with
her and wondered if she thought of it as often as he did. He
cleared his mind of her, knowing he had to be sharp and focused to
meet a consul of Rome.
A portly slave stopped them outside the door to
the chamber and fussed with their clothing, producing a carved
ivory comb to pull Marcus's curls back into place and straightening
Tubruk's jacket. As the fleshy fingers approached Cabera, the old
man's hands shot out and slapped them away.
"Don't touch!" he snapped waspishly.
The slave's face remained blank and he carried
on improving the others. At last he was satisfied, although he
permitted himself a frown at Cabera.
"The master and mistress are present this
evening. Bow first to the master as you present yourselves, and
keep your eyes on the floor as you bow. Then bow to Mistress
Metella, an inch or two less deep. If your barbarian slave requires
it, he can knock his head on the floor a few times as well."
Cabera opened his mouth to retort, but the slave
turned away and pushed the doors open.
Gaius entered first and saw a beautiful room
with a garden in the center, open to the sky. Around the rectangle
of the garden was a walkway, with other rooms leading off it.
Columns of white stone held the overhang of roof, and the walls
were painted with scenes from Roman history: the victories of
Scipio, the conquest of Greece. Marius and his wife, Metella, stood
to receive their guests, and Gaius forced a smile onto his face,
suddenly feeling very young and very awkward.
As he approached, he could see the man sizing
him up and wondered what conclusions he was drawing. For his own
part, Marius was an impressive figure. General of a hundred
campaigns, he wore a loose toga that left his right arm and
shoulder bare, revealing massive musculature and a dark weave of
hair on the chest and forearms. He wore no jewelry or adornment of
any kind, as if such things were unnecessary to a man of his
stature. He stood straight and radiated strength and will. His face
was stern and dark brown eyes glared out from under heavy brows.
Every feature revealed the city of his birth. His arms were clasped
behind him and he said nothing as Gaius approached and bowed.
Metella had once been a beauty, but time and
worry had clawed at her face, lines of some nameless grief gripping
her skin with an old woman's talons. She seemed tense, the cords of
sinew on her neck standing out. Her hands quivered slightly as she
looked at him. She wore a simple dress of red cloth, complemented
with earrings and bracelets of bright gold.
"My sister's son is always welcome in my house,"
Marius said, his voice filling the space.
Gaius almost sagged with relief, but held
himself firm.
Marcus came up beside him and bowed smoothly.
Metella locked eyes with him and the quivering in her hands
increased. Gaius caught Marius's sideways glance of worry at her as
she stepped forward.
"Such beautiful boys," she said, holding out her
hands. Bemused, they took one each. "What you have suffered in the
uprising! What you have seen!"
She put a hand to Marcus's cheek. "You will be
safe here, do you understand? Our home is your home, for as long as
you want."
Marcus put his hand up to cover hers and
whispered, "Thank you." He seemed more comfortable with the strange
woman than Gaius was. Her intensity reminded him too painfully of
his own mother.
"Perhaps you could check on the arrangements for
the meal, my dear, while I discuss business with the boys," Marius
boomed cheerfully from behind them.
She nodded and left, with a backward glance at
Marcus.
Marius cleared his throat. "I think my wife
likes you," he said. "The gods have not blessed us with children of
our own, and I think you will bring her comfort."
His gaze passed over them.
"Tubruk—I see you are still the concerned
guardian. I heard you fought well in the defense of my sister's
house."
"I did my duty, sir. It was not enough in the
end."
"The son lives, and his mother. Julius would say
that was enough," Marius replied. At this, his eyes returned to
Gaius.
"I can see your father's face in yours. I am
sorry for his leaving. I cannot say we were truly friends, but we
had respect for each other, which is more honest than many
friendships. I could not attend his funeral, but he was in my
thoughts and prayers."
Gaius felt the beginnings of liking for this
man. Perhaps that is his talent, warned an inner voice. Perhaps
that is why he has been elected so many times. He is a man whom
others follow.
"Thank you. He always spoke well of you," he
replied out loud.
Marius laughed, a short bark. "I doubt it. How
is your mother, is she... the same?"
"Much the same, sir. The doctors despair."
Marius nodded, his face betraying nothing. "You
must call me Uncle from now on, I think. Yes. Uncle suits me well.
And you, who is this?" Once again, his eyes and focus had switched
without warning, this time to Cabera, who looked back
impassively.
"He is a priest and healer, my adviser. Cabera
is his name," Gaius replied.
"Where are you from, Cabera? Those are not Roman
features."
"The distant east, sir. My home is not known in
Rome."
"Try me. I have traveled far with my legion in
my lifetime." Marius did not blink, his gaze was relentless.
Cabera didn't seem perturbed by it. "A hill
village a thousand miles east of Aegyptus. I left it as a boy and
the name is lost to me. I too have traveled far since then."
The flame gaze snapped away as Marius lost
interest. He looked again at the two boys.
"My house is your home from now on. I presume
Tubruk will be returning to your estate?"
Gaius nodded.
"Good. I will arrange your entrance to the
Senate as soon as I have sorted out a few problems of my own. Do
you know Sulla?"
Gaius was painfully aware that he was being
assessed. "He controls Rome at present."
Marius frowned, but Gaius went on: "His legion
patrols the streets and that gives him a great deal of
influence."
"You are correct. I see living on a farm hasn't
kept you completely away from the affairs of the city. Come and sit
down. Do you drink wine? No? Then this is as good a time as any to
learn."
As they sat on couches around the food-laden
table, Marius bowed his head and began to pray aloud: "Great Mars,
grant that I make the right decisions in the difficult days to
come." He straightened and grinned at them, motioning for a slave
to pour wine.
"Your father could have been a great general if
he had wanted," Marius said. "He had the sharpest mind I have ever
encountered, but chose to keep his interests small. He did not
understand the reality of power—that a strong man can be
above the rules and laws of his neighbors."
"He set great stock by the laws of Rome," Gaius
replied, after a moment's thought.
"Yes. It was his one failing. Do you know how
many times I have been elected consul?"
"Three," Marcus put in.
"Yet the law only allows one term. I shall be
elected again and again until I grow tired of the game. I am a
dangerous man to refuse, you see. It comes down to that, for all
the laws and regulations that are so dear to the old men of the
Senate. My legion is loyal to me and me alone. I abolished the land
qualification to join, so many of them owe their only livelihood to
me. True, some of them are the scrapings of the gutters of Rome,
but loyal and strong despite their origins and birth.
"Five thousand men would tear this city apart if
I were assassinated, so I walk the streets in safety. They
know what will happen if I die, do you see?
"If they can't kill me, they have to accommodate
me, except that Sulla has finally come into the game, with a legion
of his own, loyal only to him. I can't kill him and he can't kill
me, so we growl at each other across the Senate floor and wait for
a weakness. At present, he has the advantage. His men are in the
streets, as you say, whereas mine are camped outside the walls.
Stalemate. Do you play latrunculi? I have a board here."
This last question was to Gaius, who blinked and
shook his head.
"I will teach you. Sulla is a master, and so am
I. It is a good game for generals. The idea is to kill the enemy
king, or to remove his power so that he is helpless and must
surrender."
A soldier entered in full, shining uniform. He
saluted with a stiff right arm.
"General. The men you requested have arrived.
They entered the city from different directions and gathered
here."
"Excellent! You see, Gaius, another move in the
game is upon us. Fifty of my men are with me in my home. Unless
Sulla has spies on every gate, he will not know they have entered
the city. If he guesses my intentions, there will be a century from
his legion waiting outside at daybreak, but all life is a gamble,
yes?"
He addressed the guard. "We will leave at dawn.
Make sure my slaves look after the men. I will come along in a
while."
The soldier saluted again and left.
"What are you going to do?" Marcus asked,
feeling completely out of his depth.
Marius rose and flexed his shoulders. He called
a slave over and told him to prepare his uniform, ready for
dawn.
"Have you ever seen a Triumph?"
"No. I don't think there has been one for a few
years," Gaius replied.
"It is the right of every general who has
captured new lands: to march his legion through the streets of his
beloved capital city and receive the love of the crowd and the
thanks of the Senate.
"I have captured vast tracts of lush farming
land in northern Africa, like Scipio before me. Yet a Triumph has
been denied me by Sulla, who has the Senate under his thumb at the
moment. He says the city has seen too much upheaval, but that is
not the reason. What is his reason?"
"He does not want your men in the city, under
any pretext," Gaius said quickly.
"Good, so what must I do?"
"Bring them in anyway?" Gaius hazarded.
Marius froze. "No. This is my beloved
capital city. It has never had a hostile force enter its gates. I
will not be the first. That is blind force, which is always chancy.
No, I am going to ask! Dawn is in six hours. I suggest you get a
little sleep, gentlemen. Just let one of the slaves know when you
want to be taken to your rooms. Good night." He chuckled and strode
off, leaving the four of them alone.
"He—" Cabera began, but Tubruk held up a
warning finger, motioning with his eyes at the slaves who stood by
so unobtrusively.
"Life will not be dull here," Cabera said
quietly. Both Marcus and Gaius nodded and grinned at each
other.
"I'd like to see him 'ask,'" Marcus said.
Tubruk shook his head quickly. "Too dangerous.
There will certainly be bloodshed, and I have not brought you to
Rome to see you killed the first day! If I had known Marius planned
something of this sort, I would have delayed."
Gaius put a hand on the man's arm. "You have
been a good protector, Tubruk, but I too want to see this. We will
not be refused in this."
His voice was quiet, but Tubruk stared as if
Gaius had shouted. Then he relaxed.
"Your father was never this foolhardy, but if
you are set, and Marius agrees, I will come along to watch your
back, as I have always done. Cabera?"
"Where else would I go? I still wander the same
path as you."
Tubruk nodded. "Dawn, then. I suggest you rise
at least an hour or two before daybreak, for stretching exercises
and a light breakfast." He rose and bowed to Gaius. "Sir?"
"You may leave, Tubruk," Gaius said, his face
straight.
Tubruk left.
Marcus raised an eyebrow, but Gaius ignored him.
They were not in private and could not enjoy the casual
relationship of the estate. Kin or not, Marius's house was not a
place to relax. Tubruk had reminded them of this in his formal
style.
Marcus and Cabera departed soon after, leaving
Gaius to his thoughts. He lay back on a couch and stared at the
night stars over the open garden.
He felt his eyes fill. His father was gone and
he was stuck with strangers. Everything was new and different and
overwhelming. Every word had to be considered before it left his
mouth; every decision had to be judged. It was exhausting, and, not
for the first time, he wished he were a child again, without
responsibility. He had always been able to turn to others when he
made mistakes, but whom could he turn to now? He wondered if his
father or Tubruk had ever felt as lost as he did. It didn't seem
possible that they knew the same fears. Perhaps everyone had them,
but hid their worries from others.
When he was calm again, he rose in the darkness
and walked silently out of the room, barely admitting his
destination to himself. The corridors were silent and seemed
deserted, but he had walked only a few paces before a guard stepped
toward him and spoke.
"Can I help you, sir?"
Gaius started. Of course Marius would have
guards around his house and gardens.
"I brought a slave in with me today. I would
like to check on her before I sleep."
"I understand, sir," the guard replied, with a
small smile. "I'll show you the way to the slave quarters."
Gaius gritted his teeth. He knew what the man
was thinking, but speaking again would only worsen his suspicions.
He followed in silence until they came to a heavy door at the end
of the passage. The soldier knocked quietly and they waited for
just a few moments before it opened.
A senior female glared at the guard. Her hair
was graying and her face quickly set into disapproving lines,
clearly a common expression with her.
"What do you want, Thomas? Lucy is asleep and
I've told you before—"
"It's not for me. This young man is Marius's
nephew. He brought a girl in with him today?"
The woman's manner changed as she perceived
Gaius, who was shaking his head in painful silence, wondering how
public things were going to get.
"Alexandria, wasn't it? Beautiful girl. My name
is Carla. I'll show you to her room. Most of the slaves are asleep
by now, so tread quietly, if you please." She beckoned for Gaius to
follow and he did so, neck and back stiff with embarrassment. He
could feel Thomas's eyes on his back before the door closed gently
behind him.
This part of Marius's house was plain but clean.
A long corridor was lined with closed doors, and there were small
candles in holders along the walls at intervals. Only a few were
lit, but enough light was shed for Gaius to see where they were
going.
Carla's voice was lowered to a harsh whisper as
she turned to him. "Most of the slaves sleep in a few large rooms,
but your girl was put in one of her own that we keep for favored
ones. You said to treat her kindly, is that true?"
Gaius blushed. He had forgotten the interest
that Marius's slaves would take in Alexandria and himself. It would
be all over the house by the morning that he had visited her in the
night.
They turned a final corner and Gaius froze in
astonishment. The final door of the corridor was open, and against
the low light from within, he could see Alexandria standing there,
beautiful in the flickering candlelight. She alone would have
caused him to take a quick breath, but there was someone with her,
leaning against the wall in the shadows.
Carla darted forward and they both recognized
Marcus at the same time. For his part, he seemed just as surprised
to see them.
"How did you get in here?" Carla asked, her
voice strained.
Marcus blinked. "I crept about the place. I
didn't want to wake everyone up," he answered.
Gaius looked at Alexandria and his chest
tightened with jealousy. She looked annoyed, but the glint in her
eyes only heightened her tousled appearance. Her voice was
curt.
"As you can both see, I am fine and quite
comfortable. Slaves have to be up before dawn, so I would like to
go to sleep, unless you want to bring Cabera or Tubruk along as
well?"
Marcus and Gaius looked on her with surprised
expressions. She really seemed quite angry.
"No? Then good night." She nodded to them, her
mouth firm, and gently closed the door.
Carla stood with her mouth open in astonishment.
She wasn't sure how to start apologizing.
"What are you doing here, Marcus?" Gaius
demanded, keeping his voice low.
"Same thing as you. I thought she might be
lonely. I didn't know you were going to make it a social occasion,
did I?"
Doors were opening along the corridor and a low
female voice called, "Everything all right, Carla?"
"Yes, dear. Thank you," Carla hissed back.
"Look. She's gone to bed. I suggest you two follow her example
before the whole house turns out to see what's happening."
Grim-faced, they nodded and walked back down the
corridor together, leaving Carla with her hand over her mouth to
stop her laughing before they were out of earshot. She nearly made
it.
As Alexandria had predicted, the house
of Marius came suddenly alive a good two hours before dawn. The
kitchen ovens were lit, the windows opened, torches placed along
the walls until the sun rose. Slaves bustled around, carrying trays
of food and towels for the soldiers. The silence of the dark hours
was broken by coarse laughter and shouts. Gaius and Marcus were
awake at the first sounds, with Tubruk only a little behind them.
Cabera refused to get up.
"Why would I want to? I will just throw on my
robe and walk to the gates! Two more hours till dawn sounds good to
me."
"You can wash and have breakfast," Marcus said,
his eyes lively.
"I washed yesterday and I don't eat much before
noon. Now go away."
Marcus retreated and joined the others as they
ate a little bread and honey, washed down with a hot, spiced wine
that filled their bellies with warmth. They had not spoken of the
events of the night before, and both could feel a small tension
between them and silences in the spaces they would usually have
filled with light talk.
Finally, Gaius took a deep breath. "If she likes
you, I will stay out of it," he said, each word pronounced
clearly.
"Very decent of you," Marcus replied, smiling.
He drained his cup of hot wine and walked out of the room,
smoothing his hair with one hand.
Tubruk glanced at Gaius's expression and barked
out a laugh before following.
* * *
Looking fresh and rested, Marius
strode back into the garden rooms with the clatter of iron-soled
sandals on stone. He seemed even bigger in the general's uniform,
an unstoppable figure. Marcus found himself watching the walk for
weaknesses, as he had learned to watch any opponent. Did he dip a
once-injured shoulder or favor a slightly weaker knee? There was
nothing. This was a man who had never been close to death, who had
never known despair. Though he had no children, a single weakness.
Marcus wondered if it was Marius or his wife who was barren. The
gods were known to be capricious, but what a jest to give so much
to a man yet leave him unable to pass it on.
Marius wore a chestplate of bronze and a long
red cloak over his shoulders. He had a simple legionary's gladius
strapped to his waist, though Marcus noted the silver handle that
set it apart from common blades. His brown legs were mostly bare
under a leather kilt. He moved well, uncommonly well for a man of
his age. His eyes glittered with some excitement or
anticipation.
"Good to see you all up and about. You'll be
marching with my men?" His voice was deep and steady, with no trace
of nerves.
Gaius smiled, pleased not to have had to ask.
"We all are, with your permission... Uncle."
Marius nodded his head at the word. "Of course,
but stay well back. This is a dangerous morning's entertainment, no
matter how it turns out. One thing—you don't know the city,
and if we do become separated, this house may no longer be safe.
Seek out Valcinus at the public baths. They will be shut until
noon, but he'll let you in if you mention my name. All set?"
Marcus, Gaius, and Tubruk looked at each other,
dazed at the speed of events. At least two of them were a little
excited at the same time. They fell in behind Marius as he strode
out to the yard where his men waited patiently.
Cabera joined them at the last minute. His eyes
were as sharp as ever, but white stubble showed on his cheeks and
chin. Marcus grinned at him and received a scowl as reply. They
stood near the back of the group of men, and Gaius took in the
countenances of the soldiers around him. Brown skinned and dark
haired to a man, they carried rectangular shields strapped to their
left arms. On the brass face of each shield was the simple crest of
the house of Marius—three arrows crossing each other. In that
moment, Gaius understood what Marius had been explaining. These
were Roman soldiers who would fight in defense of their city, but
their loyalty was to the crest they carried.
All was silent as they waited for the great
gates to swing open. Metella appeared out of the shadows and kissed
Marius, who responded with enthusiasm, grasping a buttock. His men
regarded this impassively, not sharing his lively mood. Then she
turned and kissed Gaius and Marcus. To their surprise, they could
see tears shining in her eyes.
"You come back safe to me. I will wait for you
all."
Gaius looked around for Alexandria. He had a
vague notion that he could tell her of his noble decision to make
way for Marcus. He hoped that she would be touched by his sacrifice
and scorn Marcus's affections. Unfortunately, he could not see her
anywhere, and then the gates opened and there was no more time.
Gaius and Marcus fell in with Tubruk and Cabera
as the soldiers of Marius clattered out onto the dawn streets of
Rome.
CHAPTER
13
Under normal circumstances, the
streets of Rome would have been empty at dawn, with the majority of
the people waking in the late morning and continuing business up to
midnight. With the curfew in force, the rhythm of the day had
changed and the shops were opening as Marius and his men marched
out.
The general led the soldiers, his step easy and
sure. Shouts of warning went up from passersby, and Gaius could see
people duck back into doorways as they spotted the armed men. After
the recent riots, no one was in the mood to stand and watch the
procession as it wound its way down the hill to the city forum,
where the Senate had its buildings.
At first, the main roads emptied as the
early-rising workers stood well back for the soldiers. Gaius could
feel their eyes on them and heard angry mutters. One word was
repeated from hard faces: "Scelus!"—a crime for
soldiers to be on the streets. The dawn was damp and cold and he
shivered slightly. Marcus too looked grim in the gray light, and he
nodded as their eyes met, his hand on the hilt of his gladius. The
tension was heightened by the clatter and crash as the men moved.
Gaius had not realized how noisy fifty soldiers could be, but in
the narrow streets the clank of iron-shod sandals echoed back and
forth. Windows opened in the high apartments as they passed, and
someone shouted angrily, but they marched on.
"Sulla will cut your eyes out!" one man howled
before slamming his door shut.
Marius's men ignored the taunts and the crowd
gathering behind them, drawn by the excitement and danger into a
swelling mob.
Up ahead, a legionary carrying Sulla's mark on
his shield turned at the noise and froze. They marched toward him
and Gaius could feel the sudden excitement as every eye fixed on
the lone man. He chose discretion over valor and set off at a trot,
disappearing around a corner. A man at the front with Marius leaned
forward as if to follow, but the general put a hand against his
chest.
"Let him go. He'll tell them I'm coming." His
voice carried back through the ranks and Gaius marveled at his
calmness. No one else spoke and they continued, feet crashing down
in time.
Cabera looked behind them and blanched as he saw
the streets filling with followers. There was nowhere to retreat; a
crowd was dogging their footsteps, their eyes bright with
excitement, calling and hooting to each other. Cabera reached into
his robe and brought forth a small blue stone on a thong, kissing
it and mumbling a short prayer. Tubruk looked at the old man and
put a hand out to his shoulder, gripping it briefly.
By the time they reached the great expanse of
the forum, the crowd had spread to fill parallel roads and spilled
out behind and around them. Gaius could feel the nervousness of the
men he walked behind, and saw their muscles tense as they loosened
their swords in the scabbards, ready for action. He swallowed and
found his throat dry. His heart beat quickly and he felt
lightheaded.
As if in mockery of the mood, the sun chose the
moment they entered the forum to break from behind the morning
mists, lighting the statues and temples on one side with gold.
Gaius could see the steps of the Senate building ahead and licked
suddenly dry lips as white-robed figures came out from the darkness
and stood waiting for them. He counted four of Sulla's legionaries
on the steps, hands on swords. Others would be on their way.
Hundreds of people were filling the forum from
every direction, and jeers and calls could be heard echoing in the
nearby streets. They all watched Marius and his men and they left
an avenue to the Senate, knowing his destination without having to
be told. Gaius clenched his teeth. There were so many people! They
showed no sign of fear or awe and pointed, shouted, jostled, and
shoved each other for a better view. Gaius was beginning to regret
having asked to come.
At the foot of the steps, Marius halted his men
and took one pace forward. The crowd pushed in around them, filling
every space. The air smelled of sweat and spiced food. Thirty wide
steps led up to the doors of the debating chamber. Nine senators
stood on them.
Gaius recognized the face of Sulla, standing on
the highest step. He stared straight at Marius without expression,
his face like a mask. His hands were held behind his back, as if he
were about to begin a lecture. His four legionaries had taken up
position on the lowest step, and Gaius could see that they at least
were nervous about what would happen next.
Responsive to some invisible cue, the swelling
crowd fell silent, broken here and there by mutters and curses as
people struggled for better positions.
"You all know me," Marius bellowed. His voice
carried far in the silence. "I am Marius, general, consul, citizen.
Here, before the Senate, I claim my right to hold a Triumph,
recognizing the new lands my legion has conquered in Africa."
The crowd pressed closer and one or two came to
blows, sharp yelps breaking the tension of the moment. They pressed
against the soldiers and two had to raise their arms and shove
figures back into the mass, with more angry shouts in response.
Gaius could feel the ugly mood of the crowd. They had gathered as
they did when the games were on, to see death and violence and be
entertained.
Gaius noticed that the other senators looked to
Sulla to respond. As the only other consul, it was his word that
carried the authority of the city.
He took two steps down, closer to the soldiers.
His face reddened with anger, but his words were quiet.
"This is unlawful. Tell your men to disperse.
Come inside and we will discuss this when the full Senate has
convened. You know the law, Marius."
Those in the crowd who could hear him cheered
this, while others shouted vulgarities, knowing they were protected
from being seen by the churning mass of people.
"I do know the law! I know that a general has
the right to demand a Triumph. I make that demand. Do you deny me?"
Marius too had taken a step forward and the crowd surged with him,
pushing and shoving, spilling onto the Senate steps between the two
men.
"Vappa! Cunnus!" They screamed abuse at
the soldiers who rebuffed them, and Marius turned to the front row
of his fifty. His eyes were cold and black.
"Enough. Make room for your general," he
said, his voice grim.
The front ten men drew their swords and cut down
the nearest members of the crowd. In seconds, gashed bodies spat
blood over the marble steps. They did not stop, killing with a cold
intensity, men and women falling before them. A wail went up as the
crowd tried to back away, but those at the rear could not see what
was happening and continued to push forward. Every man of the fifty
soldiers drew his gladius and cut around him, careless of who fell
under the blade.
It must have been only a few seconds from start
to finish, but it seemed hours to Gaius and Marcus, who could only
watch in horror as the ranks of the crowd were sliced down like
wheat. The bodies littered the forum and the crowd was suddenly
fighting to get away, the message having finally got through. A few
more seconds and there was a great ring around Marius and his men,
growing wider as citizens and slaves alike ran from the red
swords.
Not a word had been said. Blades were wiped on
the dead and resheathed. The men returned to their positions and
Marius looked up at the senators again.
The stones of the forum were slicked wet with
blood. The other men on the steps had gone pale, taking involuntary
paces backward away from the slaughter. Only Sulla had held firm,
and his lips twisted into a bitter grimace as the stench of fresh
blood and opened bowels came to him.
The two men looked at each other for a long
moment, as if only they were in the forum. The moment stretched and
Marius raised his hand as if to give another command to his waiting
men.
"One month from today," Sulla snapped. "Hold
your Triumph, General, but remember you have made an enemy today.
Savor the moments of joy that are due to you."
Marius inclined his head. "My thanks, Sulla, for
your wisdom."
He turned his back on the senators and called
the turn, walking through the ranks to take up position at the
front again. The crowd held back, but anger was on every bitter
face.
"Forward," came the bellow, and once again, the
crash of iron on stone was heard as the half-century followed their
general out of the plaza.
Gaius shook his head in wonderment at Tubruk and
Marcus, saying nothing. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw a
century of Sulla's men enter the plaza from a side street, each man
running with his sword out and in hand. He tensed and would have
shouted a warning, but caught Tubruk's shake of the head.
Behind them, Sulla had raised his hand to halt
his men, and they stood to attention, watching Marius leave with
angry expressions. As Gaius reached the edge of the forum, he saw
Sulla make a circle with his right hand in the air.
"A little too close in timing for my liking,"
Tubruk whispered.
Marius snorted up ahead, overhearing. He strode
forward, his voice carrying back. "Close formation in the streets,
men. This is not over yet."
The soldiers drew into a tightly packed unit.
Marius looked back over his shoulder.
"Watch the side streets. Sulla will not let us
get clean away if he can help it. Keep your wits about you and your
swords loose."
Gaius felt dazed, carried along by events beyond
his control. This was the safety of his uncle's shadow? He walked
along with the others, hemmed in by legionaries.
A short, barking scream sounded from behind and
Gaius whirled, almost knocked off his feet by the soldier behind
him. One of the men was lying on the cobbles, in the filth of the
road. Blood pooled around him and Gaius caught a glimpse of three
men stabbing and cutting in a frenzy.
"Don't look," Tubruk warned, turning Gaius
forward with gentle pressure on his shoulder.
"But the man! Shouldn't we stop?" Gaius shouted,
astonished.
"If we stop, we'll all die. Sulla has unleashed
his dogs."
Gaius glanced into a side street as they passed
and saw a group of men with daggers drawn, running toward them. By
their bearing, they were legionaries, but without uniforms. Gaius
drew his sword almost at one with all the others. His heart began
to pound again and he felt sweat break out on his forehead.
"Hold your nerve! We stop for nothing," Marius
shouted back, his neck and back muscles rigid.
The knife men attacked the back row again as it
passed, one of them going down with a gladius in his ribs before
the others bore their man down onto the ground. He yelled in fear
as his sword was wrenched from his grasp and then the yell was cut
suddenly short.
As they marched on, Gaius could hear hoots of
triumph from behind. He sneaked a look back and wished he hadn't as
the attackers raised a bloody head and howled like animals. The men
around him swore viciously and one of them suddenly stopped,
raising his sword.
"Come on, Vegus, we're nearly there," another
urged him, but he shook off the hands on his shoulders and spat at
the ground.
"He was my friend," he muttered, and broke rank,
racing back toward the bloody group. Gaius tried to watch what
happened. He could hear the cry as they saw him coming, but then
men seemed to pour out of the alleyways and the soldier was torn
apart without a sound.
"Steady," Marius shouted, and Gaius could hear
the anger in the voice, the first touch of it he'd seen in the man.
"Steady," he called again.
Marcus took a dagger from the man on his right
and drifted back through the ranks. He was in the last row of three
when they passed the dark mouth of an alleyway and four others
sprang, their knives held to kill. Marcus ducked and took the
weight of an attacker as they crashed together in a violent
embrace. He pulled his knife across the throat he saw so close to
his own and blinked as the blood spurted out over him. He used the
body to block another thrust and then threw it at the remaining
attackers. As it landed, the men went down to swift, punching stabs
from the three legionaries, who then rejoined the ranks without a
word. One of them clapped a hand on Marcus's shoulder and Marcus
grinned at him. He ghosted up through the ranks again and arrived
at Gaius's side, panting slightly. Gaius clasped the back of his
neck for a second.
Then the gates were opening in front of them and
they were safe, holding formation until the last man was through
into the courtyard.
As the gates closed, Gaius went back to look
down the hill they'd walked together. It was deserted; not a face
showed. Rome seemed as quiet and orderly as ever.
CHAPTER
14
Marius almost glowed with pleasure and
energy as he walked amongst his men, clapping his hands to
shoulders and laughing. They grinned wryly, like schoolboys being
congratulated by a tutor.
"We've done it, boys!" Marius shouted. "We'll
show this city a day to remember a month from today." They cheered
him and he called for wine and refreshments, summoning every slave
of his home to treat the men like kings.
"Anything they want!" he bellowed. Wine cups of
gold and silver were pressed into the rough hands of every man back
in through the gates, Gaius and Marcus included. Dark purple wine
sloshed and gurgled as it was poured from clay jugs. Alexandria was
with the other slaves and smiled at both Marcus and Gaius. Gaius
nodded to her, but Marcus winked as she passed him.
Tubruk sniffed his wine and chuckled. "The
best."
Marius held his cup high, his expression somber.
Silence fell after a few seconds.
"To those who didn't make it today, who died for
us. Tagoe, Luca, and Vegus. Good men all."
"Good men all!" Every voice echoed his in a
guttural chorus, and the cups were tipped back and held out for
refills from the waiting slaves.
"He knew their names," Gaius whispered to
Tubruk, who brought his head close to reply.
"He knows all their names," he muttered. "That
is why he is a good general. That is why they love him. He could
tell you some of the history of every man here and a good portion
of the legion outside Rome as well. Oh, you can call it a trick if
you like, a cheap way to impress the men who serve. I know that's
what he would say if you asked him." He paused to look at the
general as he caught a huge and husky soldier in a headlock and
walked through the crowd with him. The man bellowed, but didn't
struggle. He bore it as it was meant.
"They're his children, I think. You can see how
much he loves them. That big man could probably tear Marius's arms
off if he wanted. On another day, he'd put a dagger in a man for
looking at him with a squint in the noonday sun. But Marius can
lead him around by the head and he laughs. I'm not sure you can
train a man into that skill—I think it's born into you, or
not. You don't even need to have it to be a good general.
"These men would follow Sulla if they were in
his legion. They'd fight for him and hold formation and die for
him. But they love Marius, so they can't be bribed or bought, and
in battle they will not ever run, not to the last man. Not while
he's watching, anyway. There used to be a land qualification to be
in the legions, but Marius abolished it. Now anyone can make a
career fighting for Rome, at least for him. Half these men wouldn't
have made it into the army before Marius had his law passed by the
Senate. They owe him a great deal."
The men began to walk out of the entrance
square, off to be bathed and massaged by the prettiest female
slaves on the grounds. Several beauties had taken arms and were
already gasping and exclaiming at stories of battle prowess. When
Marius let go of the big legionary's head, he immediately called a
girl over, a slim brunette with kohl-dark eyes. The big man took
one look and grinned like a wolf, gathering her up into his arms.
The echoes of her laughter came back off the brick walls as he
trotted into the main buildings.
One young soldier dropped a powerfully muscled
arm onto Alexandria's shoulder and said something to her. Marcus
came up behind the man quickly.
"Not this girl, friend. She's not from this
house."
The soldier looked at him and took in the boy's
bearing and determined expression. He shrugged and called to
another slave girl as she passed by. Gaius stood watching the
exchange and when Alexandria caught his eye, her face filled with
anger. She turned her back on Marcus and strode into the cool
interior of the garden rooms.
Marcus turned to his friend. He had noticed her
expression and his own was thoughtful.
"Why was she so annoyed?" Gaius said,
exasperated. "I wouldn't have thought she wanted to go with that
big ox. You saved her."
Marcus nodded. "That may be the problem. Perhaps
she didn't want me to. Perhaps she wanted you to save her."
"Oh." Gaius's face lit up. "Really?"
Marius staggered over to Gaius and his friends,
still laughing, his hair plastered to his forehead with wine
emptied over him. His eyes were shining with pleasure. He took
Gaius by both shoulders.
"Well, lad? How was your first taste of
Rome?"
Gaius grinned back at him. You couldn't help it.
The man's emotions were infectious. When he frowned, dark clouds of
fear and anger followed him around and touched all who met him.
When he smiled, you wanted to smile. You wanted to be one of his
men. Gaius could feel the power of the man and for the first time
wondered if he could ever command that kind of loyalty himself.
"It was frightening, but exciting as well," he
replied, unable to stop his lips from smiling.
"Good! Some don't feel it, you know. They just
add up supply figures and calculate how many men it would take to
hold a ravine. They just don't feel the excitement."
He looked over at Marcus, Tubruk, and
Cabera.
"Get drunk if you like, have a woman if you can
find one by now. We'll do no work today and no one can leave until
it's dark after that trouble we had. Tomorrow, we'll start planning
how to bring five thousand men fifty miles and all the way through
Rome. Do you know anything about supply?"
Both Marcus and Gaius shook their heads.
"You'll learn. The best army in the world is
lost without food and water, boys. That's the thing to know.
Everything else falls into place. My home is your home, remember.
I'm going to sit in the fountain and get drunk." He collected three
unopened jugs of wine from the remaining male slaves and walked
away—a man with a mission.
Tubruk watched him leave the courtyard with a
wry smile. "Once, in North Africa, on the eve of a battle against a
savage tribe, they say Marius walked alone into the enemy camp
carrying a jug of wine in each hand. Remember, this was the camp of
seven thousand of the most brutal warriors the legion had
encountered. He drank all night with the chief of the tribe,
despite not understanding a word of each others language. They
toasted life and the future and courage. Then the next morning he
staggered back to his own lines."
"What happened next?" Marcus said.
"They wiped out the tribe to the last man. What
would you expect?" Tubruk laughed.
"Why didn't the chief kill him?" Marcus
continued.
"I suppose he liked him. Most people do."
Metella came into the courtyard and held out her
hands to Gaius and Marcus, smiling. "I'm glad you are safely
returned to us. I want you both to think of this house as a place
of peace and refuge for you."
She gazed into Marcus's eyes and he looked back
calmly. "Is it true you grew up without a mother?"
Marcus blushed a little, wondering how much
Marius had told her. He nodded and Metella gave a little gasp.
"You poor boy. I would have brought you to me
earlier if I had known."
Marcus was wondering if she knew what the
legionaries were getting up to with her female slaves. She didn't
seem to fit into the bluff world of Marius and his legion. He
wondered what his own mother was like, and for the first time
considered trying to find her. Marius would probably know, but it
was not a question he wished to ask the man. Perhaps Tubruk would
tell him before he returned to the estate.
Metella took her hand away from his and reached
up to brush his cheek.
"You have had a rough time of it, but that is
all over now."
Slowly, he touched her hand with his and it was
as if they had reached some private understanding. Suddenly her
eyes glistened with tears and she turned and walked away along the
cloisters.
Marcus looked at Gaius and shrugged.
"You have a friend there," Tubruk said, watching
her retreating figure. "She has taken a liking to you."
"I'm a bit old to need a mother," Marcus
muttered.
"Possibly, but she's not too old to need a
son."
At noon, there was a commotion at the
house gates. Some of the legionaries turned out with swords drawn
in case it was a reprisal for the morning's work. Gaius and Marcus
rushed to the courtyard with the rest and then stopped and
gaped.
Renius was there, draped through the metal bars
and singing a drunken dirge. He used the crossbar of the gate to
steady himself, but his tunic was soaked with wine and specks of
vomit. A guard stepped up to the bars and spoke to him as Gaius and
Marcus came up, Tubruk just behind them.
Suddenly, Renius reached up to the man's hair
and pulled his head into the metal with a clang. Unconscious, the
soldier fell away and the others began to shout in anger.
"Let him in and kill him!" yelled one man, but
another said it could be a trap of Sulla's to make them open the
gates. This gave them all pause and it was Gaius and Marcus who
approached the gates next.
"Can we help you?" Marcus said, raising his
eyebrows in polite inquiry.
Renius mumbled angrily, "I'll stick my sword up
you, whore's boy."
Marcus started to laugh.
"Open the gates," Gaius called to the other
guard. "It's Renius—he's with me."
The guard ignored him as if he had not spoken,
making it clear that Gaius could not give orders in that house. As
Gaius stepped toward the gate, a legionary took a pace to stand in
front of him, shaking his head slowly.
Marcus sidled over to the gate and said a few
quiet words to the guard there.
The man was in the middle of replying when
Marcus butted him savagely, knocking him down into the dust.
Ignoring the guard as he flailed and tried to get up, Marcus ran
back the big bolts that held the door secure and opened it.
Renius fell into the yard and lay flat, his good
arm twitching. Marcus chuckled and began to close the gate when he
heard the smooth metallic sound of a knife coming from a sheath. He
spun and was just in time to block a thrust from the furious guard
with his forearm. With his left hand, he backhanded the man across
the mouth and sent him sprawling again. Marcus shut the gate.
Two more of the men ran up to grab him, but a
voice called "Hold!" and everyone froze for a second. Marius walked
into the courtyard, showing no effects from the wine he had been
putting away steadily for two hours. As he approached, the two men
kept their eyes on Marcus, who looked calmly back at them.
"Gods! What is going on in my house?" Marius
came up and put a heavy hand on the shoulder of one of the men
facing Marcus.
"Renius is here," Gaius said. "He came with us
from the estate."
Marius looked down at the sprawling figure,
peacefully asleep on the stones.
"He never got drunk when he was a gladiator. I
can see why if this is how it affects him. What happened to you?"
The last question was addressed to the guard who had resumed his
post. His mouth and nose were bloody and his eyes sparked with
indignation, but he knew better than to complain to Marius.
"Caught myself in the face with the gate when I
was opening it," he said slowly.
"Damned careless of you, Fulvio. You should have
let my nephew help you with it."
The message was clear. The man nodded and wiped
a little of the blood away with his hand.
"Glad we've cleared that up. Now, you and
you"—he pointed a stiff finger at Gaius and
Marcus—"come with me to my study. We need to discuss a couple
of things."
He waited until Gaius and Marcus had walked in
front of him before falling in behind. Over his shoulder, he
called, "Get that old man somewhere to sleep it off, and keep that
damned gate shut."
Marcus caught the eye of the legionaries nearby
and found they were all grinning, whether in malice or genuine
amusement, he couldn't say.
Marius opened the door of his study
and let the two go through into a room lined with maps on every
wall, showing Africa and the empire and Rome herself. He closed the
door quietly and then turned to face them. His eyes were cold and
Gaius felt a momentary pang of fear as the man focused his dark
gaze on him.
"What did you think you were doing?" Marius spat
from between clenched teeth.
Gaius opened his mouth to say he was letting
Renius in when he thought better of it.
"I'm sorry. I should have waited for you."
Marius banged his heavy fist on the desk. "I
suppose you realize that if Sulla had had twenty picked men in the
street waiting for just such an opportunity, we would most likely
be dead by now?"
Gaius blushed miserably.
Marius swiveled to face Marcus. "And you. Why
did you attack Fulvio?"
"Gaius gave the order to open the gates. The man
ignored him. I made it happen."
There was no give in Marcus. He looked up at the
older man and met his gaze unflinchingly.
The general raised his eyebrows in disbelief.
"You expected him, a veteran of thirty conflicts, to take orders
from a beardless boy of fourteen?"
"I... didn't think about it." For the first
time, Marcus looked unsure of himself, and the general turned back
to Gaius.
"If I back you in this, I will lose some of the
respect of the men. They all know you made a mistake and will be
waiting to see what I do about it."
Gaius's heart sank.
"There is a way out of this, but it will cost
you both dearly. Fulvio is the boxing champion of his century. He
lost a lot of face today when you clipped him, Marcus. I daresay he
would be willing to take part in a friendly fight, just to clear
the air. Otherwise, he may well put a knife in you when I am not
around to step in."
"He'll kill me," Marcus said quietly.
"Not in a friendly match. We won't use the iron
gloves, because of your tender age, just goatskin ones to protect
your hands. Have you been trained at all?"
The boys murmured that they had, thinking of
Renius.
Marius turned to Gaius again. "Of course, win or
lose, if your friend shows courage, the men will love him, and I
can't have my nephew in his shadow, do you understand?"
Gaius nodded, guessing what was coming.
"I'll put you in against one of the others.
They're all champions at some skill or other, which is why I chose
them for the escort duty to the Senate. You'll both take a beating,
but if you handle yourselves well enough, the incident will be
forgotten and you may even gain a bit of standing with my men. They
are the scum of the gutters, most of them; they fear nothing and
have respect only for strength. Oh, I can just order them back to
duties and do nothing, letting you hide in the shadow of my
authority, but that won't do, d'you see?"
Their faces were bleak, and he snorted
suddenly.
"Smile, boys. You might as well. There is no
other way out of this, so why not spit in old Jupiter's eye while
you're at it?"
They looked at each other, and both grinned.
Marius laughed again. "You'll do. Two hours.
I'll tell the men and announce the opponents. That'll give Renius
time to sober up a little. I should think he would want to see
this. By all the gods, I want to see this! Dismissed!"
Gaius and Marcus walked slowly back to their
rooms. Their initial levity had faded, leaving a sick churning in
both their stomachs at what was to come.
"Hey! Do you realize I put a century boxing
champion on his back? I am damn well going to try and win this
match. If I can hit him once, I can knock him out. One good strike
is all it takes."
"But this time he'll be expecting it," Gaius
replied morosely. "I'll probably get that big ape Marius was
leading around by the head earlier; that would be just the sort of
joke he likes."
"Big men are slow. You're fast with the cross,
but you'll have to stay out of range. All these soldiers are heavy
and that means they can hit harder than we can. Keep moving your
feet and wear them down."
"We're going to be murdered," Gaius replied.
"Yes, I think we probably are."
Tubruk was calmly accepting when he heard the
news back at their rooms.
"I expected something like it. Marius loves
contests and is forever staging them between his own men and those
of the other legions. This is just his style—a bit of
cheering and a deal of blood and everything is forgotten and
forgiven.
"Thankfully, you haven't drunk more than a cup
or two of wine. Come on, two hours is not long to get you warmed up
and ready. You'd better spar for a while in one of the training
rooms. Get a slave to direct you to one, and I'll find you as soon
as I have some gloves. One thing—don't let Marius down.
Especially you, Gaius. You're his kin, you have to put on a good
show."
"I understand," Gaius replied grimly.
"Then get going. I'll have some of the slaves
throw ice water on Renius—from a distance so that he doesn't
go berserk."
"What happened with him? Why was he drunk so
early in the day?" Gaius asked curiously.
"I don't know. Concentrate on one thing at a
time. You'll have a chance to speak to Renius this evening. Now
go!"
While the rest of Rome slept through
the heat of the afternoon, the men from the First-Born legion
gathered in the largest training room, lining the walls, laughing,
chatting, and sipping cool beer and fruit juices. After the fights,
Marius had promised them a ten-course feast of good food and wine,
and the mood was relaxed and cheerful. Tubruk stood with Marcus and
Gaius, loosening the shoulders of one, then the other. Cabera sat
on a stool, his face inscrutable.
"They are both right-handed," Tubruk said
quietly. "Fulvio you know; the other, Decidus, is a javelin
champion. He has very strong shoulders, though he doesn't look
fast. Stay away from them, make them come to you."
Marcus and Gaius nodded. Both were a little pale
under their tanned skin.
"Remember, the idea is to stay upright long
enough to show you have nerve. If you go down early, get up. I'll
stop it if you're in real trouble, but Marius won't like that, so I
will have to be careful." He put a hand on each of their
shoulders.
"Both of you have skill and courage and wind.
Renius is watching. Don't let us down."
Both boys glanced over to where Renius sat, his
useless arm strapped to his belt. His hair was still damp and
murder glinted from his expression.
Cheering began as Marius entered. He held up his
hands for quiet and it came quickly.
"I expect each man to do his best, but know that
my money will be on my nephew and his friend. Two bets, twenty-five
aurei on each. Do I have any takers?"
For a moment, the silence held. Fifty gold
pieces was a huge bet for a private fight, but who could resist?
The gathered men emptied their pouches and some left for their
rooms to fetch more coins. After a while, the money was there and
Marius added his own pouch so that one hundred gold pieces were
held in his great hand, enough to buy a farm, or a warhorse and
full armor and weapons.
"Will you hold the bag for us, Renius?" Marius
asked.
"I will," he replied, his tone solemn and
formal. He seemed to have thrown off most of the effects of drink,
but Gaius noticed he did not try to rise and waited until the money
was brought to him.
Fulvio and Decidus entered the training hall to
more cheering from the men. There was now no question where their
support lay.
Both men were wearing only a tight-fitting cloth
wrapped around their groins and upper thighs, held by a wide belt.
Decidus had the sort of shoulders and physique usually seen on the
statues of the forum. Gaius watched him closely, but there were no
obvious weaknesses. Fulvio did not wave to the crowd. His nose was
bound with a strip of cloth tied at the back of his head, and his
lips were swollen and angry looking.
Gaius nudged Marcus. "Looks like you broke his
nose with that butt earlier on. He'll be expecting you to hit it
again, you realize. Wait for a good opportunity."
Marcus nodded, engrossed as Gaius had been with
his study of the man and his movements.
Marius raised his hands again to be heard over
the lively soldiers.
"Marcus and Fulvio will fight the first bout. No
time limits, but a round ends when one man has a knee or more on
the ground. When one is unable to rise, the bout is over and the
other will begin. Come to your marks."
Fulvio and Marcus came to stand on either side
of the general.
"When the horn is blown, you begin. Good
luck."
Marius walked sedately to the sidelines with the
men and signaled to one to sound the horn usually used in battle. A
hush fell and the blare resonated as a pure note.
Marcus loosened his shoulders, rocked his head
from side to side, and stepped forward. He held his hands high as
he had been taught by Renius, but Fulvio kept his fists relaxed,
his arms only slightly bent. He swayed as Marcus jabbed with his
left, and the blows went by harmlessly. One fist shot out and
thumped into Marcus's chest, over the heart. He gasped in pain and
backed away, then set his teeth and came in again. He launched a
fast jab followed immediately by a straight right, but again Fulvio
moved out of the way with a single step and hammered the same spot
with his gloved right hand. Marcus felt the air explode out of him
with the pain.
The men had begun cheering and only Gaius,
Tubruk, and Cabera cheered for the younger fighter. Fulvio was
smiling and Marcus began to think. The man was fast and difficult
to hit. At present, Marcus was doing all the work, winning nothing
for his efforts. He growled in rage and surged forward, his right
arm cocked. He saw Fulvio steady himself and then pulled up
suddenly, letting the blow that should have knocked him out go past
his chin. Marcus punched fast and hard at Fulvio's nose and was
gratified at the crunch of bones he felt. At that second, a cross
caught him on the side of his head and he went down hard on the
wooden floor, dazed and winded.
He panted as he came up onto one knee and looked
up at Fulvio standing a couple of paces away. Blood streamed from
his nose again and he looked murderous.
Marcus got up into a flurry of blows. He tried
to stay away and fend off the worst of them, but Fulvio was all
over him, thumping fists into his stomach and kidneys from all
angles, chopping him to pieces and, when the pain made him hunch,
catching Marcus with swift uppercuts to the head, rocking him back.
He fell again and lay there, his chest heaving painfully. He tasted
blood in his mouth and his left eye was swelling shut under the
assault of Fulvio's straight right.
This time he rose and took three quick steps
backward to give him time to compose himself. Fulvio came at him
remorselessly, moving his head and body from side to side as he
looked for the best place to hit. The man resembled a snake about
to bite, and Marcus knew the next time he went down he was unlikely
to get up. Anger flooded him and he ducked the first punch on sheer
reflexes, batting the follow-through away with his arm. He felt
Fulvios forearm slide under his fingers and suddenly gripped the
wrist. His right fist came into the man's stomach with all the
power of his shoulders behind it, and he was rewarded with a slight
whoosh of pain.
Still holding the arm, he tried to repeat the
punch, but Fulvio brought his left over and clipped him hard on the
jaw. The world went black and he fell down, barely feeling the hard
wooden boards underneath him. His legs seemed to have lost all
strength, and he could only manage to get himself up onto all
fours, panting like a beast.
Fulvio waved a glove at him to get up, still
unsatisfied. Marcus looked down at the floor and wondered if he
should. Blood dribbled from between his lips and he watched it
spatter into a small pool.
Ah well, he thought. One more try.
This time Fulvio didn't rush him. He was
grinning again and beckoned with his hands for Marcus to come on.
Marcus tightened his jaw. He was going to put the man on his back
one more time if it killed him. He imagined each of Fulvio's fists
held a dagger, so that any contact would mean death. He felt his
spirits rise. He knew how to fight with swords and knives, so why
was this so different? He let himself sway a little, wanting Fulvio
to come in. Most of his knife training had revolved around
counterstrikes, and he wanted the boxer to throw another punch.
Fulvio quickly lost patience and came in fast, fists bobbing.
Marcus watched the fists and when one exploded
toward him, he blocked, lifting it with his forearm, and
counterpunched into Fulvio's abdomen. Fulvio grunted and the left
came over the top again in reflex, but this time Marcus dropped his
head and the blow skidded over him, leaving Fulvio open for a split
second. Marcus hammered everything into a straight left stopper,
wishing it were his right. Fulvio's head rocked back and, when it
came level, the right was ready and Marcus smacked it into the
boxer's broken nose again. Fulvio took a sudden seat and fresh
blood poured from his battered nose.
Before Marcus could feel any pleasure, the man
leapt up and poured out a string of blows, seeming to move twice as
fast as he had before. Marcus went down after the first two and
caught two more as he fell. This time he didn't get up and didn't
hear the cheers or the horn as Marius nodded to end the match.
Fulvio raised his hands in triumph and Marius
ruefully signaled the first fifty of the hundred gold coins to be
given back to the men. They gathered together in a momentary huddle
and then, when silence had fallen, one of them offered the bag back
to Marius.
"We'll let the win ride for the next one, sir,
if you're willing," he said.
Marius grimaced in mock horror, but nodded and
said he would cover the bet. The men cheered again.
Marcus woke up as Tubruk threw a cup of wine in
his face.
"Did I win?" he said through smashed lips.
Tubruk chuckled and wiped some of the blood and
wine off his face.
"Not even close, but you were still astonishing.
You shouldn't have been able to touch him."
"Touched him properly, though," he mumbled,
smiling and wincing as his lips cracked. "Knocked him on his
arse."
Marcus looked around for somewhere to spit and,
finding nothing handy, swallowed a gummy mixture of phlegm and
blood.
Every part of him hurt, worse than it had when
he'd been tied up by Suetonius years before. He wondered if he'd be
as good-looking when he'd healed, but his thoughts were interrupted
by Fulvio coming over, taking off his gloves as he walked.
"Good fight. I had three gold pieces on me,
myself. You're very fast—in a few years, you could be
seriously dangerous."
Marcus nodded and put out his hand. Fulvio
looked at it and then shook it briefly and walked back to the men,
who cheered him all over again.
"Take the cloth and keep dabbing as the blood
drips," Tubruk continued cheerfully. "You'll need stitches over
your eye. We'll have to cut it to get the swelling down as
well."
"Not yet. I'll watch Gaius first."
"Of course." Tubruk walked away, still
chuckling, and Marcus squinted at him through his one good eye.
Gaius clenched his fists and waited for Tubruk
to reach him. His opponent had already taken the floor and was
limbering up, stretching his muscular shoulders and legs.
"He's a big brute," he muttered as Tubruk came
alongside.
"True, but he's not a boxer. You have a
reasonable chance against this one, as long as you don't get in the
way of one of his big punches. He'll put you out like snuffing a
candle if he catches you. Stay back and use your feet to move
around him."
Gaius looked at him quizzically. "Anything
else?"
"If you can, punch him in the testicles. He'll
watch for it, but it isn't strictly speaking against the
rules."
"Tubruk, you do not have the heart of a decent
man."
"No, I have the heart of a slave and a
gladiator. I have two gold pieces on you for this one and I want to
win."
"Did you bet on Marcus?" he asked.
"Of course not. Unlike Marius, I don't throw
money away."
Marius came to the center and signaled for
silence once again.
"After that disappointing loss, the money rides
on the next bout. Decidus and Gaius, take your marks. Same rules.
When you hear the horn, begin." He waited until both stood eyeing
each other and walked to the wall, folding his great arms over his
chest.
As the horn sounded, Gaius stepped in and
slammed his fist up into Decidus's throat. The bigger man gave out
a choked groan and raised both his hands to his neck, in agony.
Gaius threw a scything uppercut that caught Decidus on the chin. He
went down onto his knees and then toppled forward, his eyes glassy
and blank. Gaius walked slowly back to his stool and sat down. He
smiled silently and Renius, watching, remembered the same smile on
a younger boy's face as he'd lifted him from the icy waters of a
river pool. Renius nodded sharply in approval, his eyes bright, but
Gaius did not see it.
The silence roared for a second, then the men
released the breath they'd been holding and a rabble of voices
broke out—mostly questions spiced with a few choice
swearwords as they realized the bets were all lost.
Marius walked over to the prostrate figure and
felt his neck for a second. Silence fell again. Finally, he
nodded.
"His heart beats. He'll live. Should have kept
his chin down."
The men gave a halfhearted cheer for the winner,
though their spirits weren't really in it.
Marius addressed the crowd, grinning. "If you
have an appetite, there's a feast waiting for you in the dining
hall. We'll make a night of it, for tomorrow it's back to planning
and work."
Decidus was revived and taken out, shaking his
head groggily. The rest trooped after him, leaving Marcus and Gaius
alone with the general. Renius never left his seat and Cabera
stayed back as well, his face alive with interest.
"Well, boys, you've made me a lot of money
today!" Marius boomed, starting to laugh. He had to lean against a
wall for support as the laughter shook his frame.
"Their faces! Two beardless boys and one puts
Fulvio on his backside..." The laughter overtook him and he wiped
his eyes as tears streamed over his red face.
Renius stood up, swaying a little. He walked
over to Marcus and Gaius and clapped a hand on each shoulder.
"You've started making your names," he said
quietly.
CHAPTER
15
On the night before the Triumph, the
First-Born camp was anything but peaceful. Gaius sat around one of
the campfires and sharpened a dagger that had belonged to his
father. All around, the fires and noise of seven thousand soldiers
and camp followers made the darkness busy and cheerful. They were
camped in open country, less than five miles from the gates of the
city. For the last week, armor had been polished, leather waxed,
tears in cloth stitched. Horses were groomed until they shone like
chestnuts. Marching drills had become tense affairs; mistakes were
not tolerated and no one wanted to be left behind when they marched
into Rome.
The men were all proud of Marius and themselves.
There was no false modesty in the camp; they knew they and he
deserved the honor.
Gaius stopped sharpening as Marcus came into the
firelight and took a seat on a bench. Gaius looked into the flames
and didn't smile.
"What's the word?" he said angrily, without
turning his head.
"I leave at dawn tomorrow," Marcus replied. He
too looked into the fire as he continued speaking. "This is for the
best, you know. Marius has written a letter for me to take to my
new century. Would you like to see it?"
Gaius nodded and Marcus passed a scroll over to
him. He read:
I recommend this young man to you, Carac. He will make a
first-rate soldier in a few years. He has a good mind and excellent
reflexes. He was trained by Renius, who will accompany him to your
camp. Give him responsibility as soon as he has proved he can
handle it. He is a friend of my house.
Marius. Primigenia.
"Fine words. I wish you luck," Gaius said
bitterly as he finished, passing back the scroll.
Marcus snorted. "More than just fine words! Your
uncle has given me my ticket into another legion. You don't
understand what this means to me. Of course I would like to stay
with you, but you will be learning politics in the Senate, then
taking a high post in the army and the temples. I own nothing
except my skills and my wits and the equipment Marius has given me.
Without his patronage, I would be pushed to get a post as a temple
guard! With it, I have a chance to make something of myself. Do you
grudge it of me?"
Gaius turned to him, his anger surprising
Marcus. "I know it's what you have to do, I just never saw myself
tackling Rome alone. I always expected you to be with me. That is
what friendship means."
Marcus gripped his arm tightly. "You will always
be my greatest friend. If ever you need me to be at your side, then
call and I will come to you. You remember the pact before we came
to the city? We look out for each other and we can trust each other
completely. That is my oath and I have never broken it."
Gaius did not look at him and Marcus let his
hand fall away.
"You can have Alexandria," Marcus said,
attempting a noble expression.
Gaius gasped. "A parting gift? What a generous
friend you are! You are too ugly for her, as she told me just
yesterday. She only likes your company for the contrast. You make
her look more beautiful when your monkey face is around."
Marcus nodded cheerfully. "She does seem to want
me only for sex. Perhaps you can read poetry to her while I run her
through the positions."
Gaius took a quick breath of indignation, then
smiled slowly at his friend. "With you gone, I will be the one
showing her the positions." He chuckled to himself at this, hiding
his thoughts. What positions? He could think of only two.
"You will be like a bullock after me, with all
the practice I have been getting. Marius is a generous man."
Gaius looked at his friend, trying to judge how
much of his boasting was just that. He knew Marcus had proved a
favorite with the slave girls of Marius's house and was rarely to
be found in his own room after dark. As for himself, he didn't know
what he felt. Sometimes he wanted Alexandria so much it hurt him,
and other times he wanted to be chasing the girls along the
corridors as Marcus did. He did know that if he ever tried to force
her as a slave, he would lose all that he found precious. A silver
coin would buy him that kind of union. The idea that Marcus might
have already enjoyed what he wanted made his blood thump in
irritation.
Marcus broke in on these thoughts, his voice
low. "You will need friends when you are older, men you can trust.
We've both seen what sort of power your uncle has, and I think both
of us would like a taste of it."
Gaius nodded.
"Then what good will I be to you as a penniless
son of a city whore? I can make my name and fortune in my new
legion, and
then we can make real plans for the future."
"I understand. I remember our oath and I will
stick to it." Gaius was silent for a moment, then shook his head to
clear it of thoughts of Alexandria. "Where will you be
stationed?"
"I'm with the Fourth Macedonia, so Renius and I
are going to Greece—the home of civilization, they say. I'm
looking forward to seeing alien lands. I have heard that the women
run races without clothes on, you know. Makes the mind bulge a bit.
Not just the mind, either." He laughed and Gaius smiled sickly,
still thinking of Alexandria. Would she have given herself to
him?
"I'm glad Renius is your escort. It'll do him
good to take his mind off his troubles for a while."
Marcus grimaced. "True, though he won't be the
best of company. He's been out of sorts ever since he turned up
drunk at your uncle's, but I can understand why."
"If the slaves had burned my house down, I'd be
a bit lost as well. They even took his savings, you know. Had them
under the floor, he said, but they must have been found by looters.
That was not a glorious chapter in our history, slaves stealing an
old man's savings. Mind you, he's not really an old man anymore, is
he?"
Marcus looked sideways at him. They had never
discussed it, but Gaius hadn't seemed to need telling.
"Cabera?" Gaius said, catching his eye.
Marcus nodded.
"I thought so; he did something similar for me,
when I was wounded. He is certainly a useful man to have
around."
"I am glad he's staying with you. He has faith
in your future. He should be able to keep you alive until I can
come back, covered in glory and draped with beautiful women, all of
whom will be the winners of footraces."
"I might not recognize you underneath all that
glory and those women."
"I'll be the same. I'm sorry I'll miss the
Triumph tomorrow. It should really be something special. You know
he's had silver coins printed with his face? He's going to throw
them to the crowds in the streets."
Gaius laughed. "Typical of my uncle. He likes to
be recognized. He enjoys fame more than winning battles, I think.
He's already paying the men with those coins so the money gets
spread around Rome even faster. It should annoy Sulla at least,
which is probably what he really wants."
Cabera and Renius came out of the darkness and
took up the spaces on Marcus's bench.
"There you are!" Renius said. "I was beginning
to think I couldn't find you to say goodbye."
Gaius noted again the fresh strength of the man.
He looked no more than forty, or a well-preserved forty-five. His
grip was like a trap as he put out his hand and Gaius took it.
"We'll all meet again," Cabera said.
They looked at him.
He held his palms up and smiled. "It's not a
prophecy, but I feel it. We haven't finished our paths yet."
"I'm glad you're staying, at least. With Tubruk
back at the estate and these two off to Greece, I would be all on
my own here," Gaius said, smiling a little shyly.
"You look after him, you old scoundrel," Renius
said. "I didn't go to all the trouble of training him to hear he's
been kicked by a horse. Keep him away from bad women and too much
drink." He turned to Gaius and held up a finger. "Train every day.
Your father never let himself become soft and neither should you if
you are to be of any use to our city."
"I will. What are you going to do when you have
delivered Marcus?"
Renius's face darkened for a second. "I don't
know. I don't have the funds to retire anymore, so we'll see... It
is in the hands of the gods as always."
For a moment, they all looked a little sad.
Nothing ever stayed the same.
"Come on," he continued gruffly. "Time for
sleep. Dawn can't be more than a few hours away, and we all have a
long day ahead of us."
They shook hands in silence for the last time
and returned to their tents.
When Gaius awoke the following
morning, Marcus and Renius were gone.
By him, folded carefully, was the toga
virilis, a man's garment. He looked at it for a long time,
trying to recall Tubruks lessons on the correct way to wear one. A
boy's tunic was so much simpler, and the low toga hem would become
dirty very quickly. The message was clear in its simplicity: A man
did not climb trees and throw himself through muddy rivers. Boyish
pursuits were to be put behind him.
In daylight, the large ten-man tents could be
seen stretching into the distance, the orderly lines showing the
discipline of the men and their general. Marius had spent most of
the month mapping out a six-mile route along the streets that
ended, as before, at the Senate steps. The filth had been scrubbed
from the stones of the roads, but they were still narrow, winding
courses, and the legion could get only six men or three horses
across. There were going to be just under eleven hundred rows of
soldiers, horses, and equipment. After a lot of argument with his
engineers, Marius had agreed to leave his siege weapons at the
camp—there was just no way to get them around the tight
corners. The estimate was that it would take three hours to
complete the march, and that was without holdups or mistakes of any
kind.
By the time Gaius had washed, dressed, and
eaten, the sun was clear of the horizon and the great shining mass
of soldiers was in position and almost ready to march. Gaius had
been told to dress in a full toga and sandals and to leave his
weapons in the camp. After so long carrying a legionary's tools, he
felt a little defenseless without them, but obeyed.
Marius himself would be riding on a throne set
atop a flat open carriage, pulled by a team of six horses. He would
wear a purple toga, a color that could only be worn by a general at
the head of a Triumph. The dye was incredibly expensive, gathered
from rare seashells and distilled. It was a garment to wear only
once, and the color of the ancient kings of Rome.
As he passed under the city gates, a slave would
raise a gilded laurel wreath above his head and hold it there for
the rest of the journey. Four words had to be whispered throughout
the Triumph, cheerfully ignored by Marius: "Remember thou art
mortal."
The carriage had been put together by the legion
engineers, made to fit perfectly between the street
stepping-stones. The heavy wooden wheels were shod with an iron
band, and the axles freshly greased. The main body had been gilded
and shone in the morning sun as if made of pure gold.
As Gaius approached, the general was inspecting
his troops, his expression serious. He spoke to many of the men and
they answered him without moving their gaze from the middle
distance.
At last, the general seemed satisfied and
climbed up onto the carriage.
"The people of our city will not forget this
day. The sight of you will inspire the children to join the forces
that keep us all safe. Foreign ambassadors will watch us and be
cautious in their dealings with Rome, with the vision of our ranks
always in their minds. Merchants will watch us and know there is
something more in the world than making money. Women will watch us
and compare their little husbands to the best of Rome! See your
reflections in the eyes as we pass. You will give the people
something more than bread and coin today; you will give them
glory."
The men cheered at the last and Gaius found
himself cheering as well. He walked to the throned carriage and
Marius saw him.
"Where shall I stand, Uncle?" he asked.
"Up here, lad. Stand at my right shoulder, so
that they will know you are beloved of my house."
Gaius grinned and clambered on, taking position.
He could see into the far distance from his new height and felt a
thrill of anticipation.
Marius dropped his arm and horns sounded,
echoing down the line to the far back. The legionaries took their
first step on the hard-packed soil.
On each side of the great gold carriage, Gaius
recognized faces from the first bloody trip to the Senate. Even on
a day of rejoicing, Marius had his handpicked men with him. Only a
fool would risk a thrown knife with the legion in the streets; they
would destroy the city in rage—but Marius had warned his men
that there were always fools, and there were no smiles in the
ranks.
"To be alive on such a day is a precious gift of
the gods," Marius said, his voice carrying.
Gaius nodded and rested his hand on the
throne.
"There are six hundred thousand people in the
city, and not one of them will be tending his business today. They
have already begun lining the streets and buying seats at windows
to cheer us through. The roads are strewn with fresh rushes, a
carpet for us to walk on for each step of the six miles. Only the
forum is being kept clear so that we can halt the whole five
thousand in one block there. I shall sacrifice a bull to Jupiter
and a boar to Minerva, and then you and I, Gaius, we will walk into
the Senate to attend our first vote."
"What is the vote about?" Gaius asked.
Marius laughed. "A simple matter of officially
accepting you into the ranks of the nobilitas and adulthood. In
truth, it is only a formality. You have the right through your
father, or, indeed, my sponsorship would do it. Remember, this city
was built and is maintained on talent. There are the old houses,
the purebloods; Sulla himself is from one such. But other men are
there because they have dragged themselves up to power, as I have.
We respect strength and cherish what is good for the city,
regardless of the parentage."
"Are your supporters from the new men?" Gaius
asked.
Marius shook his head. "Strangely enough, no.
They are often too wary of being seen to side with one of their
own. Many of them support Sulla, but those who follow me are as
often highborn as they are new wolves in the fold. The people's
tribunes make a great show of being untouched by politics and take
each vote as they find it, although they can always be depended on
to vote for cheaper corn or more rights for the slaves. With their
veto, they can never be ignored."
"Could they prevent my acceptance then?"
Marius chuckled. "Take off the worried look.
They do not vote in internal matters, such as new members, only in
city policy. Even if they did, it would be a brave man to vote
against me with my legion standing thousands deep in the forum
outside. Sulla and I are consuls—the supreme commanders of
all the military might of Rome. We lead the Senate, not the other
way around." He smiled complacently and called for wine, having the
full cup handed to him.
"What happens if you disagree with the Senate,
or with Sulla?" Gaius asked.
Marius snorted into his wine cup. "All too
common. The people elect the Senate to make and enforce the
laws—and to build the empire. They also elect the other, more
senior posts: aediles, praetors, and consuls. Sulla and I are here
because the people voted for us, and the Senate do not forget that.
If we disagree, a consul may forbid any piece of legislation and
its passage stops immediately. Sulla or I have only to say
'Veto'—'I forbid it'—as the speeches begin and
that is the end for that year. We can also block each other in this
way, although that does not happen often."
"But how does the Senate control the consuls?"
Gaius pressed, interested.
Marius took a deep draft of the wine and patted
his stomach, smiling. "They could vote against me, even remove me
from office in theory. In practice, my supporters and clients would
prevent any such vote going through, so for the whole year, a
consul is almost untouchable in power."
"You said a consul was only elected for one year
and has to step down," Gaius said.
"The law bends for strong men, Gaius. Each year,
the Senate clamors for an exception to be made and for me to be
reelected. I am good for Rome, you see—and they know it."
Gaius felt pleased at the quiet conversation, or
as quiet as the general ever managed, at least. He understood why
his father had been wary of the man. Marius was like summer
lightning—it was impossible to tell what he would strike
next—but he had the city in the palm of his hand for the
moment, and Gaius had discovered that was where he too wanted to
be: at the center of things.
They could hear the roar of Rome long
before they reached the gates. The sound was like the sea, a
formless, crashing wave that engulfed them as they halted at the
border tower. City guards approached the golden carriage and Marius
stood to receive them. They too were polished and perfectly turned
out, and they had a formal air.
"Give your name and state your business," one
said.
"Marius, general of the First-Born. I am here. I
will hold a Triumph on the streets of Rome."
The man flushed a little and Marius grinned.
"You may enter the city," the guard said,
stepping back and waving the gate open.
Marius leaned close to Gaius as he sat down
again. "Protocol says I have to ask permission, but this is too
fine a day to be polite to guards who couldn't cut it in the
legions. Take us in." He signaled and again the horns blew all down
the line. The gates opened and the crowd peered around, roaring in
excitement. The noise crashed out at the legion, and Marius's
driver had to snap the reins sharply to make the horses move
on.
The First-Born entered Rome.
"You must get out of bed now if you
want to be ready in time to see the Triumph! Everyone says it will
be glorious and your father and mother are already dressed and with
their attendants while you lie and drowse!"
Cornelia opened her eyes and stretched, careless
of the covers falling away from her golden skin. Her nurse, Clodia,
busied herself with the window hangings, parting them to air the
room and letting sunshine spill in.
"Look, the sun is high and you are not even
dressed. It is shameless to find you without clothes. What if I was
a male, or your father?"
"He wouldn't dare come in. He knows I don't
bother with nightclothes when it's hot."
Still yawning, Cornelia rose naked from her bed
and stretched like a cat, arching her back and pressing her fists
into the air. Clodia crossed to the bedroom door and dropped the
locking bar in case someone tried to enter.
"I suppose you'll be wanting a dip in the bath
before you dress," Clodia said, affection spoiling the attempt at a
stern tone.
Cornelia nodded and padded through to the
bathing room. The water steamed, reminding her that the rest of the
house had been up and working since the first moments of dawn. She
felt vaguely guilty, but that dissolved in the soothing heat as she
swung a leg over the side and climbed in, sighing. It was a luxury
she enjoyed, preferring not to wait until the formal bathing
session later in the day.
Clodia bustled in after her, carrying an armful
of warm linen. She was never still, a woman of immense energy. To a
stranger, there was nothing in her dress or manner to indicate her
slavery. Even the jewels she wore were real and she chose her
clothes from a sumptuous wardrobe.
"Hurry! Dry yourself with these and put on this
mamillare."
Cornelia groaned. "It binds me too tightly to
wear on hot days."
"It will keep your breasts from hanging like
empty bags in a few years." Clodia snorted. "You'll be pleased
enough to have worn it then. Up! Out of that water, you lazy thing.
There's a glass of water on the side to clean your mouth."
As Cornelia dabbed her body dry, Clodia laid out
her robes and opened a series of small silver boxes of paints and
oils.
"On with this," she said, dropping a long white
tunic over Cornelia's outstretched arms. The girl shrugged herself
into it and sat at the single table, propping up an oval bronze
mirror to see herself.
"I would like my hair to be curled," she said
wistfully, holding a lock of it in her fingers. It was a dark gold,
but straight for all its thickness.
"Wouldn't suit you, Lia. And there's no time
today. I should think your mother is already finished with her
ornatrix and will be waiting for us. Simple, understated
beauty is what we're after today."
"A little ochre on the lips and cheeks then,
unless you want to paint me with that stinking white lead?"
Clodia blew air out of her lips in irritation.
"It will be a few years before you need to conceal your complexion.
What are you now, seventeen?"
"You know I am, you were drunk at the feast,"
Cornelia replied with a smile, holding still while the color was
applied.
"I was merry, dear, just as everybody else was.
There is nothing wrong with a little drink in moderation, I have
always said." Clodia nodded to herself as she rubbed in the
colors.
"Now a little powdered antimony around the eyes
to make men think they are dark and mysterious, and we can start on
the hair. Don't touch it! Hands to yourself, remember, in case you
smudge."
Swiftly and dexterously, Clodia parted the dark
gold hair and gathered it into a chignon at the back, revealing the
slender length of Cornelia's neck. She looked at the face in the
mirror and smiled at the effect.
"Why your father hasn't found a man for you, I
will never know. You're certainly attractive enough."
"He said he'd let me choose and I haven't found
anyone to like yet," Cornelia replied, touching the pins in her
hair.
Clodia tutted to herself. "Your father is a good
man, but tradition is important. He should find you a young man
with good prospects, and you should have a house of your own to
run. I think you will enjoy that, somehow."
"I'll take you with me when that happens. I'd
miss you if I didn't, like... a dress that is a bit old and out of
fashion but still comfortable, you know?"
"How beautifully you put your affection for me,
my dear," Clodia replied, buffeting Cornelia's head with her hand
as she turned away to pick up the robe.
It was a great square of gold cloth that hung
down to Cornelias knees. It had to be artfully arranged for the
best effect, but Clodia had been doing it for years and knew
Cornelias tastes in cut and style.
"It is beautiful—but heavy," Cornelia
muttered.
"So are men, dear, as you will find out," Clodia
replied with a sparkle in her eyes. "Now run to your parents. We
must be early enough to have a good place to watch the Triumph.
We're going to the house of one of your father's friends."
"Oh, Father, you should have lived to
see this," Gaius whispered as they passed into the streets. The way
ahead was dark green, with every spot of stone covered by rushes.
The people too wore their best and brightest clothes, a surging
throng of color and noise. Hands were held out, and hot, envious
eyes watched them. The shops were all boarded shut, as Marius had
said. It seemed the whole city had turned out for a holiday to see
the great general. Gaius was astonished at the numbers and the
enthusiasm. Did they not remember these same soldiers cutting
themselves room on the forum only a month before? Marius had said
they respected only strength, and the proof was in their cheers,
booming and echoing in the narrow streets. Gaius glanced to his
right into a window and saw a woman of some beauty throwing flowers
at him. He caught one and the crowd roared again in
appreciation.
Not a soul pushed onto the road, despite the
lack of soldiers or guards along the edge. The lesson of the last
time had clearly been learned, and it was as if there were an
invisible barrier holding them back. Even the hard-faced men of
Marius's own guard were grinning as they marched.
Marius sat like a god. He placed his massive
hands on the arms of the golden throne and smiled at the crowd. The
slave behind him raised the garland of gilded laurel over his head,
and the shadow fell on his features. He nodded and every eye
followed his progress. His horses were trained for the battlefield
and ignored the yelling people, even when some of the more daring
landed flowers around their necks as well.
Gaius stood at the great man's shoulder as the
ride went on and the pride he felt lifted his soul. Would his
father have appreciated this? The answer was probably not and Gaius
felt a pang of sorrow at that. Marius was right: Just to be alive
on this day was to touch the gods. He knew he would never forget it
and could see in the eyes of the people that they too would store
away the moments to warm them in the dark winters of years yet to
pass.
Halfway along the route, Gaius saw Tubruk
standing on a corner. As their eyes met, Gaius could feel all the
history between them. Tubruk raised his arm in a salute and Gaius
returned it. The men around Tubruk turned to look at him and wonder
at his connection. He nodded as they passed and Gaius nodded back,
swallowing down the catch in his throat. He was drunk with emotion
and gripped the back of the throne to keep from swaying in the tide
of cheering.
Marius gave a signal to two of his men and they
climbed onto the carriage, holding soft leather bags. Hands were
plunged into the dark recesses and came up glinting with fistfuls
of silver coins. Marius's image went flying over the crowd, and
they screamed his name as they scrabbled for the metal in his wake.
Marius too reached in and his fingers emerged dripping pieces of
silver; he sprayed the coins high with a gesture and laughed as
they fell and the crowd dipped to pick up the gifts. He smiled at
their pleasure and they blessed him.
From a low window, Cornelia looked out
over the bobbing mass of people, pleased to be clear of the crowds.
She felt a thrill as Marius drew close on his throne, and cheered
with the rest. He was a handsome general and the city loved
heroes.
There was a young man next to him, too young to
be a legionary. Cornelia strained forward to get a better look. He
was smiling and his eyes flashed blue as he laughed at something
Marius said.
The procession came abreast of where Cornelia
and her family watched. She saw coins go flying and the people rush
to grab the pieces of silver. Her father, Cinna, sniffed at
this.
"Waste of money. Rome loves a frugal general,"
he said waspishly.
Cornelia ignored him, her gaze on Marius's
companion. He was attractive and healthy looking, but there was
something else about him, about the way he held himself. There was
an inner confidence, and as Clodia often said, there was nothing in
the world so attractive as confidence.
"Every mother in Rome will be after that young
cockerel for their daughters," Clodia whispered at her elbow.
Cornelia blushed and Clodia's eyebrows shot up
in surprise and pleasure.
The Triumph passed on for another two hours, but
for Cornelia it was wasted time.
The colors and faces had blurred
together, the men were heavily draped in flowers, and the sun had
reached noon by the time they began the entry to the forum. Marius
signaled to his driver to put the carriage at the front, by the
Senate steps. The space echoed as the hooves struck the stone slabs
and the noise of the streets was slowly left behind. For the first
time, Gaius could see Sulla's soldiers guarding the entrances to
the plaza and the boiling mass of the crowds beyond.
It was almost peaceful after the colorful riot
of the trip into the center.
"Stop her here," Marius said, and stood from the
throne to watch his men come in. They were well drilled and formed
tidy ranks, layer on layer from the farthest corner to the Senate
steps, until the forum was full of the shining rows of his
soldiers. No human voice could carry to every man, so a horn gave
the order to stand to attention, and they crashed their feet
together and down, making thunder. Marius smiled with pride. He
gripped Gaius's shoulder.
"Remember this. This is why we slog through
battlefields a thousand miles from home."
"I could never forget today," Gaius replied
honestly, and the grip tightened for a moment before letting
go.
Marius walked to where a white bull was held
steady by four of his men. A great black-bristled boar was
similarly held, but snorted and chafed against the ropes.
Marius accepted a taper and lit the incense in a
golden bowl. His men bowed their heads and he stepped forward with
his dagger, speaking softly as he cut the two throats.
"Bring us all through war and pestilence, safe
home to our city," he said. He wiped the blade on the skin of the
bull as it sank to its knees, bawling its fear and pain. Sheathing
the dagger, he put an arm around Gaius's shoulder, and together
they walked up the wide white steps of the Senate building.
It was the seat of power in all the world.
Columns that could not be girdled by three large men holding their
arms outstretched supported a sloping roof that was itself mounted
with distant statues. Bronze doors that dwarfed even Marius stood
closed at the top of the steps. Made of interlocking panels, they
looked as if they were designed to stand against an army, but as
the pair ascended, the doors opened silently, pulled from within.
Marius nodded and Gaius swallowed his awe.
"Come, lad, let us go and meet our masters. It
would not do to keep the Senate waiting."
CHAPTER
16
Marcus wondered at the tight
expression on Renius's face as they traveled the road to the sea.
From dawn until late in the afternoon, they had trotted and walked
the stone surface without a word. He was hungry and desperately
thirsty, but would not admit it. He had decided at noon that if
Renius wanted to do the whole trip to the docks without stopping,
then he would not give up first.
Finally, when the smell of dead fish and seaweed
soured the clean country air, Renius pulled up and, to his
surprise, Marcus noticed the man was pale.
"I want to break off here, to see a friend of
mine. You can go on to the docks and get a room there. There's an
inn...
"I'm coming with you," Marcus said curtly.
Renius's jaw tightened and he muttered "As you
please," before turning off the main road onto a lesser track.
Mystified, Marcus followed him as the track
wound through woods for miles. He didn't ask where they were going,
just kept his sword loose in his scabbard in case there were
bandits hidden in the foliage. Not that a sword would be much use
against a bow, he noted.
The sun, where it could be seen at all through
the canopy, had dropped down toward the horizon when they rode into
a small village. There were no more than twenty small houses, but
the place had a well-kept air to it. Chickens were penned and goats
tethered outside most dwellings, and Marcus felt no sense of
danger. Renius dismounted.
"Are you coming in?" he said as he walked to a
door.
Marcus nodded, and tied the two horses to a
post. Renius was inside by the time he was done, and he frowned,
resting a hand on his dagger as he went in. It was a little dark
inside, lit only by a candle and a small fire in the hearth, but
Marcus could see Renius hugging an ancient old man with his one
good arm.
"This is my brother, Primus. Primus, this is the
lad I mentioned, traveling with me to Greece."
The man must have been eighty years old, but he
had a firm grip.
"My brother has written about your progress and
the other one, Gaius. He doesn't like anyone, but I think he
dislikes you two less than most people."
Marcus grunted.
"Take a seat, boy. We have a long night ahead of
us." He went over to his small wood fire and placed a long metal
poker in its fiery heart.
"What is happening?" Marcus asked.
Renius sighed. "My brother was a surgeon. He is
going to take my arm off."
Marcus felt a sick horror come over him as he
realized what he was going to see. Guilt too flushed his face. He
hoped Renius wouldn't mention how he had been injured. To cover his
embarrassment, he spoke quickly. "Lucius or Cabera could have done
it, I'm sure."
Renius silenced him with a raised hand.
"Many people could do the job, but Primus was...
is the best."
Primus cackled, revealing a mouth with very few
teeth. "My little brother used to chop people up and I would stitch
them back together," he said cheerfully. "Let us have a light for
this." He turned to an oil lamp and lit it from a candle. When he
turned back, he squinted at Renius.
"I know my eyes are not what they were, but did
you dye your hair?"
Renius flushed. "I do not want to be told your
eyes are failing before you start cutting me, Primus. I am aging
well, that is all."
"Damned well," Primus agreed. He emptied a
leather satchel of tools onto a table surface and gestured to his
brother to sit down. Looking at the saws and needles, Marcus wished
he had taken the advice and gone on to the docks, but it was too
late. Renius sat and sweat dripped from his forehead. Primus gave
him a bottle of brown liquid and he raised it, taking great
swallows.
"You, boy, get that rope and tie him to the
chair. I don't want him thrashing around and breaking my
furniture."
Feeling sick, Marcus took the lengths of rope,
noting with a quiet horror that they were all stained with ancient
blood. He busied himself with the knots and tried not to think
about it.
After a few minutes, Renius was immobile and
Primus poured the last of the brown liquid into his throat.
"That's all I have, I'm afraid. It will take the
edge off, but not much."
"Just get on with it," Renius growled through
clenched teeth.
Primus raised a thick piece of leather to his
mouth and told him to bite it. "It will save your teeth, at
least."
He turned to Marcus. "You hold the arm still. It
will make the sawing quicker." He placed Marcus's hands on the
corded bicep and checked that the ropes held the wrist and elbow
securely. He slid a vicious-looking blade from his pack and held it
up to the light, squinting at the edge.
"I will cut a circle around the bone, then
another below it to give the saw room. We will take out a ring of
flesh, saw the bone, and cauterize the leaks. It must be fast, or
he will bleed to death. I will leave enough skin to fold over the
stump, then it must be bound securely. He must not touch it for the
first week, then, each morning and night, he should rub in an
ointment I will give you. I have no leather cup for the stump; you
will have to make or buy one yourself."
Marcus swallowed nervously.
Primus plunged his fingers into the muscles and
nerves of the useless arm, feeling around. After a minute, he
tutted to himself, his face sad.
"It is as you said. There is no feeling at all.
The muscles are cut and beginning to waste. Was it a fight?"
Involuntarily, Marcus glanced up at Renius. The
eyes above the bared teeth were manic and he looked away. "A
training accident," he said softly, his voice muffled by the
leather piece.
Primus nodded and pressed the blade to the skin.
Renius tensed and Marcus gripped the arm.
With deft, sure strokes, Primus cut deep,
stopping only to dab at the wound with a piece of cloth to remove
obscuring gouts of blood. Marcus felt his stomach heave, but
Renius's brother seemed completely relaxed, blowing air between his
teeth in something close to a little tune. White bone sheathed in a
pink curtain appeared, and Primus grunted in satisfaction. After
only a few seconds, he had reached the bone all the way around and
begun the second cut.
Renius looked down at the gory hands of his
brother, and his lip curled into a bitter grimace. After that, he
stared at the wall, his jaw clenched. A slight tremble of his
breathing was the only sign of his fear.
Blood spilled over Marcus's hands, the chair,
the floor, everything. There were lakes of it inside Renius and it
was all coming out, shining and wet. The second ring was gouged
out, leaving great flaps of hanging skin. Primus notched and
sliced, removing the dark lumps of meat and dropping them
carelessly on the floor.
"Don't worry about the mess. I have two dogs
that will love this when I let them in."
Marcus turned his head away and vomited
helplessly. Primus tutted and rearranged the hands that held the
arm. A white spike of bone was visible a hand's breadth up from the
elbow.
Renius had begun to breathe in hard blasts from
his nose, and Primus pressed a hand against his brother's neck,
feeling for the pulse.
"I'll be as quick as I can," he muttered.
Renius nodded, unblinking.
Primus stood up and wiped his hands on a cloth.
He looked his brother in the eyes and grimaced at what he found
there.
"This is the hard part. You will feel the pain
when I cut the bone, and the vibration is very unpleasant. I will
be as fast as I can. Hold him very still. For two minutes, you must
be like a rock. No more of this puking, understand?"
Marcus took deep breaths, miserably, and Primus
brought out a thin-bladed saw, set in a wooden handle like a
kitchen knife.
"Ready?"
They both muttered assent and Primus set the
blade and began to cut, his elbow moving back and forth almost in a
blur.
Renius went rigid and his whole body rose
against the ropes holding him. Marcus gripped as if his life
depended on it, and winced whenever the blood made his fingers slip
and the saw snagged.
Without warning, the arm came free, leaning
sideways and away from Renius. Renius looked down at it and grunted
in anger. Primus wiped his hands and pressed a wad of cloth into
the wound. He gestured to Marcus to hold it in place and fetched
the iron bar that had been heating in the fire. The tip glowed and
Marcus winced in anticipation.
When the cloth was removed, Primus worked
quickly, stabbing the tip into every spot of welling blood. Each
contact sizzled and the stench was horrible. Marcus dry-heaved onto
the floor, a line of sticky yellow bile connecting him with it.
"Put this back in the fire, quickly. I will hold
the cloth while it heats again."
Marcus staggered upright and took the bar,
jamming it back into the flames. Renius's head lolled on his
shoulders and the leather strip fell from his slack mouth.
Primus kept holding the cloth, then removing it
to watch the blood come. He swore viciously.
"I've missed half the pipes at least. Used to
be, I could hit each one with one go, but I haven't done this in a
few years. It has to be done right, or the wound will poison
itself. Is the iron ready yet?"
Marcus withdrew it, but the point was still
black. "No. Will he be all right?"
"Not if I can't seal the wound, no. Get outside
and fetch some wood to build up the fire."
Marcus was thankful for the excuse and left
quickly, taking great gulps of sweet air as he stood outside. It
was almost dark—gods, how long had they been in there? He
noticed a couple of large hounds tied to a wall around the side,
asleep. He shuddered and gathered heavy chunks of wood from the
pile near them. They woke at his approach and growled softly, but
didn't get up. Without looking at them, he went back inside,
dumping two billets onto the flames.
"Bring me the iron as soon as the tip is red,"
Primus muttered, pressing the wad of cloth hard against the
stump.
Marcus avoided looking at the detached arm. It
seemed wrong, away from a body, and his stomach heaved in a series
of quick spasms before he had the sense to gaze back at the
flames.
Once more the bar had to be reheated before
Primus was finally satisfied. Marcus knew he would never be able to
forget the fsss sound of the burning and repressed a shudder
as he helped bind the stump in clean cloth bandages. Together, they
lifted Renius onto a pallet bed in another room, and Marcus sat on
the edge, wiping the sweat out of his eyes, thankful it was
over.
"What happens to... that?" He gestured toward
the arm that was still tied to the chair.
Primus shrugged. "Doesn't seem right to give the
whole thing to my dogs. I'll probably bury it somewhere in the
woods. It would only rot and smell if I didn't, but a lot of men
ask for them. There are so many memories wrapped up in a hand. I
mean, those fingers have held women and patted children. It is a
lot to lose, but my brother is strong. I hope strong enough even
for this."
"Our ship leaves in four days, on the best
tide," Marcus said weakly.
Primus scratched his chin. "He can sit a horse.
He will be weak for a few days, but he's as strong as a bull. The
problems will be with balance. He will have to retrain, almost from
scratch. How long is the sea trip?"
"A month, with good winds," Marcus replied.
"Use the time. Practice with him every day. Of
all men, my brother will not enjoy being less than capable."
CHAPTER
17
Marius paused at the inner doors of
the Senate chamber.
"You are not allowed to enter until you are
officially accepted as a citizen, and then only as my guest for the
day. I will propose you and make a short speech on your behalf. It
is a formality. Wait until I return and show you where you may
sit."
Gaius nodded calmly and stood back as Marius
rapped on the doors and walked through them as they opened. He was
left alone in the outer chamber and paced up and down it for a
while.
After twenty minutes, he began to fret at the
delay and wandered over to the open outer doors, looking down onto
the massed soldiers in the forum. They were an impressive sight,
standing rigidly to attention despite the heat of the day. From the
height of the Senate doors and with the open plaza ahead of him,
Gaius had a good view of the bustling city beyond. He was lost in
his inspection of this when he heard the creak of hinges from the
inner doors and Marius stepped out.
"Welcome to the nobilitas, Gaius. You are a
citizen of Rome and your father would be proud. Sit next to me and
listen to the matters of the day. You will find them interesting, I
suspect."
Gaius followed and met the eyes of the senators
as they watched him enter. One or two nodded to him and he wondered
if they had known his father, memorizing faces in case he had a
chance to speak to them later on. He glanced around the hall,
trying not to stare. The world listened to what these few had to
say.
The arrangement was very like the circus in
miniature, he thought as he took the seat Marius indicated. Five
stepped tiers of seating curled around a central space where one
speaker at a time could address the others. Gaius remembered from
his tutors that the rostrum was made from the prow of a
Carthaginian warship, and was fascinated to imagine its
history.
The seats were built into the curving rows, with
dark wooden arms protruding where they were not obscured by seated
men. Everyone wore white togas and sandals and the effect was of a
working room, a place that crackled with energy. Most of the men
had white hair, but a few were young and physically commanding.
Several of the senators were standing, and he guessed this was to
show they wanted to raise a point or add to the debate at hand.
Sulla himself stood at the center of it all, talking about taxation
and corn. He smiled at Gaius when he saw the young man looking over
at him, and Gaius felt the power of it. Here was another like
Marius, he judged on the instant, but was there room in Rome for
two of that kind? Sulla looked as he had when Gaius had seen him at
the games. He was dressed in a simple white toga, belted with a
band of red. His hair was oiled and gleamed in dark gold curls. He
glowed with health and vitality and seemed completely relaxed. As
Gaius took his seat next to his uncle, Sulla coughed into his hand
delicately.
"I think, given the more serious business of the
day, that this taxation debate can be postponed until next week.
Are there any objections?" Those who were standing sat down,
looking unperturbed. Sulla smiled again, revealing even, white
teeth.
"I welcome the new citizen and offer the hope of
the Senate that he will serve the city as well as his father did."
There was a murmur of approval and Gaius dipped his head slightly
in acknowledgment.
"However, our formal welcome must also be put
aside for the moment. I have received grave news of a threat to the
city this very morning." He paused and waited patiently for the
senators to stop talking. "To the east, a Greek general,
Mithridates, has overrun a garrison of ours in Asia Minor. He may
have as many as eight thousand men in rebellion. They have
apparently become aware of the overstretched state of our current
fighting forces and are gambling on our being too weak to regain
the territory. However, if we do not act to repel him, we risk his
army growing in strength and threatening the security of our Greek
possessions."
Several senators rose to their feet, and shouted
arguments began on the benches. Sulla held his hands up for
quiet.
"A decision must be made here. The legions
already in Greece are committed to controlling the unstable
borders. They do not have the men to break this new threat. We
cannot leave the city defenseless, especially after the most recent
riots, but it is of equal importance that we send a legion to meet
the man in the field. Greece is watching to see how we will
respond—it must be with speed and fury."
Heads nodded in violent agreement. Rome had not
been built on caution and compromise. Gaius looked at Marius in
sudden thought. The general sat with his hands clenched in front of
him, and his face was tight and cold.
"Marius and I command a legion each. We are
months closer than any other from the north. The decision I put to
the vote is which of the two should take ship to meet the enemy
army."
He flashed a look at Marius, and for the first
time, Gaius could see the bright malice in his eyes. Marius
rose to his feet and the chamber hushed. Those standing sat to
allow the first response to the other consul. Marius put his hands
behind his back and Gaius could see the whiteness of his
knuckles.
"I find no fault with Sulla's proposed course of
action. The situation is clear: Our forces must be split to defend
Rome and our foreign dominions. I must ask him whether he will
volunteer to be the one to banish the invader."
All eyes turned to Sulla.
"I will trust the judgment of the Senate on
this. I am a servant of Rome. My personal wishes do not come into
it."
Marius smiled tightly and the tension could be
felt in the air between them.
"I concur," Marius said clearly, and took his
seat.
Sulla looked relieved and cast his gaze around
the vaulted room.
"Then it is a simple choice. I will say the name
of each legion, and those who believe that is the one to fight
Mithridates will stand up and be counted. The rest will stand when
they hear the second name. No man may abstain in such a vote on the
security of the city. Are we all agreed?"
The three hundred senators murmured their assent
solemnly, and Sulla smiled. Gaius felt fear touch him. Sulla paused
for a long moment, clearly enjoying the tension. At last he spoke
one word into the silence.
"First-Born."
Marius placed his hand on Gaius's shoulder. "You
may not vote today, lad."
Gaius remained in his seat, craning around him
to see how many would stand. Marius looked levelly at Sulla, as if
the matter were of no importance to him. It seemed that all around
them men were getting up, and Gaius knew his uncle had lost. Then
the noises stopped and no more men stood. He looked down at the
handsome consul standing at the center and could see Sulla's face
change from relaxed pleasure to disbelief, then fury. He made the
count and had it checked by two others until they agreed.
"One hundred and twenty-one in favor of the
First-Born dealing with the invader."
He bit his lip, his expression brutal for a
second. His gaze fastened on Marius, who shrugged and looked away.
The standing men sat.
"Second Alaudae," Sulla whispered, his voice
carrying on the well-crafted acoustics of the hall. Again, men
stood, and Gaius could see it was a majority. Whatever plan Sulla
had attempted had failed, and Gaius saw him wave the senators to
their seats without allowing the count to be properly finished and
recorded. Visibly, he gathered himself, and when he spoke he was
again the charming young man Gaius had seen when he entered.
"The Senate has spoken and I am the servant of
the Senate," he said formally. "I trust Marius will use the city
barracks for his own men in my absence?"
"I will," said Marius, his face calm and
still.
Sulla went on: "With the support of our forces
in Asia Minor, I do not see this as a long campaign. I will return
to Rome as soon as I have crushed Mithridates. Then we will decide
the future of this city." He said the last looking straight at
Marius, and the message was clear.
"I will have my men vacate the barracks this
evening. If there is no further business? Good day to you all."
Sulla left the chamber, with a group of his supporters falling in
behind him. The pressure disappeared in the room and suddenly
everyone was speaking, chuckling, or looking thoughtfully at each
other.
Marius stood and immediately there was
quiet.
"Thank you for your trust, gentlemen. I will
guard this city well against all comers." Gaius noted that Sulla
could well be one of those Marius would guard against, when he
returned.
Senators crowded around his uncle, a
few shaking his hand in open congratulation. Marius pulled Gaius to
him with one hand and reached out with the other to take the
shoulder of a scrawny man, who smiled at them both.
"Crassus, this is my nephew, Gaius. You would
not believe it to look at him, but Crassus here is probably the
richest man in Rome."
The man had a long, thin neck and his head
bobbed at the end of it, with warm brown eyes twinkling in a mass
of tiny wrinkles.
"I have been blessed by the gods, it is true. I
also have two beautiful daughters."
Marius chuckled. "One is tolerably attractive,
Crassus, but the other takes after her father."
Internally, Gaius winced at this, but Crassus
didn't seem to mind at all. He laughed ruefully.
"That is true, she is a little bony. I will have
to give her a large dowry to tempt the young men of Rome." He faced
Gaius and put out his hand. "It is a pleasure to meet you, young
man. Will you be a general like your uncle?"
"I will," Gaius said seriously.
Crassus smiled. "Then you will need money. Come
to me when you need a backer?"
Gaius took the offered hand, gripping it briefly
before Crassus moved away into the crowd.
Marius leaned over to him and muttered in his
ear, "Well done. He has been a loyal friend to me and he has
incredible wealth. I will arrange for you to visit his estate; it
is astonishing in its opulence. Now, there is one other I want you
to meet. Come with me."
Gaius followed him through the knots of senators
as they talked over the events of the day and Sulla's humiliation.
Gaius noted that Marius shook hands with every man who met his eye,
saying a few words of congratulation, asking after families and
absent friends. He left each group smiling.
Across the other side of the Senate hall, a
group of three men were talking quietly, stopping as soon as Marius
and Gaius approached.
"This is the man, Gaius," Marius said
cheerfully. "Gnaeus Pompey, who is described by his supporters as
the best field general Rome has at present—when I am ill or
out of the country."
Pompey shook hands with them both, smiling
affably. Unlike the spare Crassus, he was a little overweight, but
he was as tall as Marius and carried it well, creating an
impression of solid bulk. Gaius guessed him to be no more than
thirty, which made his military status very impressive.
"There is no possibility about it, Marius,"
Pompey replied. "Truly I am wondrous in the field of battle. Strong
men weep at the beauty of my maneuvers."
Marius laughed and clapped him on the
shoulder.
Pompey looked Gaius up and down. "A younger
version of you, old fox?" he said to Marius.
"What else could he be, with my blood in his
veins?"
Pompey clasped his hands behind his back. "Your
uncle has taken a terrible risk today, by pushing Sulla out of
Rome. What did you think of it?"
Marius began to reply, but Pompey held up a
hand.
"Let him speak, old fox. Let me see if he has
anything to him."
Gaius answered without hesitation, the words
coming surprisingly easily. "It is a dangerous move to offend
Sulla, but my uncle enjoys gambles of this kind. Sulla is the
servant of the city and will fight well against this foreign
general. When he returns, he will have to make an accommodation
with my uncle. Perhaps we can extend the barracks so that both
legions can protect the city."
Pompey blinked and turned to Marius. "Is he a
fool?"
Marius chuckled. "No. He just doesn't know if I
trust you or not. I suspect he has already guessed my plans."
"What will your uncle do when Sulla returns?"
Pompey whispered, close to Gaius's ear.
Gaius looked around, but there was no one close
enough to overhear, except for the three Marius obviously
trusted.
"He will close the gates. If Sulla tries to
force an entry, the Senate will have to declare him an enemy of
Rome. He will have to either begin a siege or retreat. I suspect he
will put himself at Marius's command, as any general in the field
might do to the consul of Rome."
Pompey agreed, unblinking. "A dangerous path,
Marius, as I said. I cannot support you openly, but I will do my
best for you in private. Congratulations on your triumphal march.
You looked splendid." He gestured to the two with him and they
walked away.
Gaius began to speak again, but Marius shook his
head.
"Let us go outside, the air is thick with
intrigue in here." They moved toward the doors and, outside, Marius
put a finger to his lips to stop Gaius's questions. "Not here.
There are too many listeners."
Gaius glanced around and saw that some of
Sulla's senators were close, staring over with undisguised
hostility. He followed Marius out into the forum, taking a seat on
the stone steps away from where they could be overheard. Nearby,
the First-Born still stood to attention, looking invincible in
their shining armor. It was a peculiar feeling to be in the
presence of thousands and yet to sit relaxed with his uncle on the
very steps of the Senate.
Gaius could not hold it in any longer.
"How did you swing the vote against Sulla?"
Marius began to laugh and wiped his forehead
free of sudden perspiration. "Planning, my lad. I knew of the
landing of Mithridates almost as soon as it happened, days before
Sulla heard. I used the oldest lever in the world to persuade the
waverers in the Senate to vote for me, and even then, it was closer
than I would have liked. It cost me a fortune, but from tomorrow
morning I have control of Rome."
"He will be back, though," Gaius warned.
Marius snorted. "In six months or longer,
perhaps. He could be killed on the battlefield, he could even lose
to Mithridates; I have heard he is a canny general. Even if Sulla
beats him in double time and finds fair sea winds to Greece and
back, I will have months to prepare. He will leave as easily as he
likes, but I tell you now, he won't get back in without a
fight."
Gaius shook his head in disbelief at this
confirmation of his thoughts. "What happens now? Do we go back to
your house?"
Marius smiled a little sadly in response. "No. I
had to sell it for the bribes—Sulla was already bribing them,
you see, and I had to double his offers in most cases. It took
everything I own, except my horse, my sword, and my armor. I may be
the first penniless general Rome has ever had." He laughed
quietly.
"If you had lost the vote, you would have lost
everything!" Gaius whispered, shocked by the stakes.
"But I did not lose! I have Rome and my legion
stands in front of us."
"What would you have done if you had lost,
though?"
Marius blew air through his lips in disdain. "I
would have left to fight Mithridates, of course. Am I not a servant
of the city? Mind you, it would have taken a brave man to accept my
bribe and still vote against me with my legion waiting just
outside, wouldn't it? We must be thankful that the Senate values
gold as much as they do. They think of new horses and slaves, but
they have never been poor as I was poor. I value gold only for what
it brings me, and this is where it has put me down—on these
steps, with the greatest city in the world at my back. Cheer up,
lad, this is a day for celebration, not regrets."
"No, it's not that. I was just thinking that
Marcus and Renius are heading east to join the Fourth Macedonia.
There's a fair chance they will meet this Mithridates coming the
other way."
"I hope not. Those two would have that Greek for
breakfast, and I want Sulla to have something to do when he
gets there."
Gaius laughed and they stood up together. Marius
looked at his legion and Gaius could feel the joy and pride burning
out of him.
"This has been a good day. You have met the men
of power in the city, and I have been loved by the people and
backed by the Senate. By the way, that slave girl of yours, the
pretty one? I'd sell her if I were you. It's one thing to tumble a
girl a few times, but you seem to be sweet on her and that will
lead to trouble."
Gaius looked away, biting his lip. Were there no
secrets?
Marius continued blithely, unaware of his
companion's discomfort. "Have you even tried her yet? No? Maybe
that will get her out of your system. I know a few good houses here
if you want to get a little experience in first. Just ask when
you're ready."
Gaius did not reply, his cheeks hot.
Marius stood and looked with obvious pride at
the Primigenia legion ranked before them.
"Shall we march the men over to the city
barracks, lad? I think they could do with a good meal and a decent
night's sleep after all this marching and standing in the sun."
CHAPTER
18
Marcus looked out onto the
Mediterranean Sea and breathed in the warm air, heavy with salt.
After a week at sea, boredom had set in. He knew every inch of the
small trading vessel and had even helped in the hold, counting
amphorae of thick oil and ebony planking transported from Africa.
For a while, his interest had been kindled by the hundreds of rats
below the decks, and he spent two days crawling to their nests in
the darkness, armed with a dagger and a marble paperweight stolen
from the captain's cabin. After he had thrown dozens of the little
bodies overboard, the rats had learned to recognize his smell or
his careful tread, retreating into crevices deep in the wood of the
ship the moment he set foot on the ladder below.
He sighed and watched the sunset, still awed by
the colors of the sinking sun out at sea. As a passenger, he could
have stayed in his cabin for the whole journey, as Renius seemed
determined to do, but the tiny, cramped space offered nothing in
terms of amusement, and Marcus had quickly come to use it only to
sleep.
The captain had allowed him to stand watch, and
he had even tried his hand at controlling the two great steering
oars at the back, or what he had learned to call the stern, but his
interest soon paled.
"Another couple of weeks of this will kill me,"
he muttered to himself, using his knife to cut his initials into
the wooden rail. A scuffling noise sounded behind him, but he
didn't turn, just smiled and kept watching the sunset. There was
silence and then another noise, the sort a small body might make if
it was shifting for comfort.
Marcus spun and launched his knife underarm, as
Renius had once taught him. It thudded into the mast and quivered.
There was a squeak of terror and a flash of dirty white feet in the
darkness as something scuttled deeper into shadow, trying too hard
to be silent.
Marcus strolled over to the knife and freed it
with a wrench. Sliding it back into the waist sheath, he squinted
into the blackness.
"Come out, Peppis, I know you're in there," he
called. He heard a sniff. "I wouldn't have hit you with the knife,
it was just a joke. Honestly."
Slowly, a skeletal little boy emerged from
behind some sacking. He was filthy almost beyond belief and his
eyes were wide with fear.
"I was just watching you," Peppis said
nervously.
Marcus looked more closely at him, noticing a
small crust of dried blood under his nose and a purple bruise over
one eye.
"Have the men been beating you again?" he said,
trying to make his voice friendly.
"A little, but it was my fault. I tripped on a
rope and pulled a knot undone. I didn't mean to but Firstmate said
he would teach me to be clumsy. I'm already clumsy, though, so I
said I didn't need no teaching and then he knocked me about." He
sniffed again and wiped his nose with the back of his hand, leaving
a silvery trail.
"Why don't you run away at a port?" Marcus
asked.
Peppis puffed his chest out as far as it would
go, revealing his ribs like white sticks under his skin. "Not me.
I'm going to be a sailor when I'm older. I'm learning all the time,
just by watching the men. I can tie ever so many knots now. I could
have retied that rope today if Firstmate woulda let me, but he
didn't know that."
"Do you want me to have a word with the... first
mate? Tell him to stop the beatings?"
Peppis turned even paler and shook his head.
"He'd kill me if you do, maybe this trip or maybe on the way back.
He's always saying if I can't learn to be a sailor, he'll put me
over the side some night when I'm sleeping. That's why I don't
sleep in my bunk, but out here on the decks. I move around a lot so
he won't know where to find me if he thinks it's time."
Marcus sighed. He felt sorry for the little boy,
but there was no simple answer to his problems. Even if the first
mate were quietly put over the side himself, Peppis would be
tortured by the others. They all took part and the first time
Marcus had mentioned it to Renius, the old gladiator had laughed
and said there was one like him on every ship of the sea. Even so,
it galled Marcus to have the boy hurt. He had never forgotten what
it was like to be at the mercy of bullies like Suetonius, and he
knew that if he had built the wolf trap, and not Gaius, he would
have dropped rocks in and crushed the older boy. He sighed again
and stood up, stretching tired muscles.
Where would he have ended up if Gaius's parents
hadn't looked after him and brought him up? He could very easily
have stowed away on a trade ship and have been in just the sort of
horrible position Peppis found himself. He would never have been
trained to fight or defend himself, and lack of food would have
made him weak and sickly.
"Look," he said, "if you won't let me help you
with the sailors, at least let me share my food with you. I don't
eat much anyway and I've been sending some of it back, especially
in rough water. All right? You stay there and I'll bring you
something."
Peppis nodded silently and, a little cheered,
Marcus went belowdecks to his cramped cabin to fetch the cheese and
bread left for him earlier. In truth, he was hungry, but he could
go without and the little boy was practically starved to death.
Leaving Peppis to chew on the food, Marcus
wandered back to the steering oars, knowing that the first mate
took a turn about midnight. Like Peppis, he'd never heard the man's
real name. Everyone called him by his station and he seemed to do
his job well enough, keeping the crew in line with a hard hand. The
little ship Lucidae had a reputation for honest dealing too,
with very little of the cargo ever going missing on voyages. Other
ships had to write off such small losses to keep their crews happy,
but not the owners of the Lucidae.
Marcus brightened as he saw the man had already
taken his place, holding one of the two great rudders steady
against the currents and chatting in a low voice to his partner on
the other.
"A fine evening," he said as he came close.
Firstmate grunted and nodded. He had to be polite to paying
passengers, but bare civility was all he would offer. He was a
powerfully built man and held the rudder with only one arm, while
his companion threw his weight and both shoulders into the task of
holding his steady. The other man said nothing and Marcus
recognized him as one of the crew, tall and long-armed with a
shaven skull. He gazed steadfastly ahead, engrossed in his task and
the feel of the wood in his hands.
"I'd like to buy one of the crew as a slave. Who
should I talk to?" Marcus said, keeping his voice amiable.
Firstmate blinked in surprise, and two gazes
rested on the young Roman.
"We're free men," the other said, his voice
showing his distaste.
Marcus looked disconcerted. "Oh, I didn't mean
one of you, of course. I meant the boy Peppis. He's not on the crew
lists. I checked, so I thought he might be available for sale. I
need a boy to carry my sword and—"
"I've seen you on the decks," the first mate
rumbled from deep in his chest. "You were making angry faces when
we were giving him his lessons. I reckon you're one of those soft
city lads who thinks we're too hard on the ship boys. Either that
or you want him in your bed. Which is it?"
Marcus smiled slowly, revealing his teeth. "Oh
dear. That sounds like an insult, my friend. You'd better let that
rudder go, so I can give you a lesson myself."
The first mate opened his mouth to retort and
Marcus hit it. For a while, the Lucidae wandered off course
over the dark sea.
Renius woke him by shaking him
roughly.
"Wake up! The captain wants to see you."
Marcus groaned. His face and upper body were a
mass of heavy bruises. Renius whistled softly as he stood up and,
wincing, began to dress. Using his tongue, Marcus found a loose
tooth and pulled out the water pot under his bed to spit bloody
phlegm into it.
With the part of his mind that was active, he
was pleased to notice that Renius was wearing his iron breastplate
and had his sword strapped on. The stump of his arm was bound with
clean bandages, and the depression that had kept him in his cabin
for the first weeks seemed to have disappeared. When Marcus had
pulled on his tunic and wrapped a cloak against the cold morning
breeze, Renius held the door open.
"Someone beat the first mate into the ground
last night, and another man with him," Renius said cheerfully.
Marcus put his hand up to his face and felt a
ridge of split skin on his cheek. "Did he say who did it?" he
muttered.
"He says he was jumped from behind, in the dark.
He has a broken shoulder, you know." Renius had definitely lost his
depression, but Marcus decided that the new, chuckling Renius was
not really an improvement.
The captain was a Greek named Epides. He was a
short, energetic man with a beard that looked as if it were pasted
on, without a troublesome hair out of place on his face. He stood
up as Marcus and Renius entered, and rested his hands on his desk,
which was held to the floor against the rocking of the ship with
heavy iron manacles. Each finger had a valuable stone set into gold
on it, and they glittered with every movement. The rest of the room
was simple, as befitted a working trader. There was no luxury and
nowhere to look but at the man himself, who glared at both of
them.
"Let's not try the protestations of innocence,"
he said. "My first mate has a broken shoulder and collarbone and
you did it."
Marcus tried to speak, but the captain
interrupted.
"He won't identify you, Zeus himself knows why.
If he did, I'd have you flogged raw on the decks. As it is, you
will take up his duties for the remainder of this trip, and I will
be sending a letter to your legion commander about the sort of
ill-disciplined lout he is taking on. You are hereby signed on as
crew for this voyage, as is my right as captain of Lucidae.
If I discover you are shirking your duties in any way, I will flog
you. Do you understand?"
Marcus again began to answer, but this time
Renius stopped him, speaking quietly and reasonably.
"Captain. When the lad accepted his position in
the Fourth Macedonia, he became, from that moment, a member of that
legion. As you are in a difficult position, he will volunteer to
replace the first mate until we make land in Greece. However, it
will be I who makes sure he does not shirk his duties. If he is
flogged by your order, I will come up here and rip your heart out.
Do we understand each other?" His voice remained calm, almost
friendly, right to the end.
Epides paled slightly and raised a hand to
smooth his beard in a nervous gesture. "Just make sure he does the
job. Now get out and report to the second mate for work."
Renius looked at him for a long moment and then
nodded slowly, turning to the door and allowing Marcus to walk
through first before following.
Left alone, Epides sank into his chair and
dipped a hand into a bowl of rosewater, dabbing it onto his neck.
Then he composed himself and smiled grimly as he gathered his
writing materials. For a while, he mused over the clever, sharp
retorts he should have made. Threatened by Renius, by all the gods!
When he returned home, the story he would tell would include the
blistering ripostes, but at the actual moment, something naked and
violent in the man's eyes had stopped his mouth.
The second mate was a dour man from
northern Italy called Parus. He said very little as Marcus and
Renius reported to him, just outlined the daily tasks for a first
mate of a trader, ending with the stint on the rudder at around
midnight.
"Won't seem right, calling you first mate, with
him still belowdecks."
"I'll be doing his job for him. You'll call me
by his name while I'm doing it," Marcus replied.
The man stiffened. "What are you, sixteen? The
men won't like it either," he said.
"Seventeen," Marcus lied smoothly. "The men will
get used to it. Maybe we'd better see them now."
"Have you sailed before?" Parus asked.
"First trip, but you tell me what needs doing
and I'll get it done. All right?"
Puffing out his cheeks in obvious disgust, Parus
nodded. "I'll get the men on deck."
"I'll get the men on deck, First Mate,"
Marcus said clearly through his swollen lips. His eyes glinted
dangerously, and Parus wondered how he'd beaten Firstmate in a
fight and why the man wouldn't identify him to the captain when any
fool could see who it had been.
"First Mate," he agreed sullenly, and left
them.
Marcus turned to Renius, who was looking askance
at him.
"What are you thinking?" Marcus asked.
"I'm thinking you'd better watch your back, or
you won't ever see Greece," Renius replied seriously.
All the crew who weren't actively
working gathered on the small deck. Marcus counted fifteen sailors,
with another five on the rudders and sail rigging around.
Parus cleared his throat for their
attention.
"Since Firstmate's arm is broken, the captain
says the job belongs to this one for the rest of the trip. Get back
to work."
The men turned to go and Marcus took a step
forward, furious.
"Stay where you are," he bellowed, surprising
himself with the strength of his voice. He had their attention for
a moment and he didn't intend to waste it.
"Now, you all know I broke Firstmate's arm, so
I'm not going to deny it. We had a difference of opinion and we
fought over it, that's the end of the story. I don't know why he
hasn't told the captain who it was, but I respect him a bit more
for it. I'll do his job as best I'm able, but I'm no sailor and you
know that too. You work with me and I won't mind if you tell me
when I'm wrong. But if you tell me I'm wrong, you'd better
be right. Fair enough?"
There was a mutter from the assembled men.
"If you're no sailor, you ain't going to know
what you're doing. What use is a farmer on a trade ship?" called a
heavily tattooed sailor. He was sneering and Marcus responded
quickly, coloring in anger.
"First thing is for me to walk the ship and
speak to each one of you. You tell me exactly what your job is and
I'll do it. If I can't do it, I'll go back to the captain and tell
him I'm not up to the job. Anyone object?"
There was silence. A few of them looked
interested at the challenge, but most faces were bluntly hostile.
Marcus clenched his jaw and felt the loose tooth grate.
He pulled his dagger from his belt and held it
up. It was a well-crafted weapon, given to him by Marius as a
parting gift. Not lavishly decorated, it was nonetheless an
expensive piece, with a bronze wire handle.
"If any man can do something I can't do, I will
give him this, presented to me by General Marius of the Primigenia.
Dismissed."
This time, there was much more interest in the
faces, and a number of the sailors looked at the blade he still
held as they went back to their tasks.
Marcus turned to Renius and the gladiator shook
his head slowly in disbelief.
"Gods, you're green. That's too good a blade to
throw away," he said.
"I won't lose it. If I have to prove myself to
the crew, that's what I'll do. I'm fit enough. How hard can these
jobs be?"
CHAPTER
19
Marcus clung to the mast crosspiece
with a knuckle-whitening grip. At this, the highest point of the
Lucidae, it seemed as if he were swinging with the mast from
one horizon to the other. The sea below was spattered gray with
choppy white waves, no danger to the sturdy little vessel. His
stomach heaved and every part of him responded with discomfort. All
his bruises had stiffened by noon and now he found it hard to turn
his head to the right without pain sending black and white spots
into his vision.
Above him, barefoot and standing without support
on the spar, was a sailor, the first to try to win the dagger. The
man grinned without malice, but the challenge was
clear—Marcus had to join him and risk falling into the sea
or, worse, onto the deck far below.
"These masts didn't look so tall from below,"
Marcus grunted through clenched teeth.
The sailor walked over to him, perfectly
balanced and adjusting his weight all the time to the roll and
pitch of the ship.
"Tall enough to kill you. Firstmate could walk
the spar, though, so I think you'll just have to make your
choice."
He waited patiently, occasionally checking knots
and ropes for tautness out of habit. Marcus gritted his teeth and
heaved himself over the crosspiece, resting his unruly stomach on
it. He could see the other men below and noted that a few of the
faces were turned upward to see him succeed, or perhaps to be sure
of getting out of the way if he fell—he didn't know.
The tip of the mast, festooned with ropes, lay
within his reach, and he grabbed it and used it to pull himself up
enough to get one foot on the cross-spar. The other leg hung below
and for a few moments he used its swing to steady himself. Another
grunt of effort against his tortured muscles and he was crouching
on the spar, gripping the mast tip with both hands, his knees
almost higher than his chin. He watched the horizon move and
suddenly felt as if the ship were still and the world spun around
him. He felt dizzy and closed his eyes, which helped only a
little.
"Come on now," he muttered to himself. "Good
balance you've got."
His hands shook as he released the mast, using
the muscles in his legs to counteract the great swing. Then he
uncrouched like an old man, ready to grab at the mast again as soon
as he felt his balance fail. He brought himself up from a low bow
to a round-shouldered standing position, his eyes fixed on the
mast. He flexed his knees a little and began to adjust to the
movement through the air.
"There isn't much wind, of course," the sailor
said equably. "I've been up here in a storm trying to tie down a
ripped sail. This is nothing."
Marcus suppressed a retort. He didn't want to
anger a man who could stand so comfortably with his arms folded,
sixty feet above the deck. He looked at him, his eyes leaving the
mast for the first time since he reached that height.
The sailor nodded. "You have to walk the length.
From your end to mine. Then you can go down. If your nerve goes,
just hand me the dagger before you climb down. It won't be too easy
to get if you hit the planks."
This was more like the sort of thing Marcus
understood. The man was trying to make him nervous and achieved the
opposite. He knew he could trust his reflexes. If he fell, there
would be time to grab something. He would just ignore the height
and the movement and take the risk. He stood up fully and shuffled
back to the edge, leaning forward as the mast seemed determined to
take him down as far as the sea for a moment before coming upright
and over again. Then he found himself looking down a mountain
slope, blocked only by the relaxed sailor.
"Right," he said, holding his arms out for
balance. "Right."
He began to shuffle, never taking the soles of
his bare feet from the wood. He knew the sailor could walk along it
with careless ease, but he wasn't going to try to match years of
experience in a few breathtaking steps. He inched along and his
confidence grew mightily, until he was almost enjoying the swing,
leaning into and away from it and chuckling at the movement.
The sailor looked unperturbed as Marcus reached
him.
"Is that it?" Marcus asked.
The man shook his head. "To the end, I said.
There's a good three feet to go yet."
Marcus looked at him in annoyance. "You're in my
way, man!" Surely he wasn't expected to get round him on a piece of
wood no wider than his thigh?
"I'll see you down there then," the man said,
and stepped off the crosspiece.
Marcus gaped as the figure shot past him. In the
same moment as he saw the hand gripping the spar and the face
grinning up at him, he lost balance and swayed in panic, suddenly
knowing he would be smashed onto the deck. More faces below swam
into his vision. They all seemed to be looking up, pale blurs and
pointing fingers. Marcus waved his arms frantically and arched back
and forth in whiplike spasms as he fought to save himself. Then he
steadied and concentrated on the spar, ignoring the drop below and
trying to find the rhythm of muscle he had so enjoyed only moments
before.
"You nearly went there," the sailor said, still
casually hanging from the spar by one arm, seemingly oblivious to
the drop. It had been a clever trick and had nearly worked.
Chuckling and shaking his head, the man started to reach out to a
rope when Marcus trod on the fingers that were wrapped around the
crosspiece.
"Hey!" the man shouted, but Marcus ignored him,
putting all his weight on his heel as he shifted with the movement
of the Lucidae. Suddenly he was enjoying it again and took a
deep, cleansing breath. The fingers squirmed beneath him and there
was an edge of panic in the sailors voice as he found he couldn't
quite reach the nearest rope, even bringing his legs up. With his
hand free, he would have swung and released without any difficulty,
but, held fast, he could only dangle and shout curses.
Without warning, Marcus moved his foot to take
the last step to the end of the spar and was cheered by the
scrambling sounds below him as the sailor, caught by surprise, slid
and gripped furiously to save himself. Marcus looked down and saw
the angry stare as the sailor began to climb back up to the
crosspiece. There was murder in his expression and Marcus moved
quickly to sit down in the center of the spar, gripping the mast
top firmly between his thighs. Still feeling unsafe, he wrapped his
left leg around the mast below to hold himself steady. He took out
Marius's dagger and began to whittle his initials into the wood at
the very top.
The sailor almost sprang onto the crosspiece and
stood at the end, glaring. Marcus ignored him, but he could
practically hear the train of thought as the man realized he had no
weapons and that his superior balance was canceled by the firm grip
Marcus had on the mast. To get close enough to shove Marcus off, he
would have to risk getting the dagger in his throat. The seconds
ticked by.
"All right, then. You keep the knife. Time to
get down."
"You first," Marcus said, without looking
up.
He listened to the dwindling sounds of the
sailors descent and finished carving his initials into the hard
wood. In all, he was disappointed. If he carried on making enemies
at this rate, there really would be a knife in the dark one
night.
Diplomacy was, he decided, a lot harder than it
looked.
* * *
Renius was not around to congratulate
him on his safe return from the high rigging, so Marcus continued
his round of the ship on his own. After the initial excitement at
the thought of winning the dagger, the stares he received were
either uninterested or openly malevolent. Marcus clasped his hands
behind his back to stop the involuntary shaking that had hit them
as his feet touched the safe wood of the deck. He nodded to every
glance as if it were a word of greeting, and to his surprise, one
or two nodded back, perhaps only from habit, but it reassured him a
little.
One sailor, his long hair tied back with a strip
of blue cloth, was clearly trying to meet Marcus's eye. He seemed
friendly enough, so Marcus stopped.
"What do you do here?" he asked, a little
warily.
"Come to the stern... First Mate," said the man,
and strode off, gesturing him to follow. Marcus walked with him to
stand by the two steering oars.
"My name's Crixus. I do a lot of things when
they needs doing, but my special job is to free the rudders when
they get fouled. It could be weed, but it's usually fishing
nets."
"How do you free them?"
Marcus could guess at the answer, but he asked
anyway, trying to sound light and cheerfully interested. He had
never been a strong swimmer, but this man's chest expanded to
ridiculous proportions when he took a breath.
"You should find it easy after your little walk
on the mast. I just dive off the side, swim down to the rudders,
and use my knife to cut off whatever is fouling them."
"That sounds like a dangerous job," Marcus
replied, pleased at the easy grin he received in return.
"It is, if there are sharks down there. They
follow Lucidae, see, in case we throw any scraps off."
Marcus rubbed his chin, trying to remember what
a shark was. "Big, are they, these sharks?"
Crixus nodded with energy. "Gods, yes. Some of
them could swallow a man whole! One washed up near my village once
and it had half a man inside. Bit him in two, it must have
done."
Marcus looked at him and thought he had another
one trying to scare him off. "What do you do when you meet these
sharks down there, then?" he said.
Crixus laughed. "You punch them on the nose. It
puts them off having you for a meal."
"Right," Marcus said dubiously, looking into the
dark, cold waters. He wondered if he should put this one off until
the following day. The climb down from the mast top had loosened
most of his muscles, but every movement still made him wince and
the weather wasn't warm enough to make swimming attractive.
He looked at Crixus and could see the man
expected him to refuse. Inwardly, he sighed. Nothing was working
out the way he'd intended.
"There isn't anything fouling the rudders today,
is there?" he said, and Crixus's smile widened as he thought Marcus
was trying to find excuses not to try it.
"Not in clear sea, no. Just scrape a barnacle
off the bottom of one—it's a shell, a little animal that
attaches to ships. Bring one back and I'll buy you a drink. Come
back empty-handed and that pretty little blade belongs to me, all
right?"
Marcus agreed reluctantly and began to remove
his tunic and sandals, leaving him standing in just the undercloth
that protected his modesty. Under Crixus's amused eye, he began to
stretch his legs, using the wooden rail as a brace. He took his
time, knowing from Crixus's enthusiasm that the man thought he'd
never manage it.
Finally, he was loose and ready. Taking his
knife, he stepped up onto the flat wooden section around the stern,
readying himself for the dive. It was a good twenty feet, even in
such a low-slung vessel as the Lucidae, which fairly
wallowed in the water. He tensed, trying to remember the few dives
he had managed on a trip to a lake with Gaius's parents when he was
eight or nine. Hands together.
"You'd better put this on." Crixus interrupted
his thoughts. The man was holding the tar-sealed end of a slim
rope. "It goes around your waist to stop you being left behind by
Lucidae. She doesn't look fast, but you couldn't catch her
by swimming."
"Thanks," Marcus said suspiciously, wondering if
Crixus had meant to let him dive without it, changing his mind at
the last moment. He tied the rope securely and looked at the cold
water below, scythed into plough lines by the rudders. A thought
struck him.
"Where's the other end?"
Crixus had the grace to look embarrassed and
confirmed Marcus's earlier suspicions. Mutely, he pointed to where
the rope was made fast, and Marcus nodded, returning to his
inspection of the waves.
Then he dived, turning slightly in the air to
hit the gray water with a hard smacking sound.
Marcus held his breath as he plunged under the
surface, jerking as the rope stopped his descent. He could still
feel movement as the ship started to tow him. He fought to reach
the surface and gasped in relief as he broke through the waves near
the rudders.
He could see their dark flanks cutting the waves
and tried to find a handhold on the slippery surface above the
waterline. It was impossible and he found he had to swim strongly
just to stay near them. As soon as he slowed his hands and legs, he
drifted out until the rope was taut again.
The cold was cramping his muscles and Marcus
realized he had only a short time before he was useless in the
water. Gripping his dagger tightly in his right fist, he gulped
breath and dived below, using his hands to guide him down the
slippery green underside of the nearest rudder.
At the base, his lungs were bursting. He was
able to hold himself for a few seconds while his fingers scrabbled
around in the slime, but he could feel nothing that felt like the
sort of shell Crixus had told him to expect. Cursing, he kicked his
legs back to the surface. As he couldn't hold the rudders to rest,
he felt his strength slipping away.
He pulled in another breath and disappeared down
into the darkness once more.
Crixus felt the presence of the old gladiator
before he saw him reach his side and look down at the quivering
rope in the water between the rudders. When he met the man's eyes,
Crixus could see gray anger and took a step back in reaction.
"What are you doing?" Renius asked quietly.
"He's checking the rudders and cutting off
barnacles," Crixus replied.
Renius's lip twisted with distaste. Even with
one arm, he radiated violence, standing utterly still. Crixus
noticed the gladius strapped to his belt and wiped his hands on his
ragged cloth leggings. Together, they watched Marcus surface and go
under three more times. His arms flapped aimlessly in the water
below and both men could hear his exhausted coughing.
"Bring him up now. Before he drowns himself,"
Renius said.
Crixus nodded quickly and began to haul in the
rope, hand over hand. Renius didn't offer to help him, but standing
with his hand resting on the gladius hilt seemed enough
encouragement.
Crixus was sweating heavily by the time Marcus
reached the deck level. He hung almost limp in the rope, his limbs
too tired to control.
As if he were loading a bale of cloth, Crixus
pulled him over the edge and rolled him faceup on the deck, eyes
closed and panting. Crixus smiled as he saw the dagger was still in
one hand and reached for it. There was a quick sound behind him,
and he froze as Renius brought his sword into the line of
sight.
"What are you doing now?"
"Taking the dagger! He... he had to bring a
shell back..." the man stammered.
"Check his other hand," Renius said.
Marcus could barely hear him through the water
sounds in his ears and the pain in his chest and limbs, but he
opened his left fist and in it, surrounded by scratches and cuts,
was a round shell with its live occupant glistening wetly
inside.
Crixus's jaw dropped and Renius waved him away
with his sword.
"Get that second mate to gather the men...
Parus, his name was. This has gone far enough."
Crixus looked at the sword and the man's
expression and didn't argue.
Renius crouched at Marcus's side and sheathed
his sword. Reaching over, he slapped Marcus's white face a few
times, bringing a little color back. Marcus coughed wretchedly.
"I thought you'd stop when you nearly fell off
the spar. What you think you are proving, I don't know. Stay here
and rest while I deal with the men."
Marcus tried to say something, but Renius shook
his head.
"Don't argue. I've been dealing with men like
these all my life."
Without another word, he stood and walked to
where the crew had gathered, taking a position where they could all
see him. He spoke through teeth held tightly together, but his
voice carried to all of them.
"His mistake was expecting to be treated with
honor by scum like you. Now, I don't have the inclination to win
your trust or your respect. I'll give you a simple choice from this
moment. You do your jobs well. You work hard and stand your watches
and keep everything tight until we make port. I have killed more
men than I can count, and I will gut any man who does not obey me
in this. Now be men! If anyone wants to make pretty words to argue
with me, let him take up a sword and gather his friends and come
against me all at once."
His voice rose to a bellow. "Don't walk away
from me here and plot in corners like old ladies in the sun! Speak
now, fight now, for if you don't and I find whispers later, I will
crack your heads open for you, I swear it!"
He glared around at them and the men looked at
their feet. No one spoke, but Renius said nothing. The silence went
on and on, growing painful. No one moved; they stood like statues
on the decks. At last, he took a breath and snarled at them.
"Not a single one of you with courage enough to
take on an old man with one arm? Then get back to your work and
work well, for I'll be watching each one of you and I won't give
warnings."
He walked through them and they parted, standing
mutely aside. Crixus looked at Parus and he shrugged slightly,
stepping back with the rest. The Lucidae sailed on serenely
through the cold sea.
Renius sagged against the cabin door as it
closed behind him. He could feel his armpits were damp with sweat
and cursed under his breath. He was not used to bluffing men into
obedience, but his balance was terrible and he knew he was still
weak. He wanted to sleep, but could not until he had finished his
exercises. Sighing, he drew his gladius and went through the
strokes he had been taught half a century before, faster and faster
until the blade hit the roof of the small space and wedged. Renius
swore in anger and the men near his door heard him and looked at
each other with wide eyes.
That night, Marcus was standing at the
prow on his own, looking out at the moonlit waves and feeling
miserable. His efforts of the day had earned him nothing, and
having to have Renius clear up his failure felt like a metal weight
in his chest.
He heard low voices behind him and swung to see
black figures coming around the raised cabins. He recognized Crixus
and Parus, and the man from the high rigging, whose name he did not
know. He steadied himself for the blows, knowing he couldn't take
them all, but Crixus held out a leather cup of some dark liquid. He
was smiling slightly, not sure Marcus wouldn't dash it out of his
hand.
"Here. I promised you a drink if you picked up a
shell, and I keep my promises."
Marcus took the cup and the three men relaxed
visibly, coming over to lean against the side and look out over the
black water as it passed below them. All three had similar cups,
and Crixus filled them from a soft leather bag that gurgled when he
shifted its weight under his arm.
Marcus could smell the bitter liquid as he
raised it to his mouth. He had never tasted anything stronger than
wine before and took a deep gulp before he realized that whatever
it was stung the cuts on his lips and gums. In reflex, just to
clear his mouth, he swallowed and immediately choked as fire burst
in his stomach. He fought for breath and Parus reached out an arm
and thumped his back, his face expressionless.
"Does you good, that stuff," Crixus said,
chuckling.
"Does you good, First Mate," Marcus
replied through his spluttering.
Crixus smiled. "I like you, lad. I really do,"
he said, refilling his own cup. "Mind you, that friend of yours,
Renius, now he is a truly evil bastard."
They all nodded and peacefully went back to
watching the sea and the sky.
CHAPTER
20
Marcus viewed the busy port with mixed
feelings as it grew before him. The Lucidae maneuvered
nimbly through the ancient stones that marked the edge of the wild
sea and the calm lake of the harbor itself. A host of ships
accompanied them, and they had had to stand off from the harbor for
most of the morning until a harassed pilot took a boat out to guide
them in.
At first, Marcus had thought nothing of the
month at sea, considering it with as much interest as he might
consider a walk from one town to another. Only the destination had
been important in his mind. Now, though, he knew the name of each
one of the small crew and had felt their acceptance after that
night spent drinking on the prow. Even the return of Firstmate to
light duties hadn't spoiled things with the men. Firstmate, it
seemed, bore no grudges and even seemed proud of him, as if his
acceptance by the crew were in some way his doing.
Peppis had never stopped sleeping in corners on
the decks at night, but he had filled out a little with the food
Marcus saved for him, and the beatings had stopped by some unseen
signal amongst the men. The little boy had become a much more
cheerful character and might one day be a sailor, as he hoped.
To some extent, Marcus envied the boy; it was
freedom of a kind. These men would see all the ports of the known
world while he marched over foreign fields under the baking sun,
carrying Rome always with him.
He took a deep breath and closed his eyes,
trying to sift apart all the strange scents on the sea breeze.
Jasmine and olive oil were strong, but there was also the smell of
a mass of people again—sweat and excrement. He sighed and
jumped as a hand clapped onto his shoulder.
"It will feel good to get land under our heels
again," Renius said, staring with him into the harbor town. "We'll
hire horses to take us east to the legion and find your century to
get you sworn in."
Marcus nodded in silence and Renius caught his
mood. "Only memories stay the same, lad. Everything else changes.
When you see Rome again, you'll hardly know it and all the people
you loved will be different. There's no stopping it; it's the most
natural thing in the world."
Seeing Marcus wasn't cheered, he went on.
"This civilization was ancient when Rome was
young. It's an alien place to a Roman, and you'll have to watch
their ideas of soft living don't spoil you. There are savage tribes
that raid across the border in Illyria, though, so you'll see your
share of action. That got your interest, did it?" He laughed, a
short bark. "I suppose you thought it would be all drill and
standing in the sun? Marius is a good judge, lad. He's sent you to
one of the hardest posts in the empire. Even the Greeks don't bend
the knee without a good deal of thought, and Macedonia is where
Alexander was born. This is just the place to put a bit of strength
into your steel."
Together they watched as the Lucidae
eased against the dockside and ropes were thrown and tied down. In
a short while, the little trader was tethered securely and Marcus
almost felt sorry for her sudden loss of freedom. Epides came out
on deck dressed in a chiton, a traditional Greek tunic worn at knee
length. He glittered with jewelry and his hair shone with oil in
the sun. He saw the two passengers standing at the side waiting to
disembark and walked over to them.
"I have grave news, gentlemen. A Greek army has
risen in the north, and we could not put in at Dyrrhachium as
planned. This is Oricum, about a hundred miles to the south."
Renius tensed. "What? You were paid to put us
down in the north, so that we could join the lad's legion.
I—"
"It was not a possibility, as I said," the
captain replied, smiling. "The flag codes were quite clear as we
neared Dyrrhachium. That is why we have been following the coast
south. I could not risk the Lucidae with a rebel army drunk
on broken Roman garrisons. The safety of the ship was at
stake."
Renius grabbed Epides by his chiton, lifting him
up to his toes.
"Damn you, man. There's a bloody great mountain
between here and Macedonia, as you are well aware. That is another
month of hard travel for us and great expense, which is your
responsibility!"
Epides struggled, his face purpling in rage.
"Take your hands off me! How dare you accost me
on my own ship? I'll call the harbor guards and have you hanged,
you arrogant—"
Renius shifted his grip to a ruby on a heavy
gold chain around Epides's neck. With a savage jerk, he broke the
links and tucked it away into his belt pouch. Epides began
stuttering with incoherent anger and Renius shoved him away,
turning to Marcus as the man fell sprawling onto the deck.
"Right. Let's get off. At least we can afford to
buy supplies for the trip when I sell the chain."
When he saw Marcus's gaze flick behind him,
Renius spun and drew his sword in one motion. Epides was lunging
with a jeweled dagger, his face contorted.
Renius swayed inside the blow clumsily and
ripped his gladius up into the man's smooth-shaven chest. He
withdrew the blade and ran it over the chiton in quick wipes as
Epides fell to the deck, writhing.
"Drunk on broken garrisons, was it?" he
muttered, struggling to sheathe the sword. "Damn this
scabbard—won't stay still..."
Marcus stood stunned at the quick death, and the
nearby members of the crew gaped at the suddenly violent scene.
Renius nodded to them as the gladius slid home.
"Get the ramps down. We have a long journey
ahead of us."
A section in the side was opened and plank
gangways were put down to allow the cargo to be unloaded. Marcus
shook his head in silent disbelief. He checked his belongings for
the last time and patted his sides, feeling again the loss of his
dagger, which he'd given to Firstmate the previous evening. He had
known it was the right thing to do somehow, and the smiles of the
crew as the man had shown it around had told him he had made the
right choice. There were no smiles now and he wished he'd kept
it.
He pulled his pack onto his shoulders and helped
Renius with his.
"Let's see what Greece has to offer," he said.
Renius grinned at his sudden change in mood, walking past the
twisted body of Epides without looking down. They left the
Lucidae without a backward glance.
The ground moved alarmingly under his feet and
Marcus swayed uncertainly for a few moments before the habit of
years reestablished itself.
"Wait!" a voice called behind them. They turned
to see Peppis coming down the ramp in a flurry of arms and legs. He
pulled up breathlessly, and they waited for him to calm enough to
speak.
"Take me with you, sir," he said, looking
beseechingly at Marcus, who blinked in surprise.
"I thought you wanted to grow up to be a
sailor," he said.
"Not anymore. I want to be a fighter, a
legionary like you and Renius," Peppis said, the words rushing out
of him. "I want to defend the empire from savage hordes."
Marcus looked at Renius. "Have you been talking
to the boy?"
"I told him a few stories, yes. Many boys dream
of being in the legions. It is a good life for a man," Renius
replied without embarrassment.
Peppis saw Marcus waver and pressed on. "You'll
need a servant, someone to carry your sword and look after your
horse. Please don't send me back."
Marcus shrugged his pack from his shoulders and
handed it to the boy, who beamed at him.
"Right. Carry this. Do you know how to look
after a horse?"
Peppis shook his head, still beaming.
"Then you will learn."
"I will. I will be the best servant you ever
had," the boy replied, his arms wrapped around the pack.
"At least the captain can't object," Marcus
said.
"No. I didn't like the man," Renius replied
gruffly. "Ask someone where the nearest stables are. We'll move on
before dark."
The stables, the travelers' resting
house, the people themselves, were a peculiar mixture to Marcus. He
could see Rome in a thousand small touches, not least the
serious-faced legionaries who marched the streets in pairs, looking
out for trouble. Yet at every step he would see something new and
alien. A pretty girl walking with her guards would speak to them in
a string of soft gibberish that they seemed to understand. A temple
near the stables was built of pure white marble as at home, but the
statues were odd, close to the ones he knew, but with different
faces cut into the stone. Beards were much in evidence, perfumed
with sweet oils and curled, but the strangest things he saw were on
the walls of a temple devoted to healing the sick.
Half- and full-size limbs, perfectly formed in
plaster or stone, hung on the outer walls from hooks. A child's
leg, bent at the knee, shared the space with the model of a woman's
hand, and nearby there was a miniature soldier made from reddish
marble, beautiful in its detail.
"What are those?" Marcus had asked Renius as
they passed.
"Just a custom," he said with a shrug. "If the
goddess heals you, you have a cast of the limb made and presented
to her. It helps to bring in more people for the temple, I should
think. They don't heal anyone without a little gold first, so the
models are like a sign for a shop. This isn't Rome, lad. They are
not like us when you get down to it."
"You don't like them?"
"I respect what they achieved, but they live too
much in the glories of the past. They are a proud people, Marcus,
but not proud enough to take our foot off their necks. They like to
think of us as barbarians, and the highbred ones will pretend you
don't exist, but what good is thousands of years of art if you
can't defend yourself? The first thing men must learn is to be
strong. Without strength, anything else you have or make can be
taken from you. Remember that, lad."
At least the stables were like stables anywhere.
The smell brought a sudden pang of homesickness to Marcus, and he
wondered how Tubruk fared on the estate and how Gaius was handling
the dangers of the capital.
Renius patted the flank of a sturdy-looking
stallion. He ran his hands down its legs and checked the mouth
carefully. Peppis watched him and mimicked his action, patting legs
and checking tendons with a serious frown on his face.
"How much for this one?" Renius asked the owner,
who stood with two bodyguards. The man had none of the smell of
horses about him. He looked clean and somehow polished, with hair
and beard that shone darkly.
"He is strong, yes?" he replied, his Latin
accented but clear. "His father won races in Pontus, but he is a
little too heavy for speed, more suited for battle."
Renius shrugged. "I just want him to take me
north, over the mountains. How much are you asking?"
"His name is Apollo. I bought him when a rich
man lost his wealth and was forced to sell. I paid a small fortune,
but I know horses, I know what he is worth."
"I like him," Peppis said.
Both men ignored the boy.
"I will pay five aurei for him and sell him
after the journey is over," Renius said firmly.
"He is worth twenty and I have paid for his feed
all winter," the trader replied.
"I can buy a small house for twenty!"
The trader shrugged and looked apologetic. "Not
anymore. Prices have gone up. It is the war in the north. All the
best ones are being taken for Mithridates, an upstart who calls
himself a king. Apollo is one of the last of the good stock."
"Ten is my final offer. We are buying two of
yours today, so I want a price for both."
"Let us not argue. Let me show you another of
lesser worth that will carry you north. I have two others I could
sell together; brothers they are, and fast enough."
The man walked on down the row of horses, and
Marcus eyed Apollo, who watched him with interest as he chewed a
mouthful of hay. He patted the soft nose as the continuing argument
dwindled with distance. Apollo ignored him and reached back for
another mouthful, pulled from a string sack nailed to the stable
wall.
After a while, Renius returned, looking a little
pale.
"We've got two, for tomorrow: Apollo and another
one he called Lancer. I'm sure he makes the names up on the spot.
Peppis will ride with you; his small weight won't be any trouble.
Gods, the prices these people ask for! If your uncle hadn't
provided so generously, we'd be walking tomorrow."
"He's not my uncle," Marcus reminded him. "How
much did they cost us?"
"Don't ask and don't expect to eat much on the
journey. Come on, we'll pick the horses up tomorrow at dawn. Let us
hope that the prices for rooms haven't risen as high, or we'll be
sneaking back in here when it gets dark."
Continuing to grumble, Renius strode out of the
stables, with Marcus and Peppis following him, trying not to
smile.
CHAPTER
21
Marcus sat easily on his horse,
occasionally reaching forward to scratch Lancer's ears as they rode
down the mountain path. Peppis was dozing behind him, lulled by the
gentle rhythm of the horse's walk. Marcus thought of waking him
with an elbow to see the view, but decided to leave him alone.
It seemed as if they could see all of Greece
from the heights, spread out below in a rolling green and yellow
landscape with groves of olive trees and isolated farms speckling
the hills and valleys. The clean air smelled different, carrying
the scent of unknown flowers.
Marcus remembered gentle Vepax, the tutor, and
wondered if he had walked these hills. Or perhaps Alexander himself
had taken armies through to the plains on his way to battle distant
Persia. He imagined the grim Cretan archers and the Macedonian
phalanx as they followed the boy king, and his back straightened in
the saddle.
Renius rode ahead, his eyes swinging from the
narrow trail to the surrounding scrub foliage and back in a
monotonous pattern of alertness. He had withdrawn into himself more
and more over the previous week of travel, and whole days had
passed without more than a few words spoken between them. Only
Peppis broke the long silences with exclamations of wonder at birds
or lizards on the rocks. Marcus hadn't pushed for conversation,
sensing that the gladiator was happier with silence. He smiled
wryly at the man's back as they rode, mulling over how he felt
about him.
He had hated him once, at that moment in the
courtyard of the estate, with Gaius lying wounded in the dust. Yet
a grudging respect had existed even before Marcus had raised his
sword against him. Renius had a solidity to him that made other men
seem insubstantial in comparison. He could be brutal and had a
great capacity for callous violence, oblivious to pain or fear.
Others followed his lead without a thought, as if they somehow knew
this man would see them through. Marcus had seen it on the estate
and on the ship, and it was difficult not to feel a touch of awe
himself. Even age couldn't hold him. Marcus remembered the moment
as Cabera closed the old man's wounds, and his surprise at the way
the healing took so quickly. They had both watched in astonishment
as life swelled in the broken figure and the skin flushed with
suddenly rushing blood.
"He walks a greater path than most," Cabera had
said later, when Renius had been laid out on a cool bed in the
house to finish his healing. "His feet are strong in the
earth."
Marcus had wondered at Cabera's tone as he tried
to make the young man understand the importance of what he had
seen.
"Never have I seen death take its grip off a man
as it did with Renius. The gods were whispering in my mind when I
touched him."
The path twisted and turned and they slowed to
let the horses pick their way over the rocky trail, unwilling to
risk a sprain or a fall on the steep slope.
What does the future hold for you, I
wonder? Marcus thought to himself in the comfortable silence.
Father.
The word came to him and he realized the idea
had been there for some time. He had never known a man to call
father, and the word unlocked a door in his mind as he explored his
feelings further without pain. Renius was not his blood, but a part
of him wished he were traveling these lands with his father, the
two of them protecting each other from dangers. It was a grand
daydream and he pictured men's faces as they heard he was the son
of Renius. They would look at him with a little awe of their own
perhaps, and he would simply smile.
Renius broke wind noisily, shifting his weight
to the left without looking back. Marcus laughed suddenly at this
interruption to his thoughts and continued chuckling to himself at
intervals for some time after. The gladiator rode on, his thoughts
on the descent and his future once he had delivered Marcus to his
legion.
As they approached a narrow part of the trail,
boulders rose on both sides as if the thin path had been cut
through them. Renius laid his hand on his sword and loosened the
blade.
"We're being watched. Be ready," he called back
in a low voice.
Almost as he finished speaking, a dark figure
rose from the undergrowth nearby.
"Stop."
The word was spoken with casual confidence and
in good, clear Latin, but Renius ignored it. Marcus partly drew his
sword and kept the horse walking with pressure from his knees. From
the sudden stiffness in the arms around his waist, he knew Peppis
was awake and alert, but for once staying silent.
The man looked like a Greek, with the
distinctive curled beard, but, unlike the merchants of the town
they'd seen, he had the air of a warrior about him. He smiled and
called out again.
"Stop or you will be killed. Last chance."
"Renius?" Marcus muttered nervously.
The old man scowled, but kept going, digging his
heels into Apollo's flanks to urge him into a trot.
An arrow cut the air, taking the horse high in
the shoulder with a dull thumping sound. Apollo screamed and fell,
pitching Renius to the ground in a crash of metal and swearing.
Peppis cried out in fear and Marcus reined in, scanning the
undergrowth for the archer. Was there only one, or were there more
out there? These men were obviously brigands; they would be lucky
to escape alive if they submitted meekly.
Renius came to his feet awkwardly, yanking out
his sword. His eyes glinted. He nodded to Marcus, who dismounted
smoothly, using his horse to block the sight of the hidden archer.
He drew his gladius, reassured by its familiar weight. Peppis came
off the horse in a scramble and tried to hide behind a leg,
muttering nervously to himself.
The stranger spoke again, his voice friendly.
"Do not do anything foolish. My companions are very good with their
bows. Practice is the only way to fill the hours here in the
mountains, that and relieving the occasional traveler of his
possessions."
"There is only one archer, I think," Renius
growled, staying light on the balls of his feet and keeping an eye
on the scrub. He knew the man would not have stayed in the same
place and could be creeping in to get a clean kill as they
spoke.
"You wish to gamble your life on this, yes?"
The two men looked at each other and Peppis
gripped Lancer's leg, making the horse snort with displeasure.
The outlaw was clean and simply dressed. He
looked much like one of the huntsmen Marcus had known on the
estate, burned a deep brown by constant exposure to the sun and
wind. He did not look like a man given to empty threats, and Marcus
groaned inwardly. At best, they would arrive at the legion with no
kit or equipment, a beginning he might never live down. At worst,
death was a few moments away.
"You look like an intelligent man," the outlaw
continued. "If I drop my hand, you will be dead on the instant. Put
your sword on the ground and you will live a few moments more,
perhaps until you grow old, yes?"
"I've been old. It isn't worth it," Renius
replied, already beginning to move.
He threw his gladius at the man, end over end in
the air. Before it struck, he was leaping away into the shadow of
the rock-side. An arrow cut the air where he had been, but no
others accompanied it. Only one archer.
Marcus had used the moment to duck under his
horse's belly past Peppis, and came up running, throwing himself at
the slope, trusting to his speed to keep him steady. He cleared the
main ridge without slowing down and accelerated, guessing where the
archer must be hiding. As he approached, a man broke from the cover
of a grove of fig trees off to his right, and he almost skidded as
he turned to follow.
He had him in twenty paces along the loose rock
surface, bringing him down from behind in a leap. The impact jarred
the gladius from his hand, and he found himself locked in a
struggle with a man who was bigger and stronger than he was. The
archer twisted violently in Marcus's grip and they found each
others throats with grasping hands. Marcus began to panic. The
man's face was red, but his neck appeared to be made of wood and he
couldn't seem to get a crushing grip on the thick flesh.
He would have called for Renius, but the man
couldn't have climbed the ridge with only one arm, and anyway he
could not draw breath with the archer's great paws on his throat.
Marcus dug his thumbs into the windpipe and heaved all his downward
weight onto them. The man grunted in pain, but the hairy hands
tightened still further and Marcus saw flashes of white light
across his vision as his body began to scream for air. His own
hands seemed to weaken and he despaired for a second. His right
hand came off the throat, almost without his conscious thought, and
began to hammer the grunting face. The white lights were streaked
with flashes of black, and his vision began to narrow into a dark
tunnel, but he kept striking over and over. The face below him was
a messy red pulp, but the hands on his throat were merciless.
Then they fell away, without drama, lying limp
on the ground. Marcus sobbed in air and rolled off to one side. His
heart was beating at an impossible speed and he felt light-headed,
almost as if he were floating. He pulled himself onto his knees and
his fingers scrabbled without strength for the hilt of his sword in
ever-widening circles.
Finally, they closed on the leather grip and he
breathed a silent prayer of thanks. He could hear Renius and Peppis
calling for him below, but had no breath to answer. Staggering, he
took a few steps back to the man and froze as he saw the eyes were
open and looking at him, the heavy chest heaving as raggedly as his
own.
Rasping words grated past the man's smashed
lips, but they were Greek and Marcus couldn't understand them.
Still panting, he pressed the sharp tip of the gladius against the
man's chest and shoved down hard. Then his grip slipped off the
hilt and he collapsed in a sprawl, turning weakly to empty his
stomach onto the ground.
By the time Marcus climbed stiffly back to the
path, Peppis was recovering Renius's sword, pulling it from the
chest of the sprawling body. The boy grimaced as the blade slid
clear and he tottered back to the others, pale and unsteady. Renius
was holding a pad of cloth to the wound in Apollo's shoulder. The
big horse was shivering visibly with shock, but was on his feet and
aware. Peppis had to hold Lancer's reins tightly as the horse
stepped and skittered, wide nostrils and eyes showing his fear at
the smell of blood.
"Are you all right, lad?" Renius asked as Marcus
reached them.
Marcus nodded, unable to speak. His throat felt
crushed and air seemed to whistle with each breath. He pointed at
it and Renius beckoned him closer so he could take a look. He made
the movement slow, so as not to alarm the horses.
"Nothing permanent," he said a moment later.
"Big hands, judging by the prints."
Marcus could only gasp weakly. He hoped Renius
couldn't smell the sour vomit odor that seemed to surround him in a
cloud, but guessed he could and chose not to mention it.
"They made a mistake attacking us," Peppis
observed, his little face serious.
"Yes, they did, boy, though we were lucky as
well," Renius replied. He looked at Marcus. "Don't try to speak,
just help the boy strap the equipment to your horse. Apollo will be
lame for a week or two. We'll ride in turns unless those bandits
have mounts nearby."
Lancer whinnied and an answering snort came from
farther down the mountain. Renius grinned.
"Luck is with us again, I see," he said
cheerfully. "Did you search the bowman?"
Marcus shook his head and Renius shrugged.
"Not worth climbing up again. They wouldn't have
had much and a bow's no use to a man with one arm. Let's get going.
We can get off this rock by sunset if we keep a fast pace."
Marcus began removing Apollo's packs, taking the
reins. Renius patted his shoulder as he turned away. The action was
worth far more than words.
After a month of long days and cold
nights, it was good to see the legion camp from far away across the
plain. Even at that distance, thin sounds carried. It seemed like a
town on the horizon, with eight thousand men, women, and children
engaged in the simple day-to-day tasks necessary to keep such a
large body of men in the field. Marcus tried to imagine the
armories and smithies, built and taken apart with each camp. There
would be food kitchens, building-supply dumps, stonemasons,
carpenters, leather-workers, slaves, prostitutes, and thousands of
other civilians who lived and were paid to support the might of
Rome in battle. Unlike the tent rows of Marius's legion, this was a
permanent camp, with a solid wall and fortifications surrounding
the main grounds. In a sense, it was a town, but a town constantly
prepared for war.
Renius pulled up and Marcus drew alongside on
Lancer, tugging on the reins to halt the third horse, which they
had named Bandit after his last owner. Peppis sat awkwardly on
Bandit's riding blanket, his mouth open at the sight of the
encamped legion. Renius smiled at the boy's awe.
"That's it, Marcus. That is your new home. Do
you still have the papers Marius gave you?"
Marcus patted his chest in response, feeling the
folded pack of parchment under the tunic.
"Are you coming in?" he asked. He hoped so.
Renius had been a part of his life for so long that the thought of
seeing the man riding away while he rode up to the gates alone was
too painful to express.
"I'll see you and Peppis to the praefectus
castrorum—the quartermaster. He will tell you which
century you will join. Learn the history quickly; each has its own
record and pride."
"Any other advice?"
"Obey every order without complaint. At the
moment, you fight like an individual, like one of the savage
tribes. They will teach you to trust your companions and to fight
as a unit, but the learning does not come easily to some."
He turned to Peppis. "Life will be hard for you.
Do as you are told and when you are grown you will be allowed to
join the legion. Do nothing that shames you. Do you
understand?"
Peppis nodded, his throat dry from fear of this
alien life.
"I will learn. So will he," Marcus said.
Renius nodded and clicked his tongue at his
horse to move on. "That you will."
Marcus felt an obscure satisfaction at the
clean, orderly layout of streets, complete with rows of long, low
buildings for the men. He and Renius had been greeted warmly at the
gate as soon as he had shown his papers, and they proceeded on foot
to the prefects quarters, where Marcus would pledge years of his
life in the field service of Rome. He took confidence from Renius
as the man strode confidently through the narrow roads, nodding in
approval at the polished perfection of the soldiers who marched
past in squads often. Peppis trotted behind them, carrying a heavy
pack of equipment on his back.
The papers had to be shown twice more as they
approached the small white building from which the camp prefect ran
the business of a Roman town in a foreign land. At last they were
allowed entry, and a slim man dressed in a white toga and sandals
came into the outer rooms to meet them as they passed through the
door.
"Renius! I heard it was you in the camp. The men
are already talking about you losing your arm. Gods, it is good to
see you!" He beamed at them, the image of Roman efficiency,
suntanned and hard, with a strong grip as he greeted each of them
in turn.
Renius smiled back with genuine warmth. "Marius
didn't tell me you were here, Carac. I am glad to see you
well."
"You haven't aged, I swear it! Gods, you don't
look a day over forty. How do you do it?"
"Clean living," Renius grunted, still
uncomfortable with the change Cabera had wrought.
The prefect raised an eyebrow in disbelief but
let the subject drop.
"And the arm?"
"Training accident. The lad here, Marcus, cut me
and I had it taken off."
The prefect whistled and shook Marcus's hand
again. "I never thought I'd meet a man who could get to Renius. May
I see the papers you brought with you?"
Marcus felt nervous all of a sudden. He passed
them over and the prefect motioned them to long benches as he
read.
Finally, he passed them back. "You come very
well recommended, Marcus. Who is the boy?"
"He was on the merchant ship we took from the
coast. He wants to be my servant and join the legion when he is
older."
The prefect nodded. "We have many such in the
camp, usually the bastard children of the men and the whores. If he
shapes up, there may be a place, but the competition will be
fierce. I am more interested in you, young man."
He turned to Renius. "Tell me about him. I will
trust your judgment."
Renius spoke firmly, as if reporting. "Marcus is
unusually fast, even more so when his blood is fired. As he
matures, I expect him to become a name. He is impetuous and brash
and likes to fight, which is partly his nature and partly his
youth. He will serve the Fourth Macedonia well. I gave him his
basic training, but he has gone beyond that and will go
further."
"He reminds me of your son. Have you noticed the
resemblance?" the prefect asked quietly.
"It had not... occurred to me," Renius replied
uncomfortably.
"I doubt that. Still, we always have need of men
of quality, and this is the place for him to find maturity. I will
place him with the fifth century, the Bronze Fist."
Renius took in a sharp breath. "You honor
me."
The prefect shook his head. "You saved my life
once. I am sorry I could not save your son's. This is a small part
of my debt to you."
Once again they shook hands. Marcus looked on in
some confusion.
"What now for you, old friend? Will you return
to Rome to spend your gold?"
"I had hoped there would be a place for me
here," Renius said quietly.
The prefect smiled. "I had begun to think you
would not ask. The Fist is short of a weapons master to train them.
Old Belius died of a fever six months ago, and there is no one else
as good. Will you take the post?"
Renius grinned suddenly, the old sharp grin. "I
will, Carac. Thank you."
The prefect slapped him on the shoulder in
obvious pleasure.
"Welcome to the Fourth Macedonia, gentlemen." He
signaled to a legionary standing to attention nearby. "Take this
young man to his new quarters in the Bronze Fist century. Send the
boy to the stables until I can assign duties to him with the other
camp children. Renius and I have a lot of catching up to
do—and a lot of wine to drink while we do it."
CHAPTER
22
Alexandria sat in silence, polishing
grime from an ancient sword in Marius's little armory. She was
pleased he had been able to get back his town house. She'd heard
the owner had rushed to make a gift of it to the new ruler of Rome.
Much better than the thought of living with the rough soldiers in
the city barracks—well, it would have been difficult at best.
Gods knew, she wasn't afraid of men; some of her earliest memories
were of them with her mother in the next room. They came in reeking
of beer and cheap wine and went out with a swagger. They never
seemed to last very long. One of them had tried to touch her once,
and she remembered seeing her mother properly angry for the first
time in her young life. She'd cracked his skull with a poker and
together they'd dragged him into an alleyway and left him. For
days, her mother had expected the door to burst in and men to take
her away to be hanged, but no one had come.
She sighed as she worked at the layers of
crusted oil on the bronze blade, relic of some old campaign. At
first, Rome had seemed a city with limitless possibilities, but
Marius had taken control three months before and here she was still
working all day for nothing and every day a little older. Others
were changing the world, but her life remained the same. Only at
night, when she sat with ancient Bant in his little metalwork room,
did she feel she was making any progress in her life. He had shown
her the uses of his tools and guided her hands through the first
clumsy steps. He didn't speak much, but seemed to enjoy her
company, and she liked his silences and kind blue eyes. She had
seen him first as he was shaping a brooch in the workshop, and knew
in that moment that it was something she could do. It was a skill
worth learning, even for a slave.
She rubbed more vigorously. To be worth no more
to a man than a horse, or even a good sword like the one she held!
It wasn't fair.
"Alexandria!" Carla's voice, calling. For a
moment, she was tempted to remain silent, but the woman had a
tongue like a whip and her disapproval was feared by most of the
female slaves.
"Here," she called, putting the sword down and
wiping her hands on a rag. There would be another task for her,
another few hours of labor before sleep.
"There you are, love. I need someone to run down
to the market for me; would you do that?"
"Yes!" Alexandria stood up quickly. She had come
to look forward to these rare errands over the previous few months.
They were the only occasions when she was allowed to leave Marius's
house, and on the last few she had been trusted on her own. After
all, where could she run?
"I have a list of things for you to buy for the
house. You always seem to get the best price," Carla said as she
passed a slate over.
Alexandria nodded. She enjoyed bargaining with
the traders. It made her feel like a free woman. The first time,
she hadn't been alone, but even with a witness, Carla had been
shocked at how much money the girl had saved the house. The traders
had been charging over market value for years, knowing Marius had
deep pockets. The older woman realized the girl had a talent and
sent her out as much as possible, seeing also that she needed the
little touches of freedom. Some never got used to the condition of
slavery and were slowly broken down into depression and
occasionally despair. Carla enjoyed watching Alexandria's face
light up at the thought of a trip out.
She guessed the girl was keeping a coin or two
from what she was given, but what did that matter? She was saving
them silvers, so if she kept the odd bronze, Carla didn't begrudge
them to her.
"Go on with you. I want you back in two hours
and not a minute later, understand?"
"I do, Carla. Two hours. Thank you."
The older woman grinned at her, remembering when
she had been young and the world was such an exciting place. She
knew all about Alexandria's visits to Bant the metalworker. The old
man had taken quite a liking to her, it seemed. There was very
little in the house that Carla didn't find out about sooner or
later, and she knew that in Alexandria's room was a small bronze
disc that she had decorated with a lion's head using Bants tools.
It was a pretty piece.
As she watched the trim figure vanish around a
corner, Carla wondered if it was a present for Gaius. Bant had said
the girl had a talent for the work. Aye, perhaps because she was
making it for love.
* * *
The market was a riot of smells and
swirling crowds, but Alexandria didn't dawdle over the items on the
list for once. She completed her business quickly, getting good
prices, but leaving the discussion before they were pared right to
the bone. The shopkeepers seemed to enjoy the arguments with the
pretty girl, throwing their hands into the air and calling for
witnesses to see what she was demanding. She smiled at them then,
and for a few the smile dropped the price further than they could
believe after she had left. Certainly more than their wives could
believe.
With packages stowed safely in two cloth bags,
Alexandria hurried on to her real destination, a tiny jewelry shop
at the end of the stalls. She had been inside many times to look at
the man's designs. Most of the pieces were bronze or pewter. Silver
was rarely worked in jewelry, and gold was too expensive unless
particular pieces were commissioned. The metalsmith himself was a
short man, dressed in a rough tunic and a heavy leather apron. He
watched her as she came into the tiny shop, and stopped work on a
small gold ring to keep an eye on the girl. Tabbic was not a
trusting man, and Alexandria could feel his steady gaze on her as
she looked over his wares.
Finally she summoned enough courage to speak to
him.
"Do you buy items?" she said.
"Sometimes," came the reply. "What do you
have?"
She produced the bronze disc from a pocket in
her tunic, and he took it from her hand, holding it up to the
daylight to see the design. He held it for a long time and she
didn't dare speak for fear of angering him. Still he said nothing,
just turned it over and over in his hands, examining every last
mark on the metal.
"Where did you get this?" he asked at last.
"I made it. Do you know Bant?"
The man nodded slowly.
"He has been showing me how."
"This is crude, but I can sell it. The execution
is clumsy, but the design is very good. The lion's face is very
well scribed; it's just that you aren't very skilled with the
hammer and awl." He turned it over again. "Tell me the truth now,
you understand? Where did you get the bronze to make this?"
Alexandria looked at him nervously. He returned
her stare without blinking, but his eyes seemed kind. Quickly she
told him about her bargaining and how she had saved a few tiny
coins from the house money, enough to purchase the bare metal
circle from a stall of trinkets.
Tabbic shook his head. "I can't take it then. It
isn't yours to sell. The coins belonged to Marius, so the bronze is
his as well. You should give it to him."
Alexandria felt tears threaten to start. She had
spent so long on the little piece, and now it had all come to
nothing. She watched, almost hypnotized, as he turned it over in
his grasp. Then he pressed it back into her hands.
Miserable, she put the disc back in her pocket.
"I'm sorry," she said.
He turned back to her. "My name is Tabbic. You
don't know me, but I have a reputation for honesty and sometimes
for pride." He held up another metal circle, gray-silver in
color.
"This is pewter. It's softer than bronze and
you'll find it easier to work. It polishes up nicely and doesn't
discolor as badly, just grows dull. Take it, and return it to me
when you have made something of it. I'll attach a pin and sell it
on as a cloak fastener for a legionary. If it's as good as the
bronze one, I could get a silver coin for it. I'll take back the
price of the pewter and the pin and you will be left with six,
maybe seven quadrantes. A business transaction, understand?"
"Where is your profit in this?" Alexandria
asked, her eyes wide at the change in fortune.
"None for this first one. I am making a small
investment in a talent I think you have. Give Bant my regards when
you see him next."
Alexandria pocketed the pewter circle and once
again had to fight against tears. She wasn't used to kindness.
"Thank you. I will give the bronze to
Marius."
"Make sure you do, Alexandria."
"How... how do you know my name?"
Tabbic picked up the ring he had been working on
as she came in. "Bant talks of little else when I see him."
Alexandria had to run to be back
before the two hours were up, but her feet were light and she felt
like singing. She would make the pewter disc into a beautiful
thing, and Tabbic would sell it for more than a silver coin and
clamor for more until her work brought in gold pieces, and one day
she would gather her profits together and buy herself free. Free.
It was a giddy dream.
As she was let into Marius's house, the scent of
the gardens filled her lungs and she stood for a moment, just
breathing in the evening air. Carla appeared and took her bags and
the coins, nodding at the savings as always. If the woman noticed
anything different about Alexandria, she didn't say, but she smiled
as she took the supplies down to the cool basement stores, where
they wouldn't spoil too quickly.
Alone with her thoughts, Alexandria didn't see
Gaius at first and wasn't expecting him. He spent most of his days
matching his uncle's punishing schedule, returning to the house at
odd hours only to eat and sleep. The guards at the gate let him in
without comment, well used to his comings and goings. He started as
he saw Alexandria in the gardens and stood for a moment, simply
enjoying the sight of her. Evening was coming on with late-summer
slowness, where the air is soft and the light has a touch of gray
for hours before it fades.
She turned as he approached, and smiled at
him.
"You look happy," he said, smiling in
return.
"Oh, I am," she replied.
He had not kissed her since the moment in the
stables back on the estate, but he sensed the time was right at
last. Marcus was gone and the town house seemed deserted.
He bent his neck and his heart thumped painfully
with something almost like fear.
He felt her warm breath before their lips
touched, and then he could taste her and he gathered her up in a
natural embrace, as they seemed to fit together without effort or
design.
"I can't tell you how often I have thought of
this," he murmured.
She looked into his eyes and knew there was a
gift she could give him and found she wanted to.
"Come along to my room," she whispered, taking
his hand.
As if in a dream, he followed her through the
gardens to her quarters.
Carla watched them go.
"And about bloody time," she muttered.
At first, Gaius was worried that he
would be clumsy, or worse, quick, but Alexandria guided his
movements and her hands felt cool on his skin. She took a little
bottle of scented oil from a shelf, and he watched as she spilled a
few sluggish drops onto her palms. It had a rich scent that filled
his lungs as she sat astride him, rubbing it gently into his chest
and lower, making him gasp. He took some of it from his own skin
and reached upward to her breasts, remembering the first time he
had seen their soft swell in the courtyard of the estate so long
ago. He pressed his mouth gently against one, then the other,
tasting her skin and moving his lips over the oily nipples. She
opened her mouth slightly, her eyes closing at his touch. Then she
bent to kiss him and her unbound hair covered them both.
As the evening darkened, they joined with
urgency and then again with playfulness and a kind of delight.
There was little light in her room without the candles, but her
eyes shone and her limbs were darkened gold as she moved under
him.
He woke before dawn to find her gaze on his
face.
"This was my first time," he said quietly.
Something in him told him not to ask the question, but he had to
know. "Was it the first for you?"
She smiled, but it was a sad smile. "I wish it
had been," she said. "I really do."
"Did you... with Marcus?"
Her eyes widened slightly. Was he truly
so innocent that he didn't see the insult?
"Oh, I would have, of course," she replied
tartly, "but he didn't ask."
"I'm sorry," he said, blushing, "I didn't
mean..."
"Did he say we did?" Alexandria demanded.
Gaius kept his face straight as he replied,
"Yes, I'm afraid he boasted about it."
"I'll put a dagger in his eye the next time I
see him. Gods!" Alexandria raged, gathering her clothes to
dress.
Gaius nodded seriously, trying not to smile at
the thought of Marcus returning innocently.
They dressed hurriedly, as neither wanted the
gossips to see him coming out of her room before the sun was up.
She left the slave quarters with him and they sat together in the
gardens, brushed by a warm night wind that moved in silence.
"When can I see you again?" he asked
quietly.
She looked away and he thought she wouldn't
answer. Fear rose in him.
"Gaius... I loved every moment of last night:
the touch and feel and taste of you. But you will marry a daughter
of Rome. Did you know I wasn't Roman? My mother was from Carthage,
taken as a child and enslaved, then made into a prostitute. I was
born late. I should never have been born so late to her. She was
never strong after me."
"I love you," Gaius said, knowing it was true
for at least that moment and hoping that was enough. He wanted to
give her something that showed she was more than just a night of
pleasure for him.
She shook her head lightly at his words.
"If you love me, let me stay here in Marius's
home. I can fashion jewelry and one day I will make enough to buy
myself free. I can be happy here as I could never be if I let
myself love you. I could, but you would be a soldier and leave for
distant parts of the world, and I would see your wife and your
children and have to nod to them in the street. Don't make me your
whore, Gaius. I have seen that life and I don't want it. Don't make
me sorry for last night. I don't want to be sorry for something so
good."
"I could free you," he whispered, in pain.
Nothing seemed to make sense.
Her eyes flashed in anger, quickly controlled.
"No, you couldn't. Oh, you could take my pride and sign me free by
Roman law, but I would have earned it in your bed. I am free where
it matters, Gaius. I realize that now. To be a free citizen in law,
I must work honestly to buy myself back. Then I am my own. I met a
man today who said he had honesty and pride. I have both, Gaius,
and I don't want to lose either. I will not forget you. Come and
see me in twenty years and I will give you a pendant of gold,
fashioned with love."
"I will," he said. He leaned in and kissed her
cheek, then rose and left the scented gardens.
He let himself out onto the streets of the city
and walked until he was lost and too tired to feel anything except
numbness.
CHAPTER
23
As the moon rose, Marius frowned at
the centurion.
"My orders were clear. Why have you not obeyed
them?"
The man stammered a little as he replied,
"General, I assumed there had been a mistake." His face paled as he
spoke. He knew the consequences. Soldiers did not send messengers
to query their orders, they obeyed them, but what he had been asked
was madness.
"You were told to consider tactics against a
Roman legion. Specifically, to find ways to nullify their greater
mobility outside the gates. Which part did you not understand?"
Marius's voice was grim and the man paled further as he saw his
pension and rank disappearing.
"I... No one expects Sulla to attack Rome. No
one has ever attacked the city—"
Marius interrupted him. "You are dismissed to
the ranks. Fetch me Octavius, your second-in-command. He will take
your place."
Something crumpled out of the man. More than
forty years old, he would never see promotion again.
"Sir, if they do come, I would like to be in the
first rows to meet them."
"To redeem yourself?" Marius asked.
The man nodded sickly.
"Granted. Yours will be the first face they see.
And they will come, and not as lambs, but wolves."
Marius watched the broken man walk stiffly away
and shook his head. So many found it difficult to believe that
Sulla would turn against their beloved city. For Marius it was a
certainty. The news he received daily was that Sulla had finally
broken the back of the rebel armies under Mithridates, burning a
good part of Greece to the ground in the process. Barely a year had
passed, and he would be returning as a conquering hero. The people
would grant him anything. With such a strong position, there was no
chance of him leaving the legion in the field or in a neighboring
city while he and his cronies came quietly back to take their seats
in the Senate and go on as usual. This was the gamble Marius had
taken. Though there was nothing else he could find to admire about
the man, Sulla was a fine general and Marius had known all along
that he could win and return.
"The city is mine now," he muttered thickly,
looking about him at the soldiers building ramparts onto the heavy
gates for arrow fire. He wondered where his nephew had got to and
noted absently how little he'd seen of him in the last few weeks.
Tiredly, he rubbed the bridge of his nose, knowing he was pushing
himself too hard.
He had snatched sleep for a year as he built his
supply lines and armed his men and planned the siege to come. Rome
had been re-created as a city fortress, and there was not a weak
point in any of the walls. She would stand, he knew, and Sulla
would break himself on the gates.
His centurions were handpicked, and the loss of
one that morning was a source of irritation. Each man had been
promoted for his flexibility, his ability to react to new
situations, ready for this time, when the greatest city in the
world would face her own children in battle—and destroy
them.
Gaius was drunk. He stood on the edge
of a balcony with a full goblet of wine, trying to steady his
vision. A fountain splashed in the garden below and blearily he
decided to go and put his head into the water. The night was warm
enough.
The noise from the party was a crashing mix of
music, laughter, and drunken shouting as he moved back inside. It
was past midnight and no one was left sober. The walls were lined
with flickering oil lamps, casting an intimate light over the
revelers. The wine slaves filled every cup as soon as it was
drained and had been doing so for hours.
A woman brushed against Gaius and draped an arm
over his shoulder, giggling, making him spill some red wine onto
the cream marble floor. Her breasts were uncovered and she pulled
his free hand onto them as she pressed her lips to his.
He broke for air and she took his wine, emptying
the cup in ones. Throwing it over her shoulder, she reached down
into the folds of his toga, fondling him with erotic skill. He
kissed her again and staggered back under her drunken weight until
his back pressed up against a column near the balcony. He could
feel its coolness against his back.
The crowd were oblivious. Many were only partly
dressed and the sunken pool in the middle of the floor churned with
slippery couples. The host had brought in a number of slave girls,
but the debauchery had spread with the drunkenness and by this late
hour the last hundred guests were ready to accept almost
anything.
Gaius groaned as the stranger opened her mouth
on him, and he signaled a passing slave for another cup of wine. He
spilled a few drops down his bare chest and watched as the liquid
dribbled down to her working mouth, absently rubbing the wine into
her soft lips with his fingers.
The music and laughter swelled around him. The
air was hot and humid with steam from the pool and the light of the
lamps. He finished the wine and threw the cup out into the darkness
over the balcony, never hearing it strike the gardens below. His
fifth party in two weeks and he thought he had been too tired to go
out again, but Diracius was known for throwing wild ones. The other
four had been exhausting and he realized this could be the end of
him. His mind seemed slightly detached, an observer to the writhing
clumps around him. In truth, Diracius had been right to say the
parties would help him forget, but even after so many months, each
moment with Alexandria was still there to be called into his mind.
What he had lost was the sense of wonder and of joy.
He closed his eyes and hoped his legs would hold
him upright to the end.
Kneeling, Mithridates spat blood over
his beard onto the ground, keeping his head bowed. A bull of a man,
he had killed many soldiers in the battle of the morning, and even
now, with his arms tied and his weapons taken, the Roman
legionaries walked warily around him. He chuckled at them, but it
was a bitter sound. All around lay hundreds of men who had been his
friends and followers, and the smell of blood and open bowels hung
on the air. His wife and daughters had been torn from his tent and
butchered by cold-eyed soldiers. His generals had been impaled and
their bodies sagged loosely, held upright on spikes as long as a
man. It was a bleak day to see it all end.
His mind wandered back over the months, tasting
again the joys of the rebellion, the pride as strong Greeks came to
his banner from all the cities, united again in the face of a
common enemy. It had all seemed possible for a while, but now there
were only ashes in the mouth. He remembered the first fort to fall
and the disbelief and shame in the Roman prefect's eyes as he was
made to watch it burn.
"Look on the flames," Mithridates had whispered
to him. "This will be Rome." The Roman had tried to reply, but
Mithridates had silenced him with a dagger across his throat, to
the cheers of his men.
Now he was the only one left of the band of
friends that had dared to throw off the yoke of Roman rule.
"I have been free," he muttered through the
blood, but the words failed to cheer him as they once could.
Trumpets sounded and horses galloped across a
cleared path to where Mithridates waited, resting back on his
haunches. He raised his shaggy head, his long hair falling over his
eyes. The legionaries nearby stood to attention in silence, and he
knew who it had to be. One eye was stuck with blood, but through
the other he could see a golden figure climb down from a stallion
and pass the reins to another. The spotless white toga seemed
incongruous in this field of death. How was it possible for
anything in the world to be untouched by the misery of such a gray
afternoon?
Slaves spread rushes over the mud to make a path
to the kneeling king. Mithridates straightened. They would not see
him broken and begging, not with his daughters lying so close in
peaceful stillness.
Cornelius Sulla strode over to the man and stood
watching. As if by arrangement with the gods, the sun chose that
moment to come from behind the clouds, and his dark blond hair
glowed as he drew a gleaming silver gladius from a simple
scabbard.
"You have given me a great deal of trouble,
Highness," Sulla said quietly.
At his words, Mithridates squinted. "I did my
best to," he replied grimly, holding the man's gaze with his one
good eye.
"But now it is over. Your army is broken. The
rebellion has ended."
Mithridates shrugged. What good was it to state
the obvious?
Sulla continued: "I had no part in the killing
of your wife and daughters. The soldiers involved have all been
executed at my command. I do not make war on women and children,
and I am sorry they were taken from you."
Mithridates shook his head as if to clear it of
the words and the sudden flashes of memory. He had heard his
beloved Livia screaming his name, but there had been legionaries
all around him armed with clubs to take him alive. He had lost his
dagger in a man's throat and his sword when it jammed in another's
ribs. Even then, with her screams in his ears, he had broken the
neck of a man who rushed in on him, but as he stooped to pick up a
fallen sword, the others had beaten him senseless and he had woken
to find himself bound and battered.
He gazed up at Sulla, looking for mockery.
Instead, he found only sternness and believed him. He looked away.
Did this man expect Mithridates the King to laugh and say all was
forgiven? The soldiers had been men of Rome and this golden figure
was their master. Was a huntsman not responsible for his dogs?
"Here is my sword," Sulla said, offering the
blade. "Swear by your gods that you will not rise against Rome in
my lifetime—and I will let you live."
Mithridates looked at the silver gladius, trying
to keep the surprise from his face. He had grown used to the fact
that he would die, but to suddenly have the offer of life again was
like tearing scabs away from hidden wounds. Time to bury his
wife.
"Why?" he grunted through the drying blood.
"Because I believe you to be a man of your word.
There has been enough death today."
Mithridates nodded silently in reply and Sulla
reached round him with the unstained blade to cut the bonds. The
king felt the soldiers nearby tense as they saw the enemy free once
more, but he ignored them, reaching out and taking the blade in his
scarred right palm. The metal was cold against his skin.
"I swear it."
"You have sons; what about them?"
Mithridates looked at the Roman general,
wondering how much he knew. His sons were in the east, raising
support for their father. They would return with men and supplies
and a new reason for vengeance.
"They are not here. I cannot answer for my
sons."
Sulla held the blade still in the man's grip.
"No, but you can warn them. If they return and raise Greece against
Rome while I live, I will visit upon her people a scale of grief
they have never known."
Mithridates nodded and let his hand fall from
the blade. Sulla resheathed it and turned away, striding back to
his horse without a backward glance.
Every Roman in sight moved off with him, leaving
Mithridates alone on his knees, surrounded by the dead. Stiffly, he
pulled himself to his feet, wincing at last at the score of pains
that plagued him. He watched the Romans break camp and move to the
west, back to the sea, and his eyes were cold and puzzled.
Sulla rode silently for the first few
leagues. His friends exchanged glances, but for a while no one
dared to break the grim silence. Finally, Padacus, a pretty young
man from northern Italy, put out his hand to touch Sulla's
shoulder, and the general reined in, looking at him
questioningly.
"Why did you leave him alive? Will he not come
against us in the spring?"
Sulla shrugged. "He might, but if he does, at
least he is a man I know I can beat. His successor might not make
mistakes so easily. I could have spent another six months rooting
out every one of his followers left alive in tiny mountain camps,
but what would we have gained except their hatred? No, the real
enemy, the real battle—" He paused and looked over to the
western horizon, almost as if he could see all the way to the gates
of Rome. "The real battle has yet to be fought, and we have spent
too much time here already. Ride on. We will assemble the legion at
the coast, ready for the crossing home."
CHAPTER
24
Gaius leaned on the stone window ledge
and watched the sun come up over the city. He heard Cornelia stir
on the long bed behind him and smiled to himself as he glanced
back. She was still asleep, her long gold hair spilling over her
face and shoulders as she shifted restlessly. In the heat of the
night, they had needed little to cover them, and her long legs were
revealed almost to the hip by the light cloth that she had gathered
in one small hand and pulled closer to her face.
For a moment, his thoughts turned to Alexandria,
but it was without pain. It had been hard for the first months,
even with friends like Diracius to distract him. He could look back
now and wince at his naïveté and clumsiness. Yet there
was sadness too. He could never be that innocent boy again.
He had seen Metella privately and signed a
document that passed Alexandria's ownership over to the house of
Marius, knowing he could trust his aunt to be kind to her. He had
also left a sum of gold pieces, taken from his estate funds, to be
handed to her on the day she purchased her freedom. She would find
out when she was free. It was a small gift, considering what she
had given him.
Gaius grinned as he felt arousal stir once more,
knowing he would have to be moving before the household came awake.
Cornelia's father, Cinna, was another of the political heavyweights
Marius was flattering and working to control. Not a man to cross,
and discovery in his beloved daughter's bedroom would mean death
even for Marius's nephew.
He glanced at her again and sighed as he pulled
his clothes to him. She had been worth it, though, worth the risk
many times over. Three years older than he, she had yet been a
virgin, which surprised him. She was his alone and that gave him
quiet satisfaction and more than a little of the old joy.
They had met at a formal gathering of Senate
families, celebrating the birth of twin sons to one of the
nobilitas. In the middle of the day, there was nothing like the
free license of one of Diracius's parties, and at first Gaius had
been bored with the endless congratulations and speeches. Then, in
a quiet moment, she had come over to him and changed everything.
She had been wearing a robe of dark gold, almost a brown, with
earrings and a torque of the same rich metal at her throat. He had
desired her from the first moments, and liked her as quickly. She
was intelligent and confident and she wanted him. It was a heady
feeling. He had sneaked in over the roofs to her bedroom window,
looking on her as she slept, her hair tousled and wild.
He remembered her rising from the bed and
sitting on it with her legs drawn up under her and her back
straight. It had been a few seconds before he noticed she was
smiling. He sighed as he pulled on his clothes and sandals.
With Sulla gone from the city for a whole year
as the Greek rebellion grew in ferocity, it was easy for Gaius to
forget that there had to be a reckoning at some point. Marius,
though, had worked from the first day for the moment that Sulla's
standards became visible on the horizon. The city was still buzzing
with excitement and dread, as it had been for months. Most had
stayed, but a steady trickle of merchants and families leaving the
city showed that not every inhabitant shared Marius's confidence
about the outcome. Every street had shops that were boarded closed,
and the Senate criticized many of the decisions made, pushing
Marius to rage when he came back to his home in the early hours of
the morning. It was a tension Gaius could barely share, with the
pleasures of the city to distract him.
He looked over at Cornelia again as he tightened
his toga, and saw her eyes were open. He crossed to her and kissed
her on the lips, feeling the rush of longing as he did. He dropped
one hand to her breast and felt her start against him as he broke
for air.
"Will you come to me again, Gaius?"
"I will," he replied, smiling, and found to his
surprise that he actually meant it.
"A good general is prepared for every
eventuality," Marius said as he handed the documents to Gaius.
"These are money orders. They are as good as gold in your hand,
drawn on the city treasury. I do not expect to have them repaid;
they are a gift to you."
Gaius looked at the sums and fought to smile.
The amounts were large, but would barely cover the debts he had run
up with the moneylenders. Marius hadn't been able to keep a close
eye on his nephew as the preparations for Sulla's return continued,
and Gaius had run lines of credit in those first few months after
Alexandria, buying women, wine, and sculpture—all to increase
his standing in a city that had respect only for gold and power.
With borrowed wealth, Gaius had come onto a jaded social scene as a
young lion. Even those who distrusted his uncle knew Gaius was a
man to be watched, and there was never a problem with the ever
larger sums he required, as the rich struggled to be next to offer
finance to Marius's nephew.
Marius must have caught a hint of Gaius's
disappointment and interpreted it as worry for the future.
"I expect to win, but only a fool wouldn't plan
for disaster where Sulla was involved. If it doesn't go as I have
planned, take the drafts and get out of the city. I have included a
reference that should get you a berth on a legion vessel to take
you to some far post of the empire. I... have also written
documents naming you as a son of my house. You will be able to join
any regiment and make your name for a couple of years."
"What if you crush Sulla, as you expect?"
"Then we will continue with your advance in
Rome. I will secure a post for you that carries life membership in
the Senate. They are jealously guarded, come the elections, but it
should not be impossible. It will cost us a fortune, but then you
are in, truly one of the chosen. Who knows where the future will
take you after that?"
Gaius grinned, caught up in the man's
enthusiasm. He would use the drafts to pay off the worst of his
debts. Of course, the horse sales were next week and the rumor was
that Arabian princes were bringing new breeds of warhorses, huge
stallions that could be guided with the gentlest touch. They would
cost a fortune, a fortune very like the one he held in his hand. He
tucked the papers inside his toga as he left. The moneylenders
would wait a little longer, he was sure.
In the cool night outside Marius's town house,
Gaius weighed up his options for the hours before dawn. As usual,
the dark city was far from quiet and he didn't feel ready for
sleep. Traders and cart drivers swore at each other, smiths
hammered, somebody laughed in a nearby house, and he could hear
crockery being smashed. The city was a place of life in a way the
estate could never match. Gaius loved it.
He could go and listen to the orators in the
forum by torchlight, perhaps joining in one of the endless debates
with other young nobles until the dawn made them all go home. Or he
could seek out Diracius's home and satisfy other appetites. Wiser
not to venture alone through the dark streets, he thought,
remembering Marius's warnings about the various raptores who
lurked in the dim alleys, ready for theft or murder. The city was
not safe at night and it was easy to become lost in the maze of
unnamed, twisting streets. One wrong turning could lead a wanderer
into an alley filled with piles of human filth and great pools of
urine, though the smell was usually enough of a warning.
A month before, he might have gathered
companions for a wild night, but the face of one girl had been
appearing more and more in his thoughts. Far from dwindling, his
longing for her seemed to be fired by contact rather than quenched.
Cornelia would be thinking of him in her father's estate rooms. He
would go to her and scale the outer wall, slipping past her
father's house guards one more time.
He grinned to himself, remembering the sudden
fear as he had slipped during the last climb, hanging above the
hard stones of the street below. It was getting so he knew every
inch of that wall, but one mistake would earn him a pair of broken
legs or worse.
"Worth the risks for you, my girl," he whispered
to himself, watching the night air frost his breath as he walked
through the unlit city streets to his destination.
CHAPTER
25
The Cinna estate began the bustle of
the working day as early as any other in Rome, heating water,
firing the ovens, sweeping, cleaning, and readying the clothes of
the family before they awoke. Before the sun had risen fully, a
slave entered Cornelia's room, looking round for clothes to be
collected for washing. Her thoughts were on the thousand chores to
be completed before the midmorning light meal, and at first she
noticed nothing. Then her eyes strayed to where a muscled leg
sprawled over the side of the bed. She froze as she saw the
sleeping couple, still entwined.
After a moment of indecision, her eyes lit up
with malice and she took a deep breath, cracking the still scene
with wild screams.
Gaius rolled naked off the bed and onto the
floor in a crouch. He took in the situation in a second, but didn't
waste any time on cursing himself. He grabbed toga and sword and
bolted for the window. The slave girl ran to the door, still
screaming, and Cornelia spat oaths after her. Thundering footsteps
sounded, and the nurse Clodia came into the room, her face full of
outrage. She swung her hand and connected with the slave girl's
face, cutting off the scream with a dull smack of flesh and
spinning her right round.
"Get out quickly, lad," Clodia snapped at him as
the slave girl whimpered on the floor. "You'd better be worth all
the trouble this is going to cause!"
Gaius nodded, but turned from the window and
came back into the room to Cornelia.
"If I don't go, they'll kill me for an intruder.
Tell them my name and tell them you're mine, that I'll marry you.
Tell them, if anyone harms you I'll kill him."
Cornelia didn't answer, just reached up and
kissed him.
He pulled away, laughing. "Gods, let me go! It
is a fine morning for a bit of a chase."
She watched with amusement as his white buttocks
flashed over the windowsill and away, trying to compose herself for
the drama to come.
Her father's guards entered the room first, led
by the dour captain who nodded to her and crossed to the window,
looking down.
"Get going," he shouted to his companions. "I'll
cross the roofs after him; you men intercept him down below. I'll
have his skin on my wall for this. Your pardon, lady," he said as a
farewell to Cornelia as his red face dropped out of sight.
Cornelia fought not to giggle with tension.
Gaius slipped and skittered on the
tiles, scraping skin from elbows and knees as he sacrificed safety
for breakneck speed. He heard the captain shouting behind him, but
didn't look back. The tiles offered precious little grip, and all
he could really do was control the speed of his fall as he slid
toward the edge and the street below. He had time to swear as he
realized his sandals were in the room above. How could he make any
kind of jump in only his bare feet? He'd break bones for sure and
then the chase would be over. He lost his grip on the toga to save
the gladius, by far the more valuable of the two items. He managed
to cling to the edge of the roof and inched along it, not risking
standing up in case archers were waiting for him. It would not be
unusual for a man of Cinna's wealth to have a small army on his
estate, much as Marius had.
Crouching low, he knew he was out of sight to
the swearing, puffing captain behind him, and Gaius looked around
desperately for a way out of the predicament. He had to get off the
roof. If he stayed, they would simply search each part of it until
they found him, and either pitch him off onto his head or drag him
before Cinna for punishment. With the heat of betrayal on him,
Cinna would be deaf to pleas, and death would quickly follow for
the charge of rape. In fact, Gaius realized Cinna would not even
have to bring charges; he would simply summon a lictor and have the
man execute Gaius on the spot. If Cinna was of a mind to, he could
have Cornelia strangled to save the honor of his house, though
Gaius knew the old man doted on his only daughter. If he had
genuinely believed she would suffer, he would have stayed to fight
it out, but he thought she would be safe enough against old Cinna's
rage.
Down below, where the roof overhung the street,
Gaius could hear shouting as the house guards formed a ring that
blocked all the exits. Behind him, the scrabbling of iron-shod
sandals on tiles was getting closer, and so he took a deep breath
to calm himself and ran, hoping his speed and balance would keep
him on the treacherous surface long enough to find safety. The
guard captain cried out in recognition as he broke cover, but Gaius
didn't have time to look back. The nearest roof was too far away to
leap onto, and the only flat place on the whole complex was a bell
tower with a small window.
He made the sill with a desperate jump as his
legs finally lost all grip, and he heaved himself up and over it,
panting in great gulps of the cold morning air. The bell room was
tiny, with steps leading down inside it to the main house below. At
first, Gaius was tempted to run down them, but then a plan surfaced
in his mind and he steadied his breathing and stretched a few
muscles as he waited for the captain to reach the window.
Moments after his decision to stay, the man
blocked the sunlight and his face lit up at the sight of the young
man cornered in the bell house. They looked at each other for a
moment, and Gaius watched with interest as the thought of being
killed as he climbed in crossed the other man's face. Gaius nodded
to him and stood well back to allow him entrance.
The captain grinned nastily at him, panting from
the run.
"You should have killed me while you had the
chance," he said, drawing his sword.
"You would have fallen off the roof and I need
your clothes—especially those sandals," Gaius replied calmly,
unsheathing his own gladius and standing relaxed, apparently
unaware of his nakedness.
"Will you tell me your name before I kill you?
Just so I have something to tell my master, you know," the captain
said, moving lightly into a fighters crouch.
"Will you give me your clothes? This is too fine
a morning for killing," Gaius countered, smiling easily.
The captain began to reply and Gaius attacked,
only to have his sword batted aside. The man had been expecting
such a move and was ready for it. Gaius realized quickly that he
was facing a skilled opponent and focused, aware of every move in
the dance. The floor was too small a space for ease, and the
stairwell loomed between them, threatening to send one of them
tumbling.
They feinted and struck around the space,
looking for weaknesses. The captain was puzzled at the young man's
skill. He had bought the position in Cinna's guard after winning a
city sword tournament and knew he was the better of most men, but
time and again his attacks were driven aside with speed and
precision. He wasn't worried, though. At worst, he could simply
hang on until help arrived, and as soon as the searchers realized
where they fought, more would be sent up the stairs to overwhelm
the intruder. Some of this confidence must have shown in his face,
as Gaius went on the offensive at last, having got the measure of
his man.
Gaius lunged through the captain's guard and
pierced his shoulder. The man took the wound with a grunt, but
Gaius knocked his riposte aside and opened a gash in the leather
chestplate. The captain found himself with his back to the wall of
the little bell tower, and then a bruising blow on his fingers sent
his gladius down the stairwell, clattering and rebounding in its
fall. The hand felt useless and he looked into Gaius's eyes,
expecting the cut that would finish him.
Gaius barely slowed. He turned his sword at the
last second so that the flat of it slammed against the man's temple
and dropped him senseless onto the floor.
More shouts sounded below and he began to strip
the captain, fingers working feverishly.
"Come on, come on..." he muttered to himself.
Always have a plan, Renius had advised him once, but apart from
stealing the man's clothes, he hadn't had time to think the rest of
his escape through.
After an age, he was dressed. The captain was
stirring and Gaius hit him again with the hilt, nodding as the
twitching movements ceased. He hoped he hadn't killed him; the man
had been doing what he was paid to do and without malice. Gaius
took a deep breath. Stairs or window? He paused for only a second,
put his own gladius into the captains scabbard, now strapped to
him, and strode down the stairs back into the main house.
Marius clenched his fists at the news
from the breathless messenger.
"How many days behind you are they?" he said as
calmly as he could.
"If they force-march, they can't be more than
three or four behind. I came as fast as I could, changing horses,
but most of Sulla's men had landed by the time I set off. I waited
to be sure it was the main force and not just a feint."
"You did well. Did you see Sulla himself?"
"I did, though it was at a distance. It seemed
to be a full landing of his legion returning to Rome."
Marius tossed a gold coin to the man, who
snatched it out of the air. Marius stood up.
"Then we must be ready to greet him. Gather the
other scouts together. I will prepare messages of welcome for you
to take to Sulla."
"General?" the messenger asked, surprised.
"Ask no questions. Is he not the conquering hero
returned to us? Meet me here in an hour to receive the
letters."
Without another word, the man bowed and
left.
The captain was found by the searchers
as he stumbled naked from the bell tower, holding his head. There
was no sign of the intruder, despite the exhaustive search that
went on all morning. One of the soldiers remembered a man dressed
like the captain who had gone off to check down a side street, but
he couldn't remember enough detail to give a good description. At
midday, the search was called off, and by then the news of Sulla's
return had hit the streets of Rome. An hour later, one of the house
guards noticed a small wrapped package leaning against the house
gate and opened it, finding the captain's uniform, scabbard, and
sandals. The captain swore as he was handed it.
Gaius was summoned into Marius's presence that
afternoon and had prepared a defense of his actions. However, the
general seemed not to have heard of the scandal and only motioned
Gaius to sit with his centurions.
"No doubt by now you will have heard that Sulla
has landed his forces on the coast and is only three or four days
from the city."
The others nodded and only Gaius had to try to
hide the shock he felt.
"It is a year and four months to the day since
Sulla left for Greece. I have had enough time to prepare a suitable
homecoming."
Some of the men chuckled in response and Marius
smiled grimly.
"This is no light undertaking. You are all men I
trust and nothing I say here is to leave this room. Do not discuss
this with your wives or mistresses or most trusted friends. I have
no doubt that Sulla has had spies in the city watching my every
move. He must be aware of our preparations and will arrive fully
warned of Rome's readiness for civil war."
The words, said at last in the open, chilled the
hearts of all who heard them.
"I cannot reveal all my plans even now, save to
say this. If Sulla reaches the city alive, and he may not, we will
treat his legion as an attacking enemy, destroying them on the
field. We have supplies of grain, meat, and salt to last us for
many months. We will seal the city against him and destroy him on
the walls. Even as we speak, the flow of traffic has ceased in and
out of Rome. The city stands alone."
"What if he leaves his legion in camp and comes
to demand his rightful entry?" asked a man Gaius didn't know. "Will
you risk the wrath of the Senate, declare yourself dictator?"
Marius was silent for a long time, then he
raised his head and spoke quietly, almost in a whisper.
"If Sulla comes alone, then I will have him cut
down. The Senate will not brand me a traitor to the state. I have
their support in everything I do."
This much was true: There was not a man of
influence who would dare to put a motion to the Senate condemning
the general. The position was clear.
"Now, gentlemen, your orders for tomorrow."
Cornelia waited patiently until her
father had finished, allowing his rage to wash over her, leaving
her untouched.
"No, Father. You will not have him tracked down.
He will be my husband and you will welcome him into our house when
the time comes."
Cinna purpled in renewed anger. "I'll see his
body rot first! He comes like a thief into my home and you sit
there like a block of marble and tell me I will accept it? I will
not, until his body lies broken at my feet."
Cornelia sighed gently, waiting for the tirade
to slow down. Shutting her ears against the shouting, she counted
the flowers that she could see from the window. Finally, the tone
changed and she brought her attention back to her father, who was
looking at her doubtfully.
"I love him, Father, and he loves me. I am sorry
we brought shame to the house, but the marriage will wash it all
away, despite the gossips in the market. You did tell me I could
choose a man I wanted, remember?"
"Are you pregnant?"
"Not as far as I know. There will be no sign
when we are married, no public show."
Her father nodded, looking older and
deflated.
Cornelia stood and put her hand on his shoulder.
"You won't regret it."
Cinna grunted dubiously. "Do I know him, this
despoiler of innocence?"
Cornelia smiled, relieved at his change in mood.
"You do, I'm sure. He is the nephew of Marius. Gaius Julius
Caesar."
Her father shrugged. "I have heard the
name."
CHAPTER
26
Cornelius Sulla sipped cooled wine in
the shadow of his tent, looking over the legion camp. It was the
last night he would have to bear away from his beloved Rome. He
shivered slightly in the breeze and perhaps in anticipation of the
conflict to come. Did he know every aspect of Marius's plans, or
would the old fox surprise him? Messages of official welcome lay
upon the table, ignored for the formality they were.
Padacus rode up, pulling the horse into a flashy
stop with the rear legs buckling on the turn. Sulla smiled at him.
So very young, and such a very beautiful man, he noted to
himself.
"The camp is secure, General," Padacus called as
he dismounted. Every inch of his armor was polished and glowing,
the leather soft and dark with oil. A young Hercules, Sulla thought
as he received and answered the salute. Loyal unto death, though,
like a pampered hound.
"Tomorrow night, we will enter the city. This is
the last night for hard ground and living like barbarians," Sulla
told him, preferring the simple image over the reality of soft beds
and fine linen in the general's tent at least. His heart was with
the men, but the privations of a legionary's life had never
appealed to the consul.
"Will you share your plans, Cornelius? The
others are all eager to know how you will handle Marius."
Padacus had pressed a little too closely in his
enthusiasm, and Sulla held up a palm.
"Tomorrow, my friend. Tomorrow will be soon
enough for preparations. I will retire early tonight, after a
little more wine."
"Will you require... company?" Padacus asked
softly.
"No. Wait. Send a couple of the better-looking
whores to me. I might as well see if I have anything new to
learn."
Padacus dropped his head as if he'd been struck.
He backed to his horse and trotted away.
Sulla watched his stiff retreat and sighed,
splashing the remaining wine in his goblet onto the black ground.
It was the third time the young man had offered, and Sulla had to
face the fact that he was becoming a problem. The line between
adoration and spite was fine in young Padacus. Better to send him
away to some other legion before he caused trouble that could not
be ignored. He sighed again and walked into the tent, flicking the
leather sheet closed over the entrance behind him.
The lamps had been lit by his slaves; the floor
was covered in rugs and cloth. Sweet-smelling oil burned in a tiny
cup, a rare mixture he enjoyed. Sulla took a deep breath and caught
a flicker of movement coming at him from the right. He collapsed
backward out of the line of the attack and felt the air move as
something slashed above him. Sulla kicked out with powerful legs
and his attacker was knocked from his feet. As the assassin flailed
round, Sulla caught his knife hand in a crushing grip. He levered
himself up so that his weight was on the man's chest, and he smiled
as he watched the man's expression change from anger and fear to
surprise and despair.
Sulla was not a soft man. True, he didn't favor
the more extreme Roman tests of courage, where injuries and scars
showed prowess, but he trained every day and fought in every
battle. His wrists were like metal and he had no difficulty in
turning the blade inward until it was pointing toward the man's
throat.
"How much did Marius pay you?" Sulla sneered,
his voice showing little strain.
"Nothing. I kill you for pleasure."
"Amateur by word and deed!" Sulla
continued, pressing the knife closer to the heaving flesh. "Guards!
Attend your consul!" he barked, and within seconds, the man was
pinned down and Sulla could stand and brush dust from himself.
The guard captain had entered with the rush of
people. He was pale, but managed to snap out a clean salute as he
stood to attention.
"It seems that an assassin has made his way
through the camp and into the tent of a consul of Rome without
being challenged," Sulla said quietly, dipping his hands into a
bowl of scented water on an oak table and holding them out to be
dried by a slave.
The guard captain took a deep breath to calm
himself. "Torture will get us the names of his masters. I will
supervise the questioning myself. I will resign my commission in
the morning, General, with your permission?"
Sulla continued as if the man had not spoken. "I
do not enjoy being accosted in my own tent. It seems such a common,
grubby incident to disturb my repose in this way."
He stooped and picked up the dagger, ignoring
the owner's frantic struggles as the grim soldiers bound him with
vicious tightness. He held the slim blade out to the nervous
captain.
"You have left me unprotected. Take this. Go to
your tent and cut your throat with it. I will have your body
collected in... two hours?"
The man nodded stiffly, taking the dagger. He
saluted again and turned on his heel, marching out of the tent
space.
Padacus placed a warm palm on Sulla's arm. "Are
you wounded?"
Sulla pulled his arm away in irritation. "I am
fine. Gods, it was only one man. Marius must have a very low
opinion of me."
"We don't know it was only one man. I will set
guards around your tent tonight."
Sulla shook his head. "No. Let Marius think he
has scared me? I'll keep those two whores you were bringing me and
make sure one of them is awake through the night. Bring them in and
get rid of everyone else. I believe I have worked up an appetite
for a little vicious entertainment."
Padacus saluted smartly, but Sulla saw the full
lips pout as he turned, and made a note. The man was definitely a
risk. He would not make it back to Rome. An accident of some
kind—a fall from his glorious gelding. Perfect.
At last he was alone and Sulla sat on a low bed,
smoothing a hand over the soft material. There was a quiet, female
cough from outside, and Sulla smiled with pleasure.
The two girls that entered at his call were
clean, lithe, and richly dressed. Both were beautiful.
"Wonderful," Sulla sighed, patting the bed
beside him. For all his faults, Padacus had an eye for truly
beautiful women, a rather wasted gift in the circumstances.
Marius frowned at his nephew.
"I do not question your decision to be wed!
Cinna will be a useful support in your career. It will suit you
politically as well as personally to marry his daughter. However, I
do question your timing. With Sulla's legion likely to
arrive at the gates of the city tomorrow evening, you want me to
arrange a marriage in such haste?"
A legionary rushed up to the general, attempting
to salute around an armful of scrolls and documents. Marius raised
a hand to hold him off.
"You discussed certain plans with me, if things
didn't work out tomorrow?" Gaius asked, his voice quiet.
Marius nodded and turned to the guard. "Wait
outside. I'll fetch you when I'm finished here."
The man attempted another salute and trotted out
of the general's barracks room. As soon as he was out of earshot,
Gaius spoke again.
"If somehow things go wrong for us... and I have
to flee the city, I won't leave Cornelia behind unmarried."
"She can't go with you!" Marius snapped.
"No. But I can't leave her without my name for
protection. She may be pregnant." He hated to admit the extent of
their relationship. It was a private thing between them, but only
Marius could get the sacrifices and priests ready in the short time
left to them, and he had to be made to understand.
"I see. Does her father know of... your
intimacy?"
Gaius nodded.
"Then we are lucky he is not at the door with a
horsewhip. Fair enough. I will make ready for the briefest of vow
ceremonies. Dawn tomorrow?"
Gaius smiled suddenly, released from a tension
he had felt pressing on him.
"That's more like it," Marius laughed in
response. "Gods, Sulla isn't even in sight yet and a long way from
taking Rome back from me. You look too hard for the worst outcomes,
I fear. Tomorrow evening your haste may seem ridiculous as we put
old Sulla's head on a spike, but no matter. Go. Buy a wedding robe
and presents. Have all the bills sent to me." He patted Gaius on
the back.
"Oh, and see Catia on the way out—a lady
of mature years who makes uniforms for the men. She will think of a
few things and where to get them in so short a time. Go!"
Gaius left, chuckling.
As soon as he had gone, Marius summoned his aide
with a shout and spread the scrolls out on the table, anchoring the
edges with smooth lead weights.
"Right, lad," he said to the soldier. "Summon
the centurions for another meeting. I want to hear any fresh ideas,
no matter how bizarre. What have I missed? What does Sulla
plan?"
"Perhaps you have already thought of everything,
General."
"No man can think of everything; all we can do
is to be ready for anything." Marius waved the man away on his
errand.
* * *
Gaius found Cabera throwing dice with
two of Marius's legionaries. The old man was engrossed in the game,
and Gaius controlled his impatience as he made another throw and
clapped his ancient hands together in pleasure. Coins were passed
over and Gaius took his arm before another round could begin.
"I spoke to Marius. He can arrange the ceremony
for dawn tomorrow. I need help today to get everything ready."
Cabera looked carefully at him as he tucked his
winnings into his ragged brown robe. He nodded to the soldiers and
one of them shook hands a little ruefully before walking away.
"I look forward to meeting this girl who has had
such an impact on you. I suppose she is terribly beautiful?"
"Of course! She is a young goddess. Sweet brown
eyes and golden hair. You cannot possibly imagine."
"No. I was never young. I was born a wrinkled
old man, to the surprise of my mother," Cabera answered seriously,
making Gaius laugh. He felt drunk with excitement, with the
threatening shadow of Sulla's arrival pushed right to the back of
his mind.
"Marius has given me the purse strings, but the
shops close so early. We have no time to waste. Come on!" Gaius
pulled Cabera by the arm and the old man chuckled, enjoying the
enthusiasm.
As evening darkened over the city,
Marius left the centurions and walked out to make another
inspection of the wall defenses. He stretched as he walked, and
felt and heard his back clicking, sore from bending over the plans
for so many hours. A warning voice in his mind reminded him of how
foolish it was to walk around in this city after dark, even with
the curfew still in place. He dismissed it with a shrug. Rome would
never hurt him. She loved her son too dearly, he knew.
As if in response to his thoughts, he felt the
freshening warm wind on his face, drying the sweat that had seeped
from him in the cramped barracks. When Sulla was disposed of, he
would see about building a greater palace for the Rome legion.
There was a slum area adjoining the barracks that could be
flattened by senatorial order. He saw it in his mind and imagined
entertaining foreign leaders in the great halls. Dreams, but
pleasant as he walked through the silent streets, with only the
clack-clack of his sandals breaking the perfect
stillness.
He could see the silhouettes of his men against
the star-filled night sky long before he reached them. Some were
still and some walked their prescribed, overlapping routes at
random. At a glance, he could see they were alert. Good men. Who
knew what awaited them the next time night fell? He shrugged again
to himself and was glad no one could see him in the dim streets.
Sulla would come and he would be met with steel. There was no point
in worrying and Marius took a deep, cleansing breath, putting it
all away inside him. He smiled cheerfully as the first of many
sentries stopped him.
"Good lad. Hold that spear steady now, a
pilum is a fearful weapon in a strong grip. That's it. I
thought I would take a tour of this section. Can't stand the
waiting, you know. Can you?"
The sentry saluted gravely. "I don't mind it,
sir. You may pass."
Marius clapped his hand against the sentry's
shoulder. "Good man. They won't get past you."
"No, sir."
The legionary watched him go and nodded to
himself. The old man was still hungry.
Marius climbed the steps to the new wall his
legion had constructed over and around the old gates of Rome. It
was a solid and massive construction of heavy interlocking blocks
with a wide walkway at the top, where a smaller wall would protect
his men from archers. Marius rested his hands on the smooth stone
and looked out into the night. If he were Sulla, how would he take
the city?
Sulla's legions had huge siege engines, heavy
crossbows, stone throwers, and catapults. Marius had used each type
and feared them all. He knew that, as well as large stones to
batter the wall, Sulla could load his machines with smaller shot
that would rip through defenders too slow to duck. He would use
fire, launching barrels of rock oil over the wall to ignite the
inner buildings. Enough barrels and the men on the wall would be
lit from behind, easy targets for archers. Marius had cleared some
wooden buildings away from the wall, his men dismantling homes
quickly and efficiently. Those he could not move had a huge supply
of water at the ready, with trained teams to deal with it. It was a
new idea for Rome and one he would have to look into when the
battle was over. Every summer, fires gutted houses in the city,
sometimes spreading to others before being stopped by a wide street
or a thick stone wall. A small group ready with water could...
He knuckled his eyes. Too much time spent
thinking and planning. He hadn't slept for more than a few hours
for weeks, and the drain was beginning to tell on even his
vitality.
The wall would have to be scaled with ladders.
It was strong, but Roman legions were practiced in taking
fortresses and castles. The techniques were almost mundane now.
Marius muttered to himself, knowing the nearest sentry was too far
away to hear his voice.
"They have never fought Romans, especially
Romans in defense of their own city. That is our true advantage. I
know Sulla, but he knows me. They have the mobility, but we have
the stronghold and the morale. My men are not attacking
beloved Rome, after all."
Cheered by his thoughts, Marius walked on over
the section of wall. He spoke to each man and, recalling names here
and there, asked them about their progress and promotions and loved
ones. There wasn't a hint of weakness in any he spoke to. They were
like hard-eyed hunting dogs, eager to be killing for him.
By the time he had walked the section and
descended back into the dark streets below, Marius felt lifted by
the men's simple faith in him. He would see them through. They
would see him through. He hummed a military tune to himself as he
strolled back to the barracks, and his heart was light.
CHAPTER
27
Gaius Julius Caesar smiled, despite
the feeling of anxious weakness that fluttered in his stomach. With
the help of Marius's seamstress, he had sent servants off to buy
and organize for most of the night. He'd known the ceremony would
have to be simple and was astonished at so many members of the
nobilitas in attendance on a cold morning. The senators had come,
bringing families and slaves to the temple of Jupiter. Every glance
that met his was followed by a smile, and the soft odors of flowers
and burning scentwood was strong in the air. Marius and Metella
were there at the entrance of the marble temple, and Metella was
dabbing tears from her eyes. Gaius nodded to them both nervously as
he waited for his bride to arrive. He twitched the sleeves of his
marriage robe, cut low around his neck to reveal a single amethyst
on a slender gold chain.
He wished Marcus were there. It would have
helped to have someone who really knew him. Everyone else was part
of the world he was growing into: Tubruk, Cabera, Marius, even
Cornelia herself. With a pang, he realized that to make it all seem
real, he needed someone there who could meet his eye and know the
whole journey to that point. Instead, Marcus was away in foreign
lands, the wild adventurer he always wanted to be. By the time he
returned, the wedding day would just be a memory that he could
never share.
It was cool in the temple and for a moment Gaius
shivered, feeling his skin prickle as the hairs stood up. With his
back to the room, he felt alone and uncomfortable.
If his father had lived, he could have turned to
him as they all waited for Cornelia. They could have shared a
smile, or a wink that said "Look what I've done."
Gaius felt tears come into his eyes and he
looked up at the domed ceiling, willing them not to spill onto his
face. His father's funeral had been the end of his mother's moments
of peace. Tubruk had shaken his head when Gaius asked if she was
able to come. The old gladiator loved her as much as anyone, he
knew. Perhaps he always had.
Gaius cleared his throat and dragged his
thoughts back to the moment. He had to put childhood behind him.
There were many friends in the room, he told himself. Tubruk was
like an uncle with his gruff affection, and Marius and Metella
seemed to have accepted him without reserve. Marcus should have
been there. He owed him that.
Gaius hoped Cinna would be pleasant. He had not
spoken to the man since formally asking for Cornelia's hand to be
passed from father to husband. It had not been a happy meeting,
though the senator had kept his dignity for her sake. At least he
had been generous with the dowry for Cornelia. Cinna had handed him
the deeds to a large town house in a prosperous area of Rome. With
slaves and guards as part of the gift, Gaius had felt a worry ease
from him. She would be safe now, no matter what happened. He
frowned. He would have to get used to the new name, casting off the
old with the other trappings of youth. Julius. His father's name.
It had a good sound to the ear, though he guessed he would always
be Gaius to those he had known as a boy. His father had not lived
to see him adopt his adult name, and that saddened him. He wondered
if the old man could see his only son and hoped so, wishing for
just that one more moment to share pride and love.
He turned and smiled weakly at Cabera, who
regarded him with a sour expression, his thinning hair still
tousled from being roused at what he considered an ungodly hour. He
too was dressed in a new brown robe to mark the occasion, adorned
with a simple pewter brooch, a design of a fat-faced moon standing
proud on the metal. Julius recognized it as Alexandria's work and
smiled at Cabera, who scratched an armpit vigorously in response.
Julius kept smiling and after a few seconds, the ancient features
cracked in cheerful response, despite his worries.
The future was dark to Cabera as it always was
when he was a part of a particular destiny. The old man felt afresh
the irritation at being able to sense only the paths that had
little bearing on his own life, but even the scratch of his
misgivings couldn't prevent him taking pleasure in the youthful joy
he felt coming from Julius like a warm wave.
There was something wonderful about a wedding,
even one as quickly arranged as this one. Everyone was happy and
for at least this little while the problems to come could be
forgotten, if only until dark.
Julius heard footsteps sound on the marble
behind him, and he turned to see Tubruk leaving his seat to
approach the altar. The estate manager looked his usual self,
strong, brown, and healthy, and Julius clasped his arm, feeling it
as an anchor in the world.
"You looked a bit lost up here. How are you
feeling?" Tubruk asked.
"Nervous. Proud. Amazed so many turned up."
Tubruk looked with fresh interest at the crowd
and turned back with eyebrows raised. "Most of the power in Rome is
in this room. Your father would be proud of you. I'm proud of you."
He paused for a moment, unsure of whether to continue. "Your mother
did want to come, but she was just too weak."
Julius nodded and Tubruk punched his arm
affectionately before going back to his seat a few rows behind.
"In my village, we just take a girl by the hair
and pull her into our hut," Cabera muttered, shocking the priest
out of his beatific expression. Seeing this, the old man went on
cheerfully, "If it didn't work, you'd give her father a goat and
grab one of her sisters. Much simpler that way—no hard
feelings and free goat milk for the father. I had a herd of thirty
goats when I was a lad, but I had to give most of them away,
leaving me without enough to support myself. Not a wise decision,
but difficult to regret, no?"
The priest had flushed at these casual
references to barbarian practices, but Julius only chuckled.
"You old fraud. You just like to shock these
upright Roman citizens."
Cabera sniffed loudly. "Maybe," he admitted,
remembering the trouble he'd caused when he had tried to offer his
last goat up front for a night of pleasure. It had seemed like
sense at the time, but the girl's father had taken a spear from his
wall and chased the young Cabera up into the hills, where he had to
hide for three days and nights.
The priest eyed Cabera with distaste. He was
nobilitas himself, but in his religious role wore a cream toga with
a hood that left only his face bare. He waited patiently for the
bride with the others. Julius had explained that the ceremony must
be as simple as possible because his uncle would want to leave at
the earliest moment. The priest had scratched his chin in obvious
annoyance at this, before Julius slipped a small pouch of coins
into his robe as an "offering" to the temple. Even the nobilitas
had bills and debts. It would be a short service. After Cornelia
was brought in to be given away by her father, there would be
prayers to Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus. An augur had been paid gold
to predict wealth and happiness for them both. The vows would
follow and Julius would put a simple gold ring on her finger. She
would be his wife. He would be her husband. He felt sweat dampen
his armpits and tried to shrug away the nervousness.
He turned again and looked straight into the
eyes of Alexandria as she stood in a simple dress, wearing a brooch
of silver. There were tears sparkling in her gaze, but she nodded
at him and something eased within.
Soft music began at the back, swelling to fill
the vaulted ceiling like the incense smoke that spilled from the
censers. Julius looked round and caught his breath and everything
else was forgotten.
Cornelia was there, standing tall and straight
in a cream dress and thin golden veil, her hand on the arm of her
father, who was clearly unable to keep a beaming smile from his
face. Her hair had been tinted darker, and her eyes seemed of the
same warm color. At her throat was a ruby the size of a bird's egg,
held in gold against the lighter tone of her skin. She looked
beautiful and fragile. There was a small wreath on the crest of her
head, made from verbena and sweet marjoram flowers. He could smell
their scent as Cornelia and her father approached. Cinna let go of
her arm as they reached Julius, remaining a pace behind.
"I pass Cornelia into your care, Gaius Julius
Caesar," he said formally.
Julius nodded. "I accept her into my care." He
turned to her and she winked at him.
As they knelt, he caught again the scent of
flowers from her and couldn't stop himself glancing over to her
bowed head. He wondered if he would have loved her if he hadn't
known Alexandria, or if he had met her before he had gone to the
houses where women could be bought for a night or even an hour. He
hadn't been ready for this, not back then, a year and a lifetime
ago. The prayers were a peaceful murmur over their heads, and he
was content. Her eyes were soft as summer darkness.
The rest of the ceremony went in a blur for him.
The simple vows were spoken—"Where you go, there go I." He
knelt under the priests hands for what seemed like eternity, and
then they were out in the sunshine and the crowd was cheering and
shouting, "Felicitas!" and Marius was bidding him goodbye
with a great clap on his back.
"You're a man now, Julius. Or she will make you
one very soon!" he said loudly, with a twinkle in his eye. "You
have your father's name. He would be proud of you."
Julius returned the grip strongly. "Do you want
me on the walls now?"
"I think we can spare you for a few hours.
Report to me at four this afternoon. Metella will have finished
crying about then, I think."
They grinned at each other like boys, and Julius
was left in a space for a moment, alone with his bride in a crowd
of well-wishers. Alexandria walked up to him and he smiled,
suddenly nervous. Her dark hair was bound with wire and the sight
of her made his throat feel tight. There was so much history in
those dark eyes.
"That's a beautiful brooch you are wearing," he
said.
She reached up and tapped it with her hand.
"You'd be surprised at how many people have asked about it this
morning. I already have some orders."
"Business on my wedding day!" he exclaimed, and
she nodded without embarrassment.
"May the gods bless your house," she said
formally.
She moved away and he turned to find Cornelia
looking at him quizzically. He kissed her.
"She is very beautiful. Who is she?" she said,
her voice betraying a touch of worry.
"Alexandria. She is a slave at Marius's
house."
"She doesn't act like a slave," Cornelia replied
dubiously.
Julius laughed. "Do I hear jealousy?"
Cornelia did not smile and he took her hands
gently in his.
"You are all I want. My beautiful wife. Come to
our new home and I'll show you."
Cornelia relaxed as he kissed her, deciding to
find out everything she could about the slave girl with the
jewelry.
The new house was bare of furniture
and slaves. They were the only ones there and their voices echoed.
The bed was a present from Metella, made of carved, dark wood. At
least there was a mattress over the slats, and soft linen.
For a few minutes, they seemed clumsy,
self-conscious with the weight of the new titles.
"I think you might remove my toga, wife," Julius
said, his voice light.
"I shall, husband. You could unbind my hair,
perhaps."
Then their old passion returned and the
clumsiness was forgotten through the afternoon, as the heat built
outside.
Julius panted, his hair wet with perspiration.
"I will be tired out tonight," he said between breaths.
A light frown creased Cornelia's forehead.
"You'll be careful?"
"Not at all, I shall throw myself into conflict.
I may start a battle myself, just to impress you."
Her fingers traced a line down his chest,
dimpling the smooth skin. "You could impress me in other ways."
He groaned. "Not right now I can't, but give it
a little time."
Her eyes glinted mischievously as she moved her
delicate fingers.
"I might be too impatient to wait. I think I can
awaken your interest."
After a few moments, he groaned again, crumpling
the sheets under his clenching fists.
At four o'clock, Julius was hammering
at the barracks door, only to be told the general was back up on
the walls, walking section after section. Julius had exchanged his
toga for a legionary's simple uniform of cloth and leather. His
gladius was held to his belt and he carried a helmet under one arm.
He felt slightly light-headed after the hours spent with Cornelia,
but he found he was able to leave that longing in a compartment
inside himself. He would return to her as the young lover, but at
that moment he was a soldier, nephew of Marius, trained by Renius
himself.
He found Marius talking to a group of his
officers and stood a few paces away, looking over the preparations.
Marius had split his legion into small mobile groups of sixteen
men, each with assigned tasks, but more flexible than having each
century man the wall. All the scouts reported Sulla making a
straight line for the city, with no attempt to feint or confuse. It
looked as if Sulla was going to risk a direct attack, but Marius
still suspected some other plan to make itself evident as the army
hove into view. He finished giving his final orders and gripped
hands with each of his officers before they went to their posts.
The sun had dropped past the zenith point and there were only a few
hours until evening began.
He turned to his nephew and grinned at the
serious expression.
"I want you to walk the wall with me, as fresh
eyes. Tell me anything you could improve. Watch the men, their
expressions, the way they hold themselves. Judge their morale."
Julius still looked grim and Marius sighed in
exasperation.
"And smile, lad. Raise their spirits." He leaned
in closer. "Many of these men will be dead by morning. They are
professionals, but they will still know fear. Some won't be happy
about facing our own people in war, though I have tried to have the
worst of those moved back from the first assault wall. Say a few
words to as many as you can, not long conversations, just notice
what they are doing and compliment them on it. Ask them their names
and then use the name in your reply to them. Ready?"
Julius nodded, straightening his spine. He knew
that the way he presented himself to others affected how they saw
him. If he strode in with shoulders and spine straight, men would
take him seriously. He remembered his father telling the boys how
to lead soldiers.
"Keep your head high and don't apologize unless
you absolutely have to. Then do it once, loudly and clearly. Never
whine, never plead, never gush. Think before you speak to a man
and, when you have to, use few words. Men respect the silent; they
despise the garrulous."
Renius had taught him how to kill a man as
quickly and efficiently as possible. He was still learning how to
win loyalty.
They walked slowly along a section of wall,
stopping and speaking to each soldier and spending a few minutes
longer with the leader of the section, listening to ideas and
suggestions and complimenting the men on their readiness.
Julius caught glances and held them as he
nodded. The soldiers acknowledged him, tension evident. He stopped
by one barrel-chested little man adjusting a powerful metal
crossbow, set into the stone of the wall itself.
"What's the range?"
The soldier saluted smartly. "With the wind
behind you, three hundred paces, sir."
"Excellent. Can the machine be aimed?"
"A little, nothing precise at the moment. The
workshop is working on a moving pedestal."
"Good. It looks a deadly thing indeed."
The soldier smiled proudly and wiped a rag over
the winch mechanism that would wind the heavy arms back to their
locking slot.
"She, sir. Something as dangerous as this has to
be female."
Julius chuckled as he thought of Cornelia and
his aching muscles.
"What is your name, soldier?"
"Trad Lepidus, sir."
"I will look to see how many of the enemy she
takes down, Lepidus."
The man smiled again. "Oh, it will be a few,
sir. No one is coming into my city without the permission of the
general, sir."
"Good man."
Julius moved on, feeling a touch more
confidence. If all the men were as steadfast as Trad Lepidus, there
couldn't be an army in the world that could take Rome. He caught up
with his uncle, who was accepting a drink from a silver flask and
spluttering over the contents.
"Sweet Mars! What's in this, vinegar?"
The officer fought not to smile. "I daresay you
are used to better vintages, sir. The spirit is a little raw."
"Raw! Mind you, it is warming," Marius said,
tilting the flask up once more. Finally, he wiped his mouth with
the back of his hand. "Excellent. Send a chit to the quartermaster
in the morning. I think a small flask for officers would be just
the thing against the chill of winters nights."
"Certainly, sir," the man replied, frowning
slightly as he tried to calculate the profits he would make as the
sole supplier to his own legion. The answer obviously pleased him
and he saluted smartly as Julius passed.
Finally, Marius reached the flight of stone
steps down to the street that marked the end of the section. Julius
had spoken or nodded or listened to every one of a hundred or so
soldiers on that part of the wall. His facial muscles felt stiff
and yet he felt a touch of his uncle's pride. These were good men
and it was a great thing to know they were ready to lay down their
lives at your order. Power was a seductive thing, and Julius
enjoyed the reflected warmth of it from his uncle. He felt a
mounting excitement as he waited with his city for Sulla to arrive
and darkness to come.
Narrow wooden towers had been placed
at intervals all round the city. As the sun set, a lookout shouted
from one and the word was passed at a fierce speed. The enemy was
on the horizon, marching toward the city. The gates were closed
against them.
"At last! The waiting was chafing on me," Marius
bellowed, charging out of his barracks as the warning horns were
sounded across the city, long wailing notes.
The reserves took their positions. Those few
Romans still on the streets ran for their homes, bolting and
barricading their doors against the invaders. The people cared
little for who ruled the city as long as their families were
safe.
The Senate meetings had been postponed that day,
and the senators too were in their palatial houses, dotted around
the city. Not one of them had taken the roads to the west, though a
few had sent their families away to country estates rather than
leave them at risk. A few rose with tight smiles, standing at
balconies and watching the horizon as the horns moaned across the
darkening city. Others lay in baths or beds and had slaves ease
muscles that tightened from fear. Rome had never been attacked in
its history. They had always been too strong. Even Hannibal had
preferred to meet Roman legions on the field rather than assault
the city itself. It had taken a man like Scipio to take his head
and that of his brother. Would Marius have the same ability, or
would it be Sulla who held Rome in his bloody hand at the end? One
or two of the senators burned incense at their private altars for
their household gods. They had supported Marius as he tightened his
grip on Rome, forced to take his side in public. Many had staked
their lives on his success. Sulla had never been a forgiving
man.
CHAPTER
28
Torches were lit all around the city
as night fell. Julius wondered what it would look like to the gods
as they looked down, a great gleaming eye in the black vastness of
the land. We look up as they look down, he thought. He stood
with Cabera on ground level, listening to the news as it was
shouted down from the wall lookouts and relayed along and deep into
the city, a vein of information for those who could see and hear
nothing. Over it, despite the nearby noises, he could make out the
distant tramp of thousands of armored men and horses on the move.
It filled the soft night and grew louder as they approached.
There was no doubt now. Sulla was bringing his
legion right up the Via Sacra to the gates of the city, with no
attempt at subterfuge. The lookouts reported a torch-lit snake of
men stretching for miles back in the darkness, with the tail
disappearing over hills. It was a marching formation for friendly
lands, not a careful approach to close with an enemy. The
confidence of such a casual march made many raise eyebrows and
wonder what on earth Sulla was planning. One thing was for certain:
Marius was not the man to be cowed by confidence.
* * *
Sulla clenched his fists in excitement
as the gates and walls of the fortress city began to glow with the
reflected light of his legion. Thousands of fighting men and half
as many again in support marched on through the night. The noise
was rhythmic and deafening, the crash of feet on the stone road
echoing back and around the city and the night. Sulla's eyes
sparkled in the flames of torches and he casually raised his right
hand. The signal was relayed, great horns wailing into the
darkness, setting off responses all the way down the great snake of
soldiers.
Stopping a moving legion required skill and
training. Each section had to halt to order, or a pileup would
result, with the precision lost in chaos. Sulla turned and looked
back down the hill, nodding with satisfaction as each century
became still, their torches held in unwavering hands. It took
almost half an hour from the first signal to the end, but at last,
they all stood on the Via Sacra and the natural silence of the
countryside seemed to flow back over them. His legion waited for
orders, gleaming gold.
Sulla swept his gaze over the fortifications,
imagining the mixed feelings of the men and citizens inside. They
would be wondering at his halt, whispering nervously to each other,
passing the news back to those who could not see the great
procession. The citizens would hear his echoing horns and be
expecting attack at any moment.
He smiled. Marius too would be chafing, waiting
for the next move. He had to wait; that was the key weakness of the
fortified position—they could only defend and play a passive
role.
Sulla bided his time, signaling for cool wine to
be brought to him. As he did so, he noticed the rather rigid
posture of a torch carrier. Why was the man so tense? he wondered.
He leaned forward in his saddle and noticed the thin trickle of
boiling hot oil that had escaped the torch and was creeping toward
the slaves bare hand. Sulla watched the man's eyes as they flicked
forward and back to the burning liquid. Was there a touch of flame
in the trickle? Yes, the heat would be terrible; it would stick as
it burned the man. Sulla observed with interest, noting the sweat
on the man's forehead and having a private bet with himself as to
what would happen when the heat touched the skin.
He was a believer in omens and at such a moment,
before the gates of Rome herself, he knew the gods would be
watching. Was this a message from them, a signal for Sulla to
interpret? Certainly he was beloved of the gods, as his exalted
position showed. His plans were made, but disaster was always
possible with a man like Marius. The flickering flames on the oil
touched the slave's skin. Sulla raised an eyebrow, his mouth
quirking with surprise. Despite the obvious agony of it, the man
stood still as rock, letting the oil run on past his knuckles and
continue its course into the dust of the road. Sulla could see the
flames light his hand with a gentle yellow glow yet still the
fellow did not move!
"Slave!" he called.
The man turned to face his master.
Pleased, Sulla smiled at his steadiness. "You
are relieved. Bathe that hand. Your courage is a good omen for
tonight."
The man nodded gratefully, extinguishing the
tiny flames with the grasp of his other palm. He scuttled off,
red-faced and panting at the release. Sulla accepted a cool goblet
graciously and toasted the walls of the city, his eyes hooded as he
tipped it back and tasted the wine. Nothing to do now but wait.
Marius gripped the lip of the heavy
wall with irritation.
"What is he doing?" he muttered to himself. He
could see the legion of Sulla stretching away into the distance,
halted not more than a few hundred paces from the gate that opened
onto the Via Sacra. Around him his men waited, as tense as
himself.
"They are just outside missile range, General,"
a centurion observed.
Marius had to control a flare of temper. "I
know. If they cross inside it, begin firing at once. Hit them with
everything. They'll never take the city in that formation."
It made no sense! Only a broad front stood a
chance against a well-prepared enemy. The single-point spearhead
march stood no chance of breaching the defenses. He clenched his
fist in anger. What had he missed?
"Sound the horns the moment anything changes,"
he ordered the section leader, and strode back through the ranks to
the steps leading to the city street below.
Julius, Cabera, and Tubruk waited patiently for
Marius to come over, watching him as he checked in with his
advisers, who had nothing new to offer, judging by the shaking of
heads. Tubruk loosened his gladius in his scabbard, feeling the
light nerves that always came before bloodshed. It was in the air
and he was glad he had stayed on through the hot day.
Gaius—no, Julius now—had almost sent him home to the
estate, but something in the ex-gladiator's eyes had prevented the
order.
Julius wished the band of friends could have
been complete. He would have appreciated Renius's advice and
Marcus's odd sense of humor. As well as that, if it did come to a
fight, there were few better to have at your side. He too loosened
his sword, rattling the blade against the metal lip of the scabbard
a few times to clear it of any obstructions. It was the fifth time
he had done so in as many minutes, and Cabera clapped a hand to his
shoulder, making him start a little.
"Soldiers always complain about the waiting. I
prefer it to the killing, myself." In truth, he felt the swirling
paths of the future pressing heavily on him and was caught between
the desire to get Julius away to safety and the urge to climb up
onto the wall to meet the first assault. Anything to make the paths
resolve into simple events!
Julius scanned the walls, noting the number and
positions of men, the smooth guard changes, the test runs of the
ballistae and army-killer weapons. The streets were silent as Rome
held its breath, but still nothing moved or changed. Marius was
stamping around, roaring orders that would have been better left to
the trusted men in the chain of command. It seemed the tension was
affecting even him.
The endless chains of runners were finally
still. There was no more water to be carried, and the stockpiles of
arrows and shot were all in position. Only the breathless footsteps
of a messenger from another part of the wall broke the tension
every few minutes. Julius could see the worry on Marius's face,
made almost worse by the news of no other attack. Could Sulla
really be willing to risk his neck in a legal entry to the city?
His courage would win admirers if he walked up to the gates
himself, but Julius was sure he would be dead, killed by an
"accidental" arrow as he approached. Marius would not leave such a
dangerous snake alive if he came within bow shot.
His thoughts were interrupted as a robed
messenger jostled by him. In that moment, the scene changed. Julius
watched in dawning horror as the men on the closest section of the
wall were suddenly overwhelmed from behind, by their own
companions. So intent were they on the legion waiting outside that
scores fell in a few seconds. Water carriers dropped the buckets
they held and sank daggers into the soldiers nearest them, killing
men before they even realized they were under attack.
"Gods!" he whispered. "They're already
inside!"
Even as he bared his gladius and felt rather
than saw Tubruk do the same, he saw a flaming arrow lit calmly from
a brazier and sent soaring into the night. As it arced upward, the
silence of murder was broken. From outside the walls, Sulla's
legion roared as if hell had broken open and came on.
In the darkness of the street below, Marius had
had his back to the wall when he noticed the stricken expression of
a centurion. He spun in time to see the man clawing at the air,
impaled on a long dagger that had been thrust into his back.
"What is it? Blood of the gods..." He pulled in
a great gasp of air to rally the nearest sections and, as he did,
saw a flaming arrow sweep out into the ink blackness of the
starless night.
"To me! First-Born to the gate! Hold the gate!
Sound full warning! They come!"
His voice cracked out, but the horn blowers were
lying in pools of their own blood. One still struggled with his
assailants, hanging on to the slim bronze tube despite the vicious
stabbing his body was taking. Marius drew the sword that had been
in his family for generations. His face was black with rage. The
two men died and Marius raised the horn to his own lips, tasting
the blood that had spattered onto the metal.
All around him in the darkness, other horns
answered. Sulla had won the first few moments, but he vowed it
wasn't over yet.
Julius saw the group dressed as
messengers were all armed and converging on where Marius stood with
a bloody horn and his bright sword already dark with blood. The
wall loomed behind him, flickering with torch shadows.
"With me! They're going for the general in the
confusion," he barked to Tubruk and Cabera, charging the back of
the group as he shouted.
His first blow took one of the running men in
the neck as they slowed to negotiate struggling groups of fighters.
Finally Marius's men seemed to have woken up to the fact that the
enemy was disguised, but the fighting was difficult, and in the
flashing colors and blows of combat, no man knew which of the
groups were friends and which were enemies. It was a devastating
ploy, and inside the walls everything was chaos.
Julius ripped his blade across a leg muscle,
crashing his running feet over the body as it collapsed and feeling
satisfaction as he felt the bones shift and break under his
sandals. At first he was surprised at the group not standing to
fight, but he quickly realized they had orders to assassinate
Marius and were careless of any other dangers.
Tubruk brought down another with a leap that had
them both sprawling on the hard cobbles. Cabera took one more with
a dagger throw that caught Sulla's man in the side and sent him
staggering. Julius let his blade scythe out as he clattered past
and felt a satisfying shock up his arm as it connected and slid
free.
Ahead, Marius stood alone and other, black-clad
figures converged on him. He roared defiance as he saw them coming,
and suddenly Julius knew he was too late. More than fifty men were
charging at the general. All his soldiers in the area were dead or
dying. One or two still screamed their frustration, but they too
could not reach his uncle.
Marius spat blood and phlegm and raised his
sword menacingly.
"Come on, boys. Don't keep me waiting," he
growled through clenched teeth, anger keeping despair at bay.
Julius felt a hard fist jerk at his collar and
drag him to a stop. He roared in anger and felt his sword arm
batted away as he spun to face the threat. He found himself looking
into Tubruks stern face.
"No, boy. It's too late. Get out while you
can."
Julius struggled in the grip, swearing with
incoherent rage. "Let go! Marius is—"
"I know. We can't save him." Tubruks face was
cold and white. "His men are too far away. We've been overlooked
for a moment, but there's too many of them. Live to avenge him,
Gaius. Live."
Julius swiveled in the grip and fifty feet away
saw Marius go down under a heaving mass of bodies, some of which
were loose and boneless, already dead from his blows. The others
held clubs, he saw, and they were striking wildly at the general,
beating him to the ground in mindless ferocity.
"I can't run," Julius said.
Tubruk swore. "No. But you can retreat. This
battle is lost. The city is lost. Look, Sulla's traitors are on the
gates themselves. The legion will be on us if we don't move now.
Come on." Without waiting for further argument, Tubruk grabbed the
young man under the armpits and began pulling him away, with Cabera
taking the other arm.
"We'll get the horses and cross the city to one
of the other gates. Then on to the coast and a legion galley. You
must get clear. Few who have supported Marius will be alive in the
morning," Tubruk continued grimly.
The young man went almost limp in his grasp and
then stiffened in fear as the night came alive with more black
shapes surrounding them. Swords were pressed up to their throats
and Julius tensed for the pain to come as an order broke the
night.
"Not these. I know them. Sulla said to keep them
alive. Get the ropes."
They struggled, but there was nothing they could
do.
Marius felt his sword pulled from his
grasp and heard the clatter as it was thrown on the stones almost
distantly. He felt the thudding blows of clubs not as pain but
simply impacts, knocking his head from side to side in the crush of
bodies. He felt a rib snap with an icicle of pain and then his arm
twisted and his shoulder dislocated with a rip. He pulled up to
consciousness and sank again as someone stamped on his fingers,
breaking them. Where were his men? Surely they would be coming to
save his life. This was not how it was meant to be, how he had seen
his end. This was not the man who entered Rome at the head of a
great Triumph and wore purple and threw silver coins to the people
that loved him. This was a broken thing that wheezed blood and life
out onto the sharp stones and wondered if his men would ever come
for him, who loved them all as a father loves his children.
He felt his head pulled back and expected a
blade to follow across his exposed throat. It didn't come, and
after long seconds of agony, his eyes focused on the forbidding
black mass of the Sacra gate. Figures swarmed over it and bodies
draped it in obscene costume. He saw the huge bar lifted by teams
of men and then the crack of torchlight that shone through it. The
great gate swung open and Sulla's legion stood beyond, the man
himself at the head, wearing a gold circlet to bind back his hair
and a pure white toga and golden sandals. Marius blinked blood out
of his eyes and in the distance heard a renewed crash of arms as
the First-Born poured in from all over the city to save their
general.
They were too late. The enemy was already within
and he had lost. They would burn Rome, he knew. Nothing could stop
that now. His holding troops would be overwhelmed and there would
be bloody slaughter, with the city raped and destroyed. Tomorrow,
if Sulla still lived, he would inherit a mantle of ashes.
The grip in Marius's hair tightened to bring his
head higher, a distant pain amongst all the others. Marius felt a
cold anger for the man who strode so mightily toward him, yet it
was mixed with a touch of respect for a worthy enemy. Was not a man
judged by his enemies? Then truly Marius was great. His thoughts
wandered away and back, fogged by the heavy blows. He lost
consciousness, he thought only for a few seconds, coming to as a
brutal-faced soldier slapped his cheeks, grimacing at the blood
that came off onto his hands. The man began to wipe them on his
filthy robe, but a strong, clear voice sounded.
"Be careful, soldier. Your hands have the blood
of Marius on them. A little respect is due, I believe."
The man gaped at the conqueror, clearly unable
to comprehend. He took a few paces away into the growing crowd of
soldiers, holding his hands stiffly away from his body.
"So few understand, do they, Marius? Just what
it is to be born to greatness?" Sulla moved so that Marius could
look him in the face. His eyes sparkled with a glittering
satisfaction that Marius had hoped never to see. Looking away, he
hawked up blood from his throat and allowed it to dribble onto his
chin. There was no energy to spit, and he had no desire to exchange
dry wit in the moments before his death. He wondered if Sulla would
spare Metella and knew he probably wouldn't. Julius—he hoped
he had escaped, but he too was probably one of the cooling corpses
that surrounded them all.
The sounds of battle swelled in the background,
and Marius heard his name being chanted as his men fought through
to him. He tried not to feel hope; it was too painful. Death was
coming in seconds. His men would see only his corpse.
Sulla tapped his teeth with a fingernail, his
face thoughtful.
"You know, with any other general I would simply
execute him and then negotiate with the legion to cease
hostilities. I am, after all, a consul and well within my rights.
It should be a simple enough matter to allow the opposing forces to
withdraw outside the city and lead my men into the city barracks in
their place. I do believe, though, that your men will carry on
until the last man stands, costing hundreds more of my own in the
process. Are you not the people's general, beloved of the
First-Born?" He tapped his teeth again and Marius strove to
concentrate and ignore the pain and weariness that threatened to
drag him back down to darkness.
"With you, Marius, I must make a special
solution. This is my offer. Can he hear me?" he asked one of the
men Marius could not see. More slaps woke him from his stupor.
"Still with us? Tell your men to accept my legal
authority as consul of Rome. The Primigenia must surrender and my
legion be allowed to deploy into the city without incident or
attack. They are in anyway, you know. If you can deliver this, I
will allow you to leave Rome with your wife, protected by my honor.
If you refuse, not one of your men will be left alive. I will
destroy them from street to street, from house to house, along with
all who have ever shown you favor or support, their wives,
children, and slaves. In short, I will wipe your name from the
annals of the city, so that no man will live who would have called
you friend. Do you understand, Marius? Pull him to his feet and
support him. Fetch the man water to ease his throat."
Marius heard the words and tried to hold them in
his swirling, leaden thoughts. He didn't trust Sulla's honor
farther than he could spit, but his legion would be saved. They
would be sent far from Rome, of course, given some degrading task
of guarding tin mines in the far north against the painted savages,
but they would be alive. He had gambled and lost. Grim despair
filled him, blunting the sharpness of the pain as broken bones
shifted in the rough grip of Sulla's men, men who would not have
dared lay a finger on him only a year before. His arm hung slack,
feeling numb and detached from him, but that didn't matter anymore.
A last thought stopped him from speaking at once. Should he delay
in the hope that his men could win through and turn the situation
to his advantage? He turned his head and saw the mass of Sulla's
men fanning out to secure the local streets and realized the chance
for a quick retaliation had gone. From now on, it would be the
messiest, most vicious kind of fighting, and most of his legion was
still on the walls around the city, unable to engage. No.
"I agree. My word on it. Let the nearest of my
men see me, so that I may pass the order on to them."
Sulla nodded, his face twisted with suspicion.
"Thousands will die if you tell untruth. Your wife will be tortured
to death. Let there be an end to this. Bring him forward."
Marius groaned with pain as he was dragged away
from the shadow of the wall, to where the clash of arms was
intense.
Sulla nodded to his aides. "Sound the
disengage," he snapped, his voice betraying the first touch of
nerves since Marius had seen him. The horns sounded the pattern and
at once the first and second rows took two paces back from the
enemy, holding position with bloody swords.
Marius's legion had left the walls on the
southeast side of the city, swarming through the streets. They
massed down every alley and road, eyes bright with rage and
bloodlust. Behind them, every second, more gathered as the city
walls were stripped of defenders. As Marius was propped up to
speak, a great howl went up from the men, an animal noise of
vengeance. Sulla stood his ground, but the muscles tightened around
his eyes in response. Marius took a deep breath to speak and felt
the press of a dagger by his spine.
"First-Born." Marius's voice was a croak, and he
tried again, finding strength. "First-Born. There is no dishonor.
We were not betrayed but attacked by Sulla's own men left behind.
Now, if you love me, if you have ever loved me, kill them all
and burn Rome!"
He ignored the agony of the dagger as it tore
into him, standing strong before his men for one long moment as
they roared in fierce joy. Then his body collapsed.
"Fires of hell!" Sulla roared as the First-Born
surged forward. "Form fours. Melee formation and engage. Sixth
company to me. Attack!" He drew his sword as the closest company
clustered round to protect him. Already he could smell blood and
smoke on the air, and dawn was still hours away.
CHAPTER
29
Marcus looked over the parapet,
straining his eyes at the distant campfires of the enemy. It was a
beautiful land, but there was nothing soft in it. The winters
killed the old and weak, and even the scrub bushes had a wilted,
defeated look as they clung to the steep crags of the mountain
passes. After more than a year as a hill scout, his skin was a dark
brown and his body was corded with wiry muscle. He had begun to
develop what the older soldiers called the "itch," the ability to
smell out an ambush, to spot a tracker, and to move unseen over
rocks in the dark. All the experienced trackers had the itch, and
those who hadn't acquired it after a year never would—and
would never be first rate, they claimed.
Marcus had first been promoted to command eight
men after he successfully spotted an ambush by blueskin tribesmen,
directing his scouts around and behind the waiting enemy. His men
had cut them to pieces and only afterward did anyone remark that
they had followed his lead without argument. It had been the first
time he had seen the wild nomads up close, and the sight of their
blue-dyed faces still slid into his dreams after bad food or cheap
wine.
The policy of the legion was to control and
pacify the area, which in practice meant a blanket permission to
kill as many of the savages as they could. Atrocities were common.
Roman guards were lost and found staked out, their entrails exposed
to the brutal sun. Mercy and kindness were quickly burned away in
the heat, dust, and flies. Most of the actions were minor—on
such broken and hostile terrain, there could be none of the
set-piece battles so beloved of the Roman legionaries. The patrols
went out and came back with a couple of heads or a few men short.
It seemed to be a stalemate, with neither side having the strength
for extermination.
After twelve months of this, the raids on the
supply caravans suddenly became more frequent and more brutal.
Along with a number of other units, Marcus's men had been added to
the supply guards, to make sure the water barrels and salted
provisions reached their most isolated outposts.
It had always been clear that these buildings
were barbs under the skin of the tribespeople, and attacks on the
small stone forts in the hills were common. The legion rotated the
men stationed there at regular intervals, and many came back to the
permanent camp with grisly stories of heads thrown over the
parapets or words of blood found on the walls when the sun
rose.
At first the duties of caravan guard had not
been onerous for Marcus. Five of his eight men were experienced,
cool hands and completed their duties without fuss or complaint. Of
the other three, Japek complained constantly, seeming not to care
that he was disliked by the others, Rupis was close to retirement
and had been broken back to the ranks after some failure of
command, and the third was Peppis. Each presented different
problems, and Renius had only shaken his head when asked for
advice.
"They're your men, you sort it out" had been his
only words on the subject.
Marcus had made Rupis his second, in charge of
four of the men, in the hope that this would restore a little of
his pride. Instead, he seemed to take some obscure insult from this
and practically sneered whenever Marcus gave him an order. After a
little thought, Marcus had ordered Japek to write down every one of
his complaints as they occurred to him, forming a catalogue that he
would allow Japek to present to their centurion back at the
permanent camp. The man was famous for not suffering fools, and
Marcus was glad to note that not a single complaint had gone down
on the parchment he had provided from the legion stores. A small
triumph, perhaps, but Marcus was struggling to learn the skills of
dealing with people, or, as Renius put it, making them do what you
want without being so annoyed that they do it badly. When he
thought about it, it made Marcus smile that the only teacher he'd
ever had for diplomacy was Renius.
Peppis was the kind of problem that couldn't be
resolved with a few words or a blow. He had made a promising start
at the permanent barracks, growing quickly in size and bulk with
good food and exercise. Unfortunately, he had a tendency to steal
from the stores, often bringing the items to Marcus, which had
caused him a great deal of embarrassment. Even being forced to
return everything he took and a brief but solid lashing had failed
to cure Peppis of the habit, and eventually the Bronze Fist
centurion, Leonides, had sent the boy to Marcus with a note that
read, Your responsibility. Your back.
The guard duty had started well, with the kind
of efficiency Marcus had begun to take for granted but which he
guessed was not the standard all over the empire. They had set off
one hour before dawn, trailing along the paths into the dark
granite hills. Four flat ox carts had been loaded with tightly
lashed barrels and thirty-two soldiers detailed for guard duty.
They were under the command of an old scout named Peritas, who had
twenty years of experience under his belt and was no one's fool.
Altogether, they were a formidable force to be trundling through
the winding hill paths, and although Marcus had felt hidden eyes on
them almost from the beginning, that was a feeling you quickly
became used to. His unit had been given the task of scouting ahead,
and Marcus was leading two of his men up a steep bank of loose
stone and dried moss when they came face-to-face with about fifty
painted, blue-skinned figures, fully armed for war.
For a few seconds, both groups merely gaped at
each other, and then Marcus had turned and scrambled back down the
slope, his two companions only slightly slower. Behind them a great
yell went up, making unnecessary the need to call any warning to
the caravan. The blue-skins poured over the lip of the hidden ledge
and fell on the caravan guards with their long swords held high and
wild screams rending the mountain air.
The legionaries had not paused to gape. As the
blue-skins charged, arrows were fitted to bowstrings and a humming
wave of death passed over the heads of Marcus and his men, giving
them time to reach the path and turn to face the enemy. Marcus
remembered having drawn his gladius and killing a warrior who had
screamed at him right up to the moment when Marcus chopped his
blade into the creature's throat.
For a moment, the legionaries were overwhelmed.
Their strength was in units, but on the ragged path it was every
man for himself and little chance to link shields with anyone else.
Nonetheless, Marcus saw that each of the Romans was standing and
cutting, their faces grim and unyielding before the blue horror of
the tribe. More men fell on both sides and Marcus found himself
with his back to a cart, ducking under a sword cut to bury his
shorter blade in a heaving blue stomach and ripping it out to the
side. The intestines seemed bright yellow against the blue dye,
some part of him noted as he defended against two more. He took one
hand off at the wrist and sliced another warrior in the groin as he
tried to leap onto the cart. The snarling tribesman fell back into
the choking dust, and Marcus stamped down on him blindly while
slicing the bicep of the next. It seemed to last a long time, and
when they finally broke and raced away up the banks into cover,
Marcus was surprised to see the sun where it had been when they
attacked. Only a few minutes had passed at most. He looked round
for his unit and was relieved to see faces he knew well, panting
and splashed with blood, but alive.
Many had not been so lucky. Rupis would never
sneer again. He lay with his legs sprawled against one of the
carts, a wide red smile opened in his throat. Twelve others had
been butchered in the attack, and around them lay almost thirty of
the still blue bodies, dribbling blood onto their land. It was a
grim sight and the flies were already arriving in droves for the
feast.
As Marcus called for Peppis to bring him a flask
of water, Peritas began setting the guards again and called the
commanders to him for a quick report. Marcus took the flask from
Peppis and trotted to the head of the column.
Peritas looked as if the heat and dust had baked
all moisture out of him over the years, leaving only a sort of hard
wood and eyes that peered out at the world with amused
indifference. Of the whole group, he was the only one who was
mounted. He nodded as Marcus saluted.
"We could turn back, but my guess is we've seen
the worst they have to offer at the moment. I think if we took the
bodies back, that would be a little victory for the savages, so we
go on. Strap the dead to the carts and change the guards over. I
want the freshest men on lookout, just in case of more trouble.
Well done, those men who surprised the enemy and made them show
themselves early. Probably saved a few Roman lives. It's only
thirty miles to the hill fort, so we had better press on.
Questions?"
Marcus looked at the horizon. There was nothing
to ask. Men died and were cremated and sent back to Rome. That was
army life. Those who survived received promotions. He hadn't
realized there was as much luck involved as there seemed to be, but
Renius had nodded when asked and pointed out that although the gods
may well have heroic favorites, an arrow doesn't care who it
kills.
The real trouble started when the
depleted company reached the last few miles of the journey. They
had begun to see blueskins watching them from the undergrowth, a
flash of color here and there. They hadn't the numbers to send a
unit to attack, and the blueskins had never used missile weapons,
so the legionaries just ignored the tribesmen and kept a good grip
on their swords.
The closer they came to the fort, the more of
the enemy they could see. At least twenty of them were keeping pace
on a higher level than the path, using the trees and undergrowth
for cover, but occasionally coming out into the open to hoot and
jeer at the grim soldiers of Rome. Peritas frowned as his horse
trotted on and kept his hand on his sword hilt.
Marcus kept expecting a spear to be thrown. He
imagined one of the blue warriors sighting on him and could
practically feel the spot between his shoulder blades where the
point would land. They certainly carried spears, but seemed to
avoid throwing them, or at least had in the past. It didn't stop
the spot itching, though. He began willing the fort to be close and
at the same time dreading what they might find. More than one tribe
must be gathered; certainly none of the men had ever seen so many
blueskins in one place before. If any of them lived to report back
to the rest of the legion, someone would have to warn them that the
tribes had grown in confidence and numbers.
At last they rounded a turn in the track and saw
the last segment of the journey, half a mile of steeply rising path
up to a small fortress on a gray hill. Roaming the flat lands
around the outcropping were more of the blue men. Some were even
camped in sight of the fortress and watched the caravan with
slitted eyes. Footfalls on rock could be heard behind them, and
rocks dislodged by scrambling bare feet spattered and bounced
against the ground. With every man on edge, they had begun the slow
climb to the fort, the ox drivers waving and cracking their whips
nervously.
Marcus could see no lookouts and began to feel a
sense of dull fear. They wouldn't make it—and what would they
find if they did?
The slow march continued until they were close
enough to see the details of the fort. Still there was no one on
the ramparts, and Marcus knew with a sinking heart that no one
could be alive inside. He had his sword drawn and was swinging it
nervously as he walked.
Suddenly a great howl went up from every
blueskin around. Marcus risked a glance back down the path and saw
what must have been a hundred of the warriors charging at them.
Peritas rode down the line of legionaries.
"Abandon the wagons! Make for the fort. Go!" he
shouted, and suddenly they were running. The howls increased in
savage joy behind them as the drivers leapt off and sprinted the
last hundred feet. Marcus held his sword away from his body and
ran, not daring to look back again. He could hear the slap of hard
bare feet and the high screaming of a blueskin attack too close for
comfort. He saw the gate come up and was through it with a knot of
shoving, heaving soldiers, turning immediately to yell
encouragement to the slower men.
Most made it. Only two men, either too tired or
too scared to make the sprint, were run down, turning in the last
moment like trapped animals and spitted with many blades. Wet red
metal was raised in defiance as the survivors shut and barred the
gate, and Peritas was off his horse and shouting to search and
secure the fort. Who could understand the sick reasoning of the
savages? Perhaps they had more men waiting inside, just for the
pleasure of picking them off when they thought they had reached
safety.
The fort was empty, however, except for the
bodies. A Fifty manned each fort, with twenty horses. Man and beast
lay where they had been killed and then mutilated. Even the horses
had their stinking guts spread over the stone floor, and clouds of
blue-black flies buzzed into the air as they were disturbed. Two
men vomited as the smell hit them, and Marcus's heart sank even
more. They were trapped, with only disease and death in the future.
Outside, the blueskins chanted and whooped.
CHAPTER
30
Before night fell, Peritas had the
bodies of the legionaries locked in an empty basement store. The
dead horses proved a more difficult problem. All weapons had been
stripped from the fort, and there wasn't an axe to be found
anywhere. The slippery carcasses could be lifted by five or six of
the men working at once, but not carried up the stone steps to be
put over the ramparts. In the end, Peritas had stacked the heavy,
limp bodies against the gate to slow down attackers. It was the
best they could hope for. No one expected to make it through the
night, and fear and resignation hung heavily on all of them. Up on
the walls, Marcus watched the campfires with narrowed eyes.
"What I don't understand," he muttered to
Peppis, "is why we were allowed back into the fort. They have taken
it once and they must have lost some lives, so why not cut us down
on the trail?"
Peppis shrugged. "They're savages, sir. Perhaps
they enjoy a challenge, or humiliating us." He carried on with his
task of sharpening blades on a worn concave whetstone. "Peritas
says we will be missed when we don't get back by morning and
they'll send out a strike force by tomorrow evening, perhaps even
earlier. We don't have to hold out for long, but I don't think the
blueskins will give us that kind of time." He continued wiping the
stone along a silver blade.
"I think we could hold this place for a day or
so. They have the numbers, granted, but that's all they have. Mind
you, they did take it once."
Marcus paused as a chant began in the near
darkness. If he strained his eyes, he could see dancing figures
silhouetted against the flames of the fires.
"Someone is having a good time tonight," he
muttered. His mouth watered. The fort well had been poisoned with
rotting flesh, and everything else edible had been removed. Truth
to tell, if the reinforcements didn't get to them in a day or two,
thirst would do the blueskins' job for them. Perhaps they intended
the Romans to die with dry throats in the burning sun. That would
match the cruel tales he had heard about them, given a fresh airing
amongst the nervous soldiers as night fell on the fort.
Peppis peered over the wall into the gloom and
snorted. "There's one of them peeing against the wall down there,"
he said, his voice caught between outrage and amusement.
"Watch yourself, don't lean out or put your head
up too high," Marcus replied as he pressed his own head closer to
the rough stone, trying to peer over the edge while exposing as
little of himself as possible.
Astonishingly close and directly below them was
a swaying blueskin holding his parts and spraying the fort with
dark urine in short sweeping arcs. The grinning figure caught sight
of the movement above and jumped, recovering quickly. He waved a
hand at the pair who watched him and waggled his privates in their
direction.
"He's had a little too much to drink, I'd say,"
Marcus murmured, grinning despite himself. He watched the man pull
a bloated wineskin around his body and suck on the mouth of it,
spilling more than he took in. Blearily, the blueskin shoved in the
stopper on his third attempt and gestured up again, calling out
something in his slushy tongue.
Tiring of their lack of response, he took two
steps and fell flat on his face.
Marcus and Peppis watched him. He was still.
"Not dead; I can see his chest moving. Dead
drunk maybe," Peppis whispered. "It's bound to be a trap. Devious,
the blueskins are, everyone says."
"Maybe, but I can only see one of them and I can
take one. We could do with that wine. I know I could, anyway,"
Marcus replied. "I'm going down there. Fetch me a rope. I can drop
over the wall and climb back up before there's any real
danger."
Peppis scurried off on his errand and Marcus
focused on the prone figure and the surrounding ground. He weighed
the risks and then smiled sardonically. They were all going to die
in the night or at dawn, so what did the risks matter? The problem
receded and he felt his tension relax. There was something about
almost certain death that was quite calming in its way. At least he
would have a drink. That wine sack had looked full enough to give
nearly all of them a cupful.
Peppis tied up his end of the rope and sent the
rest uncoiling silently down the twenty-foot drop. Marcus made sure
his gladius was secure and ruffled the hair of the lad.
"See you soon," he whispered, putting one leg
over the parapet and disappearing into the gloom below. The dark
was so complete that Peppis could barely make him out as he crept
toward the still figure, the gladius drawn and ready in his
hand.
Marcus felt the itch again and clenched his jaw.
Something was wrong with the scene and it was too late to avoid the
trap. He reached out a foot to stir the drunken blueskin and wasn't
surprised when the man suddenly sprang up. Marcus took his throat
out before the expression of triumph could fully form. Then two
more blue men rose out of the dirt. It was their presence he'd
sensed, hidden in shallow graves and lying perfectly still for
hours with almost inhuman discipline. They had probably dug
themselves in to wait before the Roman caravan even appeared,
Marcus realized as he attacked. They were not wild savages, but
warriors.
There seemed to be just the three of them, young
men out for status or a first kill. They had risen with swords in
their hands, and his first backhand blow was blocked with a loud
ring of metal that made Marcus wince. There would be more of them
coming. He had to get clear before the whole blueskin army
arrived.
Marcus's blade slid along the dust-covered
warrior's and clashed against a crude bronze guard. The man leered
and Marcus punched him in the stomach with his other fist, ripping
the blade back and through him as he doubled over in pained
surprise. He collapsed as his neck veins parted, and hit the ground
wretchedly.
The third was not as skilled as his companion,
but Marcus could hear shouts and knew time was running out. His
haste made him careless and he ducked late on a wild slash that
nicked his ear and scored a line in his scalp.
He slid to his left and punched the blade into
the man's heart through the blue-stained ribs from the side. As the
warrior fell with a gurgling cry, Marcus could hear the slap of
running feet he remembered so vividly from the afternoon scramble
into the fort. It was too late to run for the rope, so he turned
and detached the wineskin from the first body, pulling out the
stopper and taking a deep draft as the night around him filled with
swords and blue shadows.
They formed a circle around him, swords ready,
eyes bright even in the darkness. Marcus eased the wine bag to his
feet and held his gladius high. They made no move and he saw eyes
roam over the bodies. Long seconds stretched in silence, then one
of them stepped forward, large, bald, and blue, and carrying a
long, curved blade.
The warrior pointed off into the distance and
gestured at Marcus. Marcus shook his head and pointed back at the
fort. Someone jeered, but a curt hand signal from the man cut their
noise off. The warrior stepped forward fearlessly, his sword
pointed at Marcus's throat. With his other arm he pointed again at
the campfires and then at the young Roman. The circle tightened
silently and Marcus could feel the closeness of the men behind
him.
"Tortured to death over the fire it is, then,"
he said, pointing to the campfires himself.
The big blue warrior nodded, his eyes never
leaving Marcus. He spoke a few words of command and another warrior
placed his hand on Marcus's sword blade, gently removing it from
his grip.
"Oh, unarmed and tortured to
death—I didn't understand at first," Marcus continued,
forcing his voice to pleasant tones and knowing they didn't
understand. He smiled and they smiled back at him.
They left the fort behind in the darkness, and
it was probably just his imagination that he caught a glimpse of
Peppis's face outlined against the sky for a moment when he looked
back.
They walked with strutting confidence
into the blueskin camp with their prisoner. Marcus could see they
were readying themselves for war. Weapons were stacked in bundles
and the warriors danced and howled at the fires, spitting what must
have been raw alcohol, judging by the blue flames that burst and
flickered as the streams of liquid hit them. They whooped and
wrestled and more than one sat slathering a pale mud onto his arms
and face—the source, Marcus guessed, of the blue dye.
He barely had time to take all this in before he
was shoved to his knees at the side of the bonfire and a crude clay
cup of clear spirit was pressed into his hands. His eyes watered as
he caught the evaporating fumes, but he swallowed it all and then
fought not to choke. It was powerful liquor and he waved away the
offer of another cup, wanting to keep a clear head. His guards
settled on the ground all around him and seemed to be commenting on
his clothes and manners to each other. Certainly it involved much
pointing and laughing. Marcus ignored them, wondering if there
would be a chance to run. He eyed the swords of the warriors
nearest him, noting how they were removed from belts and laid on
the scrub grass near to hand. He might be able to grab one...
Horns blew and interrupted his concentration. As
everyone looked toward the source of the sound, Marcus stole one
more look at the closest blade and saw the warrior's hand was
resting on it. As his gaze traveled upward, he met the man's eyes
and chuckled wryly as the burly warrior shook his head and smiled,
revealing brown and rotting teeth.
The horn was held by the first old blueskin
Marcus had seen. He must have been fifty, and unlike the hard,
muscular bodies of the young fighters, he had a heavy belly that
bowed out his robe and jiggled as he moved skinny arms. He must
have been a leader, as the warriors reacted to his shouted commands
with speed. Three handy-looking types unsheathed their long swords
and nodded to friends in the circle. Small drums were produced and
a fast rhythm sounded. The three men stood relaxed as the rhythm
filled the night, and then they moved, faster than Marcus would
have believed possible. The swords were like bars of dawn light,
and the moves were fluid, flowing into one another, so unlike the
Roman sequences that Marcus had learned.
He could see the fight was staged, more a dance
than a contest of violence. The men spun and leapt and their swords
hummed as they cut the hot night air.
Marcus watched entranced to the end as the men
once again resumed their relaxed positions and the drumming ceased.
The warriors whooped and Marcus joined them without embarrassment,
tensing as the old man walked over to him.
"Do you like? They are skillful?" the man said
in a heavy accent.
Marcus covered his confusion and agreed, his
expression carefully blank.
"These men took your little fort. They are the
Krajka, the best of us, yes?"
Marcus nodded.
"Your men fought well, but the Krajka train when
they stand, yes, as young children? We will take back all your ugly
forts this way, yes? Stone from stone and ashes scattered? We will
do this."
"How many... Krajka are there?" Marcus
asked.
The old man smiled, showing only three teeth in
black gums. "Not enough. We practice on those came with you today.
Other warriors need to see how you people fight, yes?"
Marcus looked at him in disbelief. The future
was clearly bleak for those left in the fort. They had been allowed
to make the safety of the walls just so the young blueskins could
blood themselves against reduced defenders. It was chilling. The
legion believed the blueskins to be close to animals in
intelligence. Any captured prisoners went berserk, biting through
ropes and killing themselves on anything sharp if they couldn't
escape. This evidence of careful planning—and one who spoke a
civilized language—would wake them up to a threat they didn't
treat seriously enough.
"Why didn't the men kill me?" Marcus asked. He
fought to remain calm as the old man leaned closer to his face and
sour breath washed over him.
"They very impressed. Three men you kill with
short sword. Kill like man, not with bow or spear throwing. They
bring you to show to me, as a strange thing, yes?"
A curiosity, a Roman good at killing. He guessed
what had to come next before the old man spoke.
"Not good to have young warriors admire Roman.
You fight Krajka, yes? If win, you go back to fort. If Krajka kill
you, then all men see and know hope for future days, yes?"
Marcus agreed. There was nothing else to do. He
looked into the flames and wondered if they would let him use his
gladius.
* * *
Blueskins had come over from all the
other campfires, leaving them barely defended. Marcus realized the
men in the fort could not be aware of the opportunity. They would
still see the spots of light in the mountain darkness and not know
the bulk of them had trotted over to see the contest.
Marcus was allowed to stand and a circle was
marked out with daggers stuck into the soil. The blueskins gathered
outside the line, some balancing friends on their shoulders so they
could see. Whichever way Marcus turned, he could see a heaving wall
of blue flesh and grinning yellow teeth. He noticed how many of the
eyes were pink-rimmed and decided it must be something in the dye
that irritated the skin. The older, potbellied blueskin stepped
into the circle and gravely handed Marcus his gladius, stepping
back warily. Marcus ignored him. You didn't need the scouts eye to
sense the hostility here. Lose and be cut to pieces to show their
superiority, win and be torn apart by the mob. For a fleeting
moment, he wondered what Gaius would do and had to smile at the
thought. Gaius would have killed the leader as soon as he handed
over the sword. It couldn't get any worse, after all.
The leader was still visible, his belly sticking
into the circle space, but somehow it didn't seem right to run over
and stick the old devil. Perhaps they would let him go. He looked
around at the faces again and shrugged. Not very likely.
A low cheer built as one of the Krajka came
through the circle, with the warriors parting briefly and then
shoving their way back into position to get a good view. Marcus
looked him up and down. He was much taller than the average
blueskin and had a good three inches on Marcus, even after the
growth he'd put on since leaving Rome. He was bare-chested and
muscles shifted easily under the painted skin. Marcus guessed they
were probably about equal in reach. His own arms were long, with
powerful wrists from hours of sword practice. He knew he had a
chance, no matter how good the man was. Renius still worked with
him every day, and Marcus was running out of opponents to give him
a challenge in the practices.
He watched the way the tall man moved and
walked. He looked into his eyes and found no give. The man didn't
smile and wouldn't understand insults anyway. He walked around the
edge of the circle, always staying out of reach in case Marcus
tried a wild attack. Marcus turned on the spot, watching him all
the time until he took up his position on the opposite side, twenty
feet away. Tactics, tactics. Renius said never to stop thinking.
The point was to win, not to be fair. Marcus winced as the man drew
a long sword that reached from his hip to the ground, a shining
length of polished bronze. There was the edge. He hadn't really
noticed before, but the blueskins were using bronze weapons and a
hard iron gladius would soon take the edge off it, if he could
survive the first few blows. His thoughts raced. Bronze blunted. It
was softer than iron.
The man walked closer and loosened his bare
shoulders. He was wearing only leggings over bare feet and looked
supremely athletic, moving like a great cat.
Marcus called to the leader, "If I kill him, I
walk free, yes?"
A great jeer went up from the crowd, making him
wonder how many understood the language. The old blueskin nodded,
smiling, and signaled with his hand to begin.
Marcus jumped as drums sounded over the chatter
of the crowd. His opponent relaxed visibly as the rhythms were
pounded out. Marcus watched him lower into a fighter's stance, the
sword held out unwavering. The extra inches on the blade would give
him the advantage in reach, Marcus thought, rolling his shoulders.
He held up his hand and took a step back to remove his tunic. It
was a relief to be free of it in the stifling heat, made worse by
the nearby fire and the sweating crowd. The drumming intensified
and Marcus focused his gaze on the man's throat. It unnerved some
opponents. He became utterly still while the other swayed gently.
Two different styles.
The Krajka barely seemed to move, but Marcus
felt the attack and shifted aside, making the bronze blade miss
him. He didn't engage the gladius with the blade, trying to judge
the man's speed.
A second cut, a smooth continuation of the
first, came at his face, and Marcus brought his gladius up
desperately with a ring of metal. The blades slid together and he
felt fresh sweat prickle on his hairline. The man was fast and
fluid, with killing strikes that seemed only flicks and feints.
Marcus blocked another low cut into his stomach and stepped and
punched forward into the blue body.
It was not there and he went sprawling on the
hard ground. He got up quickly, noting the fact that the Krajka
stood well back to let him. This was not to be a quick kill then.
Marcus nodded to him, his jaw clenched. Feel no anger, he told
himself, nor shame. He remembered Renius's words. It does not
matter what happens in battle as long as the enemy lies at your
feet at the end of it.
The Krajka skipped lightly forward to meet him.
At the last second, the bronze sword flicked out and Marcus was
forced to duck under it. This time he didn't follow through with a
lunge under the blow and saw the man's readiness to reverse his
sword into a downward slash. He had fought Romans before!
The thought flashed into Marcus's head. This man knew their style
of fighting, perhaps he had even learned it with a few of the
legionaries who had disappeared over previous months, before
killing them.
It was galling. Everything he had been taught
came from Renius, a Roman-trained soldier and gladiator. He had no
other style to fall back on. The Krajka was clearly a master of his
art.
The bronze sword licked out and Marcus blocked
it. He focused on the lightly pulsing blue throat and could still
see the shifting arms and sinuous moves of the body. He let one
blow slide by him and stepped away from another, judging the
distance perfectly. In the space, he struck like a snake and scored
a thin line of red in the Krajka's side.
The crowd fell suddenly silent, shocked. The
Krajka looked puzzled and took two sliding steps away from Marcus.
He frowned and Marcus saw he had not felt the scratch. He pressed
his hand to the red line and looked at it, his face blank. Then he
shrugged and danced in again, his bronze sword a blur in the light
and shadows.
Marcus felt the rhythm of the movements and
began working against the flowing style, breaking the smoothness,
causing the Krajka to jump back from a sword held out rigidly and
again when Marcus's hard sandals cracked against his toes.
Marcus advanced, knowing his opponent's
confidence was wavering. Each step was accompanied by a blow that
became another, a flowing pattern that mimicked the style the
Krajka employed against him. The gladius became an extension of his
arm, a thorn in his hand that required just a touch to kill. The
Krajka let a throat cut pass a hairbreadth from his skin, and
Marcus could feel the hot gaze above his own. The man was angry
that he had not won easily. Another blow was blocked and once again
the bare feet were crunched under hard Roman sandals.
The Krajka gave out a strangled groan of pain
and spun, leaping into the air like a spirit, as Marcus had seen
the others do before. It was a move from the dance and the bronze
sword whirled with him, coming out of the spin unseen and slicing
Marcus's skin across the chest. The crowd roared, and as the man
landed, Marcus reached up and caught the bronze blade with his bare
left hand.
The Krajka looked in astonishment into Marcus's
eyes and found for the first time in the whole battle that they
were looking back at him, cold and black. He froze under that gaze
and the hesitation killed him. He felt the iron gladius enter his
throat from the front and the pouring wetness of blood that stole
his strength. He would have liked to pull his blade back, cutting
the fingers away like overripe stalks, but there was no strength
left and he dropped into a boneless sprawl at Marcus's feet.
Marcus breathed slowly and picked up the bronze
sword, noting the twisted and buckled edge where he had caught it.
He could feel blood trickle over his knuckles from the cut on his
palm, but was able to move the fingers stiffly. He waited then for
the crowd to rush in and kill him.
They were silent for some time and in that
silence the old blueskin's voice called out harsh-sounding
commands. Marcus kept his eyes on the ground and the swords loose
in his hands. He was aware of footsteps and turned as the old
blueskin took his arm. The man's eyes were dark with astonishment
and something else.
"Come. I keep my word. You go back to friends.
We come for you all in morning."
Marcus nodded, scarcely daring to believe it was
true. He looked for something to say.
"He was a fine fighter, the Krajka. I have never
fought better."
"Of course. He was my son." The man seemed older
as he spoke, as if years were settling on his shoulders and
weighing him down. He led Marcus outside the circle and into the
open and pointed into the night.
"Walk home now."
He stayed silent as Marcus handed him the bronze
blade and walked away into the dark.
The fort wall was black in the
darkness as Marcus approached. While he was still some distance
away, he whistled a tune so that the soldiers would hear him and
not put a crossbow bolt into his chest as he drew close.
"I'm alone! Peppis, throw that rope back down,"
he called into the silence.
There was scrambling inside as the others moved
to peer over the edge.
A head appeared above him in the gloom and
Marcus recognized the sour features of Peritas.
"Marcus? Peppis said the 'skins had you."
"They did, but they let me go. Are you going to
throw a rope down to me or not?" Marcus snapped. It was colder away
from the fires and he held his damaged hand in his armpit to keep
the stiff fingers warm. He could hear whispered conversations above
and cursed Peritas for his cautious ways. Why would the tribesmen
set a trap when they could just wait for them all to die of
thirst?
Finally, a rope came slithering over the wall
and he pulled himself up it, his arms burning with tiredness. At
the top, there were hands to help pull him onto the inner wall
ledge, and then he was almost knocked from his feet by Peppis, who
threw his arms around him.
"I thought they was going to eat you," the boy
said. His dirty face was streaked where he had been crying, and
Marcus felt a pang of sorrow that he had brought the boy to this
dismal place for his last night.
He reached out a hand and ruffled his hair
affectionately. "No, lad. They said I was too stringy. They like
them young and tender."
Peppis gasped in horror and Peritas chuckled.
"You have all night to tell us what happened. I don't think anyone
will sleep. Are there many of them out there?"
Marcus looked at the older man and understood
what couldn't be said openly in front of the boy.
"There's enough," he replied, his voice low.
Peritas looked away and nodded to himself.
As dawn broke, Marcus and the others
waited grimly for the assault, bleary-eyed from lack of sleep.
Every man of them stood on the walls, swinging their heads
nervously at the slightest movement of a bird or rabbit down on the
scrubland. The silence was frightening, but when a sword falling
over interrupted it, more than a few swore at the soldier who'd let
it slip.
Then, in the distance, they heard the brassy
horns of a Roman legion, echoing in the hills. Peritas jogged along
the narrow walkway inside the walls and cheered as they watched
three centuries of men come out of the mountain trails at a
double-speed march.
It was only a few minutes before a voice
sounded, "Approaching the fort," and the gates were thrown
open.
The legion commanders had not been slow in
sending out a strike force when the caravan was late returning.
After the recent attacks, they wanted a show of strength and had
marched through the dark hours over rough terrain, making twenty
miles in the night.
"Did you see any sign of the blueskins?" Peritas
asked, frowning. "There were hundreds around the fort when we
arrived. We were expecting an attack."
A centurion shook his head and pursed his lips.
"We saw signs of them, smoldering campfires and rubbish. It looks
like they all moved out in the night. There is no accounting for
the way savages think, you know. One of their magic men probably
saw an unlucky bird or some kind of omen."
He looked around at the fort and caught the
stench of the bodies.
"Looks like we have work to do here. Orders are
to man this place until relieved. I'll send a Fifty back with you
to permanent camp. No one moves without a heavy armed force from
now on. This is hostile territory, you know."
Marcus opened his mouth to reply and Peritas
turned him deftly around with an arm on his shoulder, sending him
off with a gentle push.
"We know," he said, before turning away to ready
his men for the march home.
CHAPTER
31
The street gang was already draped in
expensive bolts of cloth, stolen from a shop or seamstress. They
carried clay vessels that sloshed red wine onto the stone street as
they wove and staggered along.
Alexandria peered out of the locked gates of
Marius's town house, frowning.
"The filth of Rome," she muttered to herself.
With all the soldiers in the city engaged in battle, it had not
taken long for those who enjoyed chaos to come out onto the
streets. As always, it was the poor who suffered the most. Without
guards of any kind, houses were broken into and everything of value
carried away by yelling, jeering looters.
Alexandria could see one of the bolts of cloth
was splashed with blood, and her fingers itched for a bow to send a
shaft into the man's drunken mouth.
She ducked back behind the gatepost as they went
past, wincing as a burly hand reached out to rattle the gate,
testing for weakness. She gripped the hammer she had taken from
Bant's workshop. If they tried to climb the gates, she was ready to
crack someone's head. Her heart thudded as they paused and she
could hear every slurred word between them.
"There's a whorehouse on Via Tantius, lads. We
could get a little free trade," came a rough voice.
"They'll have guards, Brac. I wouldn't leave a
post like that, would you? I'd make sure I got paid for my service
as well. Those whores would be glad to have a strong man protecting
them. What we want is another nice little wife with a couple of
young daughters. We'll offer to look after them while the husband's
away."
"I'm first, though. I didn't get much of a turn
last time," the first voice said.
"I was too much for her, that's why. After me, a
woman don't want another."
The laughter was coarse and brutal and
Alexandria shuddered as they moved away.
She heard light footsteps behind her and spun,
raising the hammer.
"It's all right, it's me," Metella said, her
face pale. She had heard the end of it. Both women had tears in
their eyes.
"Are you certain about this, mistress?"
"Quite certain, Alexandria, but you'll have to
run. It will be worse if you stay here. Sulla is a vengeful man and
there is no reason for you to be caught up in his spite. Go and
find this Tabbic. You have the paper I signed?"
"Of course. It is the dearest thing I own."
"Keep it safe. The next few months will be
difficult and dangerous. You will need proof you are a free woman.
Invest the money Gaius left for you and stay safe until the city
legion has restored order."
"I just wish I could thank him."
"I hope you have the chance one day." Metella
stepped up to the bars and unlocked them, looking up and down the
street. "Go quickly now. The road is clear for the moment, but you
must hurry down to the market. Don't stop for anything, you
understand?"
Alexandria nodded stiffly, not needing to be
told after what she had heard. She looked at Metella's pale skin
and dark eyes and felt fear touch her.
"I just worry about you in this great house, all
alone. Who will look after you, with the house empty?"
Metella held up a hand in a gentle gesture.
"Have no fear for me, Alexandria. I have friends who will spirit me
away from the city. I will find a warm foreign land and retire
there, away from all the intrigue and pains of a growing city.
Somewhere ancient appeals to me, where all the struggle of youth is
but a distant memory. Stay to the main street. I can't relax until
the last of my family is safely away."
Alexandria held her gaze for a second, her eyes
bright with tears. Then she nodded once and passed through the
gates, closing them firmly behind her and hurrying away.
Metella watched her go, feeling every one of her
years in comparison to the young girl's light steps. She envied the
ability of the young to start anew, without looking back at the
old. Metella kept her in sight until she turned a street corner,
and then looked inward to her empty, echoing home. The great house
and gardens were empty at last.
How could Marius not be here? It was an eerie
thought. He had been gone so often on long campaigns, yet always
returned, full of life and wit and strength. The idea that he would
not return once more for her was an ugly wound that she would not
examine. It was too easy to imagine that he was away with his
legion, conquering new lands or building huge aqueducts for foreign
kings. She would sleep and, when she awoke, the awful sucking pain
inside her would be gone and he would be there to hold her.
She could smell smoke on the air. Ever since
Sulla's attack on the city three days before, there had been fire,
raging untended from house to house and street to street. It had
not reached the stone houses of the rich yet, but the fire that
roared in Rome would consume them all eventually, piling ashes on
ashes until there was nothing left of dreams.
Metella looked out at the city that sloped away
from the hill. She leaned against a marble wall and felt its
coolness as a comfort against the thick heat. There were vast black
plumes of churning smoke lifting into the air from a dozen points
and spreading into a gray layer, the color of despair. Screams
carried on the wind as the marauding soldiers fought without mercy
and the raptores on the streets killed or raped anything that
crossed their path.
She hoped Alexandria would get through safely.
The house guards had deserted her the morning they heard of
Marius's death. She supposed she was lucky they had not murdered
her in her bed and looted the house, but the betrayal still stung.
Had they not been treated fairly and well? What was left to stand
on in a world where a man's oath could vanish in the first warm
breeze?
She had lied to Alexandria, of course. There was
no way out of the city for her. If it was dangerous to send a young
slave girl on a journey of only a few streets, it was impossible
for a well-known lady to transport her wealth past the wolves that
roamed the roads of Rome, looking for just such opportunities.
Perhaps she could have disguised herself as a slave, even traveled
with one of the slaves. With luck, they might have got out alive,
though she thought it more than likely that they would have been
hurt and abused and left for the dogs somewhere. There had been no
law in Rome for three days, and to some that was a heady freedom.
If she had been younger and braver, she might have taken the risk,
but Marius had been her courage for too long.
With him, she could stand the sniggers of
society ladies as they discussed her childless state behind her
back. With him, she could face the world with an empty womb and
still smile and not give way to screaming. Without him, she could
not dare the streets alone and start again as a penniless
refugee.
Metal-studded sandals ran past the gates and
Metella felt a shiver start in her shoulders and run through her.
It would not be long before the fighting reached this area and the
looters and murderers that moved with Sulla would be breaking down
the iron gates of Marius's old city home. She had received reports
for the first two days, until her messengers too had deserted her.
Sulla's men had poured into the city, taking and holding street
after street, using the advantage that Marius had created for them.
With the First-Born spread all around the city walls, they could
not bring the bulk of their forces against the invader for most of
the first night of fighting, and by then Sulla had dug in and was
content to continue a creeping battle, dragging his siege engines
through the streets to smash barricades and lining the roads behind
him with the heads of Marius's men. It was said the great temple of
Jupiter had been burned, with flames so hot that the marble slabs
cracked and exploded, bringing down the columns and the heavy
pillars, spilling them onto the piazza with thunderous reports. The
people said it was an omen, that the gods were displeased with
Sulla, but still he seemed to be winning.
Then her reports had ended, and at night she
knew that the rhythmic victory chants echoing across Rome were not
from the throats of the First-Born.
Metella reached up to her shoulder and took hold
of the strap there, lifting it away from her skin. She shrugged it
off and reached for the other. In a moment, her dress slipped into
a puddle of material and she stepped naked from it, her back to the
gates as she walked through the arches and doors, deeper into the
house. The air felt cooler on her uncovered skin and she shivered
again, this time with a touch of pleasure. How strange it was to be
naked in these formal rooms!
As she walked, she slipped bangles from her
hands and rings from her fingers, placing the handful of precious
metal on a table. Marius's wedding ring she kept, as she had
promised him that she would never take it off. She loosed her hair
from the bands and let it spill down her back in a wave, tossing
her head to make the crimps and curls fall out.
She was barefoot and clean as she entered the
bathing hall and felt the steam coat her with the tiniest trace of
gleaming moisture. She breathed it in and let the warmth fill her
lungs.
The pool was deep and the water freshly heated,
the last task of the departing slaves and servants. She let out a
small sigh as she stepped down into the clear pool, made dark blue
by the mosaic base. For a few seconds, she closed her eyes and
thought back over the years with Marius. She'd never minded the
long periods he spent away from Rome and their home with the
First-Born. Had she known how short the time would be, she would
have gone with him, but it was not the moment for pointless
regrets. Fresh tears slid from under her eyelids without effort or
any release of tension.
She remembered when he was first commissioned
and his pleasure at each rise in rank and authority. He had been
glorious in his youth and the lovemaking had been joyous and wild.
She had been an innocent girl when the muscular young soldier had
proposed. She hadn't known about the ugly side of life, about the
pain as year after year passed without children to bring her joy.
Each one of her friends had pressed out screaming child after
child, and some of the babies broke her heart just to look at them,
just from the sudden emptiness. Those were the years when Marius
had spent more and more time away from her, unable to cope with her
rages and accusations. For a while she had hoped he would have an
affair, and she had told him that she would even accept a child
from such a union as her own.
He had taken her head tenderly in his hands and
kissed her softly. "There is only you, Metella," he had said. "If
fate has taken this one pleasure from us, I won't spit in her
eye."
She had thought she would never be able to stop
the sobs that pulled at her throat. Finally he had lifted her up
and taken her to bed, where he was so gentle she cried once more,
at the end. He had been a good husband, a good man.
She reached over to the side of the pool without
opening her eyes. Her fingers found the thin iron knife she had
left there. One of his, given after his century had held a hill
fort for a week against a swarming army of savages. She gripped the
blade between two fingers and guided it blindly down to her wrist.
She took a deep breath and her mind was numb and filled with
peace.
The blade cut, and the strange thing was, it
didn't really hurt. The pain was a distant thing, almost unnoticed
as her inner eye relived old summers.
"Marius." She thought she'd said the name aloud,
but the room was still and silent and the blue water had turned
red.
Cornelia frowned at her father.
"I will not leave here. This is my home
and it is as safe as anywhere else in the city at the moment."
Cinna looked about him, noting the heavy gates
that blocked off the town house from the street outside. The house
he had given as her dowry was a simple one of only eight rooms, all
on one floor. It was a beautiful home, but he would have preferred
an ugly one with a high brick wall around it.
"If a mob comes for you, or Sulla's men, looking
to rape and destroy..." His voice shook with suppressed emotion as
he spoke, but Cornelia held firm.
"I have guards to handle a mob, and nothing in
Rome will stop Sulla if the First-Born cannot," Cornelia replied.
Her voice was calm, but inside, doubts nagged at her. True, her
father's home was built like a fortress, but this belonged to her
and to Julius. It was where he would look for her, if he
survived.
Her fathers voice rose almost to a screech. "You
haven't seen what the streets are like! Gangs of animals looking
for easy targets. I couldn't go out myself without my guards. Many
homes have been set on fire or looted. It is chaos." He rubbed his
face with his hands and his daughter saw that he hadn't shaved.
"Rome will come through it, Father. Didn't you
want to move out to the country when the riots were going on a year
ago? If I had left then, I would not have met Julius and I would
not be married."
"I wish I had left!" Cinna snapped, his voice
savage. "I wish I had taken you away then. You would not be here,
in danger, with..."
She stepped closer to him and put her hand out
to touch his cheek. "Calm, Father, calm. You will hurt yourself
with all your worries. This city has seen upheavals before. It will
pass. I will be safe. You should have shaved." There were tears in
his eyes and she stepped into a crushing hug.
"Gently, old man. I am delicate now."
Her father straightened his arms, looking at her
questioningly. "Pregnant?" he asked, his voice rough with
affection.
Cornelia nodded.
"My beautiful girl," he said, gathering her in
again, but carefully.
"You will be a grandfather," she whispered into
his ear.
"Cornelia," he said. "You must come now. My
house is safer than this. Why take such a risk? Come home."
The word was so powerful. She wanted to let him
take her to safety, wanted very much to be a little girl again, but
could not. She shook her head, smiling tightly to try to take away
the sting of rejection.
"Leave more guards if it will make you feel
happy, but this is my home now. My child will be born here, and
when Julius is able to return to the city, he will come here
first."
"What if he has been killed?"
She closed her eyes against the sudden stab of
pain, feeling tears sting under the lids. "Father, please.. .Julius
will come back to me. I... I am sure of it."
"Does he know about the child?"
She kept her eyes closed, willing the weakness
to pass. She would not start sobbing, though part of her wanted to
bury her head in her father's chest and let him carry her away.
"Not yet."
Cinna sat on a bench next to a trickling pool in
the garden. He remembered the conversations with the architect when
he had been readying the house for his daughter. It seemed such a
long time ago. He sighed.
"You defeat me, girl. What will I tell your
mother?"
Cornelia sat next to him. "You will tell her
that I am well and happy and going to give birth in about seven
months. You will tell her that I am preparing my home for the
birth, and she will understand that. I will send messengers to you
when the streets are quiet again and... that we have enough food
and are in good health. Simple."
Her fathers voice was cracking slightly as he
tried to find a note of firmness. "This Julius had better be a good
husband to you—and a good father. I will have him whipped if
he isn't. Should have done it when I heard he was running about on
my roof after you."
Cornelia wiped a hand over her eyes, pressing
the worry back inside her. She forced herself to smile. "There's no
cruelty in you, Father, so don't try and pretend there is."
He grimaced, and the silence stretched for long
moments.
"I will wait another two days and then I will
have my guards take you home."
Cornelia pressed a hand on her father's arm.
"No. I am not yours anymore. Julius is my husband and he will
expect me to be here."
Then the tears could no longer be held back and
she began to sob. Cinna pulled her to him and embraced her
tightly.
Sulla frowned as his men raced to
secure the main streets, which would give them access to the great
forum and the heart of the city. After the first bloody scramble,
the battle for Rome had gone well for him, with area after area
taken with quick, brutal skirmishes and then held against an enemy
in disarray. Before the sun had risen fully, most of the lower east
quarter of Rome was under his control, creating a large area in
which they could rest and regroup. Then tactical problems had
arisen. With his controlled areas expanding in a line, he had fewer
and fewer men to hold the border and knew he was always in danger
from any sort of attack that massed men against a section where his
were spread thinly.
Sulla's advance slowed and orders flowed ever
more swiftly from him, moving units around or making them hold. He
knew he had to have a secure base before he asked for any kind of
surrender. After Marius's last words to them, Sulla accepted that
there was a chance his soldiers would fight to the last
man—their loyalty was legendary even in a system where such
loyalty was fostered and nurtured. He had to make them lose hope,
and a slowing advance would not do that.
Now he was standing in an open square at the top
of the Caelius hill. All the massed streets behind him back to the
Caelimontana gate were his. The fires had been put out and his
legion was entrenched from there all the way to Porta Raudusculana
at the southern tip of the city walls.
In the small square were nearly a hundred of his
men, split into groups of four. Each man had volunteered and he was
touched by it. Was this what Marius felt when his men offered their
lives for him?
"You have your orders. Keep moving and cause
havoc. If you are outnumbered, get away until you can attack again.
You are my luck and the luck of the legion. Gods speed you."
As one, they saluted him and he returned it, his
arm stiff. He expected most to be dead within the hour. If it had
been night, they would have been more useful, but in the bright
daylight they were little better than a distraction. He watched the
last group of four squeeze through the barricade and hare off along
a side street.
"Have Marius's body wrapped and placed in cool
shadow," Sulla said to a nearby soldier. "I cannot say when I will
have the leisure to organize a proper funeral for him."
A sudden flight of arrows was launched from two
or three streets away. Sulla watched the arc with interest, noting
the most likely site for the archers and hoping a few of his
four-man squads were in the area. The black shafts passed overhead
and then all around them, shattering on the stone of the courtyard
Sulla had adopted as a temporary command post. One of his
messengers dropped with a barbed arrow through his chest, and
another screamed, though he seemed not to have been touched. Sulla
frowned.
"Guard. Take that messenger somewhere close and
flog him. Romans don't scream or faint at the sight of blood. Make
sure I can see a little of his on his back when you return."
The guard nodded and the messenger was borne
away in silence, terrified lest his punishment be increased.
A centurion ran up and saluted. "General. This
area is secure. Shall I sound the slow advance?"
Sulla stared at him. "I chafe at the pace we are
setting. Sound the charge for this section. Let the others catch us
up as they may."
"We will be exposed, sir, to flanking attacks,"
the man stammered.
"Question an order of mine again in war and I
will have you hanged like a common criminal."
The man paled and spun to give the order.
Sulla ground his teeth in irritation. Oh, for an
enemy who would meet him on an open field. This city fighting was
unseen and violent. Men ripping each other with blades out of sight
in distant alleyways. Where were the glorious charges? The singing
battle weapons? But he would be patient and he would eventually
grind them down to despair. He heard the charge horn sound and saw
his men lift their barricades and prepare to carry them forward. He
felt his blood quicken with excitement. Let them try to flank him,
with so many of his squads mingling out there to attack from
behind.
He smelled fresh smoke on the air and could see
flames lick from high windows in the streets just ahead. Screams
sounded above the eternal clash of arms, and desperate figures
climbed out onto stone ledges, thirty, forty feet above the
sprawling melee below. They would die on the great stones of the
roadways. Sulla saw one woman lose her grip and fall headfirst onto
the heavy curb. It broke her into a twisted doll. Smoke swirled in
his nostrils. One more street and then another.
His men were moving quickly.
"Forward!" he urged, feeling his heart beat
faster.
Orso Ferito spread a map of Rome on a
heavy wooden table and looked around at the faces of the centurions
of the First-Born.
"The line I have marked is how much territory
Sulla has under his control. He fights on an expanding line and is
vulnerable to a spear-point attack at almost any part of it. I
suggest we attack here and here at the same time." He indicated the
two points on the map, looking round at the other men in the room.
Like Orso, they were tired and dirty. Few had slept more than an
hour or two at a time in the previous three-day battle, and like
their men, they were close to complete exhaustion.
Orso himself had been in command of five
centuries when he had witnessed Marius's murder at the hands of
Sulla. He had heard his general's last shout and he still burned
with rage when he thought of smug Sulla shoving a blade into a man
Orso loved more dearly than his own father.
The following day had been chaos, with hundreds
dying on both sides. Orso had kept control over his own men,
launching short and bloody attacks and then withdrawing before
reserves could be brought up. Like many of Marius's men, he was not
highborn and had grown up on the streets of Rome. He understood how
to fight in the roads and alleys he had scrambled along as a boy,
and before dawn on the second day he had emerged as the unofficial
leader of the First-Born.
His influence was felt immediately as he began
to coordinate the attacks and defenses. Some streets Orso would let
go as strategically unimportant. He ordered the occupants out of
houses, set the fires, and had his men withdraw under arrow cover.
Other streets they fought for again and again, concentrating their
available forces on preventing Sulla from breaking through. Many
had been lost, but the headlong rush into the city had been slowed
and stopped in many areas. It would not be over quickly now, and
Sulla had a fight on his hands.
Whatever Orso's mother had called him, he had
always been Orso, the bear, to his men. His squat body and most of
his face was covered in black, wiry hair, right up onto his cheeks.
His slab-muscled shoulders were matted with dried blood, and like
the others in the room who had been forced to give up their Roman
taste for cleanliness, he stank of smoke and old sweat.
The meeting room had been chosen at random, a
kitchen in someone's town house. The group of centurions had walked
in off the street and spread the map out. The owner was upstairs
somewhere. Orso sighed as he looked at the map. Breakthroughs were
possible, but they would need the luck of the gods to beat Sulla.
He looked around at the faces at the table again and was hard put
not to wince at the hope he saw reflected there. He was no Marius,
he knew that. If the general had remained alive to be in this room,
they would have had a fighting chance. As it was...
"They have no more than twenty to fifty men at
any given point on the line. If we break through quickly, with two
centuries at each position, we should be able to cut them to pieces
before reinforcements arrive."
"What then? Go for Sulla?" one of the centurions
asked. Marius would have known his name, Orso acknowledged to
himself.
"We can't be sure where that snake has
positioned himself. He is quite capable of setting up a command
tent as a decoy for assassins. I suggest we pull straight back out,
leaving a few men in civilian clothes to watch for an opportunity
to take him."
"The men won't be pleased. It is not a crushing
victory and they want one."
Orso snapped back his ire. "The men are
legionaries of the finest damn legion in Rome. They will do as
they're told. This is a game of numbers, if it is a game at all.
They have more. We control similar ground with far fewer men. They
can reinforce faster than we can and... they have a far more
experienced commander. The best we can do is to destroy a hundred
of their men and pull out, losing as few of ours as possible. Sulla
still has the same problem of defending a lengthening line."
"We have the same problem, to some extent."
"Not half as badly. If they break through, it is
into the vast city, where they can be flanked with ease and cut
off. We are still in control of the larger area by far. When we
break their line, it will be straight into the heart of their
territory."
"Where they have their men, Orso. I am not
convinced your plan will work," the man continued.
Orso looked at him. "What is your name?"
"Bar Gallienus, sir."
"Did you hear what Marius called out before he
was killed?"
The man reddened slightly. "I did, sir."
"So did I. We are defending our city and her
inhabitants from an illegal invader. My commander is dead. I have
assumed temporary command until the current crisis is over. Unless
you have something useful to add to the discussion, I suggest you
wait outside and I'll let you know when we are finished. Is that
clear?" Although Orso's voice remained calm and polite throughout
the exchange, all the men in the room could feel the anger coming
off him like a physical force. It took a little courage not to edge
away.
Bar Gallienus spoke quietly. "I would like to
stay."
Orso clapped a hand on his shoulder and looked
away from him. "Anything we have that can launch a missile,
including every man with a bow, will mass at those two points, one
hour from now. We will hit them with everything and then two
centuries will charge their defenses on my signal. I will lead the
attack through the old market area, as I know it well. Bar
Gallienus will lead the other. Any questions?"
There was silence at the table. Gallienus looked
Orso in the eye and nodded his agreement.
"Then gather your legionaries, gentlemen. Let's
make the old man proud. 'Marius' is the shout. The signal will be
three short blasts. One hour."
Sulla stepped back from the bloodied
men panting in front of him. Of the hundred he had sent into the
fray hours before, only eleven had made it back to report, and
these were wounded, every one.
"General. The mobile squads were only partially
successful," a soldier said, trying hard to stand erect over the
weakness of his heaving lungs. "We did a lot of damage in the first
hour and at a guess took down more than fifty of the enemy in small
skirmishes. Where possible, we caught them alone or in pairs and
overwhelmed them as you suggested. Then the word must have gone out
and we found ourselves being tracked through the streets. Whoever
was directing them must know the city very well. Some of us took to
the roofs, but there were men waiting up there." He paused for
breath again and Sulla waited impatiently for the man to calm
himself.
"I saw several of the men brought down by women
or children coming out of the houses with knives. They hesitated to
kill civilians and were cut to pieces. My own squad was lost to a
similar group of First-Born who had removed their outer armor and
carried only short swords. We had been running a long time and they
cornered us in an alleyway. I—"
"You said you had information to report. It was
clear from the beginning that the mobile groups would do only
limited damage. I had hoped to spread fear and chaos, but it seems
there is a semblance of discipline left in the First-Born. One of
Marius's seconds must have taken overall tactical control. He will
be looking to strike back quickly. Did your men see any signs of
this?"
"Yes, General. They were bringing men up quietly
through the streets. I do not know when or where they will attack,
but there will be some sort of skirmish soon."
"Hardly worth eighty of my men, but useful
enough to me. Get yourselves to the surgeons. Centurion!" he
snapped at a man nearby. "Get every man up to the barricades. They
will try to break through. Triple the men on the line."
The centurion nodded and signaled to the
messengers to carry the news to the outposts of the line.
Suddenly the sky turned black with arrow shafts,
a stinging, humming swarm of death. Sulla watched them fall. He
clenched his fists and tightened his jaw as they whirred toward his
position. Men around him threw themselves down, but he stood
straight and unblinking with his eyes glittering.
The shafts rained and shattered around him, but
he was untouched. He turned and laughed at his scrambling advisers
and officers. One was on his knees, pulling at an arrow in his
chest and spilling blood from his mouth. Two others stared glassily
at the sky, unmoving.
"A good omen, don't you think?" he said, still
smiling.
Ahead, somewhere in the city, a horn blew three
short blasts and a roar rose in response. Sulla heard one name
chanted above the noise and for a moment knew doubt.
"Ma-ri-us!" howled the First-Born. And they came
on.
CHAPTER
32
Alexandria hammered at the door of the
little jeweler's shop. There had to be someone there! She knew he
could have left the city as so many others had done, and the
thought that she might be just drawing attention to herself made
her go pale. Something scraped in the street nearby, like a door
opening.
"Tabbic! It's me, Alexandria! Gods, open up,
man!" She let her arm fall, panting. Shouts came from nearby and
her heart thudded wildly.
"Come on. Come on," she whispered.
Then the door was wrenched aside and Tabbic
stood glaring, a hatchet held tightly in his hand. When he saw her,
he looked relieved and something of the anger faded.
"Get in, girl. The animals are out tonight," he
said gruffly. He looked up and down the street. It seemed deserted,
though he could feel eyes on him.
Inside, she was faint from relief. "Metella...
sent me, she..." she said.
"It's all right, girl. You can explain later.
The wife and kids are upstairs putting a meal together. Go up and
join them. You're safe here."
She paused for a moment and turned to him,
unable to hold it in. "Tabbic. I have papers and everything. I'm
free."
He leaned close and looked her in the eyes, a
smile beginning. "When were you anything else? Get upstairs now. My
wife will be wondering what all the fuss is about."
There was nothing in the battle
manuals for assaulting a broken barricade set across a city street.
Orso Ferito simply roared his dead general's name and launched
himself up the litter of broken carts and doors into the arms of
the enemy. Two hundred men came behind him.
Orso buried his gladius in the first throat he
saw and only missed being cut by slipping on the shifting barricade
and rolling down the other side. He came up swinging and was
rewarded with a satisfying crunch of bone. His men were all around
him, hacking and cutting onward. Orso couldn't tell how well they
were doing or how many had died. He only knew that the enemy was in
front of him and he had a sword in his hand. He roared and cut a
man's arm from his shoulder as it was raising a shield to block
him. He grabbed the shield with the limp arm falling out of the
grip and used it to shoulder-charge two men from his path,
trampling over them. One of them stabbed upward and he felt a
warmth rush over his legs but paid it no attention. The area was
clear, but the end of the street was filling with men. Orso saw
their captain sound the charge and met it at full speed across the
open space. He knew in that moment how it felt to be a berserker in
one of the savage nations they had conquered. It was a strange
freedom. There was no pain, only an exhilarating distance from fear
or exhaustion.
More men went under his sword and the First-Born
carried all before them, cutting and dealing death on bright
metal.
"Sir! The side streets. They have more
reinforcements!"
Orso almost shook off the hand tugging at his
arm, but then his training came to the fore. "Too many of them.
Back, lads! We've cut them enough for now!" He raised his sword in
triumph and began to run back the way they had come, panting even
as he noted the numbers of Sulla's dead. More than a hundred, if he
was any judge.
Here and there were faces he had known. One or
two stirred feebly and he was tempted to stop for them, but behind
came the crash of sandals on stone and he knew they had to reach
the barricades or be routed with their backs to them.
"On, lads. Ma-ri-us!"
The cry was answered from all around and then
again they were climbing. At the top, Orso looked back and saw the
slowest of his men being brought down and trampled. Most had made
it clear and as he turned to run down the other side, the
First-Born archers fired again over his men's heads, sending more
bodies to die on the stone road, screaming and writhing. Orso
chuckled as he ran, his sword drooping from the exhaustion that was
threatening to unman him. He ducked inside a building and stood
gasping, his hands braced on his knees. The cut in his thigh was
bad and blood ran freely. He felt light-headed and could only
mumble as hands took him onward away from the barricade.
"Can't stop here, sir. The archers can only
cover us until they run out of arrows. Have to keep going a road or
two farther. Come on, sir."
He registered the words, but wasn't sure if he
had responded. Where had his energy gone? His leg felt weak. He
hoped Bar Gallienus had done as well.
Bar Gallienus lay in his own blood,
with Sulla's sword pressing against his throat. He knew he was
dying and tried to spit at the general, but could not raise more
than a sputter of liquid. His men had found a freshly reinforced
century over the barricade and had very nearly been broken on the
first assault. After minutes of furious fighting, they had breached
the wall of piled stone and wood and thrown themselves into the
mass of soldiers beyond. His men had taken many with them, but it
was simply too much. The line had not been thin at all.
Bar smiled to himself, revealing bloody teeth.
He knew Sulla could reinforce quickly. It was a shame he
wouldn't have the chance to mention this to Orso. He hoped the
hairy man had done better than he had, or the legion would be
leaderless again. Foolhardy to risk himself on such a venture, but
too many of them had died in that dreadful first day of havoc and
execution. He'd known Sulla would reinforce.
"I think he's dead, sir," Bar heard a voice
say.
He heard Sulla's voice reply, "A pity. He has
the strangest expression. I wanted to ask him what he was
thinking."
Orso snarled at the centurion who
tried to help him stand. His leg ached and he had a crutch under
one shoulder, but he was in no mood to be helped.
"No one came back?" he asked.
"We lost both centuries. That section had been
reinforced just before we charged it, sir. It doesn't look like
that tactic will work again."
"I was lucky then," Orso grunted. No one met his
eye. He had been, to hit a section of the wall where the strength
was low. Bar Gallienus must have laughed to see himself proved
right about that. It was a shame he couldn't buy the man a
drink.
"Sir? Do you have any other orders?" asked one
of the centurions.
Orso shook his head. "Not yet. But I will have
when I know where we stand."
"Sir." The younger man hesitated.
Orso swung to face him. "What is it? Spit it
out, lad."
"Some of the men are talking of surrender. We
are down to half strength and Sulla has the supply routes to the
sea. We cannot win and—"
"Win? Who said we were going to win? When I saw
Marius die, I knew we couldn't win. I realized then that Sulla
would break the back of the First-Born before enough could gather
to cause him any real difficulty. This isn't about winning, boy,
it's about fighting for a just cause, following orders and honoring
a great man's life and death."
He looked at the men around the room. Only a few
couldn't meet his eyes and he knew he was among friends. He smiled.
How would Marius have put it?
"A man can wait a lifetime for a moment like
this and never see one. Some just grow old and wither, never
getting their chance. We will die young and strong and I wouldn't
have it any other way."
"But, sir, perhaps we could break out of the
city. Head for the mountains..."
"Come outside. I am not going to waste a great
speech on you buggers."
Orso grunted and hobbled out of the door. In the
street were a hundred or so of the First-Born, weary and dirty,
with bandages wrapped around cuts. They looked defeated already and
that thought gave him the words.
"I am a soldier of Rome!" His voice, by nature
deep and rough, carried across them, stiffening backs.
"All I ever wanted was to serve my time and
retire to a nice little plot of land. I didn't want to lose my life
on some foreign ground and be forgotten. But then I found myself
serving with a man who was more father to me than my own father
ever was, and I saw his death and I heard his words and I thought,
Orso, this may be where you stand, old son. And maybe that's
enough, after all.
"Anyone here think they will live forever? Let
other men plant cabbages and grow dry in the sun. I will die like a
soldier, on the streets of the city I love, in her defense."
His voice dropped a little, as if he were
imparting a secret. The men leaned close and more joined the
growing crowd.
"I understand this truth. Few things are worth
more than dreams or wives, pleasures of the flesh or even children.
Some things are, though, and that knowledge is what makes us men.
Life is just a warm, short day between long nights. It grows dark
for everyone, even those who struggle and pretend they will always
be young and strong."
He pointed to a mature soldier, slowly flexing
his leg as he listened.
"Tinasta! I see you testing that old knee of
yours. Did you think age would ease the pain of it? Why wait until
it buckles from weakness and have younger men shoulder you aside?
No, my friends, my brothers. Let us go while the light is still
strong and the day is still bright."
A young soldier raised his head and called out,
"Will we be remembered?"
Orso sighed, but smiled. "For a while, son, but
who remembers the heroes of Carthage or Sparta today? They
know how they ended their day. And that is enough. That is
all there ever is."
The young man asked quietly, "Is there no chance
then that we can win?"
Orso limped over to him, using the crutch for
support. "Son. Why don't you get out of the city? A few of you
could break off if you slipped past the patrols. You don't have to
stay."
"I know, sir." The young man paused. "But I
will."
"Then there is no need to delay the inevitable.
Gather the men. Everyone in position to attack Sulla's barricades.
Let anyone go who wants to, with my blessing. Let them find other
lives somewhere and never tell anyone they once fought for Rome
when Marius died. One hour, gentlemen. Gather your weapons one more
time."
Orso looked around him while the men stood and
checked their blades and armor as they had been trained to do. More
than a few clapped him on the shoulder as they went to their
positions, and he felt his heart would burst with pride.
"Good men, Marius," he muttered to himself.
"Good men."
CHAPTER
33
Cornelius Sulla sat idly on a throne
of gold, resting on a mosaic of a million black and white tiles.
Near the center of Rome, his estate had been untouched by the
rioting, and it was a pleasure to be back and in power once
more.
Marius's legion had fought almost to the last
man, as he had predicted they would. Only a few had tried to run at
the end, and Sulla had hunted them down without mercy. Vast fire
trenches lined the outer walls of the city, and he had been told
that the thousands of bodies would burn for days or even weeks
before the ashes were finally cold. The gods would notice such a
sacrifice to save their chosen city, he was sure.
Rome would need to be cleaned when the fires
were out. There wasn't a wall anywhere that had not been speckled
with the oily ash that floated in and stung the eyes of the
people.
He had denounced the Primigenia as traitors,
with their lands and wealth forfeit to the Senate. Families had
been dragged out onto the streets by neighbors jealous of their
possessions. Hundreds more had been executed and still the work
went on. It would be a bitter mark on the glorious history of the
seven hills, but what choice had he had?
Sulla mused to himself as a slave girl
approached with a cup of ice-cold fruit juice. It was too early in
the day for wine and there were so many still to see and to
condemn. Rome would rise again in glory, he knew, but for that to
happen the last of the friends and supporters of Marius—the
last of Sulla's enemies—had to be ripped from the good,
healthy flesh.
He winced as he sipped from the gold cup and ran
a finger over his swollen eye and the ridges of a purpling gash
along his right cheek. It had been the hardest fight of his life,
making the campaign against Mithridates look rather pallid in
comparison.
Marius's death came into his mind again, as it
had so frequently in recent days. Impressive. The body had been
saved from the fires. Sulla considered having a statue of the man
standing at the top of one of the hills. It would show his own
greatness in being able to honor the dead. Or he could just have it
thrown into the pits with the others. It wasn't important.
The room where he sat was almost empty. A domed
roof showed a pattern of Aphrodite in the Greek style. She looked
down on him with love, a beautiful naked woman, with her hair
wrapped around her. He wanted those who met him to know he was
loved by the gods. The slave girl and her pitcher stood paces from
him, ready to refill his cup at a gesture. The only other presence
in the room was his torturer, who stood nearby with a small brazier
and the grisly tools of his trade laid out on a table in front of
him. His leather apron was already spattered from the morning's
work, and still there was more to do.
Bronze doors, almost as large as those that
opened onto the Senate, boomed as they were struck with a mailed
gauntlet. They opened to reveal two of his legionaries dragging in
a burly soldier with his wrists and feet tied. They pulled him
across the shining mosaic toward Sulla, and he could see the man's
face was already battered, his nose broken. A scribe walked behind
the soldiers and consulted a sheaf of parchment for details.
"This one is Orso Ferito, master," the scribe
intoned. "He was found under a pile of Marius's men and has been
identified by two witnesses. He led some of the traitors in the
resistance."
Sulla stood lithely and walked to the figure,
signaling for the guards to let him fall. He was conscious, but a
dirty cloth gag prevented anything more than animal grunts from
him.
"Cut the gag away. I would question him," Sulla
ordered, and the deed was done quickly and brutally, a blade
bringing fresh blood and a groan from the prostrate man. "You led
one of the attacks, didn't you? Are you that one? My men were
saying you had taken over after Marius. Are you that man?"
Orso Ferito looked up with a sparkle of hatred.
His gaze played over the bruise and cut on Sulla's face, and he
smiled, revealing teeth broken and bloody. The voice seemed dragged
from some deep well as it croaked out, "I would do it again."
"Yes. So would I," Sulla replied. "Put out his
eyes and then hang him." He nodded to the torturer, who removed a
sliver of hot iron from the brazier, holding the darker end in
heavy clamps. Orso struggled as his arms were bound with leather
straps, his muscles writhing. The torturer was impassive as he
brought the metal close enough to singe the lashes, then pressed it
in, rewarded with a soft, grunting, animal sound.
Sulla drained his cup without tasting the juice.
He looked on without pleasure, congratulating himself for his lack
of emotion. He was not a monster, he knew, but the people expected
a strong leader and that is what they would get. As soon as the
Senate could reconvene, he would declare himself dictator and
assume the power of the old kings. Then Rome would see a new
era.
The unconscious Ferito was dragged away to be
executed, and Sulla had only a few minutes alone before the door
boomed again and fresh soldiers entered with the little scribe.
This time, he knew the young man who stumbled between them.
"Julius Caesar," he said. "Captured at the very
height of the excitement, I believe. Let him stand, gentlemen; this
is not a common man. Remove his gag—gently."
He looked at the young lad and was pleased to
note how he straightened. His face bore some bruising, but Sulla
knew his men would have been wary of risking their general's
displeasure with too much damage before judgment. He stood tall, a
fraction under six feet, and his body was well muscled and
sun-dark. Blue eyes looked coldly out from his face and Sulla could
feel the force of the man coming at him, seeming to fill the room
till it was just the two of them, soldiers, torturer, scribe, and
slave all forgotten.
Sulla tilted his head back slightly and his
mouth stretched and opened into a pleased expression.
"Metella died, I am sorry to say. She took her
own life before my men could break in and save her. I would have
let her go, but you... you are a different problem. Did you know
the old man captured with you escaped? He seems to have slipped his
bonds and freed the other. Most unusual companions for a young
gentleman." He saw the spark of interest in the other's face.
"Oh, yes. I have men out looking for the pair,
but no luck at present. If my men had tied you with them, I daresay
you would be free by now. Fate can be a fickle mistress—your
membership in the nobilitas leaves you here while those gutter scum
run free."
Julius said nothing. He did not expect to live
an hour longer and suddenly saw that nothing he could say would
have meaning or use. Raging at Sulla would only amuse him and
pleading would arouse his cruelty. He remained silent and
glared.
"What do we have on him, scribe?" Sulla spoke to
the man with the parchment.
"Nephew of Marius, son of Julius. Both dead.
Mother Aurelia, still alive, but deranged. Owns a small estate a
few miles outside the city. Considerable debts to private houses,
sums undisclosed. Husband of Cornelia, Cinna's daughter, married on
the morning of the battle."
"Ah," Sulla said, interrupting. "The heart of
the matter. Cinna is no friend of mine, though he is too wily to
have supported Marius openly. He is wealthy; I understand why you
would want the support of the old man, but surely your life is
worth more.
"I will offer you a simple choice. Put this
Cornelia aside and swear loyalty to me and I will let you live. If
not, my torturer here is heating his tools once again. Marius would
want you to live, young man. Make the right choice."
Julius glared his anger. What he knew of Sulla
didn't help him. It could be a cruel trick to make him deny those
he loved before executing him anyway.
As if sensing his thoughts, Sulla spoke again.
"Divorce Cornelia and you will live. Such a simple act will shame
Cinna, weakening him. You will go free. These men are all witnesses
to my word as ruler of Rome. What is your answer?"
Julius held himself perfectly still. He hated
this man. He had killed Marius and crippled the Republic his father
had loved. No matter what he lost, the answer was clear and the
words had to be said.
"My answer is no. Make an end of it."
Sulla blinked in surprise and then laughed out
loud. "What a strange family! Do you know how many men have died in
this very room over the last few days? Do you know how many have
been blinded, castrated, and scarred? Yet you scorn my mercy?" He
laughed again and the sound was harsh under the echoing dome.
"If I let you go free, will you try to kill
me?"
Julius nodded. "I will devote my remaining years
to that end."
Sulla grinned at him in genuine pleasure. "I
thought so. You are fearless, and the only one of the nobilitas to
refuse a bargain of mine." Sulla paused for a moment, raising his
hand to signal to the torturer, who stood ready. Then his hand
dropped listlessly.
"You may go free. Leave my city before sunset.
If you come back while I live, I will have you killed without trial
or audience. Cut his ropes, gentlemen. You have bound a free man."
He chuckled for a moment, then was still as the ropes fell in
twisted circles by Julius's feet. The young man rubbed his wrists,
but his expression was as still as stone.
Sulla stood from his throne. "Take him to the
gates and let him walk." He turned to look Julius in the eye. "If
anyone ever asks you why, tell them it was because you remind me of
myself and perhaps I have killed enough men today. That's all."
"What about my wife?" Julius called as his arms
were taken again by the guards.
Sulla shrugged. "I may take her as a mistress,
if she learns to please me."
Julius struggled wildly, but could not break
free as he was dragged out.
The scribe lingered by the door. "General? Is
that wise? He is Marius's nephew, after all...."
Sulla sighed and accepted another cup of cold
liquid from the slave girl. "Gods save us from little men. I
gave you my reason. I have achieved anything I ever wanted and
boredom looms. It is good to leave a few dangers to threaten
me."
His gaze focused far away. "He is an impressive
young man. I think there may be two of Marius inside him."
The scribe's expression showed he understood
none of it. "Shall I have the next one brought in, Consul?"
"No more today. Are the baths heated? Good, the
Senate leaders will be dining with me tonight and I want to be
fresh."
Sulla always had his pool as hot as he
could possibly stand it. It relaxed him wonderfully. His only
attendants were two of his house slave girls, and he rose naked out
of the water without self-consciousness in front of them. They too
were naked, except for bangles of gold on their wrists and around
their necks.
Both had been chosen for their full figures, and
he was pleased as he allowed them to rub the water from his body.
It was good for a man to look on beautiful things. It raised the
spirit above the level of the beasts.
"The water has brought my blood to the surface,
but I feel sluggish," he murmured to them, walking a few paces to a
long massage bench. It was soft under him and he felt himself relax
completely. He closed his eyes, listening to the two young women as
they tied the thin, springy wands of the birch tree, gathered fresh
that morning and still green.
The two slaves stood over his heat-flushed body.
Each held a long bunch of the cut branches, almost like a brush,
three feet long. At first they almost caressed him with the birch
twigs, leaving faint white marks on his skin.
He groaned slightly and they paused.
"Master, would you like it harder?" one of them
asked timidly. Her mouth was bruised purple from his attentions the
night before, and her hands trembled slightly.
He smiled without opening his eyes and stretched
out on the bench. It was splendidly invigorating. "Ah yes," he
replied dreamily. "Lay on, girls, lay on."
CHAPTER
34
Julius stood with Cabera and Tubruk at
the docks, his face gray and cold. In contrast, as if to mock the
grim events of his life, the day was hot and perfect, with only a
light breeze coming off the sea to bring relief to the dust-stained
travelers. It had been a hectic flight from the stinking city. At
first he had been alone and on a sway-backed pony that was all he
could buy for a gold ring. Grimacing, he had skirted around the
firepits filled with flesh and trotted onto the main stone road
west to the coast.
Then he heard a familiar hail and saw his
friends step out from the trees ahead. It had been a joyous reunion
to find each other alive, though the mood darkened as they told
their stories.
Even in that first moment, Julius could see
Tubruk had lost some of his vitality. He looked gaunt and dirty and
told briefly of how they had lived as animals in streets where
every sort of horror happened in the day and grew worse at night,
where screams and shouts were the only clues. He and Cabera had
agreed to wait a week on the road to the coast, hoping Julius could
win free.
"After that," Cabera said, "we were going to
steal some swords and cut you out."
Tubruk laughed in response and Julius could see
they had grown closer in their time together. It failed to lighten
his mood. Julius told them of Sulla's whimsical cruelty and his
fists clenched in fresh anger as the words spilled from him.
"I will come back to Rome. I will cut off his
balls if he touches my wife," he said quietly at the end.
His companions could not hold his gaze for long,
and even Cabera's usual humor had vanished for a while.
"He has the pick of women in Rome, Gaius,"
Tubruk murmured. "He's just the sort of man who likes to twist the
knife a little. Her father will keep her safe, even get her out of
Rome if there's a danger. That old man would set his guards on
Sulla himself if there was a threat to her. You know this."
Julius nodded, his eyes distant, needing to be
persuaded. At first, he had wanted to try to get to her under cover
of night, but the curfew was back, and moving in the streets would
mean instant death.
At least Cabera had managed to get hold of a few
valuable items in the days he had spent on the streets with Tubruk.
A gold armlet he had found in ashes bought them horses and bribes
to pass the wall guards. The drafts that Julius still carried
against his skin were too large to change outside a city, and it
was infuriating to have to rely on a few bronze coins when paper
wealth was so close but useless to them. Julius was not even sure
that Marius's signature would make them good anymore, but guessed
the wily general would have thought of that. He had prepared for
almost anything.
Julius had spent a couple of their valuable
coins sending letters, giving each to legionaries on their way back
to the city or outward to the coast and Greece.
Cornelia would know he was safe, at least, but
it would be a long time before he could see her again. Until he
could return with strength and support, he was not able to return
at all, and the bitterness of it twisted and ate at him, leaving
him empty and tired. Marcus would hear of the disaster in Rome and
not come blindly back to look for him when his term of service
ended. That was only a small comfort. As never before, he felt the
loss of his friend.
A thousand other regrets taunted him as they
came into his mind, too painful to be allowed to take root. The
world had changed fundamentally for the young man. Marius could not
be dead. The world was empty without him.
Weary after days on the road, the
three men trotted their horses into the bustling coastal port west
of Rome. Tubruk spoke first, after they had dismounted and tied
their horses to a post outside an inn.
"The flags of three legions are here. Your
papers will get you a commission in any of them. That one is based
in Greece, that one in Egypt, and the last is on a trade run up to
the north." Tubruk spoke calmly, showing his knowledge of the
empire's movements had not waned in the time he had spent running
the estate.
Julius felt uncomfortable and exposed on the
docks, yet this was not a decision to be hurried. If Sulla changed
his mind, even now there could be armed men on their way to kill
them or bring them back to Rome.
Tubruk could not give much advice. True, he had
recognized the banners of the legions, but he knew he was fifteen
years out of date when it came to the reputations of the officers.
He felt frustrated to have to put such a serious decision in the
hands of the gods. At least two years of Julius's life would be
spent with whichever unit they decided upon, and they could end up
flipping coins.
"I like the sound of Egypt, myself," Cabera
said, looking wistfully across the sea. "It is a long time since I
shook its dust from my sandals." He could feel the future bending
around the three of them. Few lives had such simple choices, or
maybe all did but most could not see them when they came. Egypt,
Greece, or the north? Each beckoned in different ways. The lad must
make a choice on his own, but at least Aegyptus was hot.
Tubruk studied the galleys rocking at their
moorings, looking for one to rule out. Each was guarded by alert
legionaries, and men swarmed over the wallowing vessels, repairing,
scrubbing, or refitting after voyages all over the world.
He shrugged. He assumed that after the fuss had
died down and Rome was peaceful, he would return to the estate.
Someone had to keep the place alive.
"Marcus and Renius are in Greece. You could meet
up with them there if you wanted," Tubruk ventured, turning to
watch the road for dust raised by trackers.
"No. I haven't achieved anything, except to be
married and run out of Rome by my enemy," Julius muttered.
"Your uncle's enemy," Cabera corrected.
Julius turned slowly to the old man, his gaze
unwavering. "No. He is my enemy now. I will see him dead, in
time."
"In time, perhaps," Tubruk said. "Today you need
to get away and learn to be a soldier and an officer. You are
young. This is not the end of you, or your career." Tubruk held his
gaze for a second, thinking how much like his father Julius was
becoming.
Eventually, the younger man nodded briefly
before turning away. He examined the ships again.
"Egypt it is. I always wanted to see the land of
the pharaohs."
"A fine choice," Cabera said. "You will love the
Nile, and the women are scented and beautiful." The old man was
pleased to see Julius smile for the first time since they had been
captured in the night. It was a good omen, he thought.
Tubruk gave a boy a small coin to hold their
horses for an hour and the three men walked toward the galley ship
that bore an Egyptian legion's flags. As they approached, the busy
action of workers became even more apparent.
"Looks like they're getting ready to ship out,"
Tubruk noted, jerking his thumb at barrels of supplies being loaded
by slaves. Salted meat, oil, and fish swung over the narrow strip
of water into the arms of sweating slaves on board, each one noted
and crossed off a slate with typical Roman efficiency. Tubruk
whistled to one of the guards, who stepped over to them.
"We need to speak to the captain. Is he aboard?"
Tubruk asked.
The soldier gave them a quick appraisal and
appeared to be satisfied, despite the dust of the road. Tubruk and
Julius, at least, looked like soldiers.
"He is. We'll be casting off on the noon tide. I
can't guarantee he'll see you."
"Tell him Marius's nephew is here, fresh from
the city. We'll wait," Tubruk replied.
The soldier's eyebrows rose a fraction and his
gaze slid over to Julius. "Right you are, sir. I'll let him know
immediately."
The man took a step to the dockside and walked
the narrow plank bridge onto the deck of the galley. He disappeared
behind the raised wooden structure that dominated the ship and,
Julius guessed, must house the captain's quarters. While they
waited, Julius noted the features of the huge vessel, the oar-holes
in the side that would be used to move them out of harbor and in
battle to give them the speed to ram enemy vessels, the huge square
sails that were waiting to be raised for the wind.
The deck was clear of loose objects, as befitted
a Roman war vessel. Everything that might cause injury in rough
seas was lashed down securely. Steps led to the lower levels at
various places in the planking, and each could be secured with a
bolted hatch to prevent heavy waves from crashing down after the
crew. It looked like a well-run ship, but until he met the captain,
he wouldn't know how things would be for the next two years of his
life. He could smell tar and salt and sweat, the scents of an alien
world he did not know. He felt strangely nervous and almost laughed
at himself.
Out of the deck shadows came a tall man in the
full uniform of a centurion. He looked hard and neat, with gray
hair cut short to his head and his breastplate shined to a bright
bronze glow in the sun. His expression was watchful as he crossed
the planks to the dockside and greeted the three waiting men.
"Good day, gentlemen. I am Centurion Gaditicus,
nominal captain of this vessel for the Third Partica legion. We
cast off on the next tide, so I cannot spare you a great deal of
time, but the name of Consul Marius carries a lot of weight, even
now. State your business and I'll see what I can do."
Straight to the point, without fuss. Julius felt
himself warming to the man. He reached into his tunic and brought
out the packet of papers Marius had given him. Gaditicus took them
and broke the seal with his thumb. He read quickly, with a frown,
nodding occasionally.
"These were written before Sulla was back in
control?" he asked, his eyes still on the parchment.
Julius felt the desire to lie, but guessed he
was being tested by this man. "They were. My uncle did not...
expect Sulla to be successful."
Gaditicus's eyes were unwavering as he measured
the young man in front of him. "I was sorry when I heard he was
lost. He was a popular man and good for Rome. These papers were
signed by a consul—they are perfectly valid. However, I am
within my rights to refuse you a berth until your personal position
vis-a-vis Cornelius Sulla is made clear to me. I will take
your word if you are a truthful man."
"I am, sir," Julius replied.
"Are you wanted for criminal offenses?"
"I am not."
"Are you avoiding scandal of any sort?"
"No."
Again the man held his gaze for a few seconds,
but Julius did not look away. Gaditicus folded the papers and
placed them inside his own clothing.
"I will allow you to take the oath, on the
lowest officer's rank of tesserarius. Advancement will come
quickly if you show ability; slowly or not at all if you don't.
Understood?"
Julius nodded, keeping his face impassive. The
days of high life in Roman society were over. This was the steel in
the empire that allowed the city to relax in softness and joy. He
would have to prove himself again, this time without the benefit of
a powerful uncle.
"These two, how do they fit in?" Gaditicus
asked, motioning toward Tubruk and Cabera.
"Tubruk is my estate manager. He will be
returning. The old man is Cabera, my... servant. I would like him
to accompany me."
"He's too old for the oars, but we'll find work
for him. No one loafs on any ship I run. Everyone works.
Everyone."
"Understood, sir. He has some skill as a
healer."
Cabera had taken on a slightly glassy-eyed
expression, but agreed after a pause.
"That will serve. Will you be signing on for two
years or five?" Gaditicus asked.
"Two, to begin with, sir." Julius kept his voice
firm. Marius had warned him not to devote his life to soldiering
under long contracts, but to keep his options open to gain a wider
experience.
"Then welcome to the Third Partica, Julius
Caesar," Gaditicus said gruffly. "Now get on board and see the
quartermaster for your bunk and supplies. I'll see you in two hours
for the oath taking."
Julius turned to Tubruk, who reached across and
gripped his hand and wrist.
"Gods favor the brave, Julius," the old warrior
said, smiling. He turned to Cabera. "And you, keep him away from
strong drink, weak women, and men who own their own dice.
Understand?"
Cabera made a vulgar sound with his mouth,
"I own my own dice," he replied.
Gaditicus pretended not to notice the exchange
as he once again crossed the planks onto his ship.
The old man felt the future settle as the
decision was made, and a spot of tension in his skull disappeared
almost before he had realized it was there. He could sense the
sudden lift in Julius's spirits and felt his own mood perk up. The
young never worried about the future or the past, not for long. As
they boarded the galley, the dark and bloody events in Rome seemed
to belong to a different world.
Julius stepped onto the moving deck and pulled a
deep breath into his lungs.
A young soldier, perhaps in his early twenties,
stood nearby with a sly look on his face. He was tall and solid
with a pocked and pitted face bearing old acne scars.
"I thought it must be you, mudfish," he said. "I
recognized Tubruk on the dock."
For a moment, Julius didn't recognize the man.
Then it clicked. "Suetonius?" he exclaimed.
The man stiffened slightly. "Tesserarius
Prandus, to you. I am watch commander for this century. An
officer."
"You're signing on as one of those, aren't you,
Julius?" Cabera said clearly.
Julius looked at Suetonius. On this day, he
hadn't the patience to mind the man's feelings.
"For now," he replied to Cabera, then turned to
his old neighbor. "How long have you been in that rank?"
"A few years," Suetonius replied,
stiffening.
Julius nodded. "I'll have to see if I can do
better than that. Will you show me to my quarters?"
Anger at the offhand manner colored Suetonius's
features. Without another word, he turned away from them, striding
over the decks.
"An old friend?" Cabera muttered as they
followed.
"No, not really." Julius didn't say any more and
Cabera didn't press for details. There would be time enough at sea
to hear them all.
Inwardly Julius sighed. Two years of his life
would be spent with these men, and it would be hard enough without
having Suetonius there to remember him as a smooth-faced urchin.
The unit would range right across the Mediterranean, holding Roman
territories, guaranteeing safe sea trade, perhaps even taking part
in land or sea battles. He shrugged at his thoughts. His experience
in the city had shown that there was no point worrying about the
future—it would always be a surprise. He would become older
and stronger and would rise in rank. Eventually he would be strong
enough to return to Rome and look Sulla in the eye. Then they would
see.
With Marcus standing at his side, there would be
a reckoning, and a payment taken for Marius's death.
CHAPTER
35
Marcus waited patiently in the outer
chamber of the camp prefects rooms. To pass the time before he was
admitted to the meeting to determine his future, he read the letter
from Gaius again. It had been traveling for many months and had
been carried from hand to hand by legionaries passing closer and
closer to Illyria. Finally, it had been included in a bundle of
orders for the Fourth Macedonia and passed on to the young
officer.
Marius's death had come as a terrible blow.
Marcus had wanted to be able to show the general that his faith in
him had been well founded. He had wanted to thank him as a man, but
that was impossible now. Although he had never met Sulla, he
wondered if the consul would be a danger for himself and
Gaius—Julius now.
He smiled at the news of the marriage and winced
at the brief lines about Alexandria, guessing much more than Julius
had revealed. Cornelia sounded like an angel to hear Julius write
of her. It was really the only piece of good news in the whole
thing.
His thoughts were interrupted by the heavy door
to the inner rooms opening. A legionary came out and saluted.
Marcus rose and returned the gesture smartly.
"The prefect will see you now," the man
said.
Marcus nodded and marched into the room,
standing to attention the regulation three feet from the prefects
oak table, bare except for a wine jug, inkpot, and some neatly
arranged parchment.
Renius was there, standing in the corner with a
cup of wine. Leonides too, the centurion of the Bronze Fist. Carac,
the camp prefect, rose as the young man entered, and gestured to
him to sit. Marcus lowered himself onto a heavy chair and sat
rigidly.
"At your ease, legionary. This is not a
court-martial," Carac muttered, his gaze wandering over the papers
on his desk.
Marcus tried to relax his bearing a little.
"Your two years are up in a week, as you are no
doubt aware," Carac said.
"Yes, sir," Marcus replied.
"Your record has been excellent to date. Command
of a contubernium, successful actions against local tribesmen.
Winner of the Bronze Fist sword tourney last month. I hear the men
respect you, despite your youth, and regard you as dependable in a
crisis—some would say especially in a crisis. One officer's
opinion was that you do well enough from day to day, but stand out
in battle or difficulty. A valuable trait in a young officer suited
to active legion life. It is perhaps to your benefit that the
empire is expanding. There will be active work for you anywhere
should you so desire it."
Marcus nodded cautiously and Carac motioned to
Leonides.
"Your centurion speaks well of you and the way
you have curbed the thefts of that boy... Peppis. There was some
talk at first of whether you could merge your individuality into a
legion, but you have been honest and obviously loyal to the Fourth
Macedonia. In short, lad, I would like you to sign on again, with
promotion to command a Fifty. More pay and status, with time to
train for sword tourneys if necessary. What do you say?"
"May I speak freely, sir?" Marcus asked, his
heart thudding in his chest.
Carac frowned. "Of course," he replied.
"It is a generous offer. The two years with
Macedonia have been happy ones for me. I have friends here.
However... Sir, I grew up on the estate of a Roman who was not my
father. His son and I were like brothers, and I swore I would
support him, be his sword when we were men." He could feel Renius's
gaze on him as he continued. "He is with the Third Partica at
present, a naval legion, with a little more than a year left to
serve. When he returns to Rome, I would like to join him there,
sir."
"Renius has explained some of the history
between this... Gaius Julius and yourself. I understand loyalty of
this nature very well. It is what makes us more than beasts in the
field, perhaps." Carac smiled in a cheerful way and Marcus looked
at the other two quickly, surprised not to see the censure he had
feared.
Leonides spoke up, his voice calm and low. "Did
you think we would not understand? Son, you are very young. You
will serve in many legions before they parcel you off with a farm.
Most important of all, though, is that you serve Rome, constantly
and without complaint. We three have devoted our lives to that
aim—to see her safe and strong, envied by the world."
Marcus looked round at the three of them and
caught Renius smiling as he covered his mouth with the wine cup.
Together they were the personification of what he had hoped to be
as a young boy, linked by beliefs and loyalty and blood into
something unbreakable.
Carac reached over for a document on thick
parchment.
"Renius was convinced this would be the only way
to keep you in the legion long enough to take part in the Graeca
sword competition this winter. It indentures you for a year and a
day." He passed it over and Marcus felt his throat tighten with
emotion.
He had expected to have to hand back his
officer's equipment and collect his pay before beginning a lonely
journey back to Italy. To have this offered to him when the future
had seemed so bleak was like a gift from the gods. He wondered how
much Renius had had to do with it and decided suddenly that he
didn't care. He wanted to stay on with the Macedonia and in truth
had felt torn between the loyalty to his childhood friend and the
satisfaction he had found with his own family, the legion.
Now he had a year longer to grow and prosper.
His eyes widened slightly as he read the complex Latin of the
document. Carac noticed it.
"You see we have included the promotion. You
will command a Fifty under Leonides, directly responsible to his
optio, Daritus. I suggest you begin the post with an open
mind. Fifty men is not eight—the problems will be new to you
and the training for war involves complex skills. It will be a hard
and challenging year, but I think you might enjoy it."
"I will, sir. Thank you. It is an honor."
"An honor earned, young man. I heard about what
happened in the blueskin camp. The information you brought back has
helped us to reformulate our policy toward them. Who knows, we may
even trade with them after a few years." Carac was clearly enjoying
being the bringer of good news to the young man, and Renius looked
on approvingly.
This will be my year, Marcus vowed to
himself as he read the document to the end, noting how many ounces
of oil and salt he was allowed to draw from the stores, what his
allowance for repairs and damages was, and so on. The new post had
a hundred things he had to learn and quickly. The pay was a vast
improvement as well. He knew Julius's family would support him if
asked, but the thought that he might be dependent on charity when
he returned to Rome had rankled. Now he would be able to save a
little and have a few gold coins for the return.
A thought struck him.
"Will you be staying on with the Macedonia?" he
asked Renius.
The warrior shrugged and sipped his wine.
"Probably, I like the company here. Mind you, I am way past
retirement age as it is. Carac has to fiddle the pay figures every
time he sends them in. I'd like to see what Sulla has done to the
place. Oh, I heard he had Rome in the bulletins. I wouldn't mind
checking he's looking after the old girl properly, and unlike you,
I'm not under contract, as sword master."
Carac sighed. "I would like to see Rome again.
It's been fourteen years since I was last posted there, but I knew
that's how it would be when I joined." He poured cups of wine for
all of them, refilling Renius's as it was held out.
"A toast to Rome, gentlemen, and to the next
year."
They stood and knocked the cups together with
easy smiles, each one of them a long way from home.
Marcus put his cup down, took up the quill from
the inkpot, and signed his full name on the formal document.
Marcus Brutus, he wrote.
Carac reached over the desk and took his right
arm in a solid grip.
"A good decision, Brutus."
Historical
Note
There is very little historical
information on the earliest years of Julius Caesar's life. As far
as possible, I have given him the sort of childhood that a young
boy from a minor Roman family could have had. Some of his skills
can be inferred from later accomplishments, of course. For example,
swimming saved his life in Egypt, when he was fifty-two years old.
The biographer Suetonius said that he had great skill with swords
and horses as well as surprising powers of endurance, preferring to
march rather than ride and going bareheaded in all weathers. I am
sorry to say that Renius is fictional, though it was customary to
employ experts in various fields. We know of one tutor from
Alexandria who taught Caesar rhetoric, and we can read Cicero's
reluctant praise of Caesar's ability to speak skillfully and
movingly when needed. His father died when Julius was only fifteen,
and it is true that Julius married Cinna's daughter Cornelia
shortly afterward, apparently for love.
Although Marius was an uncle on his father's
side rather than Aurelia's as I have it, the general was very much
the sort of character presented here. In flagrant opposition to law
and custom, he was consul seven times in all. Where previously it
was possible to join a legion only if a man owned land and had an
income from it, Marius abolished that qualification and enjoyed
fanatical loyalty from his soldiers. It was Marius who made the
eagle the symbol of all Roman legions.
The civil war between Sulla and Marius forms a
major part of this book, but I found it necessary to simplify the
action for dramatic purposes. Cornelius Sulla did worship
Aphrodite, and parts of his lifestyle scandalized even the tolerant
Roman society. However, he was an extremely able general who had
once served under Marius in an African campaign for which they both
claimed credit. The two men disliked each other intensely.
When Mithridates rebelled against Roman
occupation in the east, both Marius and Sulla wanted to move
against him, seeing the campaign as an easy one and a chance to
gain great riches. In part from personal motives, Sulla led his men
against Rome and Marius in 88 B.C., claiming that he would "free it
from tyrants." Marius was forced to flee to Africa, returning later
with the army he had gathered there. The Senate was simply unable
to cope with such powerful leaders and allowed him back, declaring
Sulla an enemy of the state while he was away fighting Mithridates.
Marius was elected consul for the last time, but died during his
term, leaving the dithering Senate in a difficult situation. They
sought peace at first, but Sulla was in a strong position, after a
crushing victory in Greece. He did let Mithridates live, but
confiscated vast wealth, looting ancient treasures. I compressed
these years, having Marius dying in the first attack, which may be
an unfairly quick ending for such a charismatic man.
When Sulla returned from the Greek campaign, he
led his armies to quick victory against those loyal to the Senate,
finally marching on the city again in 82 B.C. He demanded the role
of Dictator and it was in this role that he met Julius Caesar for
the first time, when he was brought before Sulla as one of those
who had supported Marius. Despite the fact that Julius flatly
refused to divorce Cornelia, Sulla did not have him killed. The
Dictator is reported to have said that he saw "many Mariuses in
this Caesar," which if true is something of an insight into the
man's character, as I hope I have explored in this book.
Sulla's time as Dictator was a brutal period for
the city. The unique position he held and abused had been designed
as an emergency measure for times of war, similar in concept to
martial law in modern democracies. Before Sulla, the strictest time
limits had accompanied the title, but he managed to avoid these
restrictions and scored a fatal wound on the Republic by doing so.
One of the laws he passed forbade armed forces approaching the
city, even for the traditional Triumph parades. He died at age
sixty and for a while it looked as if the Republic might flower
again into its old strength and authority. In Greece at this time,
there was a twenty-two-year-old man called Caesar who would make
this impossible. After all, Marius and Sulla had shown the
fragility of the Republic when faced with determined ambition. We
can only speculate how the young Caesar was affected when he heard
Marius say, "Make room for your general," and watched the jostling
crowd cut down in full view of the Senate house. The histories of
these characters, especially those written shortly after the
period, by Plutarch and Suetonius, make astonishing reading. In
researching the life of Caesar, the question that kept coming up
was "How did he do that?" How did a young man recover from the
disaster of being on the losing side in a civil war to the point
where his very surname came to mean king? Both tsar and
kaiser are derived from that name and were still being used
two thousand years later.
The histories can be a little bare at times,
though I would recommend Caesar by Christian Meier to any
reader interested in the details I had to omit here. There are so
many fascinating incidents in this life that it has been a great
pleasure putting flesh to them. The events of the second book are
even more astonishing.
C. IGGULDEN
About the
Author
CONN IGGULDEN taught English for seven years
before becoming a full-time writer. He is married with a son and
lives in Hertfordshire, England. Emperor: The Gates of Rome
is his first novel.