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Authors: Douglas Jackson

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BOOK: Avenger of Rome
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Paulinus’s rasping laugh surprised him. ‘So the pup has not lost his fangs. Yes,’ he admitted, ‘there is more, but I doubt it will give you any greater pleasure. A direct order from the Emperor to his subject which must be delivered by someone trusted by both and conveyed by word of mouth only. It is this.’ The consul’s voice hardened, along with the eyes. ‘Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo is suspected of overstepping the powers of
imperium
granted him in the east by his Emperor. While you are on his staff you will compile a report on his activities and those of his senior officers. That report will be thorough and objective and when it is completed you will find a way to get it into my hands.’

‘You are asking me to spy?’

Paulinus sniffed. ‘I am told you have some talents in that direction.’

‘That was different.’ Valerius remembered his pursuit of Petrus, the Christian leader, two years earlier. ‘The man was an enemy of the state. General Corbulo is …’

‘Successful, quite ruthless and utterly vain, and that vanity makes
him
certain of his infallibility. So certain that he believes he can overrule the Emperor’s advisers and follow his own policy in Armenia and Cappadocia. If that suggestion is confirmed it may be that Corbulo will be withdrawn, perhaps even retired.’ The words contained a hint of satisfaction and Valerius was reminded of something else: that before his disgrace, Suetonius Paulinus had vied with Corbulo for the position of Rome’s paramount general. ‘It will not be an easy assignment. Corbulo has friends in the Palatium and at court. He may well hear of your mission and, if he does, he will try to delay you or stop you entirely.’ Paulinus hesitated and the younger man noticed the unnecessary emphasis his visitor placed on the last three words. ‘The task requires a man of resource and courage, but Gaius Valerius Verrens has proved himself to be such a man in the past. Your Emperor has every faith in you.’

If his situation hadn’t been so perilous, Valerius would have laughed at the blatant flattery. Instead, he said: ‘I am honoured by the Emperor’s confidence in my abilities, but I do not believe I have the capacity to complete this mission successfully. I am a simple soldier, without the … subtlety required. He has other men, better qualified than I, he can call upon, I’m sure.’ He stood, but Paulinus remained seated and fury flared like a flash of lightning in his eyes. Boudicca’s conqueror might be a consul in name only, but he still had power and knew how to use it.

‘You forget yourself, young man. I can think of a dozen others who would cut off their right arms for the chance to prove their faith to the Emperor.’ He cast a contemptuous glance at the carved wooden fist that had replaced Valerius’s right hand. ‘They now lie in the depths of the Palatine awaiting his pleasure.’ Paulinus had raised his voice and it must have been a signal because Valerius heard scuffling behind him. He turned to find Olivia held by two of Paulinus’s bodyguards – a helpless, waif-like figure shivering with fear. ‘It would take but a single word and the family of Verrens would join them. Do not think we are unaware of the conflicting loyalties within this house. You cannot hide from reality for ever, as you have hidden here from those who could have linked you to the traitor Piso’s cause. Consuls, senators and
knights
have been imprisoned and tortured, their families forced to take poison. Your old mentor, Seneca. Did you believe your isolation freed you from his taint? Gaius Valerius Verrens should know better than most men that there are no innocents on the battlefield, and that in a fight to the death those who believe otherwise will be crushed.’ For a moment, Valerius considered making a grab for the sword lying so conveniently at Paulinus’s right hand, but he knew that even if he reached it Olivia would be dead before he could turn. Paulinus saw his glance and smiled. ‘Think yourself fortunate that you have been given the luxury of choice.’

The reality was that there had never been any choice, and they both knew it. Paulinus nodded as Valerius acknowledged his defeat and Olivia protested as she was taken from the room.

‘She will be safe under the Emperor’s protection while you are in Antioch. You understand your orders?’

The answer was no, but the word that emerged from Valerius’s mouth was ‘Yes’.

Paulinus rose to his feet. ‘You will visit the Palatium where they will be explained to you in more detail. Methods of communication. Friends you may depend on and those to avoid.’ Valerius turned to go, but Paulinus wasn’t finished with him. ‘It is possible that your investigations may uncover something more than mere vanity and over-enthusiasm at Corbulo’s headquarters.’ He paused to allow the full significance of his words to register. ‘Should that be the case, you may be required to take further, more direct, action.’ He picked up the sword with the silver hilt and placed it in the younger man’s left hand. ‘Do we understand each other?’

Valerius nodded, because the words would have choked him.

Yes, they understood each other.

If he discovered any link between Rome’s greatest general and the Piso conspiracy he would become Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo’s executioner.

II

VALERIUS TWITCHED THE
reins to steer the big gelding around a stationary cart. Portus, which Emperor Claudius had begun building at the Tiber mouth almost twenty years earlier and was still only half completed, must be the busiest port in the world, he thought. It was a bustling place of trade and commerce where wagons and packhorses thronged the streets and smaller boats scuttled like water beetles among the stately giants loading up for the grain convoys to the east. They had to ask twice before they were eventually directed to where their ship was docked.

‘By Mars’ sacred arse, will you look at that.’

Valerius reined the horse to a stop and followed his companion’s eye towards the vessel that waited to carry them to Syria. He would have expected a well-worn cargo ship, or at best a fast military galley to transport General Corbulo’s new second in command to his posting. This was anything but. It was larger than any normal merchant vessel, forty paces from elegant bow to angular stern, with a breadth of perhaps ten or twelve where the hull bellied out like a pregnant sow between them. Astonishingly, the ship was painted a bright gold, so that it shone like a jewel in the sunlight. The figure of a swan with wings outstretched was carved above the bowsprit. A substantial curtained awning had been set up behind the single central mast and a pair of
twin
steering oars projected from below a platform in the stern. As they watched, lines of slaves hurried up the gangplanks carrying assorted sacks and
amphorae
.

‘An imperial ship?’

‘Or a floating whorehouse?’ Serpentius offered.

‘Either way it can’t be for us.’

But he was wrong.

An ancient sailor burned almost black by the sun ambled up and gave an awkward salute. ‘Tribune Verrens?’ Valerius nodded. ‘My captain requests that you embark your horses and equipment within the hour. We sail as soon as our other passengers arrive.’

‘Other passengers?’

The man’s face took on the blank stare of a legionary on parade.

Valerius exchanged an amused glance with his companion. ‘Curiouser and curiouser. In that case send some slaves to unload the mules and get our mounts aboard.’ The two men supervised as the nervous animals were walked up the unfamiliar wooden gangplank and into the stifling darkness of the hold.

‘I’ll come down twice a day to make sure they’re properly fed and watered,’ Serpentius said as they returned to the deck. Valerius nodded. He wouldn’t like to be whoever was responsible if Serpentius discovered that the horses were neglected. The former gladiator was the most capable fighter he had ever known and a slave in name only. Part companion, part bodyguard, the wiry Spaniard wore his manumission on a leather loop round his neck and swore he would use it when he elected and not when some Roman decided it was time. They had been together almost three years and the first time they’d met, on the dusty surface of a gladiatorial practice ground, Serpentius had tried to kill him. The resentful eyes and shaven head with its patchwork of half-healed scars made men wary of him, and they were right to be. There would come a time when the gladiator needed to be told the true nature of his mission. For the moment, all he knew was that Valerius was travelling to a new appointment in Antioch.

They emerged into the sunshine to the usual organized chaos of a ship being prepared for sail – with one peculiar difference. Amongst
the
sailors loading last-minute provisions Valerius saw one man sprinkling water on the planking: perfumed water, if his nose didn’t mistake him, that masked but didn’t quite overcome the stench from the bilges and the familiar scents of sea salt, male sweat and new laid pitch. Serpentius shook his head, muttered something about being right about the brothel, and went off to check their equipment was properly stored. Valerius noticed a heavily built man in conversation with a young legionary officer. The older man looked up and they both hurried across to greet him.

‘Aelius Aurelius,
magister navis
,’ the captain introduced himself in a voice that would be useful in a howling gale. His accent marked him as a southerner, as did his looks. Dark, soulful eyes shone from heavy-browed features weathered to the colour of polished teak and his hair was styled in long ringlets. A thick gold ring hung from the lobe of his right ear. ‘My apologies for not welcoming you on board the
Golden Cygnet
, tribune. But if I take my eyes off these dogs they’ll turn the deck into a latrine.’

Valerius smiled at the exaggeration. He doubted if a single rope’s end was out of place in this ship. ‘Unless my nose is mistaken your deck smells more like a lady’s bedroom than a latrine, captain. I had expected a less elaborate transport.’

Aurelius’s laugh sounded like a seal barking. ‘She may look like a fat-bottomed old tart in her imperial livery, but she’s the sweetest sailing ship in the Mare Nostrum and can lie closer to the wind than most. You may thank your fellow passenger for the Emperor’s generosity.’

The young soldier noticed Valerius’s look of surprise and shook his head. ‘Please don’t think I’m the cause of all this, sir. Tiberius Claudius Crescens, junior tribune, on the way to join General Corbulo’s eastern forces, and may I venture to say that your fame precedes you.’

Valerius studied him for any hint of mockery. He’d seen the pink-cheeked soldier dart a glance at his sleeve, where the walnut-carved fist replaced his right hand, the only visible scar of his encounter with Boudicca. The boy was what the legionaries called ‘frontier fodder’, one of the young officers Rome sent to the farthest points of her Empire to learn fast or die fast. Tiberius had the plump, earnest face and bright
eyes
of a teenager, but he must be past twenty and well connected to have been given such a prestigious assignment. Eventually, to the younger man’s relief, Valerius smiled acceptance of the compliment. ‘Then who is responsible for our good fortune?’

His question was answered by a commotion on the far side of the harbour which alerted them to the arrival of a four-wheeled carriage escorted by a detachment of German auxiliary cavalry. The coach clattered over the cobbles and drew to a halt by the foremost gangplank.

‘About time,’ the
Golden Cygnet
’s master grumbled. ‘I’d have preferred to wait until the next grain convoy east, but my sailing orders were specific. The only consolation is that we’ll have a pair of galleys from the base at Misenum to keep us safe from any sea scum as far as Creta. The gods be thanked that she sent her baggage in advance. Still, we should make Neapolis by nightfall. Say a prayer to Poseidon and we’ll be in Seleucia Pieria in twelve days.’ He let out a roar. ‘Ready the sails!’

The ship burst into life around them and Valerius watched as a slim figure in a blue veil dismounted from the coach and swept up the gangway accompanied by a pair of dark slave girls. The little procession was followed by another, older woman, and finally four of the cavalry escort relinquished their mounts and marched towards the ship. Tiberius Crescens laughed.

‘I almost forgot. I’m supposed to take command of her guard.’ He rushed for the top of the gangway, grinning over his shoulder. ‘The lady Domitia Longina Corbulo, the general’s daughter. It should certainly make the voyage interesting.’

III

WITH A FAVOURABLE
wind and light seas the
Cygnet
made good time on the first leg of her journey south, and as her captain had predicted she set anchor off Neapolis as dusk fell. There was just enough soft roseate light to show the bay in all its glory: the familiar sweeping curve of low grey cliff and white sand, washed by a gentle sea the colour of aged Niger wine. Above it, the rustic cloak of grey and green that garbed the great mountain which dominated the city shone gold in the dying embers of the day.

Valerius was relieved that he’d seen little of his fellow passengers during the sedate, timeless run down the coast from Ostia. The guilt he felt over his unwanted mission was more than enough without being confronted by Corbulo’s daughter to remind him of it. He had spent his time trying to discover some kind of escape, but without success. For the moment, all he could do was carry on and make his decision when the moment came.

Makeshift accommodation had been created in the bow for Domitia and her women, and they’d stayed there all day, behind screens, amid rumours that the lady and her entourage were stricken by the usual first-time sailor’s malady. Seasickness had never bothered Valerius and the same was obviously true for Tiberius Crescens, who had divided his time between his duties as guard commander and badgering his
superior
for stories of the British war. Valerius had told the tale a thousand times and had perfected a version that played down his own part in the defence of Colonia and gave credit to the real heroes: men like Falco, veteran centurion of the Twentieth legion and commander of the Colonia militia; brave Lunaris, who had stood at his side through the dark days of the temple; and the legionaries, Gracilis and Messor, who had given their lives so that he could fight on.

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