Fire in the East (30 page)

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Authors: Harry Sidebottom

BOOK: Fire in the East
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He was still some way off. They waited, all eyes not on the cavalryman but looking beyond him to see what might appear. The five
equites singulares
with the column fanned out into a line. Behind them the servants waited phlegmatically with the pack animals. The scribes and messengers talked rapidly among themselves. They all looked very frightened, except the scribe with the Spanish accent, who waited as impassively as any of the soldiers.
Nothing had shown itself by the time the cavalryman brought his horse to a halt before Ballista.
‘Dominus,
Sassanid light cavalry, bowmen - about fifty or sixty of them - about three miles away.’
‘Which direction are they heading?’
‘They were coming from the west, down from the hills to the river.’
‘Did they see you?’
‘Yes.’
‘Did they chase you?’
‘Not straight away. They waited until their lead group had reached the river, then they started to follow me, but at a walk.’
‘Lead group?’
‘Yes,
Dominus.
They were split into five groups stretched out over the three or four miles between the hills and the river.’
‘Had they seen the rest of us?’
‘I don’t think so,
Dominus.’
Allfather, but this looks bad, thought Ballista. Everyone was looking at him, waiting. He tried to block them out and think clearly. He looked around. Still nothing to be seen.
The man on point to the left, the east, was only a couple of hundred paces away; beyond him was the cliff down to the river. To the west the scout was about 400 paces out. Straight ahead to the south neither of the scouts could be seen, but the fresh wind was carrying a wide line of dust towards them from some miles away.
‘Romulus, where exactly are we?’ Ballista worked hard at making his voice sound calm, possibly even slightly bored.
‘Just under twenty miles out of Arete,
Dominus,
just over twenty-five short of Castellum Arabum. The disused caravanserai is about three miles ahead.’
‘Is there any shelter up in the hills to the west - a fort or settlement, occupied or not?’
‘Only the village of Merrha to the north-west. It is occupied and walled, but the Sassanids are between us and it.’ Romulus brightened. ‘But we can go to the disused caravanserai. Its walls still stand, and we can reach it long before the Persians catch up with us.’
‘Yes, it is tempting. But I think that it is possibly the last thing we should do.’ Ballista circled his arms, calling in the men from left and right. ‘Romulus, which of the
equites singulares
here has the best mount?’
Before the standard-bearer could answer, another cheekily cut in. ‘No question about that,
Dominus,
me.’ The man grinned. Demetrius whispered in Ballista’s ear: ‘Antigonus.’
‘Right, Antigonus, I want you to go and bring in the two scouts from out in front. Meet us back at the last grove of date palms we passed through, down by the river. We will wait for you there. If we are not there, the three of you are to make your own way either to Arete or Castellum Arabum. Save yourselves as best you can. There is not a moment to lose. I will explain when you return. Take care.’
While Antigonus set off to the south at a gallop, the column retraced its steps to the north, also at a gallop. Once they were in the stand of trees, Ballista rattled out orders to put them in a new formation, his voice little above a fierce whisper. They were to form a wedge, an arrowhead. Ballista was to be the point, Maximus close to his right and half a length behind him, three
equites singulares
beyond and behind him. Romulus and the other four
equites singulares
were to comprise the left side of the formation. Demetrius and the Spanish scribe were to ride right behind Ballista, then the rest of the staff and the servants with the packhorses.
Ballista quietly, and he hoped calmly, explained what he was about. The aim could not be simpler: they were to break through the group of Sassanids closest to the river. With luck, the Persians would be taken by surprise as they charged out of the shelter of the date palms. Again with luck, this group of Persians down by the river would at that moment be out of sight of the others up on the plateau, buying the Romans just a little time. Anyway, once through the nearest group, the Romans would ride flat out for Arete and safety. With yet more luck, the night would hide them from the pursuing enemy.
It was growing dark among the date palms. The shadow of the cliff stretched out across the Euphrates. The temperature was dropping quickly. The wind worried at the palm fronds and tamarisks. The waters sucked at the banks. It was hard to hear anything clearly and difficult to see in the gathering gloom. Somewhere on the other side of the river a jackal barked.
‘How do you know we are in a trap?’ Maximus whispered, his mouth very close to Ballista’s ear. The northerner took his time replying, wondering how to put his suspicions into words.
‘The Sassanids between us and Arete are not acting like a normal scouting party looking for information. If that is what they were they would have chased the one of us they saw, chased him flat out - catch him and they could go home, out of danger. Instead they are moving south at a slow walk, strung out across the plain between the river and the hills. They have been sent on a flank march to catch any of us who escape from the main ambush. That line of dust in the sky to the south - it might just be the wind, but to me it looks all too like the sort of dust raised by a lot of cavalry moving fast.’
The sound of a scatter of stones and the first of the Persian horsemen appeared. They rode out of the
wadi
and on to the floodplain, advancing in the gathering gloom. As the scout had said, they were light cavalry, horse archers. Dressed in tunic and trousers, they were unarmoured. One or two had metal helmets, but the majority were bareheaded or wore just a cloth cap or bandana. Each had a long cavalry sword on his left hip, some had a small round shield on their left arm. There seemed to be at least fifteen of them. If they had ridden in any particular order, it had been dissipated by the descent into the ravine. Now they rode in a loose group, three horses across and four or five deep. They came on at a walk, their horses stepping delicately.
The Sassanids were getting close. Even in the gloom Ballista could make out their long hair, the glitter of their dark eyes. They were getting too close. Any moment now one of them would see the immobile forms waiting in the deeper shadow of the palm grove. Ballista could feel his heart beating as he sucked in air to fill his lungs.
‘Now!
Charge! Charge!’ he yelled, kicking his heels into Pale Horse’s flanks. There was a second’s pause as the gelding gathered his quarters and then they were crashing through the reeds which fringed the grove and hurtling towards the Persians. There were exclamations of surprise, shouts of warning. The enemy tugged swords from scabbards. Their horses had come to a halt, some wheeling pointlessly. Ballista aimed at a point between two of the leading Sassanids. As he shot between them the northerner directed a vicious cut at the head of the Persian on his right. The man blocked the blow. The shock jarred Ballista’s arm.
There was virtually no gap between the next two Sassanids in front of the northerner. He jabbed his heels into Pale Horse and set him at them. The gelding’s left shoulder crashed into the withers of the Persian horse to the left. It staggered back. A gap opened, but the impact had robbed Pale Horse of all momentum. Ballista kicked furiously. His mount responded, leaping forward. To his right he saw Maximus’s blade topple first one then another Persian out of the saddle.
They were nearly through; just one line of Persians still ahead. Maximus was no longer right on his shoulder. Ballista drew his
spatha
back over his left shoulder and aimed a mighty downward cut at the Sassanid to his right. Somehow the man blocked it with his shield. Ballista wrenched his blade free of the splintered wood and cut horizontally over Pale Horse’s ears at the man on his left. This time he felt the blade bite home. There were no more enemy in front.
The force of the blow smashed Ballista’s head forward. His nose crunched into Pale Horse’s neck and blood poured from it. It was broken. He could feel more blood running down the back of his neck. Instinctively he twisted round to the right, bringing his
spatha
up in an attempt to parry the next blow he knew would come, the blow meant to finish him.
There was the Sassanid, sword arm raised. The bastard smiled - and looked down, clutching his side, staring stupidly at the sword wound.
Ballista waved his thanks to the Spaniard and kicked on. The scribe grinned back and flourished his sword - then the look on his face changed to shock. His horse disappeared from beneath him. He seemed to hang for a moment, then he went down into the tumbling, sliding mass of his own horse and under the hooves of the following Roman and Sassanid mounts alike.
There would be time for pity or guilt later. Ballista could not have stopped Pale Horse in any case. They rushed on, up the wadi, up its steep bank. As they emerged on to the plateau it grew much lighter. Up here the sun had not quite set. Without looking to see who was still with him, Ballista set the pace at a hell-for-leather gallop. He angled away from the road towards the north-west. It was vital that they pass inland of the next ravine.
The northerner looked over his left shoulder. There was the next group of Persians, about twenty of them. They had turned and were now riding hard to cut Ballista and his men off. Their long shadows flickered over the plain. The other groups of Persians had also turned, but they could not possibly reach the ravine in time; for now they were of no concern.
Ballista heard Maximus shout something. He ignored him; he needed to think. Despite the growing ache in his head, his mind was clear. He was calculating the distances and the angles. He saw it all as if watching from a great height: the fixed point of the head of the ravine, the two moving bodies of horsemen converging on it. He leant forward in the saddle, pushing Pale Horse for just that last bit of effort, that last pace or two of extra speed.
Ballista and his men made it with a little bit to spare. They skidded round the mouth of the ravine with the Persians still fifty paces away. They pushed on, but some of the urgency seemed to have gone out of the pursuit. Soon they were a couple of hundred paces ahead. Ballista slackened the pace. It was now twilight. There was something that had to be done. He did not want to do it, but it could not be deferred. He looked round to see who had fallen.
Maximus was there. Demetrius was there. Romulus was there, and four
equites singulares,
one scribe, both messengers and three servants, the latter commendably still leading their packhorses. The butcher’s bill could have been higher - three soldiers, one Spanish scribe and two servants. It could yet mount higher, much higher.
The moon was up, but the strong south wind was pushing tattered clouds across its face.
‘Are you all right? You look terrible,’ Maximus called.
‘Never better.’ Ballista replied sourly. ‘Like a slave at
Saturnalia.’
‘Do you think they will give up?’ Demetrius asked, trying but failing to keep the desperate wishful thinking out of his voice.
‘No.’ It was Maximus who firmly crushed his hopes. ‘They are settling in for the long haul. They intend to run us down during the night.’
As the Hibernian spoke, a series of twinkling lights appeared strung out between the river and the hills.
‘Do we still have a lantern?’ Having been assured by one of the servants that they still had two, Ballista ordered one of them to be lit. The order was obeyed amid unvoiced horror. Bright golden light spilled out around them.
‘I do not want to appear stupid, but does not your lamp make it just a bit easier for your Persians to follow us?’ Maximus asked.
‘Oh yes, and that is just what I want.’ Ballista asked a servant to tie the lantern securely to the saddle of one of the packhorses. They rode on in silence for a time, travelling no faster than an easy canter. The clouds were building up, the moon ever more obscured. Now it was pitch dark outside the pool of lantern light.
‘Romulus, you know where the village of Merrha lies?’
‘Yes,
Dominus.
Off in the hills to the north-west, not far now, four miles maybe.’
‘I want you to lead the packhorse with the lantern in that direction. When you think that you have gone far enough or the Sassanids are getting too close, set the packhorse running free and ride for Arete.’
The standard-bearer smiled enigmatically. ‘We will do what is ordered, and at every command we will be ready.’ He spoke ruefully. He took the horse’s leading rein and set off diagonally across the dark plain.
‘Now we ride flat out again.’
In complete silence the small group rode hard. Off to their left, the light of Romulus’s lantern bobbed across the plain towards the just distinguishable darker mass of the hills. Beaded across the wide plain were the lights of the Sassanids. Soon they altered course and surged after the lone Roman lantern. Ballista and his remaining twelve men rode north into the darkness to safety.
Not one was looking back when the line of Sassanid lights converged on the solitary lantern making vainly for the hills.
 
They were found by the patrol just after dawn; Turpio was working Cohors XX hard these days: the first patrols set out early, always in the dark. When Ballista and his party were found they were still a couple of miles from town, and in a bad way. Horses and men were completely exhausted. The flanks of the horses were covered in a white foam of sweat, their nostrils wide, mouths hanging open. The men were ashen-faced, almost insensible with fatigue. Apart from a servant more dead than alive who was slung over a packhorse, they were walking, stumbling along by their mounts. The Dux Ripae looked terrible, his face masked in dried blood, staggering, hanging on to the near-side pommel of his horse’s saddle.

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