Still not nearly enough.
What more could he do? The manpower simply did not exist. Then he remembered, from the ancient texts; when the Spartans had sent aid to the Syracusans in the form of just one man, a noble and valorous strategos who transformed their campaign against the Carthaginians. Suddenly, he realised what was needed.
‘To my campaign room,’ he barked, then clapped his hands. Two candidati rushed to flank him as he flitted down the steps from the battlements.
The midday sun scorched the column of legionaries, cooking their bodies inside their scale vests as they marched across the Syrian plain, the terracotta dust thrown up from the march coating their throats.
Mounted at the head of the column, Traianus’ thoughts flitted between his empty water skin and the grim memories of the skirmish back in the dunes. He rubbed at his hooked nose and then his jaw, now broad and stubbled with grey as he approached his fiftieth year. Then he looked at the blood encrusted under his fingernails and was sure he could still smell the entrails of the last of the Persian warriors he had slain. Just as when he had been a legionary, blood and slaughter ruled now that he was
Magister Militum Per Orientalis
, commander of all legionaries in the extreme east, answerable only to Emperor Valens himself.
Mercifully, the outline of Antioch emerged from the heat haze on the western horizon; rest and refreshment was near. When they reached the eastern gate, Traianus raised a hand in salute to the wall guard.
‘Ave!’ The sentry called out, then shouted down inside the city. ‘Open the gates!’
Traianus felt the cool shade of the gatehouse like a balm on his skin as they passed under it and into the bustle of the city. Antioch was situated just a few miles west of the volatile border between the two great empires of Rome and Persia. It was the first city that could be considered partisan, staunchly Christian, as opposed to almost every other settlement dotted across the border region – riddled with zeal, Christianity and Zoroastrianism clashing as opposing holy truths. Indeed, even the legions here had adopted the Christian God over the previously infallible Mithras. Traianus often wondered not which god to follow, but if there was such a thing at all.
He led his men across the market square, shaded by the baths and the horreum, then past the Column of Valentinian and the Great Church of Constantine. Then they entered the market swell, rich with a stench of sweat and a mixture of camel and horse dung and packed with a sea of faces gawping at their blood-spattered armour.
Then a column of sorry-looking slaves was bundled across his path in chains. Both parties halted. The bald, ageing slavemaster turned round to see what had held up his column. He looked Traianus in the eye with a scowl, then gulped in fear as he realised who he was dealing with.
Traianus cocked an eyebrow at the state of the slaves: dressed only in loincloths, their legs were more bone than muscle, their ribs seemed to be pressing tight against their skin and their faces spoke of the many years that had passed since they had last been free men. Then he noticed a faded stigma on one man’s bicep.
Legio II Parthica
, it read. A frown wrinkled his brow.
‘Hold on,’ he raised a hand as the slavemaster readied to whip his slaves onwards.
The slavemaster stopped, his eyes widening in fear. Around the two columns, the crowd slowed, looking on in hope of a brawl.
Traianus slipped from the saddle and grappled the slave’s arm. ‘This man was a legionary?’ He looked to the slavemaster. ‘Is he a deserter?’
The slavemaster made to reply, but the slave cut in before him;
‘Never!’
One of Traianus’ legionaries lunged forward, raising a balled fist to the slave.
‘No!’ Traianus barked, then lowered his voice and looked the slave in the eyes. ‘Let him speak.’
Under his hay-like, untended hair, the slave’s face was sun-darkened and lined with age, his cheeks were sunken and his lips cracked and bleeding. But his eyes screamed defiance.
‘I am Caelus Pedius Carbo of the II Parthica, first cohort, second century. I fought for my empire until the last. I shed blood on the walls of Bezabde until I could no longer stand,’ he gestured to the network of thick scar welt on his arms and thighs.
Traianus’ eyes widened. ‘You fought at Bezabde?’ The sack of the fortified city on the banks of the River Tigris had sent shockwaves around the eastern frontier, but much time had passed since that incident. ‘That was, what, more than fifteen years ago.’
Carbo looked to Traianus with glassy eyes. ‘Has it really been that long?’
Nodding, Traianus suppressed the surge of pity he felt for the man, then replied prosaically. ‘It was thought that none survived the razing of the city? I was part of the relief column that arrived there, too late.’ His mind flitted with the images of the blackened, toppled walls, the blood-slicked streets and the whimpering of the dying.
Carbo shook his head. ‘It may have been better that way. When Bezabde fell, the Persians took me along with the captured. There were hundreds of us at first. I worked in the salt mines in heat a man should never know and I was certain that I had arrived in Hades. Days turned into weeks, then months, then years and by then we lost count. My comrades weakened and fell victim to the lung disease of the mines and eventually there were less than half of us left. I started to pray that I would be next. Then one day I was bought by a Persian noble who took me to his luxurious palace. There I had the pleasure of pools and baths and silken bedding. A stark contrast to the mines. Except that he had me horsewhipped for his amusement, every day.’ He twisted to reveal the almost unbroken coating of scar tissue that was his back. His shoulder blades were crooked, as if they had been broken and healed many times. ‘Then I was sold on to a travelling trader. I have changed hands many times since then and now I find myself here, as a slave to the empire I would gladly die for.’
Traianus frowned, scanning the column of slaves. ‘Are there more survivors?’
Carbo sighed. ‘Not here. But I fear that some of my comrades still live, back in the desert salt mines.’
Traianus turned his gaze on the slavemaster. The man’s bald head glistened as he broke out in a nervous sweat. ‘Unshackle this man,’ he barked, ‘and pray to God and Mithras that you don’t cross my path again.’
The slavemaster thought about protesting until two of Traianus’ legionaries growled, part unsheathing their spathas. Quickly, the slavemaster fumbled with the shackles, then backed away from Traianus. The slave gazed down with a haunted look to the worn and callused flesh on his wrists where the iron had been clamped for so long. He did not move, even when the slavemaster rushed the rest of his column off into the throng of the market.
‘Would you serve again, soldier?’ Traianus asked Carbo.
‘Gladly,’ Carbo nodded. ‘Through all those years in the salt mines, one thing kept me and my comrades going: the promise of being reunited with our empire once more. Though I never dreamed I would be in chains when I next set foot in her sweet lands.’
‘Then you will serve again. You will be fed and tended to at the city barracks. There you will be assigned one month’s light duties and double rations, until your strength has returned.’
Carbo gazed at Traianus, realisation dawning on him that this really was happening. Then one of the legionaries nodded to him, beckoning him into the column. The watching crowds returned to their own business again and the rabble of market day erupted once more.
Traianus wondered if the man’s words were true as he climbed into the saddle again. Were there poor beggars from the II Parthica chained together in the notorious Persian salt mines? A bitter gall rose in his throat at the thought; Shapur would pay for this. If Rome could not conquer Persia with her armies, then another route would have to be sought. Emperor Valens had talked of a covert approach to infiltrating the Persian heartlands, but so far those plans lay undeveloped.
Then a voice barked over the rabble. ‘Magister Militum!’
Traianus twisted to the voice. A legionary waved at him frantically.
‘Emperor Valens requests your presence with the utmost urgency!’
The campaign room in the city palace was blessedly cool, and Traianus had slaked his thirst with a wide-brimmed cup of fruit juice. He looked on at the campaign map and the carved wooden pieces aligned along the borders. Then footsteps grew louder behind him until Emperor Valens and a pair of candidati entered the room.
‘Ah, Traianus!’ Valens’ azure eyes were sharp as always. ‘Your return is most timely.’
‘Emperor?’ Traianus frowned, watching Valens pluck four of the pieces from the map and place them west of Constantinople, near the Danubian limes.
‘Let me waste no time with preamble,’ Valens spoke evenly. ‘The Danubian frontier is on the brink.’
Traianus frowned. ‘Athanaric’s Goths?’
Valens cocked one eyebrow. ‘Perhaps, behind it all. But it is Fritigern who has breached our borders.’
‘Fritigern? He has broken the truce?’
‘That is not clear. It appears that he comes in peace,’ Valens shook his head, ‘and I will come on to the detail in a moment.’
‘But surely if he has encroached on our borders then he is in breach of the treaty?’
Valens nodded. ‘All valid questions that I will need to answer, Traianus. But it seems that the immediate danger is of famine. Fritigern has brought with him little or no grain. If we are still to respect the truce – as we must in the first instance – then we are obliged to aid him. The rider who brought me this news will be setting off at dawn to advise the local tribunus that he can levy grain from the towns and cities far to the south of the river. It’ll be a stretch, but I’m hoping it will be enough to ensure that Fritigern and his people stay exactly where they are until I get there. If they mobilise in search of food and fall upon our towns and cities . . . ’ his words trailed off as he gazed at the province of Moesia on the map, suddenly so distant. The handful of wooden pieces representing the limitanei looked desperately sparse, and the pieces Valens had moved there from the east did little to bolster their number.
He clapped his hands and a scribe rushed into the room, stopping beside Valens with a reed pen and a leaf of papyrus at the ready.
Eyeing the moved pieces, he spoke. ‘Send word to the II Armeniaca, the IV Italica, the II Isauria and the I Adiutrix. Then muster my ala of cataphractii and an ala of equites; they are to mobilise and rendezvous at Trapezus. There, the
Classis Pontica
will take them to Tomis. Make sure they understand that this order is given with the utmost urgency.’