Rome’s Fallen Eagle (35 page)

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Authors: Robert Fabbri

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‘But you would have been on schedule! And you could’ve had the town surrounded and killed any long-hairs that decided they didn’t like us. But instead you do the worst possible combination of things: you leave the town open but send a delegation to
announce that we’ll be arriving tomorrow and get the elders to declare for us, leaving time for all the young fire-eaters to piss off west to fill the ranks of Caratacus’ army. Idiot!’

‘Yes, sir,’ Vespasian admitted, burning with shame inside, due as much to realising now the magnitude of his mistake as to the amused looks on the faces of Corvinus and Geta as he received this very public dressing-down. Only Sabinus remained neutral as Plautius paced up and down his tent. Rain drummed on the roof, increasing and decreasing in intensity with each gust of wind. The musty smell of damp woollen clothing pervaded the atmosphere.

‘In war delay can be fatal, legate,’ Plautius continued once he had collected himself somewhat. ‘Just read Caesar again if you want to understand the importance of seizing the initiative with quick action.’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘Why didn’t you send cavalry out after them as soon as you were told?’

‘The fog was—’

‘The fog! We all had fog; you’re going to have to get used to the fucking fog in this damp arsehole of the world. If you’d sent cavalry immediately they could have at least been closer to the bastards by the time the fog lifted; they were on foot, for fuck’s sake!’

‘Yes, sir; I’m sorry, sir.’

Plautius glared at Vespasian for a few moments before letting out a huge sigh. ‘Well, it’s done now and a thousand men is not such a great number in the scheme of things. But let that be a lesson to you, Vespasian: next time I order you to do something, you do it unless you can show me the evidence that Jupiter himself came down and personally gelded you and put out your eyes in order to stop you; because if you can’t, that’s what I’ll do to you. Do you understand me?’

Vespasian winced again. ‘Yes, sir!’

‘Good. Sit down.’

Vespasian sat back down next to Sabinus as Geta and Corvinus exchanged an amused glance.

‘Stop smirking,’ Plautius growled at them as he sat at his desk.
‘I expect it’s not the last mistake that will happen on this trip but I’m sure it’s the last that Vespasian will make. Now, to business, gentlemen.’ He unravelled a scroll and perused it for a few moments before looking back up at his subordinates. ‘So far it’s gone reasonably smoothly. To sum up: Sabinus found no one to the south worth mentioning, we’ve seized the harbour by the white cliffs and the navy has started work on it. We have a large squadron in the Tamesis estuary to our north and Rutupiae is secure and work has started on the port. The Ninth has occupied Geta’s camp and has already laid two miles of temporary road from there towards us. Adminios is in place as our puppet and has received the loyalty of the local sub-tribes and a civil administration favourable to us is being created under the watchful eye of Sentius. Our cavalry patrols report that there is no large enemy force between us and the Afon Cantiacii and the bridge is still standing. So with our rear and flanks secure we start our push west immediately. I want your legions ready to march two hours after this briefing ends; is that understood?’

‘Yes, sir!’ all four legates replied simultaneously.

‘Good. That was the easy part; from now on we’ve lost all elements of surprise and the Britons know the land far better than we do. We shall move forward on a broad front, quickly, but taking care not to damage too much of the farmland; I want a good harvest growing behind us as I don’t intend that either our lads or the tribes that surrender to us should go hungry this winter. Sabinus’ Fourteenth will be my centre; it’s mainly undulating ground between here and the river so there’s no need to deviate unless the enemy appear. Your auxiliaries will act as the army’s forward scouts.

‘Geta, your Twentieth will take the right flank. You will keep to within two miles of Sabinus. Your task is twofold: firstly to stop anything getting around that flank, and secondly to keep in contact with the squadron in the estuary who will be supplying us. Your auxiliaries will be busy.

‘Vespasian, your Second will be our left flank. You will advance along the north side of these downs with your auxiliaries taking the high ground. I want regular reports from the south
side; it wouldn’t do to have an army sneak past us that way.

‘Corvinus, the Ninth will guard our rear. Two of your auxiliary cohorts will stay in Rutupiae making the camp a permanent structure. Another two will carry on constructing the road; I want nothing fancy, we’ll build a proper one when we have the time and slaves to do it. Just make it so that it can take wheeled transport. I want your cavalry alae patrolling the south making our presence felt amongst the locals so that they get used to us. The legion and the rest of your cohorts will follow half a day’s march behind us just in case something slips behind our backs.

‘You will all take your own baggage with you now that it’s caught up; the siege train and other heavy stuff will advance with the Ninth. Any questions, gentlemen?’

‘Will the Ninth always have to tag along in the rear?’ Corvinus asked with more than a hint of derision in his voice.

‘You will address me as sir or general, legate!’ Plautius snapped, slamming his fist down on the desk top. ‘Being the Empress’ brother does not put you above me here. This is an army in a war zone not a dinner party on the Palatine; do you understand me, lad?’

Corvinus all but recoiled at the vehemence of the put-down and the insult. The muscles in his cheeks tensed and re-tensed. ‘Yes, general,’ he answered eventually.

‘That’s the second time you’ve questioned my orders recently; there’ll not be a third. The Ninth will do as it’s told; it will be our rearguard for this river but it’ll be the freshest legion when we come to the Tamesis and then it’ll see hard fighting. Once we’ve secured the Tamesis crossing and whilst we’re waiting for Claudius, your legion will head south and place Verica on his throne and then take Vectis in preparation for the push west next season; so you’ll have plenty to do. I know from our time in Pannonia together that you’re up to it, Corvinus; that’s why I didn’t object when you were made a part of this army.’ Plautius pointed his finger threateningly at Corvinus’ face. ‘Don’t give me cause to regret it.’ He rolled up his scroll and then stood and addressed the other three legates. ‘We march in two hours; that gives you four hours before you’ll need to build
camps for the night. By then I want Vespasian and Geta’s legions in the positions I’ve given you either side of Sabinus ready for a hard day’s march tomorrow. I intend to be at the Afon Cantiacii by dusk the following day; let’s hope that we don’t find it held against us. Dismiss, gentlemen.’

The sun warmed Vespasian’s face for the first time since arriving in Britannia as he and Magnus, accompanied by a turma of the II Augusta’s legionary cavalry, rode up the grass-covered northern slope of the hills on the left flank of the army’s advance. With the sun out, the landscape took on a completely different aspect. Gone was the gloom of dripping vegetation and rain-spattered puddles on mud-churned ground, all pressed down upon by a heavy, grey sky that seemed so low as to be touchable. In its stead was a lush, green countryside of pasture, woods and freshly sprouting wheat fields; the air was clear and fresh, and with the warmth returning to his body Vespasian felt that it might not be such a miserable land after all.

It had been two days since Plautius’ briefing and the advance had been as fast as it had been uneventful; the only obstacles to their progress had been the weather and the occasional enemy cow or sheep, which invariably found its way to the cooking fires of whichever century claimed the honour of tackling such a fearsome foe.

‘I’m beginning to think that a plague has wiped out almost every living thing west of Cantiacum,’ Magnus commented as they passed yet another deserted farmstead. ‘And judging by the freshness of the sheep shit it must have been very recent.’

‘But where are the bodies?’ Vespasian asked, smiling at his friend’s hypothesis. ‘Perhaps Paetus can tell us; we should come across him soon.’

‘I don’t understand why you didn’t send a message ordering him to come to you instead of traipsing all the way up here.’

Vespasian pulled up his horse and turned it around. ‘That’s why,’ he said, extending his arm to the view.

Below them the country was speckled with marching columns, eight men abreast, arranged in an almost straight line
north; the three legions in the middle were advancing in a broader formation, each forty men abreast in two long columns of five cohorts and trailed by endless pack-mules and wagons. Between Vespasian and his II Augusta, just three miles distant, tramped his seven infantry auxiliary cohorts, the closest one, the archers of I Cohort Hamiorum, was a hundred paces just down the slope from them. In front of the three legions the XIIII Gemina’s eight cohorts of Batavian infantry scouted ahead to spring any ambushes set, in order to protect the more valuable lives of the Roman citizens in the legions. A cavalry turma galloped past them returning from a patrol to the west. The low, booming sound of cornua floated up from the army as it advanced with the sun reflecting off countless helmets.

In the distance, ten miles away to the north, the supporting squadron of triremes and supply vessels appeared like small dots on the glittering Tamesis estuary. Then to the east, bringing up the rear five miles behind the last of the columns, was the dark shadow of the siege train and heavy baggage followed by the almost square formation of the VIIII Hispana flanked by auxiliary cohorts.

‘What a sight that is,’ Vespasian said after a few moments of admiration. ‘That is a very big army.’

Magnus was unimpressed. ‘I’ve seen bigger.’

Vespasian was disappointed at his friend’s reaction but hid it; he had forgotten momentarily that Magnus had served with Germanicus in Germania with armies almost twice the size. ‘I suppose you must have,’ he mumbled, turning his horse and kicking it on up the hill towards the woods that crowned it. ‘Anyway, the main reason is to see for myself the lie of the land ahead of us.’

‘Of course, very sensible.’

‘And to see what Paetus’ situation is at first hand.’

‘Indeed.’

Paetus’ situation was similar to every other commander’s in the army: quiet. ‘We’ve seen hardly anyone,’ he told Vespasian and Magnus once they had caught up with him amongst the trees. ‘Occasionally we come across small family groups, without
any men of fighting age, hiding in the woods with their livestock. I don’t let the chaps touch them, not even take something for the pot. All my patrols from the south have come back in with nothing to report apart from the occasional hostile deer that demonstrates its martial prowess with a consummate display of running away. Nothing’s here, and no one is moving.’

‘I’ve a feeling that we’ll find them soon, Paetus.’ Vespasian looked out over the thickly forested country to the south. ‘How deep have you sent patrols into there?’

‘Ten miles in, sir. We’ve found nothing but a few charcoal burners. It’s thick forest; you could hide an army in there but it wouldn’t be able to move very fast.’

‘Thank you, Paetus, keep your lads at it.’ Vespasian turned to leave.

‘You know of course where they all are?’ Magnus said as they rode out of the trees.

‘Where?’

‘All together.’

‘I’ve worked that out. The question is: are they waiting for us at the river, or are they trying to get around behind us, or are they going to do something that we just don’t expect?’

Magnus’ face fell. ‘I think it’s the latter, sir, look.’ He pointed west to a hill just beyond the advance of the Batavian infantry.

Vespasian followed his gaze; over the hill came a dark smudge, blurred by the dust rising from it. Then came the distant roar of massed voices raised in hatred. ‘They must be mad! They can’t take us head on.’

Thousands of warriors, led by hundreds of two-horse chariots careering over the grass, were swarming for the XIIII Gemina and the II Augusta. The Batavians had evidently had warning from advance scouts and the eight cohorts had formed into line and closed up forming a protective shield for the legions as they too manoeuvred into battle order.

‘I think it’s time you got back to the legion, sir.’

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER XVI

‘I
T SEEMS THAT
we’re facing about thirty thousand, sir. Plautius has ordered us to send forward cohorts one to four of our Gallic auxiliaries to support the Batavians,’ Mucianus reported as Vespasian and Magnus pulled their horses up to a skidding halt at the II Augusta’s command post between the two lines of its ten cohorts, now in battle formation. ‘I’ve sent them; they made contact with the Batavians not long ago. The fifth I’ve had move on to our left flank along with the rest of the legion’s cavalry.’

‘Good; what are our orders?’

‘Form two lines to give us as broad a frontage as possible but remain in open order, which we’ve done, and then wait.’

‘Wait?’

‘Yes, sir, wait.’

‘All right. Send a messenger to the First Hamiorum telling them to come in range of our left flank; I want archer support when it comes to it. And send another to Paetus; he’s to stay on the hill in case they try to outflank us. You can rejoin your first and second cohorts when that’s done.’

‘Yes, sir!’

Vespasian looked over the heads of his front rank cohorts and up the slope ahead; two hundred paces away, the auxiliaries were formed up four ranks deep in a line almost a mile long. Beyond them, at the top of the hill, a mass of thousands of naked and halfnaked tribesmen bellowed war cries, whilst capering and brandishing weapons as hundreds of chariots skitted around on the cropped grass before them. Skilled drivers brought their vehicles close enough for the single warrior in each to hurl a couple of javelins at the shielded auxiliaries before veering their stocky
ponies off back up the hill to be replaced by another wave and then another before coming around again. Occasionally a warrior, carried away by battle-lust, jumped from his chariot to charge single-handedly into the front rank of the auxiliaries – with the inevitable consequence. His brisk and bloody death earned raucous roars of approval from the mass of tribesmen watching on.

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