Sword of Rome (51 page)

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Authors: Douglas Jackson

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #History, #Ancient, #Rome

BOOK: Sword of Rome
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They had a month.

‘In a month we’ll get you fit enough to fight.’ He saw the stricken look in Valerius’s eyes. ‘Don’t worry. I’ll think of something.’

L
May,
AD
69

‘Ready?’

Valerius nodded, but he had a lump in his throat the size of a goose egg and his feet seemed to be encased in lead. They sat in the stifling heat of the arming room below the arena outside Cremona and all around them were the sounds of men praying, or sobbing. Somewhere close was the thick, bitter scent of fresh vomit.

Serpentius kept his voice low. ‘We’ll fight together and if the gods will it, we’ll be the last men standing.’

‘What happens then?’

The Spaniard shrugged. ‘Maybe we’ll have been so good they’ll let us both live.’

Valerius nodded slowly, knowing it was unlikely, no matter how well they fought. ‘And if not?’

He saw a glint in the dark eyes. ‘I’ll make it quick and clean.’

Valerius swallowed as he imagined the coldness of bright iron piercing his heart, but he managed a smile. ‘What if it’s the other way round?’

Serpentius stared at him. They both knew that was not going to happen. ‘Do not concern yourself. If you die, you will die with a sword
in your hand and a friend by your side.’ He reached down to retrieve a bag from between his feet. ‘Here, take this.’

Valerius opened the bag and the contents took his breath away. Inside was a rough replica of the wooden hand he had watched burn all those months ago on the Rhenus. It had a laced cowhide stock and without a word he pulled it over his right forearm and deftly tied the laces with the fingers of his left hand. He turned it slowly as if he might be imagining its existence.

‘I told them you’d fight better with a shield,’ Serpentius said gruffly. ‘It should fit this.’ He produced a round shield, in the Thracian style, but Valerius only had eyes for the crude oak fist his friend had carved. For a moment, the world seemed to spin around him. No words could ever express what he felt and all he could think of was to reach across with his good hand and touch the Spaniard’s arm.

If he was going to die, he would die a whole man. A whole man with a sword in his hand and a friend by his side.

It was enough.

‘Prepare yourselves.’

Valerius’s left hand rose to touch the golden boar amulet at his neck.

 

Aulus Vitellius Germanicus Augustus frowned as the guards brought them out in batches of ten. Caecina hadn’t even thought to create a better spectacle by arming them properly. They looked like a bunch of bearded peasant farmers with spears and swords. At first they stood around, frightened and bewildered, but the
lanistae
ran between them pushing them into match-ups and pointing out the hundreds of archers who ringed the packed dirt and had orders to kill any man who refused to fight. Soon the arena rang to the roars of the spectators, the clash of swords and the screams of the dying.

He pinned the young man sitting next to him, the architect of this farce, with a smile, muttered some unintelligible words of praise and turned away. By the gods he was bored.

After the victory at Bedriacum he had been feted from Moguntiacum to Mediolanum and Lugdunum to Rome. He had eaten and drunk until he had been surprised to discover that even
his
gargantuan
appetites had limits. Not four days earlier, Valens had held his own little spectacle, and in truth it was infinitely more cultured than anything this upstart youth had provided thus far.

His mind returned to the day when he had finally visited the battlefield between Cremona and Bedriacum, forty days after the fighting had ended. A charnel house. A slaughterer’s yard two miles long and a mile and a half wide. Tens of thousands of putrefying corpses piled as high as temple walls and hanging from the trees. Legs, arms and severed heads littering each yard of blood-soaked earth, every inch blanketed by the flies that swarmed insatiable to the feast. His court had gagged at the stink of rotting flesh, the yards of blackened, festering intestines torn from gas-filled bodies by the feral dogs which still roamed that awful field of death, and the black clouds of crows who fought for the softest parts – the best of it, the eyes, the lips, had long gone, but there were still opportunities for the determined – but to Aulus Vitellius Germanicus Augustus the stink of a rotting corpse was the sweet smell of victory.

A cry of appreciation from the crowd brought him back to the ‘entertainment’. A pair of gladiators had been clever enough to fight together for a time, but the taller of the men, a well-muscled bruiser, had taken the opportunity to stab his comrade in the back the instant that particular contest had been won. It appeared the victim had some special skill his murderer had feared. Perhaps the spectacle was not going to be as dull as he’d believed.

A second pair had also decided to fight as a team and he admired their skills until his attention was drawn to two equally matched men armed with terrible, curved knives. The blades darted and threatened, sang in great scything arcs that would have removed a head if they’d been successful, until the sublime moment when, with a scream that rent the air, they simultaneously ripped each other’s guts out and fell, spilling viscera on to ground already pooled with blood and gore. The numbers were down to twenty or thirty now, with the rest dead … or, like one of the gutted men who was entertainingly trying to crawl somewhere with his insides trailing behind him, certainly dying.

His gaze drifted back to the double team. By the gods, they weren’t
bad. A tall spare bullwhip of a fighter with a long sword that seemed to have a life of its own, and a stockier man – no, not stocky, just not as tall as the other – who fought with a short sword and shield. So quick and coordinated that at times it seemed they fought as one man, entertaining the crowd with spectacular executions and imaginative ends, quite literally carving their way through their opponents. Vitellius thought he recognized something in the taller man. He had seen him fight before, he was certain.

Amusing. What would happen when …?

Valerius seemed to see the world through a red veil and a mist of scarlet droplets coated every inch of his skin and clothing. How many men had he killed? It didn’t matter. All that mattered was to kill the next one, and the next. Make it look good, but make it quick. They deserved that at least. He was glad Serpentius had insisted they stay away from the other prisoners and that he had never learned their names, otherwise … well, otherwise didn’t mean anything now. He fought on, always conscious of Serpentius’s immense presence at his side, not immense in mass, but in speed and style and efficiency. With a thrill of fear he realized the red mist had cleared and only one man faced them. The big man who had fought beside his friend, right until the moment he’d stabbed him in the back.

‘Come on, Lucius, let’s get it over,’ Serpentius coaxed. Valerius saw a moment of recognition in the other man’s face, and then he ran. The crowd shrieked their disgust and within five paces a dozen arrows from the archers on the walls had pierced his body.

Valerius stood, head down and panting, until he realized the attention of the entire crowd was focused on him. A wall of sound pounded him from every quarter. He turned to find the Spaniard four paces away, with his sword at the ready.

‘Remember,’ Serpentius said quietly. ‘Fight hard and die well.’

He fought hard, because Serpentius made him fight for his life. He only lived because Serpentius made it so. This was a different Serpentius from the man he had faced on the training ground so many times. An implacable, stone-cold killer who could have finished it at any time of his choosing. Valerius looked good because Serpentius made him
look good. A dozen times he was able to avoid a killer stroke by the merest whisker, because of the Spaniard’s whispered instructions. A dozen times he stepped back, amazed to be alive, with the cheers of the crowd ringing in his ears. But it couldn’t last. There had to be an end.

Gradually, he realized that Serpentius was manoeuvring him to the precise spot he had chosen for the kill. As he fought for his life, he wondered how many other men had experienced this despairing hopelessness. This feeling of being a fish in a tank chosen as someone’s horribly eviscerated supper.

‘Now!’

The long sword came down in an arc that chopped the shield from his right hand. He heard a shout from somewhere in the distance, but already the Spaniard’s wrist had twisted to deliver the counter-stroke and Valerius’s short sword was an age too slow to parry it. Lightning seemed to flash in his brain and he experienced a terrible pain. As he fell, he felt an odd relief that it was over.

Aulus Vitellius had seen the shield drop to reveal the wooden hand. For the first time he realized the identities of the two men and instinctively he heaved himself to his feet shouting: ‘No!’

Too late. The sword flashed a second time and the stockier man’s head exploded in a cloud of bright scarlet. He went down like a stone, but such was the bloodlust of his opponent that he hacked at the fallen body with his sword and reached down to tear the viscera from the corpse, raising it high to the ecstatic roars of the crowd.

When the cheering subsided, the fighter trudged wearily through the carnage to where Vitellius sat beside Aulus Caecina Alienus in the Imperial box.

‘You fought well,’ the Emperor congratulated him – was there a hint of regret in his voice? – ‘as did your … friend.’

The gladiator, his skin streaked with the blood of his last victim, fell to his knees in supplication. ‘I would ask a favour of the Emperor.’ The harsh voice was respectful, but not pleading. Aulus Vitellius doubted this was a man who would ever plead.

Beside him, Caecina growled and started to rise, but Vitellius placed a hand on his shoulder. ‘Ask it.’

‘I beg the right to bury my comrade with the honour he deserves.’

It was too much. ‘You have your life, traitor,’ Caecina snapped. ‘Be satisfied with that or it will be taken from you. Do not try your Emperor’s patience.’

But Vitellius only sighed. His eyes roamed the arena, testing the mood of the crowd. Finally, he nodded.

‘I grant you that right, gladiator.’ He reached up to his neck and there was a collective gasp as he unclipped the golden brooch holding his cloak. Aulus Vitellius Germanicus Imperator raised his voice so his words echoed around the walls. ‘He was a nobleman, I think, and a Hero of Rome. Let him be buried in the purple.’ He threw the heavy cloak to Serpentius. The Spaniard gave a curt nod and stalked back to where Valerius lay. Taking the utmost care, he wrapped his friend in Imperial purple and, with a last baleful look around the arena, picked up the body and carried it to the doors with the cheers of the crowd ringing unwanted in his ears.

Epilogue

Valerius opened his eyes, but the darkness was as total as the grave. So, not Elysium, then, but the inside of a tomb.

‘How does it feel to be dead?’

He started at the unexpected voice in his right ear. ‘Better than the alternative, but my head hurts. Did you have to hit me so hard?’

‘Another scar to add to your collection.’ Serpentius rose and went to the door, drawing back a ragged curtain to allow a shaft of moonlight into the hut. ‘I made it look real, that’s all that matters. Everything went as we planned. I turned the blade at the last moment, but they needed to see blood. It helped that we were fighting on top of two who’d gutted each other – one man’s guts looks exactly the same as another’s.’

Valerius lay back and closed his eyes. His throbbing head cleared for a moment and he felt as if a spear had pierced his chest. She was lost to him for ever. ‘So it’s exile then,’ he said wearily. ‘A new life. I have always wanted to see the mountains of your home and you have always wanted a servant.’

It was an old jest and should have brought a smile, but when he finally spoke Serpentius’s voice was grave.

‘Word reached the village yesterday that the legions of Syria and Egypt have hailed General Titus Flavius Vespasian as Emperor and the Balkan units who would have fought for Otho have joined them. They say they’re already marching on Italia to bring Vitellius to battle.’

So, more war, more bloodshed and more death, but, oddly, Valerius felt a wellspring of hope. There was still a chance. He would do what he did best, fight, and defeat his old friend. He would regain his honour and win back Domitia. He turned to the Spaniard.

‘So it begins again.’

Glossary
Ala milliaria

A reinforced auxiliary cavalry wing, normally between 700 and 1,000 strong. In Britain and the west the units would be a mix of cavalry and infantry, in the east a mix of spearmen and archers.
Ala quingenaria

Auxiliary cavalry wing normally composed of 500 auxiliary horsemen.
Aquilifer

The standard bearer who carried the eagle of the legion.
As

A small copper coin worth approximately one fifth of a
sestertius
.
Aureus (pl. Aurei)

Valuable gold coin worth twenty-five
denarii
.
Auxiliary

Non-citizen soldiers recruited from the provinces as light infantry or for specialist tasks,
e.g.
cavalry, slingers, archers.
Ballista (pl. Ballistae)

Artillery for throwing heavy missiles of varying size and type. The smaller machines were called scorpions or onagers.
Batavians

Members of a powerful Germanic tribe which lived in the area of the Rhine delta, now part of the Netherlands. Traditionally provided auxiliary units for the Roman Empire in return for relief from tribute and taxes.
Beneficiarius

A legion’s record keeper or scribe.
Boars Head (alt. Wedge)

A compact arrowhead formation used by Roman infantry and cavalry to break up enemy formations.
Caligae

Sturdily constructed, reinforced leather sandals worn by Roman soldiers. Normally with iron-studded sole.
Century

Smallest tactical unit of the legion, numbering eighty men.
Classis Germanica

Fleet of galleys which patrolled and carried military traffic on the River Rhine frontier.
Cohort

Tactical fighting unit of the legion. Normally contained six centuries, apart from the elite First cohort, which had five double-strength centuries (800 men).
Consul

One of two annually elected chief magistrates of Rome, normally appointed by the people and ratified by the Senate.
Contubernium

Unit of eight soldiers who shared a tent or barracks.
Cornicen (pl. Cornicines)

Legionary signal trumpeter who used an instrument called a
cornu
.
Decimation

A brutal and seldom used Roman military punishment where one man in every ten of a unit found guilty of cowardice or mutiny was chosen for execution by his comrades.
Decurion

A junior officer in a century, or a troop commander in a cavalry unit.
Denarius (pl. Denarii)

A silver coin.
Domus

The house of a wealthy Roman,
e.g.
Nero’s Domus Aurea (Golden House).
Duplicarius

Literally ‘double pay man’. A senior legionary with a trade, or an NCO.
Equestrian

Roman knightly class.
Fortuna

The goddess of luck and good fortune.
Frumentarii

Messengers who carried out secret duties for the Emperor, possibly including spying and assassination.
Gladius (pl. Gladii)

The short sword of the legionary. A lethal killing weapon at close quarters.
Governor

Citizen of senatorial rank given charge of a province. Would normally have a military background (see
Proconsul
).
Haruspex

Soothsayer, sometimes a priest.
Hispania Tarraconensis

Roman province covering a large part of what is now Spain.
Jupiter

Most powerful of the Roman gods, often referred to as
Optimus Maximus
(greatest and best).
Legate

The general in charge of a legion. A man of senatorial rank.
Legion

Unit of approximately 5,000 men, all of whom would be Roman citizens.
Lictor

Bodyguard of a Roman magistrate. There were strict limits on the numbers of lictors associated with different ranks.
Lituus

Curved trumpet used to transmit cavalry commands.
Lusitania

The Roman province which covered a territory now southern Portugal and part of western Spain.
Magister navis

A ship’s captain.
Manumission

The act of freeing a slave.
Mars

The Roman god of war.
Mithras

An Eastern religion popular among Roman soldiers.
Nomentan

A superior variety of Roman wine, mentioned by Martial in his Epigrams.
Phalera (pl. Phalerae)

Awards won in battle worn on a legionary’s chest harness.
Pilum (pl. Pila)

Heavy spear carried by a Roman legionary.
Praetorian Guard

Powerful military force stationed in Rome. Accompanied the Emperor on campaign, but could be of dubious loyalty and were responsible for the overthrow of several Roman rulers.
Prefect

Auxiliary cavalry commander.
Primus Pilus

‘First File’. The senior centurion of a legion.
Principia

Legionary headquarters building.
Proconsul

Governor of a Roman province, such as Spain or Syria, and of consular rank.
Procurator

Civilian administrator subordinate to a governor.
Proscaenium

The area where plays were staged in a Roman theatre.
Quaestor

Civilian administrator in charge of finance.
Scorpio

Bolt-firing Roman light artillery piece.
Scutum (pl. Scuta)

The big, richly decorated curved shield carried by a legionary.
Senator

Patrician member of the Senate, the key political institution which administered the Roman Empire. Had to meet strict financial and property rules and be at least thirty years of age.
Sestertius (pl. Sestertii)

Roman brass coin worth a quarter of a
denarius
.
Signifer

Standard bearer who carried the emblem of a cohort or century.
Testudo

Literally ‘tortoise’. A unit of soldiers with shields interlocked for protection.
Tribune

One of six senior officers acting as aides to a Legate. Often, but not always, on short commissions of six months upwards.
Tribunus laticlavius

Literally ‘broad stripe tribune’. The most senior of a legion’s military tribunes.
Urban cohorts

Force founded by Augustus to combat the power of the Praetorian Guard. Used for policing large mobs and riot-control duties.
Vascones

Roman auxiliaries from a tribe inhabiting northern Spain. Gave their name to the Basque region.
Victimarius

Servant who delivers and attends to the victim of a sacrifice.
Victory

Roman goddess equivalent to the Greek Nike.
Vigiles

Force responsible for the day-to-day policing of Rome’s streets and fire prevention and fighting.

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