Read The Sword of Attila Online
Authors: David Gibbins
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Flavius looked on with bemused fascination as the Goth infantry advanced in blocks, forming a stationary line on the high ground while the cavalry ranged up on either side of them. It was a classic manoeuvre, straight out of the textbooks, something that commanders had been taught to do since the wars against Hannibal. It was also wrong, so badly wrong that Flavius began to despair that he would ever get this particular set of future generals to desist from nocturnal distractions and do their homework. He sighed, and watched the Roman forces deploy slightly more accurately on the opposing hill, the seven legions occupying the crest, the
lanciarii
and the
mattiarii,
the mace-armed infantry, in the centre, the
scutarii
shielded cavalry in reserve, the
sagittarii
dispersed along the front. He would give them a few more minutes to puzzle out how this evenly matched deployment could possibly end in anything other than a battle of attrition and then, not for the first time, he would attempt to fill the yawning gaps in knowledge that had clearly not been helped by time spent in the taverns and brothels around the forum the night before.
He stroked the four parallel white ridges on his right forearm, feeling the throb that came when the weather was hot or when he exercised, when the veins and arteries of his arm pulsed with blood and pressed against the hardened scar tissue. It had been nearly ten years since Carthage â two years of campaigning against the Ostrogoths in the north, two years of administration and training at the
comitatenses
headquarters outside Ravanna, and nearly six years now in Rome â but even so, the attack of the Alaunt war dogs that morning outside Carthage seemed as vivid as if it were yesterday, something he had relived for years afterwards in dreams that would leave him sitting stock upright in his bed, clutching his arm and bathed in sweat, unable to breathe or to scream. The nightmares were fewer now, but hearing a baying dog in the distance would still set him on edge, would send a trickle of sweat down his back. He looked again at the opposing armies. What he had experienced then could never be taught; it was something that those here today could only understand first-hand themselves when they too faced death in battle and when those who survived learned to live with the aftershock.
âFlavius Aetius.' Someone was shaking his arm. âWhat do we do next?'
Flavius started, and stared at his cousin Quintus in the eyes. He suddenly remembered where he was, and turned back to the model on the table. âI'm sorry. I was about fifteen hundred miles away, thinking of my own experience of battle.'
âTell us about it,' one of the boys piped up. âWere the Alans really as bad as all that? The only ones I've seen are farmers in Aquitaine, and they seem pretty tame to me.'
âAnother time,' Flavius said, straightening himself up. âWe have twenty minutes until the lesson is over. Thorismud will talk you through the battle.'
The tall Goth nodded to him and took a wooden pointer from one of the boys. Thorismud had been Flavius' sparring partner in the days when they themselves had been students in the
schola
twelve years before. He was the eldest son and heir of the Visigoth king Theodoric, once an ally but for several years now an enemy of Rome, and he had come under a flag of truce from the Visigoth stronghold of Tolosa in Gaul to discuss terms with Flavius' uncle, the
magister militum
Aetius, seeking further grants of agricultural land and vineyards that Aetius had flatly turned down. Although the mission had been a failure, the terms of the truce allowed Thorismud and his retinue to stay a further day in Rome, and he had agreed to spend an hour sitting in on Flavius' class in the
schola
that afternoon.
âThe Battle of Adrianople, near Constantinople, five days before the Ides of August,
Anno Domini
376,' he began, his voice deep and his Latin only slightly accented. âWho can tell me something about the conditions that day?'
His request was met by silence, and Flavius looked at the sixteen officer candidates ranged around the table. Half of them were direct-entry cadets, teenagers like Quintus who had passed the entrance examinations, and the other half were men of
optio
and centurion rank who had been recommended for a commission by their
limitanei
and
comitatenses
commanders, the oldest of them in their mid-thirties. The younger cadets were overawed by Thorismud, and some of the older ones were visibly apprehensive, men who may have faced the Visigoths in battle and be nursing memories as vivid and terrifying as those that Flavius had endured from fighting the Vandals and Alans before Carthage.
Flavius tapped his hand on the table. âWell?'
Quintus cleared his throat. âIt was hot.'
âGood.' Thorismud slapped his pointer into his hand. âAnything else?'
Quintus answered again, his voice quavering. âAnd there was no water.'
âVery good.' Thorismud brought his pointer down hard on the table, cracking the end and shaking the blocks. âThat's what you don't learn in these games of war. Standing in this cool room, nursing your hangovers and wondering what pox you picked up from the whores along the Tiber last night, you can't be thinking like soldiers in battle, can you? Anyone with an aching head and bleary eyes can push blocks around a model and pretend they're generals. But being a good commander is not just about tactics. It's also about knowing what it's like to be a soldier: what it's like to feel exhausted, to feel hungry and thirsty, to feel disorientated, to feel let down by false expectations, to feel humiliated. If you don't understand that, you can push around those blocks until Jupiter comes back to rule in Rome, but you still won't win battles.'
Quintus pointed at the model, his hand shaking slightly. âBefore the battle, the Goths burnt the grass and crops, increasing the heat and reducing the visibility. It was already roastingly hot, sickeningly so. The emperor Valens marched his men for almost seven hours from the town of Adrianople towards the Goth encampment, arriving in early afternoon in the worst of the heat. At that time of year there were no streams and there was no other source of water. Men collapsed from dehydration even before the battle began, and others could barely move in their armour. That's as far as I got in Ammianus Marcellinus' account before the library shut,' he said, looking ruefully around.
âYou mean before the taverns opened,' Thorismud said, glaring at him.
Another of the younger cadets suddenly pushed back his chair, lurched to a corner and threw up noisily, the smell filling the room. Flavius gritted his teeth, picked up his own pointer and pushed the line of red blocks around into a circle. âIt was like this,' he said. âThe Goths had formed a wagon laager, in effect a fortification protecting their women and children and possessions, with rings of infantry encircling it and their cavalry positioned nearby. The Romans arrived exhausted and dehydrated, as Quintus said, but believing that theirs was the stronger force. It seems possible that Valens lost control of his men; we'll never know, because he never made it out alive. My grandfather Gaudentius, who was at the battle on the Goth side, says that the Romans let passion rule, that on seeing the Goth army for the first time they remembered the devastation caused by the Goths to their land over the preceding years, and that they became enraged and charged without Valens' order. Others say that dehydration and exhaustion made them delirious, unable to think straight and make rational decisions. To me that's a good explanation of what happened next.'
He pushed the blue Roman blocks down the valley and up to the wagon laager. âLeaving their vantage point on the adjacent hill, the Romans charged down the valley and up the slope towards the Goths, exhausting themselves even further in the process. Once there, they discovered that the laager was impregnable, and they were rebuffed every time they tried to attack it.' He pushed the blue blocks back into the valley, and then pulled the thin red blocks representing Goth cavalry down towards them, leaving the circle of red blocks unaltered. âThe Romans retreated in disarray, and as they did so the Goth cavalry charged down on them, followed by the infantry who by then knew they could safely leave the laager. Encumbered by their heavy chain armour and shields, the Romans were destroyed and the valley became a bloodbath. One estimate puts the number of Roman dead at twenty thousand, almost three-quarters of those who went into action that day.'
âThe greatest battle of modern times,' Thorismud said. âThe worst-ever defeat for Roman arms. A humiliation for all who call themselves soldiers â and I speak as a Goth, like Flavius on his paternal barbarian side a grandson of one of the victors.'
âThe Huns use wagon laagers,' one of the older men said, his face stony as he stared at Thorismud. âI've seen it myself, in the far distance when the Huns advanced into Thrace. Instead of deploying their cavalry outside the laager like the Goths at Adrianople, they keep their mounted archers within the circle, launching them on the enemy lines when the time is right. It's said that the tactic was developed by Attila himself.'
At the mention of that name the atmosphere in the room changed, becoming tense, more focused, the pale faces of the younger cadets peering at Thorismud. âWhat do you think our chances are against him?' Quintus said.
âIn open battle? Nil, unless you learn the lessons of Adrianople.'
He glanced at Flavius, who turned to the class. âYou are fortunate to have had Prince Thorismud instruct you. Now you will write me a ten-point summary of the main lessons to be learned from Adrianople. Those who pass will go straight to the exercise yard for this week's weapons demonstration with Macrobius, then they will go for a thorough cleansing in the Baths of Caracalla, entry fee courtesy of me, and then they will return here to prepare kit ready for infantry training on the Field of Mars. Those who fail will spend the entire evening with the monks in the Greek Library helping to rearrange the military history section. Wax tablets and pens are in the box under the table.'
Quintus quickly pulled out the box and distributed the contents, and everyone hunched over their task. Flavius got up and accompanied Thorismud to the rear door of the chamber, and spoke quietly, out of earshot of the table. âI apologize for their state, my cousin Quintus especially. I could smell last night on his breath. He has the makings of a decent tribune, but if he fails his exam through carousing and drinking he brings dishonour on me, not just on himself.'
Thorismud coughed. âHe reminds me of someone I once knew.'
Flavius looked exaggeratedly serious. âWho could you possibly mean?'
âDo you remember that drinking contest by the Tiber? A cup of each vintage from Falernian to Campanian, until one of us dropped.'
âI won.'
âThose fancy Roman drinks didn't suit my gut.'
Flavius put a hand on his shoulder. âUntil we meet again, Thorismud.'
âFighting against each other, or as allies.'
âDo you think that's possible? That Rome and the Visigoths could be allies again?'
Thorismud stared at the ground. âBlack shadows are falling on the world. The threat from Attila is greater than anything we have ever faced before. We will only survive if new alliances are forged, if men who were previously enemies put aside their differences for the common good. Without that, we will be entering a dark age.'
âSave a place at your mead hall for me, Thorismud. We can do much together.'
âIt is done. Now I must go.'
The door to the
schola
chamber opened and Macrobius appeared, legs apart and hands behind his back, his tunic freshly dyed red and the number of his old
limitanei numerus
still proudly displayed on his shoulders. Flavius glanced at the sundial visible outside the window on the side of Trajan's market. He had run over time, as usual. He let the cadets finish writing, collected the tablets and stood up. âThat's all for today. Next week it's barbarian culture.'
A groan came up from the front row. âNot barbarian culture again, tribune. It's all woad and tree-hugging and shrieking.'
âKnow your enemy, Marcus Duranius. And don't worry, you won't need to strain your eyes in the library over a book, trying to work out which way is up. For research you only need to talk to your friends. Half of you here have Goth ancestry.'
âWhen do we get back to battles?'
Flavius gave him a stern look. âThe following week you'll be receiving instructions in surveying and map-reading from Gnaeus Uago Alentius, a senior tribune of the
fabri.
He's a retired officer who taught in the
schola
for decades and he has agreed to come in and teach you as a special favour to me, so you're lucky. He's a Gepid on his father's side, with some Alan blood, so you can also question him about barbarian culture, Marcus Duranius. And he's a rock-hard disciplinarian, so watch your mouth. Now get downstairs, drink some water from the fountain and get ready for some interesting items from Macrobius' collection in the
palaestra.
'