by Ian Ross
Jumping down from the platform, he threw his arms out straight before him and forced the bodies aside. The first sailor he caught by the neck, then kicked his legs from under him. The second went down with a fist in the face; the third saw the way of things and made his escape. Castus took a moment to catch his breath, then scooped up the woman and her child and lifted them up onto the crane platform.
By the time he clambered up after them, it was over. The Christian priest had raised his arms and stepped off the cart, surrendering himself to the centurion of the Praetorian detachment. The shields closed around him, and he was led away.
‘With any luck,’ the youth on the crane said with lazy relish, ‘they’ll throw him to the lions!’
21
Out beyond the city walls, men were working in the late-afternoon sun. Thousands of them, slaves and conscripted civilians labouring alongside legionaries stripped to their tunics. In the lengthening shade of the wall itself they were clearing out the defensive ditch, digging up the mass of rubbish and debris that had filled it over centuries of peace. In the open ground on the far side of the ditch there were gangs tearing down the clusters of huts and low houses that had sprung up outside the fortifications. Far away, past the grey dust clouds rising from the demolished buildings, more men were hacking down the olive groves on the nearer slopes. An entire harvest ruined, only to deny the enemy wood and shade. But there was nothing the people of Massilia could do about the destruction: they were under military rule now, and Maximian had ordered that everything must be sacrificed to strengthen the city for a siege. The work had been going on for five days, but could not last much longer. Constantine had paused at Arelate, but was advancing once more.
‘All this,’ Brinno said, ‘for one man.’
Castus, standing beside him on the ramparts, nodded slowly. ‘Two men,’ he said.
They were both speaking quietly; following only a few paces behind them on the rampart walk were four soldiers of the Praetorian cohort. Officially they were supposed to be ‘military servants’ for the two Protectores, but their glowering watchful expressions showed plainly that they were intended as guards. Despite their lower rank, Castus did not doubt that the Praetorians had secret orders to report any treasonous words or actions to their superiors, and prevent any attempts to escape or sabotage the defensive works. He recognised at least two of them from the group that had surrounded him and Urbicus between the wagons at Lugdunum.
But the Praetorians could not stop Castus and Brinno from surveying the walls; as Protectores, they were supposed to be the emperor’s own loyal bodyguards, after all. Castus was no engineer, but he had a clear eye for the military possibilities of any location, and during his tour of the ramparts and gates with Brinno he had made sure to remember all that he saw. Now, standing on the walkway of the wall that descended towards the Rome Gate, he had a panoramic view over the whole sweep of the city as it curved around the northern shore of the harbour.
Massilia was built upon a wide hilly promontory, with the streets rising in tiers from the docks up to the temple-crowned summits. Artemis glowing in the afternoon sun. That, and the temple of Apollo on the next summit, formed the ancient acropolis of the city. Any troops breaking through the walls would have to battle their way up to those temples through a warren of streets; any defender keen on fighting to the last could hold either of them as a citadel. But that was a desperate thought. Castus had never experienced a true street battle, but he knew it was always a bloody business.
On the landward side of the promontory the old walls were strong, and even stronger now that Maximian had ordered them repaired. Massilia had only been assaulted once, hundreds of years before, but on that occasion it had held out against the great Julius Caesar. Or so Castus had learned in the imperial council that morning. Sallustius had told him later that the city had surrendered to Caesar in the end, but only after six months of siege. There were no catapults or other engines left in the city to fight off attackers, but with several thousand men to hold the ramparts, and plenty of archers among them, Massilia’s defences would be tough to break.
Only on the harbour side were the walls less formidable. Several gates had been knocked through them to give access to the docks, and the city merchants had built their warehouses and emporia higher than the wall tops, with overhanging attics and gantries to winch goods directly up from the wharfs. But anyone attacking on that side would have to cross the harbour itself, through the mass of anchored vessels, and Castus doubted that Constantine had either the boats or the manpower to attempt such an assault.
Surveying the scene, he frowned and shook his head.
Brinno leaned into the embrasure between the crenellations of the rampart, spitting noisily out into the cleared ditch twenty feet below. Castus had caught the twitch of his friend’s expression, and leaned into the embrasure beside him.
‘What do we do?’ Brinno hissed.
Castus had no answer.
‘We should have killed him on the boat!’ Behind them they could hear the scrape of the Praetorians’ boots on the paving of the walkway. ‘We could still do it...’
‘Couldn’t get close enough,’ Castus said under his breath. Both men were speaking through tightened lips, gazing out through the embrasure at the sun-drenched landscape beyond the walls. It was approaching late September now, but the heat of full summer still endured, and the air was humid with the scent of the sea.
‘Then what...? We start a riot, a revolt in the city? What?’
One of the Praetorians leaned heavily against the wall beside Castus, clearing his throat. Castus nudged Brinno with his elbow, and the pair of them straightened up.
‘Wait for a chance,’ Castus whispered as they moved on. ‘Hope we know it when we see it...’
He heard Brinno’s choke of frustration.
A warm breeze lifted over the ramparts, loaded with dust and the smell of smoke from the burning debris of buildings. On the other side of the wall, the city side, more smoke was rising from the workshops just inside the Rome Gate as the blacksmiths laboured to prepare their quotas of spear- and javelin heads, helmets and mail. From high on the wall, Castus could see the white placards set up in the street, the bold red letters proclaiming the penalty of death for anyone failing to do their duty to Maximian Augustus.
In truth, Castus knew that this was about more than just Maximian’s ambitions for rule. Maximian was like an actor, an old and worn-out actor, dragged back onto the stage to play his most famous role once more. He had been a capable military leader once, a ferocious and determined commander, a true emperor. Perhaps he could be again, but there were others around him who drove events now. Gorgonius, Scorpianus. Perhaps, behind them, Maxentius. It did not matter: men would die on both sides, and never know why.
He had seen Maximian at the council that morning, along with the members of his new imperial consistorium. They had all gathered in the apsed dining hall of the grand mansion on the hillside above the theatre, which Maximian had taken over as his palace. The house was the finest in the city, and had formerly belonged to Plotius Diadumenus, the curator of Massilia and head of the council. Diadumenus did not appear to mind being evicted; he had been promoted to governor of the Viennensis diocese for his pains. Now he stood with the rest of the assembled dignitaries – the military chiefs Scorpianus and Gaudentius, Macrobius the new Master of the Records, the eunuch Gorgonius, now promoted to Superintendent of the Sacred Bedchamber...
Castus had stood at the side of the imperial podium, scanning the faces of these men, the closest supporters of the new emperor. If they were anxious, they were careful not to let it show. There were nearly a score of new Protectores too, former centurions of the Praetorians and the Spanish legions, keeping a close and forbidding watch over the members of the assembly. Among their number, Castus recognised his old adversary Urbicus. The scarred veteran met his stare and held it for a moment, sneering with open contempt.
Maximian himself had sat, immobile
and silent, on his throne of state while Scorpianus read in his iron voice the proclamations of the day. News had arrived by fast ship from Carthage: the troops of Maxentius had crushed the rebellion in Africa and executed the rebel usurper Domitius Alexander. Now Maxentius would be free to send men and supplies to support his father in Massilia. Cheers and renewed acclamations echoed off the marble walls, but Castus thought only of Sabina. Her husband had been one of Alexander’s officials: what had become of him? Did she already know?
There had been other news, but it had not been proclaimed to the council. Instead it had filtered through the city, passed between the soldiers and the civilians. Castus heard it from Brinno. Nearly half the troops ordered to march from Arelate to join Maximian in Massilia had failed to arrive. At first it seemed they had mistaken their route, but the truth soon became clear. Led by their centurions, they had torn the images of Maximian from their standards and diverted their march to Aquae Sextiae, either to keep out of the conflict or turn themselves over to Constantine. Most of the deserters were from the Rhine legion detachments, eager not to have to fight their own comrades. But some had been men from the Spanish legions. The news had run through the city and the palace like a slow current, mixing anxious dread and hopeful possibility. Anything could happen; nothing was certain.
Pacing on down the rampart walkway towards the Rome Gate, Castus stared out once more at the activity beyond the walls. Gangs of men were dragging carts of rubble and debris from the demolished buildings back towards the fortifications, and building a new wall just outside the line of the ditches. It was rough work, no more than a straggling mound of stone, but it would further impede anyone trying to bring up ladders or siege towers to the ramparts.
Castus looked up at the hazy horizon. Somewhere out there was Constantine and his army, getting closer with every passing day. Then another sound reached him, a cry of laughter from among the buildings on the city side of the wall. Stepping across the walkway, Castus looked down into a dirty shadowed yard between the clustered houses and workshops. Children were playing there, boys and girls in ragged tunics running back and forth. They had built their own little wall across the yard, a low pile of stones and broken rubble, and separated into two opposing gangs. Waving sticks, they called out to each other in thin high voices: ‘I’m Constantine! I’m Maximian! I’m the true emperor!’
Castus smiled to himself. Then he stepped away from the edge of the wall, in case one of the Praetorians approached and heard what the children were saying – could they be punished for it? But his smile remained as he walked on down the steps towards the gate.
That’s all we are, he thought to himself. Children playing at war.
Until the killing begins.
Passing back through the city as evening fell, the two Praetorians still dogging his steps, Castus could read the strain of the approaching siege on every face. The broad main street that followed the curve of the harbour between the gates and the agora was still crowded; several of the shops and emporia on either side were still open for business, but many more had heavy wooden shutters firmly bolted across their doors. The majority of the crowd were soldiers, and the few civilians had a harried, uncertain look. From the narrow alleys to the left the sounds of boisterous laughter came from the cheaper taverns and drinking shops along the harbour wall and the dockside. The troops were enjoying their new billets, even if most of them did not know whether the citizens of Massilia were friends or enemies.
As he walked, scanning his surroundings carefully but appearing unconcerned, Castus noticed a small boy weaving along the street to his right, keeping parallel with him. There were plenty of street children in Massilia, just as in every other town and city of the empire, but this boy appeared to have more of a purpose, and was clearly following Castus in particular. Slowing his steps, Castus veered to the right, pretending an interest in the open doors of a silversmith’s shop. He glanced at the boy, who nodded to him and sidled closer. The two Praetorians were still strolling in the middle of the street.
‘Somebody wants to talk to you,’ the boy said, in a tight whisper. Clearly he had been paid as a messenger.
Castus gave him a shrug. ‘Who?’
The boy was keeping his eyes on the two soldiers, not looking at Castus at all. ‘Somebody who sees better in the dark. That’s what he said.’
Castus walked on a few steps, the boy keeping pace with him.
‘Wait for me on the corner over there, by the bakery,’ he said from the corner of his mouth. When he looked again the boy was gone.
The two Praetorians had noticed Castus slowing down; now he walked back to join them in the middle of the street. He knew their names – Glyco and Ursus – but found it hard to tell them apart. Both were squat, muscular, dull-eyed men.
‘I have to go somewhere,’ he told them.
They stared back at him, impassive. ‘Then we’re coming with you,’ Glyco said. ‘That’s your orders.’
Castus feigned a smile, and tried to look crafty. ‘I’m going to find a woman,’ he said. ‘You planning to follow me there too?’
The two soldiers glanced at each other, blank-faced.
Castus reached into his belt pouch and brought out a pair of silver pieces. ‘Here,’ he said, ‘you’ve done well for the day. Why not go and find something for yourselves?’
Both men frowned heavily, contemplating.
‘I suppose that sounds right,’ Ursus said.
‘We could do that,’ said Glyco.
The coins vanished into their fists, and the two soldiers marched off together leaving Castus in the middle of the street.
He waited a moment, watching them, then cut across the street to the bakery. It was open at the front, with a selection of half-stale loaves and savoury pastries set out on a table. A crowd of soldiers and civilians gathered on the corner, and it was easy for Castus to slip between them. He had taken to wearing an old military cloak while he was away from the emperor’s household, instead of his distinctive white one, and it allowed him to blend easily into the throng. The boy was waiting at the mouth of the alley at the far side; he beckoned quickly, then turned and set off down the alley towards the docks.
Castus had barely considered what the notary might want with him. He had not spoken to the man since the night he and Brinno had escaped from the cells, although he had seen him often enough hanging around the margins of the emperor’s retinue. But he remembered all too well what had happened the last time he had followed one of Nigrinus’s schemes. As he marched after the boy, he eased the sword slightly from his scabbard and kept his hand upon the pommel.
The alley was narrow and stank of fish and decaying rubbish. Stepping to either side of the gutter that ran down the middle, Castus turned the corner at the bottom and saw the boy dodging out through one of the low arches in the harbour wall. Three bored soldiers on guard, but they weren’t keeping a close watch on anyone leaving, and gave Castus only the slightest scrutiny as he passed them.
Beyond the arch the street led between the crumbling brickwork of a pair of warehouses built against the wall, then out onto the open quayside. For a moment Castus paused to look across the water at the mass of anchored shipping in the harbour, the masts and rigging black and spidery against the evening sky. Then he glanced to his right and saw the boy waving to him from along the quayside. The warehouses here were fronted by wine shops and eating houses, sailors and off-duty soldiers crowding the benches outside. The cobbles were slick and greasy underfoot.
Castus followed the boy up the quay and saw him stop before the open front of one of the taverns towards the end of the row. A man stepped out onto the quay, glanced at Castus and then tossed a coin; the boy caught it and darted away. It was Flaccianus, Castus realised as he approached. And, stepping from the tavern behind him, the hulking bodyguard Glaucus.
For a moment Castus stood still, his palm closing around the hilt of the sword beneath his cloak. Flaccianus gave him a quick nod and a smile, jerked his thum
b towards the interior of the tavern, then turned and moved away down the quay with his bodyguard swaggering after him.
Castus took a long deep breath, his senses alert for danger. The tavern looked innocuous: to the side of the entrance was a smoking griddle, strips of fish blackening over the glowing charcoal. The word ‘TRITON’ was painted on the cracked plaster above the wide doorway, and a crude black and white mosaic covering the threshold showed a plump sea god cramming his mouth with fish. Castus moved closer, into the spit and smoke of the grill, and stared into the dark throat of the tavern. There were figures hunched over tables in the gloom. A last quick glance up and down the quayside, and Castus stepped inside.
Once his eyes had adjusted he found Nigrinus quickly enough; he was only man sitting by himself, at a small round table in a booth off the main room. On the table was a jug of wine, three clay cups and a wooden platter of food.
‘Grilled squid,’ the notary said, gesturing to the platter as Castus sat down. ‘Try some. They cook it with a lot of spice here. Flaccianus did not care for it.’
‘I don’t care much for him,’ Castus said. ‘Or his friends.’
‘Ah, yes,’ Nigrinus said. ‘Your last meeting with them was rather unfortunate. We must aim to avoid any further such misunderstandings.’
Castus tightened his jaw and exhaled slowly through his nose. No, he thought, I won’t forgive you that easily. I won’t forgive you at all. He poured himself a cup of wine, concentrating on keeping his hand steady and not letting his anger show.
‘You wanted me for something?’ he said.
‘I do,’ the notary replied. The casual tone had drained from his voice now. When Castus glanced up he saw that the man’s face, usually so bland and inscrutable, was lined and hollowed by fatigue. He felt a pang of satisfaction, although he knew it was not a good sign.