Legionary: The Scourge of Thracia (Legionary 4)

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Legionary: The Scourge of Thracia (Legionary 4) Page 15

by Gordon Doherty


  As Sura jogged forward to the front of the century to march in step with Zosimus, Pavo again eyed the ragged line that the recruits had fallen into: men swaying from side to side, some marching a good few arm-lengths proud of the rest of the column, and one using his spear butt as a cane. He heard in his mind the echoing rebukes of leaders past – many now but shades – then clacked his optio’s staff on the flagstones. ‘Come on you bloody laggards!’ he bellowed. ‘Get in line, stay in step!’

  As the recruits winced and drew closer together, he nodded in satisfaction, then felt something hot stinging his cheek. He reached up, touched the lone tear and gazed at the moisture on his finger.

  I’ll never forget you, Felicia.

  Then he recalled the giant Farnobius, standing over her corpse, the memory of that bestial laugh penetrating to his marrow.

  And I will not stop until I have avenged you.

  They marched on for the rest of that day, slowing only late in the afternoon when they came within sight of Trimontium on the southern edge of the Via Militaris. The compact Roman city was unmistakeable due to the three rounded granite hills that it was built on and around. And the settlement was wrapped in a double ring of walls with tall, rounded towers jutting from the corners. A perfect fortification, Gallus thought – were it not for the sparse garrison on the battlements. Just twelve men, he counted along the circumference of the lengthy parapet. As they approached, he saw that the two above the northern gatehouse wore the garb not of legionaries or auxiliaries, but of some private retinue: brown leather jerkins and conical helms with cavalry swords on their belts. ‘Who goes there?’ one called out, neglecting to ask for a watchword and confirming their non-legionary status.

  Once inside, they saw a picture of normal civilian life. Bakers carried baskets of bread, women carried babies and chatted with friends, children played with balls and threw sticks for barking dogs. It was only the sight of an armoured column of soldiers that disrupted this. It had been some time since this town had known a true garrison, Gallus realised. No doubt the cohort or centuries stationed here had been summoned to the Great Northern Camp earlier in the year – and Mithras only knew where they were, dead or alive, now.

  The Governor, a handsome fellow by the name of Urbicus with dark hair streaked gray at the temples, offered the men billet, food and use of the baths. His demeanour was warm and he insisted they enjoy bowls of hot broth and bread before sitting down to discussions. It was the constant wringing of his fingers that told Gallus the demeanour was but a veneer. Shortly after the XI Claudia had eaten, he and Urbicus talked in his offices.

  ‘The Great Northern Camp has fallen?’ he said, standing to face the fire, his usually busy hands clasped behind his back and at rest for once.

  ‘The camp and the passes are no more. Saturninus and what forces remain are retreating to the cities of southern and eastern Thracia while the Goths roam across central Thracia at will,’ Gallus replied. He noticed Urbicus’ hands wring together once again as he said this.

  ‘And your brief?’ the Governor asked.

  ‘We are headed west, to Trajan’s Gate.’

  Urbicus remained silent for a moment, just a few snatched breaths sounding. Then he swung round, his face ashen. ‘Stay, Tribunus. Garrison my city.’

  Gallus cocked one eyebrow. Had this fellow mistaken the broken youths of the XI Claudia as veterans who might defend his city walls?

  ‘Your men can enjoy warm beds, ample food and the safety of our walls here. A savage Thracian winter approaches. At Trajan’s Gate you will find only a windswept valley and bleak defences. That and . . . the Coward of Ad Salices,’ he spat this moniker like a mouthful of phlegm.

  ‘Surely you mean Comes Geridus,’ Gallus frowned, ‘Master of the Passes?’

  Urbicus snorted at the moniker. ‘Geridus is a craven old man. He will offer you nothing.’

  Gallus was taken aback by the man’s vehemence. ‘You and he have a long history, it seems?’

  Urbicus’ obstinance faltered. ‘I . . . well, no, but . . . ’

  ‘You have met him, I presume?’ Gallus persisted.

  ‘I have heard of him all I need to know,’ Urbicus insisted, his lips growing taut.

  ‘You judge a man by the words of others?’ Gallus said, cocking his head to one side and weighing the man’s suggestion: stay and suffer a stubborn and blinkered governor here, or march on and endure perhaps yet another Barzimeres at Trajan’s Gate? It did not matter, he realised; the Gate was his legion’s destination. His brief from Saturninus commanded so. Destiny demanded it. ‘We will be leaving in the morning, Governor.’

  The next day, Gallus rose before dawn. As he dressed, a bracing chill searched around the empty barrack blocks to which they had been assigned. He warmed his hands at a small brazier by the door and saw the light coating of frost on the flagstones outside: winter was imminent, it seemed, just as the odd skies of the last day or so had foretold. The two centuries of the XI Claudia woke, ate a swift breakfast of bread and bacon fat, then formed for roll-call in the dawn light. When they marched for the city gates, they found Urbicus waiting there. Gallus eyed him then raised a hand for the legion to halt. He noted with a keen eye how the twelve men on the battlements had gathered here. More, a group of citizens had gathered to watch – mostly men.

  ‘I repeat my offer, Tribunus,’ Urbicus spoke in a low voice. ‘Stay, guard these walls and you will not want for anything.’

  ‘And the empire?’ Gallus replied without hesitation. ‘What of Trajan’s Gate? Who will inform Comes Geridus of the Gothic incursion into Thracia?’ He flicked a hand up. Quadratus lifted the ruby bull standard and the legion crunched forward again.

  ‘Gates!’ Gallus called up to the gatehouse. The timber gates groaned and began to open with a clanking of chains.

  ‘Stay!’ Urbicus leapt in front of him, his eyes bulging and his handsome face streaked with sweat despite the chill. ‘Stay!’

  Gallus’ nose wrinkled. ‘Why?’

  ‘These walls are useless without a true garrison. A band of brigands almost stole into the city last month. If what you say about the Goths is true, then we are at their mercy – high walls or not.’

  Gallus looked around the gathering crowd, seeing faces of women, children and frail old men amongst them now. ‘I’m sorry,’ he said in a concilliatory tone. ‘I’d advise you to train the men of the city into a militia and-’

  ‘Close the gates!’ Urbicus snapped, backing away from Gallus, his demeanour changing and a nasty glint appearing in his eyes. The opening gates halted and the men in the crowd now stepped forward, bringing cudgels and knives from behind their backs. ‘By the fury of God, you will stay.’

  Gallus glanced around the grubby mob that Urbicus had roused. A few hundred of them. ‘Do you know how easily trained legionaries could slay these men?’ he said coolly, swatting away the fact that the recruits had only experienced a fraught moment of action at the fall of the Great Northern Camp and most of those who had survived had done so only by virtue of their swiftness to flee. He stepped towards Urbicus as he said this. ‘I have witnessed it before. In Constantinople, during the riots, I saw the streets run red as thousands fell to the blades of just a century of the emperor’s guard.’ The mob halted at this. He clasped a hand to his sheathed spatha and now Urbicus too lost his pluck, his bulging eyes flicking from Gallus’ glower to the blade hilt. Urbicus backed up against the inner town wall. Gallus came nose to nose with him.

  ‘Now do as I say: train these men to fight Goths, not legionaries. And, for your sake and that of everyone in these walls,’ he added, his teeth gritted so his next words were feral, ‘open the bloody gates.’

  That afternoon they stopped by the Via Militaris. The great highway was deserted as far as the eye could see in both directions. No sign of the Gothic horde at their rear, Gallus realised, and no sign of Roman forces ahead . . . or anywhere. Had the armies at the Great Northern Camp been the very last of Thracia’s regiments?
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br />   Western Thracia was a wild country with green hills, granite shards and a tapestry of wild flowers. A birdsong of larks and martins filled the gaps in between legionary banter as they set about kindling cooking fires and sucked from their water skins hungrily.

  ‘Easy . . . easy!’ Quadratus scolded one callow and somewhat rotund youth by the name of Trupo who seemed set to drain his skin in one sitting. ‘You’ll bloody well drown yourself if you’re not careful. Save a little – remember we still have an afternoon of marching to come.’ The chubby recruit – beetroot-red and still panting from the morning’s trek – nodded hurriedly and tried to spit his last mouthful of water back into the skin, much to Quadratus’ disgust and to his fellow recruits’ amusement.

  Gallus’ expression eased at the gentle chorus of laughter. A rare speck of light on what had been a dark few days. A degree of fragile spirit amongst these terrified boys had been kindled. And it would be needed if they were to become anything like the many legionaries he had fought alongside in his military years. His gaze flicked between the few veterans that still walked the realm of the living. Zosimus and Quadratus, two who had been with him since his earliest days in the ranks. Pavo and Sura, once mere boys themselves. Now they were on the cusp of becoming true leaders. And there was Dexion, an officer who seemed to be everything Pavo might yet become: wily, astute, wary of bullshit and well-scarred from over twelve years of service. His thoughts drifted momentarily to the memory of Felix, his one-time Primus Pilus. He imagined fondly what the diminutive Felix’s reaction might have been to his replacement. A big, lanky bugger like him? Nah, never good enough to take my place – short and deadly’s what you want – like a spatha blade! The faintest hint of a smile played with Gallus’ lips, only to be scattered when he thought of all the recruits lacked: armour, training and fitness were all absent . . . as was true courage. Their road would be long and arduous.

  Three cohorts had been promised. A few hundred men had been delivered and just two centuries had survived their first battle. He cursed himself for ever believing in the memorandum that talked of such grand numbers.

  ‘Sir,’ Dexion said, stalking over to him, his white-plumed helm clasped underarm and his hair matted to his forehead. ‘They’re asking for permission to grind their grain and bake some bread?’

  Gallus shot an eye to the sky. A short while could be sacrificed in order to fill their bellies properly. ‘They have an hour,’ he nodded.

  Dexion wheeled round to address them. ‘Bake your bread and cook your porridge. We will be marching again in an hour and no later.’

  In moments, the men had been separated into groups of eight and the burring of hand mills and crackling of kindling cooking fires filled the air, sending spirals of sweet woodsmoke into the air. Quadratus, Zosimus, Pavo and Sura strolled between them, watching how they went about this vital business.

  Dexion came to stand by Gallus again, watching them. ‘Seems they know the basics?’ he mused, chewing on a cake of hard tack he had made a few days previously, watching as they made pots of porridge and kneaded dough, before placing it in small, clay clibani pots to bake. Soon, the aroma of baking bread wafted from each fire. ‘At least, they already work in contubernia of eight men and know how to cook.’

  Gallus nodded, then his brow knitted. ‘Aye, except that one.’

  They squinted to see one young lad near them – tall and rangy. Instead of milling grain or tending to porridge or baking bread, he was busy chopping an onion and finely slicing a clove of garlic and a sprig of wormwood, while the other seven of his contubernium watched on with wide eyes, licking their lips like hungry pets. Gallus sighed, ready to step forward and scold the lad.

  ‘I’ll deal with this one,’ Dexion offered, then stepped forward in his place.

  Gallus strolled around the edge of the cooking legionaries, eyeing the goings-on, hearing Dexion’s tirade in the background: ‘Pheasant stew? What’s your name? Cornix? Well, Cornix, where in Hades do you think you’ll get a skinned pheasant within the next hour? I couldn’t care less if you’ve brought an onion! Shove the onion up your arse for all I care! Get some bloody bread in the clibanus and do it now!’

  Gallus nodded in appreciation at the man’s sudden turn of ire. Dexion had a steeliness about him. The man had been sullen for these past few days since the girl Felicia’s slaying, but when it mattered, there was not a trace of sorrow. The primus pilus had known the girl only for a few months, it seemed, so perhaps their bond was not so strong. Pavo, on the other hand, was struggling. He glanced over to see the optio watching over the men’s cooking absently, his intercisa helm clasped underarm, his short, dark hair tousled, his hawk-like face smoke-stained and his eyes glassy. The young optio was doing his best to hide his grief, but he seemed sapped of his usual pluck. Loss was something the lad was becoming fast-accustomed to. Loss, he thought, seeing a familiar look in Pavo’s dark eyes, memories of Olivia and Marcus coming to his mind’s eye, that endless, dark sea.

  He looked to the west and wondered what might be found there. At Trajan’s Gate, might his path and Emperor Gratian’s cross? And the shadowy members of the western court . . . would they be with him? They had gone unpunished for their actions for years. Every passing day without justice was an affront to his slain family. Have I not waited long enough?

  Destiny, he thought. Justice, he affirmed.

  Chapter 9

  The Cornutii marched abreast with the Scutarii riders, heading along the easterly track, across the wetlands of eastern Thracia, skirting the shores of the tranquil and turquoise Burgas salt-lake. At their head, Barzimeres swayed on his mount. He squinted into the sun and inhaled the crisp, morning air as he tore at a loaf of fresh bread, chewing happily on it as he reflected upon his obtaining of the fine grey mare. The shame had faded as swiftly as the ruin of the Great Northern Camp had slipped into the horizon.

  Ah, Saturninus, you had little need of this beast anyway, it seems.

  He chuckled again, casting a glance over his right shoulder and across the silvery-green tall grass of the plains. Somewhere back there lay the city of Adrianople, and the last scout that had come to him reported that Saturninus and his legions had somehow managed to gather south of the overrun Great Camp then stage a fighting retreat towards that city. Five days of rearguard action and fending off Fritigern’s harrying riders? he thought, imagining the meek and horseless magister equitum in the midst of such a fraught encounter. Ah well, they say that a fight is always better on foot, he mused, his shoulders jostling once again as he patted the neck of Saturninus’ mare.

  Make haste for the cities! the scout had implored him, passing on Saturninus’ word. The Goths spread like fire!

  ‘That they do,’ he muttered under his breath, ‘but not in this direction. Haven’t seen one of those dogs in days!’ He cast his eyes over the salt lake again, seeing only storks and herons picking through the muddy shallows. One such bird plucked an unlucky grey mullet from the water and juggled the fish in its beak before gulping it down, the sparkling, silvery-scaled fish gone as quickly as it had appeared, devoured by its foe. Again, this reminded him of Saturninus and his desperate retreat. A great sense of contentment overcame him.

  A whiff of salt-tang in the air and a weary cheer from his palatinae legions brought him from his thoughts and drew his gaze forwards again. Their destination was in sight: Deultum, the coastal town that sat on the crossroads of this eastern track and the paved Via Pontica. Framed by the Pontus Euxinus’ sparkling sapphire waters and a clear, azure sky, this fortified settlement would be a fine winter billet for his regiments. The thick, squat grey walls looked as if they had been carved from the bedrock, and the purple imperial banners fluttering over the land-facing gatehouse rapped defiantly in the stiff coastal breeze.

  ‘It was formed as a veterans’ colony, you know,’ he said to the nearest of his men, tossing another chunk of bread into his mouth. ‘So unlike some other cities, they will welcome a famous general and his army,’ he add
ed, crumbs spraying.

  The feather-helmed Cornutii centurion marching alongside Barzimeres’ stallion nodded, not looking up.

  ‘Famed for its hot springs and fine wine, it should make a comfortable home for the time being.’

  ‘Perhaps,’ the centurion muttered absently.

  Barzimeres frowned at the response, peering down to see the man’s eyes, but the jutting iron brow of his helm shaded them from view.

  A simple fellow, Barzimeres chuckled. A swordsman and no more. Why waste such well-thought-out words on his kind? He mused. ‘It has its whores as well,’ he said, sure this would hook the reprobate’s interest. ‘Though you take your chances with th-’

  The words died in his throat as he saw something in the north, from the corner of his eye. Something had moved: a silvery flash. His sunken eyes swivelled to scour the tall grass and fens off in that direction. A leaping mullet? He hoped.

  Nothing.

  Then, just as he turned away, it came again. A glint of silver. Then another. Then many. A cold, creeping dread overcame him and the bread fell from his hand. Armoured men rose from their haunches and into view like an demon crop sprouting from the earth. Fair-skinned and tall spearmen in red leather vests, topknots billowing in the breeze, eyes merciless.

  Goths? Barzimeres mouthed through quivering lips. There were hundreds of them. No, thousands. He swept his disbelieving gaze around both flanks – there were two great rows of them, one on each side of his column. And the ends of each hurried to join up behind the column, forming a vast arc all but surrounding them. Now riders galloped into view behind the join: a handful of Taifali in mail and leather and – his heart almost stopped – the head-taker!

  Reiks Farnobius rode tall in his saddle, axe resting against one broad shoulder. He whistled and a small pack of Huns sped forward into view as well. Barzimeres noticed how Farnobius wore a foul look upon his face – as if he had been wronged. That the giant’s gaze was fixed upon him brought a mighty, unseen hand pushing down upon his bowels.

 

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