Masters of Rome Boxset: First Man in Rome, the Grass Crown, Fortune's Favourites, Caesar's Women, Caesar

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Masters of Rome Boxset: First Man in Rome, the Grass Crown, Fortune's Favourites, Caesar's Women, Caesar Page 464

by Colleen McCullough

Sulpicia

  Sool-pick-ee-ah

  suovetaurilia

  soo-of-et-ow-rill-ee-ah

  Syrtis

  Seer-tiss (seer as in “leer”)

  Taprobane

  Tap-roh-bah-nay

  Tarpeian

  Tar-pay-ee-an

  tata

  tah-tah

  Teutobod

  Ter-toh-bod (bod as in “cod”)

  Teutones

  Ter-toh-nays

  Thermopylae

  Ther-mop-ee-lye

  torc

  tork

  tribuni

  trib-oo-nee (trib as in “crib”)

  tribuni aerarii

  eye-rah-ree-ee

  tribuni militum

  mill-it-oom (mill as in “will”)

  tribuni plebis

  pleb-iss (pleb as in “web”)

  Tullianum

  Tool-ee-ah-noom

  Tusculum

  Tuss-koo-loom (tuss as in “puss”)

  Tyrrhenian

  Tir-ray-nee-an (tir as in “stirrup”)

  Ubus

  Oo-buss

  Ulysses

  Oo-liss-ays (English, Yew-liss-ees)

  Utica

  Oo-tee-kah

  Vediovis

  Ved-ee-of-iss (ved as in “bed”— of as in “of”)

  Velabrum

  Vel-ab-room (vel as in “sell”—ab as in “cab”)

  Velia

  Vel-ee-ah

  Vercellae

  Ver-kell-eye

  via

  vee-ah

  Via Aemilia

  Eye-mill-ee-ah

  Via Aemilia Scauri

  Eye-mill-ee-ah Skow-ree (skow as in “cow”)

  Via Annia

  Ah-nee-ah

  Via Appia

  Ah-pee-ah

  Via Aurelia

  Ow-ray-lee-ah (ow as in “cow”)

  Via Domitia

  Dom-it-ee-ah (dom as in “tom”—it as in “sit”)

  Via Flaminia

  Flam-in-ee-ah (flam as in “ham”)

  Via Lata

  Lah-tah

  Via Latina

  Lat-ee-nah (lat as in “sat”)

  Via Nova

  Noh-vah

  via praetoria

  prye-tor-ee-ah

  via principalis

  prin-kip-ah-liss

  Via Sacra

  Sack-ran

  Via Salaria

  Sal-ah-ree-ah (sal as in “pal”)

  Via Tiburtina

  Tib-er-tee-nah (lib as in “crib”)

  vicus

  vee-kuss

  Vicus Patricii

  Pat-rick-ee-ee (pat as in “sat”)

  Vicus Tuscus

  Tuss-kuss (as in “puss”)

  Volcae Tectosages

  Vol-kye Teck-toh-sah-gays

  Volscian

  Vol-skee-an

  First published in the UK in 1996 by Century

  This ebook edition first published in the UK in 2013 by Head of Zeus Ltd

  Copyright © Colleen McCullough, 1996

  The moral right of Colleen McCullough to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  This is a work of fiction. All characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  9 7 5 3 1 2 4 6 8

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  ISBN (E) 9781781857946

  Head of Zeus Ltd

  Clerkenwell House

  45-47 Clerkenwell Green

  London EC1R 0HT

  www.headofzeus.com

  Contents

  Cover

  Welcome Page

  Dedication

  Maps and Illustrations

  Maps

  Illustrations

  Part I

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Part II

  Chapter 1

  Part III

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Part IV

  Chapter 1

  Part V

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Part VI

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Author’s Note

  Glossary

  Pronunciation Guide to Roman Masculine Names

  Pronunciation Guide to Other Names and Terms

  Copyright

  54BC

  Caesar’s legions are sweeping across Gaul, brutally subduing the tribes who defy him. But, in Rome, his enemies are plotting his downfall and disgrace. Vindictive schemers like Cato and Bibulus, the spineless Cicero, the avaricious Brutus. Even Pompey, Caesar’s former ally. But all have underestimated Caesar.

  When the Senate refuse to give him his due he marches upon Rome, an army prepared to die for him at his back. Rome is his destiny – a destiny that will impel him to the banks of the Rubicon, and beyond, into legend.

  Table of Contents

  For Joseph Merlino

  Kind, wise, perceptive, ethical and moral.

  A truly good man.

  LIST OF MAPS AND ILLUSTRATION

  Maps

  Caesar’s Provinces

  Caesar in Britain, 54 B.C., and in Belgic Gaul, 53 B.C.

  Forum Romanum

  Crassus in the East

  Route of Caesar and the Fifteenth Legion

  Caesar and Vercingetorix: The Campaigns of 52 B.C.

  Alesia

  Italia in Respect to the Campaigns of 49 B.C.

  Caesar in Spain, 49 B.C.

  Macedonia, Epirus, Greece, Via Egnatia, Asia Province

  Egypt

  The Known East

  Illustrations

  Gaius Julius Casesar

  Quintus Tullius Cicero

  Metellus Scipio

  Vercingetorix

  Avaricum

  Titus Labienus

  Gaius Scribonius Curio

  Lucius Domitus Ahenobarbus

  Pompey

  Roman Magistrates

  BRITANNIA

  NOVEMBER of 54 B.C.

  1

  The orders were that while Caesar and the major part of his army were in Britannia, none but the most urgent communications were to be sent to him; even directives from the Senate had to wait in Portus Itius on the Gallic mainland until Caesar returned from his second expedition to the island at the western end of the world, a place almost as mysterious as Serica.

  But this was a letter from Pompey the Great, who was the First Man in Rome—and Caesar’s son-in-law. So when Gaius Trebatius in Caesar’s office of Roman communications took delivery of the little red leather cylinder bearing Pompey’s seal, he did not post it in one of the pigeonholes to wait for that return from Britannia. Instead he sighed and got to his feet, plump and taut like his ankles because he spent the vastest part of his life sitting or eating. He went through the door and out into the settlement which had been thrown up upon the bones of last year’s army camp, a smaller compound. Not a pretty place! Rows and rows and rows of wooden houses, well-packed earthen streets, even the occasional shop or two. Treeless, straight, regimented.

  Now if this were only Rome, he thought, commencing the long traipse of the Via Principalis, I could hail me a sedan chair and be carried in comfort. But there were no sedan chairs in Caesar’s camps, so Gaius Trebatius, hugely promising young lawyer, walked. Hating it and the system which said that he could do more for his burgeoning career by working for a soldier in the field than he could by strolling—or sedan-chairing—around the Fo
rum Romanum. He didn’t even dare depute a more junior someone else to do this errand. Caesar was a stickler for a man’s doing his own dirty work if there was the remotest chance that delegation might lead to a stuff-up, to use crude army vernacular.

  Oh, bother! Bother, bother! Almost Trebatius turned to go back, then tucked his left hand among the folds of toga arranged on his left shoulder, looked important, and waddled on. Titus Labienus, the reins of a patient horse looped through the crook of one elbow, lounged up against the wall of his house, talking to some hulking Gaul hung with gold and blazing colors. Litaviccus, the recently appointed leader of the Aedui cavalry. The pair of them were probably still deploring the fate of the last leader of the Aedui cavalry, who had fled rather than be dragged across those heaving waters to Britannia. And had been cut down by Titus Labienus for his pains. Some weird and wonderful name—what was it? Dumnorix. Dumnorix… Why did he think that name was connected with a scandal involving Caesar and a woman? He hadn’t been in Gaul long enough to get it all sorted out in his mind, that was the trouble.

  Typical Labienus, to prefer talking to a Gaul. What a true barbarian the man was! No Roman he. Tight, curly black hair. Dark skin with big, oily pores. Fierce yet cold black eyes. And a nose like a Semite’s, hooked, with nostrils that looked as if someone had enlarged them with a knife. An eagle. Labienus was an eagle. He belonged under the standards.

  “Walking some of the fat off, Trebatius?” the barbarian Roman asked, grinning to show teeth as big as his horse’s.

  “Down to the dock,” said Trebatius with dignity.

  “Why?”

  Trebatius itched to inform Labienus that it was none of his business, but he gave a sick smile and answered; Labienus was, after all, the general in the absence of the General. “I’m hoping to catch the mail pinnace. A letter for Caesar.”

  “Who from?”

  The Gaul Litaviccus was following the conversation, bright-eyed. He spoke Latin, then. Not unusual among the Aedui. They’d been under Rome for generations.

  “Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus.”

  “Ah!” Labienus hawked and spat, a habit he’d picked up from too many years hobnobbing with Gauls. Disgusting.

  But he lost interest the moment Pompey’s name was said, turned back to Litaviccus with a shrug. Oh, of course! It had been Labienus who trifled with Pompey’s then wife, Mucia Tertia. Or so Cicero swore, giggling. But she hadn’t married Labienus after the divorce. Not good enough. She’d married young Scaurus. At least he had been young at the time.

  Breathing hard, Trebatius walked on until he emerged from the camp gate at the far end of the Via Principalis and entered the village of Portus Itius. A grand name for a fishing village. Who knew what name it had among the Morini, the Gauls in whose territory it lay? Caesar had simply entered it in the army’s books as Journey’s End—or Journey’s Beginning. Take your pick.

  The sweat was rolling down his back, soaking into the fine wool of his tunic; he had been told that the weather in Further Gaul of the Long-hairs was cool and clement, but not this year! Extremely hot, the air laden with moisture. So Portus Itius stank of fish. And Gauls. He hated them. He hated this work. And if he didn’t quite hate Caesar, he had come very close to hating Cicero, who had used his influence to obtain this hotly contested posting for his dear friend, the hugely promising young lawyer Gaius Trebatius Testa.

  Portus Itius didn’t look like any of those delightful little fishing villages along the shores of the Tuscan Sea, with their shady vines outside the wine shops, and an air of having been there since King Aeneas had leaped down from his Trojan ship a millennium before. The songs, the laughter, the intimacy. Whereas here was all wind and blowing sand, strappy grasses plastered against the dunes, the thin wild keening of a thousand thousand gulls.

  But there, still tied up, was the sleek oared pinnace he had hoped to catch before it put out, its Roman crew busy loading the last of a dozen kegs of nails, all it was carrying—or, at its size, could hope to carry.

  When it came to Britannia, Caesar’s fabled luck seemed permanently out; for the second year in a row his ships had been wrecked in a gale more terrible than any gale which blew down the length and breadth of Our Sea. Oh, and this time Caesar had been so sure he had positioned those eight hundred ships in complete safety! But the winds and the tides—what could one do with alien phenomena like tides?—had come along and picked them up and thrown them about like toys. Broken. Still, they belonged to Caesar. Who didn’t rant and rave and call down curses on all winds and tides. Instead, he proceeded to gather up the pieces and put the ships back together again. Hence the nails. Millions of them. No time or personnel for sophisticated shipwrights’ work; the army had to be back in Gaul before winter.

  “Nail ’em!” said Caesar. “All they have to do is make it across thirty-odd miles of Oceanus Atlanticus. Then they can sink, for all I care.”

  Handy for the office of Roman communications, the pinnace which rowed back and forth between Portus Itius and Britannia with a dozen kegs of nails going out and messages going in.

  And to think I might have been over there! said Trebatius to himself, shivering despite the heat, the humidity, and the weight of a toga. Needing a good paper man, Caesar had put him down for the expedition. But at the last moment Aulus Hirtius had taken a fancy to go, all the Gods look after him forever! Portus Itius might be Journey’s End for Gaius Trebatius, but better that than Journey’s Beginning.

  Today they had a passenger; as he and Trogus had organized it (in the colossal hurry Caesar always demanded), Trebatius knew who the Gaul was—or Briton, rather. Mandubracius, King of the Britannic Trinobantes, whom Caesar was returning to his people in return for their assistance. A blue Belgic, quite horrific. His gear was checked in mossy greens and shadowy blues, into which his skin, painted in a complex pattern with rich blue woad, seemed to merge. They did it in Britannia, so Caesar said, to blend into their interminable forests; you could be scant feet from one and never see him. And to frighten each other in battle.

  Trebatius handed the little red cylinder to the—captain? was that the correct term?—and turned to walk back to the office. Thinking, with a sudden rush of saliva, of the roast goose he was going to have for his dinner. There wasn’t much one could say in favor of the Morini, except that their geese were the best in the whole wide world. Not only did the Morini stuff snails, slugs and bread down their throats, they made the poor creatures walk—oh, walking!—until their flesh was so tender it melted in the mouth.

  *

  The pinnace oarsmen, eight to a side, rowed tirelessly in a perfect unison, though no hortator gave them the stroke. Each hour they rested and took a drink of water, then bent their backs again, feet propped against ridges in the boat’s sloshing bottom. Their captain sat in the stern with the rudder oar and a bailing bucket, his attention expertly divided between the two.

  As the soaring, striking white cliffs of Britannia came closer, King Mandubracius, stiffly and proudly sitting in the bow, grew stiffer and prouder. He was going home, though he had been no further from it than the Belgic citadel of Samarobriva, where, like many other hostages, he had been detained until Caesar decided where to send him for safekeeping.

  The Roman expeditionary force to Britannia had taken over a very long, sandy beach which at its back dwindled into the Cantii marshes; the battered ships—so many!—lay behind the sand, propped up on struts and surrounded by all the incredible defenses of a Roman field camp. Ditches, walls, palisades, breastworks, towers, redoubts that seemed to go on for miles.

  The camp commander, Quintus Atrius, was waiting to take charge of the nails, the little red cylinder from Pompey, and King Mandubracius. There were still several hours of daylight left; the chariot of the sun was much slower in this part of the world than in Italia. Some Trinobantes were waiting, overjoyed to see their king, slapping him on the back and kissing him on the mouth, as was their custom. He and the little red cylinder from Pompey would start out at once, for it w
ould take several days to reach Caesar. The horses were brought; the Trinobantes and a Roman prefect of cavalry mounted and rode off through the north gate, where five hundred Aeduan horse troopers swung to enclose them in the midst of a column five horses wide and a hundred long. The prefect kicked his mount to the column’s front, leaving the King and his noblemen free to talk among themselves.

  “You can’t be sure they don’t speak something close enough to our tongue to understand,” said Mandubracius, sniffing the hot damp air with relish. It smelled of home.

  “Caesar and Trogus do, but surely not the others,” said his cousin Trinobellunus.

  “You can’t be sure,” the King repeated. “They’ve been in Gaul now for almost five years, and for most of that among the Belgae. They have women.”

  “Whores! Camp followers!”

  “Women are women. They talk endlessly, and the words sink in.”

  The great forest of oak and beech which lay to the north of the Cantii marshes closed in until the rutted track over which the cavalry column rode grew dim in the distance; the Aedui troopers tensed, cocked their lances, patted their sabers, swung their small circular shields around. But then came a great clearing stubbled with the relics of wheat, the charred black bones of two or three houses standing stark against that tawny background.

  “Did the Romans get the grain?” Mandubracius asked.

  “In the lands of the Cantii, all of it.”

  “And Cassivellaunus?”

  “He burned what he couldn’t gather in. The Romans have been hungry north of the Tamesa.”

  “How have we fared?”

 

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