by Jack Whyte
Alaric’s shrug was matter-of-fact. “They breed them. They’ve been doing so for years. Some of them, most of them, came from Asia. The Franks bought them or stole them in great herds. Horse-breeding has become an art among them.”
“Strange we’ve never heard of it,” Caius said.
“Nonsense, Caius Britannicus. It has been under your noses now for years. You simply chose to pay them no attention, so long as they remained peaceful. Rome has had no great and pressing need for horses, least of all the small, rough-bred horses of the Franks.”
Caius expelled pent-up air through his lips with a rasping sound. “You are correct, my friend. You are correct. Rome, it seems, will not learn. If the Franks are horsed at all, they are a threat! A big one! If massed horsemen smashed six legions at a time on one ill day, rolling the cohorts up like carpets, they’ll do it again, you mark my words. What has the Emperor done about this? Is Rome training horsemen?”
“Which emperor, Caius?” Alaric was smiling gently. “A moment ago, when you were ranting about three of them, I hesitated to interrupt you. Now I must tell you that you are out of date. There are four emperors now.”
My heart began to pound. Caius sat stunned.
“What do you mean?” I asked.
Alaric shrugged again. “The legions here in Britain have elected Magnus Maximus their emperor by acclamation. He is, at this moment, assembling an army to cross into Gaul to pacify the land and fortify his claim.”
“God’s blood! I was afraid of that man’s dark ambition! Varrus, did I not name him to you?” Caius’ face was sombre as he spoke to Alaric again. “What of Antonius Cicero? Where is he?”
“Tonius is dead.” Alaric’s voice was heavy with sorrow. “Loyal to Theodosius and dead, Caius. He marched against Magnus when he heard the news, but his own men deserted him and crossed to Maximus. Cicero was executed.”
I had to fight down nausea at this news. Noble Tonius. He had done as he said he would at our wedding feast and had died for his nobility. I was heartsick.
“When did this happen?”
“Very recently. I heard the news myself only days ago.”
“Alaric,” I asked wearily, “how does it happen that you hear so much so fast?”
“The Church has many eyes and ears, Publius, and threatens no one. That word was brought to me by Father Cato, here, who had it from a priest who saw Cicero die.”
“Legate Cicero!” I corrected him.
“Legate Cicero. May God rest his soul!”
I felt a burden of depression settle on my shoulders, remembering Tonius the night he swore he would oppose a self-proclaimed emperor from Britain. Poor Cicero. He had been prophetic. How many others had, that night, I wondered?
I had a sudden thought. “What about Seneca? Where is he?”
Alaric shook his head. “I do not know, Publius, but he is no longer in Colchester. He disappeared shortly before Magnus’ insurrection.”
I frowned at him, alerted by something in his tone. “Disappeared? Before? What do you mean?”
“Only what I said. He disappeared.”
“But you said ‘before’, did you not? Before the insurrection? And there was something in the way you said it. You have some thoughts on the matter, I think.”
Alaric sighed. “Publius,” he said, “I bring you only facts. I do not deal in rumour, and rumour is all I have to go on in this matter. I have no interest in the man Claudius Seneca. He is not the sort of man on whom I choose to spend valuable time.”
“What is the rumour, Alaric? Please, it is important.”
He sighed again at my insistence. “You should put Seneca away from your mind, Publius. He is an evil man. No good will come of brooding on him or on his actions.”
“I know that, Alaric. But he owes me a life.”
“He owes you nothing.” His voice sounded dispirited. “There is talk that it was he who financed Magnus Maximus in his bid for the imperial throne.”
I slammed the table in frustration. “Damn the man to the blackest pit in Hades. Now he has killed two of my friends! Phoebe and Tonius.”
“Publius!” Alaric’s tone was remonstrative. “You cannot say such a thing. I have told you that this is only rumour.”
“Aye, Alaric, you have. But now I am telling you that never was rumour better founded. The deed fits the man perfectly. It stinks of his plotting and his mental sickness. If Magnus Maximus succeeds in making good his claim, he will overthrow Theodosius, and that will be to no one’s advantage more than Seneca’s. The serpent has found a perfect stone under which to hide. Magnus’ revolt will take the Emperor’s eyes away from Seneca and from his thieving, scheming villainy. If Magnus wins, Seneca wins. If Magnus loses, Seneca still wins. You can be sure that there will be no living soul left to relate how Seneca helped Magnus raise the funds to win an army. And Theodosius can hardly blame his Procurator for being unable to perform his duties in a province that has been usurped by an upstart emperor. No, you mark my words. When the dust of this revolt dies down, one way or the other, Claudius Seneca will emerge unscathed and richer than ever.”
I suddenly realized that I was ranting. Luceiia sat wide-eyed, watching me. Alaric was expressionless. I looked at Caius. He had sunk his forehead onto the heels of his hands. Alaric saw my look and spoke to Caius.
“I am sorry to be the bearer of so much bad news, Caius. It had not occurred to me that you might be ignorant of all of it. I tend to assume that others all have the sources that I do.”
Caius was subdued. “Think not of it, Alaric. We are in a quiet backwater here, out of the way of news.”
This was too much for me. “Damnation, Caius,” I exploded, “is that all you’re going to say? This is Claudius Seneca we’re talking about, not some exalted nincompoop none of us has ever heard of. I would have thought you’d have more reason than I do to get excited about this.”
“You think me dead, then?” Caius snapped, and the tone of his voice silenced me utterly. He drew a deep breath and pinched the bridge of his nose between his finger and thumb. When he spoke again, his voice had regained its usual dispassionate calm.
“Publius, I know better than anyone how easy it is to hate the Senecas — the entire tribe of them. But I cannot simply allow myself to be thrown into a convulsive reaction every time one of them demonstrates what I know to be the nature of the beast…. There are more important things at stake in our lives right now. Neither you nor I has the time to concern ourself with the personal treachery of a Seneca. Leave them to time — to history and God. We have our own priorities. What we are doing here in this Colony is far more important than anything any Seneca might do out yonder, where the world is coming apart. Our success here will mean our survival… and that will be all the revenge we will ever need against a family who are headed directly for extinction.
“Don’t talk of scores and debts, Publius. You have no need to fret about such things. Time itself will settle such debts very soon.”
There was nothing I could say in response, and there was silence at the table for some time. Luceiia excused herself and left the room. It was I who finally spoke again.
“You’re right, Caius, of course. I’m sorry. I find I’m growing more emotional as I get older. Time will take care of Seneca and all his kind…. But if I can change the subject, I find it hard to believe that with things as bad as they are, Magnus intends to leave Britain and cross to Gaul.”
“Why not?” The bitterness in Caius’ voice must have burned his throat like vomit. “We are talking of ambition here, my friend, not duty! Rome’s new emperor must make a name for himself beyond these shores. He is known here in Britain. Now he must make his Divine Presence known in other lands.”
“But how could his generals permit this?”
“Don’t be naive, Varrus! Each of them sees himself commander of the new Praetorian Guard, personal bodyguard to the new emperor. They’ll fight like demons not to stay behind.”
“But some will sta
y, surely? He’ll not denude the country of armed strength?”
Caius’ anger gave way to disgust. “No, you can rest assured he’ll leave enough strength behind to guarantee himself a bolt hole if his plans fall through the net of fate. He will keep Britain strong for now. He’s no man’s fool, our noble, newest Emperor!”
“Publius, is Luceiia ill?” Alaric’s voice was concerned. “She was deathly pale when she left here.”
“Was she?” I felt alarm flare in me. “I didn’t notice. Please excuse me. I’ll just check that she is quite all right.” I rose quickly and left to find her.
When I re-entered the room my face must have looked strange, because Caius immediately asked me what was wrong. I crossed to the table and picked up a jug of wine.
“What day is it today?”
Alaric answered me, “The Calends was two days ago, so we are at the third day of the month.”
“What year?”
“This is the eleven hundred and thirty-sixth year of Rome,” he said. “It is also the three hundred, eighty-third year of our Lord. Why do you ask?”
“Because it has been momentous.” I poured a cup of wine for myself and then moved around the table, filling their cups, too. “First, I brought home my skystones. Then you arrived, Alaric, an event of some importance on its own. Then we learned of invasions, treason, mutiny and war, of a new emperor and the death of a noble and worthy friend. And now, my wife tells me she is with child. This is a momentous day.”
I raised my cup, and my friends drank with me. A silent toast.
XXIX
As I grow older, it becomes clear to me that life is like campaigning: long periods of quiet and boredom when nothing seems to happen, and then short, intensive spasms when everything important is compressed into chaotic action.
The year just past, 383 of the Christian calendar, was a chaotic one — at least in its final months. By comparison, the four years that followed were somnolent.
There were many things happening, of course, throughout the country and all over the Empire, but none of them affected our quiet Colony. For us, it was a time of building and consolidation, with very few traumatic incidents.
Caius’ son Picus sent us word that he was marching off to war with the new emperor, Magnus Maximus, to help him claim the imperial throne, and after that we heard no more of him. It hurt Caius deeply that the boy could not see the glaring imperfections of the man, but Picus was young, only eighteen that year. He would have to do his own learning, like every other man.
Caius and I discussed that, along with several other topics, one crisp morning after he had found me actively debating the techniques of combat with three husky young trainee soldiers. At that point, we had not yet developed a regular, formalized program for training our young men as fighters; that development still lay a full year in the future. We had, nevertheless, begun a program of informal training for youths fifteen and older, accepting the need to make a start somewhere if all of our Colonists were to be expected to bear arms and comport themselves knowledgeably in their own defence.
No one knows the origins of the Roman practice sword; the name of its creator and the story of its beginnings are lost in time. The efficacy and practicality of its design, however, have never been altered and could not be improved. It is made of wood — a piece of heavy, ash dowel — and is circular in section, more like a club than a sword. It is cut to the same length as the gladium, the classic Roman short-sword, but it possesses twice the weight, which makes it awkward to wield and difficult to work with. The extra weight builds the strength of the user’s arm so that when real violence occurs, when blades are bared in earnest, the sword’s real weight seems as nothing in the hand of a well-trained soldier.
Attracted by the clattering of these practice blades, Caius came upon me working at close quarters in a small, cobbled, dung-strewn courtyard, face to face with the three strapping young recruits. They were all attacking me at once, trying to get their blades around my shield and above or beneath my guard. They couldn’t, and I was enjoying myself greatly, aware of the advantage I had over them. They were young and inexperienced, rash and undisciplined. In a matter of mere months, I knew, they would learn enough to overwhelm me quickly at this game. For now, however, I was taking advantage of their youth, strength and clumsiness, encouraging them to attack me more and more strongly, and with less and less success as their frustration increased. As soon as I noticed Caius standing there watching, however, I brought matters to a close swiftly, rapping each of the three soundly with a heavy, telling blow of my blade — one on the helmet, one on the elbow and one in the ribs — before stepping back and lowering my guard to dismiss them. Crestfallen and subdued, they made their way out of the yard, convinced that they would never be able to best that old whoreson Varrus. I loosened my chin-strap and pulled off my helmet, wiping my sweaty brow with the kerchief I kept tucked into my breastplate.
Caius, watching me closely, said nothing for several moments. Then, “You looked like you were enjoying that.”
I stood on tiptoe and stretched my arms above my head, drawing a deep breath and then bending from the waist to touch my toes. “I was,” I answered, puffing slightly as I straightened up and began wiping the headband of my helmet. “I enjoy the activity. Keeps me in trim. Don’t get much chance to work up a sweat nowadays. Besides, it’s good for the youngsters. It lets them work off some energy, trying for a free whack at authority, and none of them ever see it as a lesson in foolhardiness.” The leather rim of my headband was dry again, and I slapped the heavy, crested weight of the helmet back onto my head, adjusting it as I continued. “Mind you, we both know, you and I, that I wouldn’t dare try that trick on them after they’ve learned even a little more than they know now, but sneaking it in on them like this gives them a healthy respect for the people in charge of them.”
He smiled and turned away. “Walk with me,” he said, over his shoulder.
I left my things where they were and followed him. We went out through the main gates of the villa and walked in silence for almost half a mile, until the sights and sounds of the farm and its buildings had dropped out of sight behind us, screened from our view by bushes and undergrowth.
Directly ahead of us stood the only large tree on this part of the villa lands, a solitary copper beech, massive and beautiful, that seemed to owe its survival to its mere presence. It had been standing here for a very long time and no one had ever thought to cut it down. Now no one ever would. It was part of the place. Everyone referred to it simply as “the Big Tree.” Caius paced directly towards it and stopped some ten paces from the trunk, which swept straight upward for thirty or more feet to the junction of the first major bough. He gazed at the smooth, silver-grey bark and then turned to me.
“You have your dagger with you?”
I nodded. “I do. Why?”
“Balanced for throwing, isn’t it?”
“Yes. Why?”
“Can you throw it from there, where you’re standing, and stick it in the tree?”
I glanced at the tree, gauging the distance, visualizing the tumbling flight of the knife and then seeing the result. “Easily,” I told him, “but I’d rather not.”
“Why not?” From the way his eyebrow shot up, I saw I had surprised him.
I shrugged my shoulders, making light of the reason for my reluctance. “Convenience, I suppose, and cleanliness… or laziness. Tree sap does strange things to the skystone dagger. It stains the blade. Doesn’t damage it, but it discolours it slightly, and it’s very hard to clean off, unless you do it immediately.” I stopped, looking at him. “Why d’you want me to throw it, anyway?”
He cleared his throat and then met my eye. “I didn’t, particularly.” he responded. “I was hoping you might show me how to throw it.”
“Well, of course I will, happily!” Filled with sudden pleasure, I whipped the dagger from its sheath at the small of my back, swung it up shoulder high, aiming as I did so, and flung it hard
and true at the tree. It flipped end over end once and thudded home in the centre of the bole with a deep, satisfying thunk. I crossed to it, worked it free of the wood and dried the sap from the tip immediately, then took it back to show the slight discoloration to Caius.
“You see what I mean?” I held the blade angled to the light. “That doesn’t happen to any other blade, at least, not to any I’ve noticed. But, as I said, it comes off easily enough if you wipe it immediately. Leave it to dry, however, and you’ve got a black stain that almost can’t be removed. Here.”
I handed him the knife and he examined it closely, holding it loosely in his fingers the way he had seen me hold it prior to throwing it. I showed him the throwing grip and gave him a brief lesson in how to throw properly, with enough strength to flip the knife and hammer it home into the target. Eventually, I allowed him to try a throw, and he sank the point a good thumb-nail’s depth into the trunk. We retrieved it and he did the same again five times in succession. Then we increased the distance to the tree and he had to make the required adjustments. He threw two misses, the knife clunking lengthwise against the bark, before he captured the correct weight again, and his shots were unerring from then on. When I estimated he had had enough, I retrieved the knife, dried the blade and slipped it into its sheath.
“So,” I asked him, “what made you decide you wanted to throw knives?”
Before responding, he linked his arm through mine and pulled me into motion. We moved on as he spoke, leaving the big tree behind us.
“I didn’t really want to throw knives, Publius. I merely wanted to do something different. Does that make sense?”
I made a gesture of agreement, although he had me mystified. But he paid no attention to me. My reactions were not important to him at that moment. He was talking simply for the sake of talking.
“I’m restless,” he went on. “and I don’t know why…” I could almost hear his thoughts churning. “I don’t like the way I’m feeling, Publius… don’t like feeling I haven’t come to grips with my life or my own desires. Do you know what I mean? I feel I’m missing something. Do you ever feel that way?”