The Emperor Series: Books 1-5

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The Emperor Series: Books 1-5 Page 175

by Conn Iggulden


  She did not care about the pompous arguments of men like Suetonius and Cassius. She saw their jealousy for what it was, despite the honour they claimed. They were too small to love the Republic, or even to understand what it had once meant. Better by far to stand and say that they hated him because he did not notice them. Vanity and pride would be the strength that drove their knives. She knew it, as she had always known the hearts of men. They would play their games of passwords and whispers as they met in the shadows, but the truth did not frighten her as it did them. Her hatred was a clean thing.

  She raised a hand to her face, surprised to find tears on her wrinkled skin. That was the reality of the years that stole, she thought. They took the joys and left only bitter pain and tears that came from emptiness.

  How many wives had he taken to press his seed into life? Not once had he asked the whore he kept. Not once, even when there was life in her womb and her flesh was firm and strong. He had used her knowledge a hundred times against his enemies. She had kept him safe and now she had been forgotten. Her hands were claws in the cloth as she thought of his pride in his son. There was always a price to pay.

  The rain increased in power as it swept across the city, and Servilia wept again. Rome would be clean by the dawn of the Ides of March. The past would no longer trouble her sleep.

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

  Julius walked alone through a waking city to the senate house. His son had disturbed his sleep with crying and he was red-eyed, rising as the market stalls and traders were still setting up for the business of the day.

  He preferred Rome at these moments after rain, when the air smelled fresh and clean and the day stretched far ahead with promise. It was true that the wind was cold, but he wore a heavy tunic under his toga and the touch of frozen air was pleasant as he breathed deeply.

  No guards were there to disturb the peace of the morning. He needed no lictors to frown at his people as they passed with their eyes downcast. They may not have accepted the crown Mark Antony had offered, but the man himself was untouchable. He did not fear them as men like Sulla and Pompey had feared. They had treated the citizens as violent children, terrified of the same force that had brought them to power. He needed no such protection. Julius sighed to himself as he strolled along the stone walkway, lost in thought.

  Without Cleopatra, he might well have left Rome months before. When he was far away, he could love his city as an abstract. He could talk of his home in the same breath as Alexandria, Carthage and Athens, the centres of empires gone and still rising. The distance somehow lent a romance to the heaving ant-heap of reality. When Rome was thousands of miles to the west, he could see the glory of her scholarship, her inventions and trade. It was difficult to remember those things existed when he was suffocated amongst the petty rivalries and vanity of the Senate. There was such a chasm between the two. When he despaired, he saw only the worst face of the city of his birth. Life teemed there in filthy alleys and a few coins would have bought a woman, a man or a child. When it was hot, the city stank like an open drain and when there was frost, thousands starved and froze on a knife edge of survival. Those were the times when he could barely catch his breath. His inner vision crumbled against the hard truths and he ached to ride clear and leave it all behind.

  To have the power to make changes had been intoxicating at first. Whatever he had the wit to imagine could be made, created new. It was a temporary joy, like so much else. He hungered for something he could never quite name and when fresh-faced generals had come with news of unrest in Parthia, he had not sent them away. Mark Antony would rule Rome again, or Octavian perhaps. He had earned the right to leave his mark on the city and until Julius’ son became a man, the boy would need strong protectors. It would be Octavian, Julius decided, already imagining the expression on his face when he heard the news.

  Outside the city, there were legions of young men gathering to march against the Parthians. His unease vanished in the presence of so much youthful hope. They had not been made cynical. They carried more than a sword and shield for Rome, he thought, groping for the idea. When they left, they carried a distilled form of the city with them, the purest part. It took them through pain and exhaustion. It kept their discipline when they saw death coming and suddenly knew it would not pass them by. By pledging their strength, each one of them gave a value to what they left behind. They were saying ‘This is worth my life.’ And they made it so. There could be no value in a city without those young men to stand in the Campus.

  Julius remembered what Brutus had said about the spring air raising his head and he smiled as he walked. It was true that the thought of another campaign had stirred his blood. His time in Rome had been everything he had wanted it to be. His Triumphs would be remembered for generations and the Senate had honoured him as no one else in history. Scipio would have given his right arm for the titles they had bestowed. Marius would have loved every moment.

  Before Julius reached the bottom of the hill, he saw a lone figure in a toga so white it looked like winter frost. He frowned as the man began to walk in his direction. Could they do nothing until he had arrived? What new problem was so vexing and difficult that they must interrupt his thoughts before the day had even begun? He recognised Cassius as the man drew closer and bowed his head.

  ‘Caesar, the Senate are meeting in Pompey’s theatre this morning. I have stayed to let you know.’

  ‘Why, what has happened?’ Julius said, his calm evaporating.

  ‘The Ides of March fall on the anniversary of Pompey being made consul, sir,’ Cassius replied. ‘It was decided to honour his family in this way. The resolution was passed in your absence. I was worried it might not have reached you, and …’

  ‘All right, enough,’ Julius snapped. ‘I do not have time to read every line of the speeches.’

  Cassius bowed his head again and Julius repressed his irritation at the intrusion. They fell into step together as they crossed the road on stepping stones and took a right turn that would take them over the Capitoline hill.

  Without warning, Julius stopped suddenly.

  ‘Sir?’ Cassius asked.

  ‘No, it’s nothing. I was just thinking of an old man I knew, a long time ago.’

  ‘I see, sir,’ Cassius replied automatically.

  ‘You are sweating, Cassius,’ Julius observed. ‘You should walk more often, for fitness.’

  ‘It is a chill, sir, nothing more,’ Cassius replied, staring ahead.

  Pompey’s theatre had been used as a second senate house many times since its completion. It could accommodate even the swollen numbers of new senators Julius had introduced since his return to the city. There was a certain pleasure in debating with the senators of Rome at the foot of Pompey’s statue. It loomed over them all, a matchless casting that captured the stern features of the man in his prime.

  As the sun rose, Julius was surprised to find only a few senators clustered around the main doors. They saw his arrival and two broke away to walk inside. Julius frowned at the thought of the work ahead. When he had been young, he had watched their discussions in something approaching awe. He had seen great men stand and dominate their fellows, changing Rome with the force of their thoughts and words. Julius had responded to the power of their oratory, been inspired by it.

  It was the tragedy of experience that heroes lost the shine they had once had. Perhaps the new men he had brought into the ranks of the nobilitas still walked with soft steps as the laws were passed. He did not know if they did, or whether it was just that the great issues of the age had been decided. Perhaps he had seen the last of the grand figures to stride through Rome. He had known the men with strength enough to challenge the restrictions of the Republic. He had learned from them, but those battles were over, whether he wore a crown or not.

  He passed through the entrance with barely a nod to those who stood around in the grey light, taking his place on a bench close to the central stage. He would speak today. Perhaps he would try once more
to make them understand the need to expand the lands under Rome. He would speak even though they seemed deaf to the words he used; blind to the ideas. Rome could never rest on what had been brought to her feet. How many times had he seen small rebellions take fire throughout a country, the strength of the Senate tested from outside? From the Mytilene fort to Syria, he had been witness to the hawks that waited for Rome to nod in sleep, just once.

  There were a thousand small kings in the world who bent their knee and still watched for a moment of weakness. Only a fool would give it to them. If Roman generals ever reached a line and said, ‘This is far enough’, that would be the end of a million lives given to reach that point. That would be the crack that would break the glass.

  Julius was so deep in his inner thoughts that he did not notice Tillius Cimber approach him, striding along the curved line of benches. Julius assumed the younger man had stumbled when he felt a hand grip the cloth of his toga, yanking it aside.

  In an instant, rage spiked in him as the man held on. Cimber’s face was rigid with effort and Julius gripped his fingers with both hands, twisting at them.

  ‘What are you doing?’ Julius shouted at his attacker, struggling to stand.

  He saw faces turn towards him from the corners of his eyes and more men rush to his aid. Through his fury, he knew he had only to wait for Cimber to be dragged away. The punishment for daring to lay a hand on him was death, and he would not be merciful.

  Cimber was young and strong, but Julius had weathered like an oak on a thousand miles of march. His arms shook with the strain, yet he could not break the deathless fingers that writhed against his neck.

  More men clustered around on the benches, crying out as they came closer. Julius saw Suetonius draw a dagger, his face flushed with vicious excitement. The shock strained at his heart as he understood at last what was happening. Cimber smiled as he saw the realisation come to the Dictator and he renewed his grip, holding Julius in place for Suetonius to strike.

  Julius looked desperately around for anyone he could call. Where was Ciro? Brutus? Where was Octavian or Mark Antony? He bellowed as Suetonius gashed at him, the knife scoring a line of blood on his shoulder. Cimber’s hold was broken by others who swarmed in to kill and Julius struck out blindly, yelling for help. He grunted as a knife sank into his side and was withdrawn to strike again.

  A man fell across him, hindering the others. Julius was able to stand for a moment and raised his arm against a dagger slashing towards his neck. It sliced his hand and he cried out in agony, shoved back in his seat by the press of snarling men.

  There was blood everywhere, staining their white togas and spattering their faces. Julius thought of his son and was terrified for what they would do to him. In his agony, he shoved one of his attackers backwards with fading strength. More knives punched into his legs as he kicked out in spasm.

  He did not stop calling for help, knowing he could survive even the worst of the wounds. If Octavian could be summoned, he would strike fear into the animals that screamed and yelped around him in a frenzy.

  Two of them held him by shoulders slippery with blood. Hot liquid bubbled from the corner of his mouth as his strength vanished. He could only look up in despair as they panted into his face, close enough to smell their breath.

  ‘Wait,’ he heard a voice say, somewhere close.

  The bloody hands shoved Julius against the back of his seat and he turned in an agony of hope to see who had stopped them.

  Brutus walked across the central floor of the theatre, his hands clasped behind his back. Even as Julius felt relief, he saw his old friend too carried a blade in his hand and he slumped brokenly. Blood poured from his wounds and his vision seemed to sharpen as every sense screamed to live. He felt the hands of his enemies fall away, but he could not move or fight them any longer.

  ‘You too, Brutus?’ he said.

  Brutus stepped into the line of benches and raised his knife up to Julius’ face. His eyes held a great sadness and a triumph Julius could not bear to witness.

  ‘Yes,’ Brutus replied softly.

  ‘Then kill me quickly. I cannot live and know this,’ Julius said, his voice a whisper.

  The other men stood back in awe, seeing the blood they had released. Julius did not look at them. Slowly, without dropping his gaze from Brutus, he reached to the twisted folds of his toga and drew it slowly upwards.

  Brutus watched in silence as Julius showed his contempt for them all. He bowed his head under the toga, folding his shaking hands into the cloth. Then he sat perfectly still and waited for death.

  Brutus showed his teeth for an instant, then shoved his knife through the cloth, finding the heart. The tableau broke as the others joined him, stabbing and stabbing at the small figure until it slumped to the side and the last of life was gone.

  The susurration of panting breath was the only sound in the world as Brutus looked around the men in the echoing theatre. Every eye was on the body that lay between the benches, limp and slick with blood. The dark liquid stained their faces and arms and rested in tiny droplets in their hair.

  ‘He’s dead at last,’ Suetonius murmured, shaking as the draining frenzy left him weak and dazed. ‘What happens now?’

  The men who had come so far looked to Brutus for an answer.

  ‘Now we walk out,’ Brutus said. His voice shook. ‘We walk. We go to the senate house and we tell them what we have done. We have cut the tyrant out of Rome and we will not go in shame.’

  He saw Suetonius begin to wipe his knife clean and Brutus reached out a hand, stopping him.

  ‘We will not hide the marks. Let the blood show the honour of those with courage to stand against a tyrant. This is how we have saved the Republic. Let it show. Now he is gone, Rome can begin to heal.’

  His eyes glittered as he looked down at the figure of the man he had known and loved.

  ‘We will honour him in death,’ he said, almost too quietly to hear.

  Those closest to the doors began to walk away and Brutus went with them. The rest followed, glancing back at the scene, as if to reassure themselves of its reality.

  They walked red-handed on the ancient streets of Rome and they walked with pride.

  HISTORICAL NOTE

  Gaius Julius Caesar is remembered for much more than being an extraordinary general. It is true that there are few military leaders who could have equalled his strategic skill, or charismatic leadership, but that is only a part of the tale. Republican Rome may have eased into empire without Julius Caesar, but it could also have torn itself apart. In one of the hardest schools in history, Caesar rose to pre-eminence, finally crushing Pompey at Pharsalus. His life was the bridge between two eras of history; the catalyst for empire.

  Throughout his career, he showed a fine understanding of politics, power and manipulation. I will not say he invented propaganda, but he must surely be one of its greatest and earliest exponents. Undermining Pompey through public displays of clemency was a deliberate policy. As Julius wrote in a letter, ‘Let this be a new way of gaining victory; let us secure ourselves through mercy and magnanimity!’

  Pompey never understood the technique, though Cicero clearly saw through at least part of it. He referred to the policy as ‘insidious clemency’ and said that ‘Whatever evil he refrains from, arouses the same gratitude as if he had prevented another from inflicting it.’

  Pompey was outmatched from the start of the civil war, when he demanded the Gaul general return to Rome without the support of his legions. Caesar spent a night of soul-searching on the river Rubicon where he debated whether the loss of life resulting from a civil war would be worth his own. With characteristic self-belief, he decided it would be and launched a lightning strike south, at such a speed that Pompey was caught completely by surprise. He could not defend the city and even forgot to empty the treasury in his haste to leave. Not that it was needed. The vast sums of gold Caesar brought back from Gaul devalued the Roman aureus by an astonishing thirty per cent.
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  The incident on the feast of Bona Dea was as I have described it, including the fact that Publius dressed as a woman to escape detection. Publius was actually found innocent of adultery by a court, but Caesar divorced his wife anyway, saying that ‘Caesar’s wife must be above suspicion.’ Having an heir was no doubt increasingly important to him and he would have understood the need for a son’s legitimacy to be beyond question.

  For reasons of plot and length, I have omitted battles in Spain and Africa as Julius and his generals crushed legions loyal to Pompey. When the time came for him to seek Pompey in Greece, he gave control of Italy to Mark Antony and, as a result, Marcus Brutus betrayed him for the first time, joining Pompey against his old friend. Julius gave orders for him to be spared if possible in what, for me, is one of the most poignant scenes in the history. Forgiving Brutus after such a betrayal shows Caesar’s greatness as nothing else.

  Julius landed in Oricum on the west coast of Greece. I have not included the fact that he had to return to Italy in a small boat to fetch more men. The boat hit a storm and Caesar is reported to have told the boatmen not to fear, saying that they carried ‘Caesar and his fortune.’ He was a great believer in his own luck and this seems to have been borne out through the events of his life. He did manage to take Dyrrhachium from Pompey’s control, after an exhausting night march.

  Though the centurion Decimus is fictional, one of Caesar’s officers did take his own life when captured, saying that he was used to dispensing mercy rather than receiving it. The disdain this shows can only be imagined. Another small change is that Cicero’s wife Terentia was in fact in Rome during the civil war. She did not travel to Greece.

 

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