Pavo shivered. He had seen that look once before; the day Father did not return from the Persian campaign. Instead, a gaunt, unsmiling legionary had ambled through the narrow tenemented street, face coated in dust and sweat pooling in his frown. The soldier had walked along, asking for a Numerius Vitellius Pavo. In excitement, Pavo had run to him. The soldier had looked at him with those same dead eyes, then handed him a purse containing the legionary funeral payout.
Mother had died giving birth to him, and he had never known her, but for the glassy glint in Father’s eye when he spoke of her. Now he had nobody, nothing. Nothing, except the recurring dream. The same harrowing scene most nights, with Father stood in his armour on an empty dune, his face burnt from the sun and his eyes staring longingly, seeing Pavo, but also looking right through him. He gulped back a sob. In the eight months since Father’s death, the modest room in the tenements had been repossessed, so the gutter had been his bed and vermin meat his sustenance. All the while, he had clung to the pride of Father’s memory. A broad-shouldered man in his prime, he had towered twice as high as Pavo. He would return on leave from the legions, scoop him up and bear-hug him, and Pavo would nuzzle into the tousled chestnut locks – thick with the scent of wood smoke and dust from his travels. As always, Pavo coloured and bolstered this memory, sickened at the thought of it fading completely.
‘Sold!’ The trader yelped, punching a finger forward to pinpoint the buyer.
Pavo glanced up. Behind the shimmering golden grin of the trader, a short, corpulent figure waddled forward. His bald pate glistened in the sunlight like a shelled egg and his pallor was an unhealthy, pitted yellow, the same colour as the remnants of hair matted to the back and sides of his head. The purple-rim of his toga caught the eye – a senator.
Then a sharp pain shot through Pavo’s spine. ‘Move!’ the trade hand barked from behind him, pulling the freed manacle to one side and shoving him down the steps. Pavo stumbled forward and down onto the dust of the ground, the skin scraping from his knees.
‘Easy with my property,’ the rotund man hissed.
Wincing, Pavo squinted up at his new owner.
‘A fine purchase, Senator Tarquitius,’ the trader purred. ‘I ‘ope you’ll be back next time - word ‘as it I’ll be receivin’ some Scythians for next week.’
‘You would just love it if I had nothing better to do than fill your purse wouldn’t you, Balbus?’ The senator sneered.
‘Well, if you will beat the ones you buy to death...’
‘Keep your voice down…’ Tarquitius’ eyes darted all around. ‘Fronto,’ he barked to the rock-faced bull of a man who accompanied him, ‘get this wretch into the cart!’
Pavo braced himself as Fronto stretched out a hand like a ham and wrenched him up onto his feet. Then, the senator snapped his fingers and strode forward in self-majesty through the bustle of the market. Eventually, the crowd thinned, the rabble dulled, and at the edge of the square he beheld Tarquitius’ slave-cart; another grim cobbling of timbers and rust, powered by an emaciated donkey, clinging to the tiny sliver of shade under the walls of the great baths. Squinting into the penumbra of the cart, Pavo could just make out the selection of pale, drawn and defeated expressions of the others tucked inside. From one master to another. So this was to be his life. As he made to step inside, the fight was dissolving in his heart. Then Tarquitius squealed.
A withered crone stood in the senator’s path. Sixty years, if not more, her face was puckered like a prune, her eyes milky, yet piercing. Her razor-like nose was within a hair’s-breadth from the senator’s.
‘See that the boy comes to no harm from your hand,’ she rasped.
‘Out of my way, hag!’ Tarquitius protested, sweeping her to one side, but she gripped his chubby wrist with her talon-like fingers. Tarquitius yelped. Fronto jostled, hand on his sword-hilt, awaiting the order of his master.
Pavo’s tears suddenly dried and his interest keened. The crone held Tarquitius’ arm fast, and stretched up on her bare and gnarled tiptoes to put her furrowed lips to the senator’s ear. She whispered to him for only a few moments, and then calmly she walked over to Pavo, her eyes unblinking, and fixed on his. She pressed something into his hand. With that, she wandered off into the crowd, her tousled and patchy grey locks dissolving into the melee of market goers.
The senator turned, slowly, his face milky pale, eyes wide, the fat rolls under his chin quivering. He stared at Pavo. Pavo stared back.
‘Back to the villa,’ he muttered quietly, his gaze drifting off into the distance.
Pavo frowned, stepping onto the slave-cart gingerly and sitting without a word next to the filthy and cowering slaves already in there. As the cart shuddered into life, he turned over the crone’s words. Then he looked at his clenched fist, uncurling his fingers slowly as the cart jostled. A battered bronze legionary phalera – a thin bronze disc issued as a military reward, smaller than a follis – stared up at him. The text was chewed and battered, but he screwed up his eyes to read it in the flitting light from the slatted cart roof.
Legio II Parthica, it read – his father’s legion. Pavo’s skin rippled.
His eyes hung on the text as intrigue gripped his thudding heart. What did it mean? Confusion danced through his thoughts.
But one thing was certain.
The fight would never leave him.
Chapter 2
Late winter, 376 AD
The prow of the Aquila roared and shuddered as it carved a path out of the ocean and through the sandbank, before finally settling to a halt. The old Kingdom of Bosporus greeted her, hurling the bitter rains of the storm across her deck. Under the murky late afternoon sky, a grimacing row of legionaries clung to the sides of the ship. The howling wind filled the air as they peered across the shadowy texture of the hinterland, the long grass writhing in the gale. They gripped their shields, flexed their sword hands, all the while judging the shadows of the forested inland.
Standing at the prow was the tall and lean figure of Manius Atius Gallus, Chief Centurion, primus pilus, of the first cohort of the XI Claudia legion, dressed in leather boots, a ruby tunic under a mail vest, and a plumed intercisa helmet tucked under his arm. As he gazed upon the land, he squeezed the incessant rainwater from his peak of hair, charcoal, flecked with grey at the temples. His gaunt features, wolf-like in the gloom, betrayed nothing but a thin-lipped iron glare, yet behind the ice-blue eyes, he wondered what this dark corner of the world might think of the lone bireme on its shores. It had been fortunate to say the least that they had slipped into this bay without encountering any Gothic war ships, but from here on in, anything could happen.
‘Park the oars!’ He roared, remaining at the stern, eyes fixed on the land, ears trained on the goings-on behind him. First, there were the scuttling footsteps as the beneficiarius worked his way along the deck, and then the rhythmic clatter as the remiges lifted their oars clear of the water, sighing as they rested their weary arms. Not perfect, Gallus mused, comparing it to the drill back in the docks, but acceptable.
Once more, he gazed inland. The peninsula had fallen into darkness more than one hundred years ago. The invading Gothic tribes, the Greuthingi, as they were known, had declared their sovereignty over the peninsula with the delivery of the Roman ambassador’s head to the emperor’s palace. Since that day, the empire had seen the rise and fall of scores of emperors, her territory sliced like an apple into eastern and western halves and her mighty legions evolve almost beyond recognition. Nobody was quite sure how much this place had changed in that time, but reports indicated that the old Roman frontier fortification system still stood, lying dotted like decaying teeth across the eighty miles or so of the peninsula neck. Yes, there had been trade and diplomacy in the many years since this place had last been under direct Roman influence, but the Goths of Bosporus had fallen silent some time ago, and a hundred years could breed many ills. Gallus could only wonder what the shadows held.
He held his back straight and his f
ace expressionless, burying the gnawing excitement and fear deep within. How would this group of men behind him handle the sortie, far from the XI Claudia fort on the banks of the Danubius? While the rest of the legion, some two thousand men, remained stretched out over the great river’s borders protected by walls and reinforcements, here with him were the double strength first century of the first cohort – the one hundred and sixty considered most able, thrust out into the wilderness. Discounting the smattering of calloused veterans though, the numbers counted for little. Gallus turned and ran his eyes over them; barely one in ten were over twenty years of age, such was the fatality rate on the frontiers, and dressed only in filthy, sodden tunics and boots the youngsters looked every bit the farmers and labourers they were. He bit back his doubts; this was a brave new dawn for the empire, and Gallus was all too proud to lead it. In this day and age, for a vexillatio of limitanei border troops to be given a mission deep into foreign lands…well, that was quite something. Quickly, he tempered the urge to smile, keeping his lips quill-thin, maintaining the iron stare instead. Then, he placed the intercisa helmet on his head, with the shark fin of iron and the plume adding another foot to his towering frame.
‘That’s the stuff,’ he encouraged the men as they set about tying down the rigging, thumping his hands together. But there was no cheering, no banter. He clenched his jaw at the silence.
He had been a late starter in the army, joining when he turned thirty. The post of primus pilus had fallen to him after a rapid succession of deaths of the previous incumbents. Practically every Gothic raid over the Danubius had propelled him further up the ladder; from legionary to optio, to centurion and now here, the role of the primus pilus. In just four years, he had risen to be the man whom all in the legion should look to for inspiration. He saw one young legionary grapple with the supply cart, his hands trembling. They were anything but inspired. It’s not you, Gallus, they’re just scared, he repeated in his head, thinking of the last words his predecessor had offered him; you can lead them. The old nerves that he had felt in his first officer posting as a junior optio had returned; parched mouth, self-doubt and paranoia. Regardless of this, his iron features stayed cold as ever.
His ears pricked up at a nervous cough – the rigging and deck space of the ship was in order and the men were ready, standing in formation, staring dead ahead. ‘Good work! Now unload the ship,’ he barked with a nod to the supply sacks and crates, ‘then form up for the march.’
The men shuffled across the deck. The ropes for the gangplank were hurled over the rim of the vessel and onto the shore. The century split in two, half thumping down onto the shingle and half unloading supplies to them. The odd roar of encouragement split the air from the handful of veterans in the century, but apart from that, the silence was painful.
He looked over to his optio, Felix. The swarthy, diminutive, fork-bearded Greek was holding the silver eagle standard with a damp ruby-red bull banner rippling from the crossbar, readying to give it to the aquilifer, whose job it would be to carry the standard on the march. ‘Felix,’ he beckoned, ‘give me that, I have a job for it!’ He grappled the staff and strode over to the gangplank, surveying his men as they busied themselves assembling the supply cart.
‘And let’s get this eagle planted in the sand,’ he cried, leaping over onto the shingle with a thud. ‘It is time for the XI Claudia to make her mark on this land!’
The century turned to him as one – a sea of stunned faces. Gallus felt the cold fingers of doubt race up his spine as he tried to hold his posture, until, after an agony of only a few moments, a chorus of cheers erupted. The cheering died into a rabble of banter as they jostled and bumped past each other as they worked.
A thump landed behind Gallus. ‘Nice touch, sir,’ Felix whispered with a grin.
Gallus barely flicked up the sides of his papyrus-thin lips in return, but he knew his trusted optio valued that like a thousand bear hugs from any other. The Greek had shed blood with him along the length of the Danubius for so long that they understood each other like brothers. He turned to eye the precious few select men of the century that he could count on in the same fashion; Zosimus the hulking Thracian with a nose like a squashed pear and permanent stubble; Avitus the bald, catlike little Roman and Quadratus the towering Gaul – his thick blonde moustache a throwback to his long-lost ancestors. All had their own stories, but each of them had shared his pain in the ranks since the day he had flung himself into his military career.
Life for Gallus before the legions was like a fading dream, the days before the gods had seen fit to take her from him. Olivia. The morning before they had set off in the Aquila, he had crouched before the temple of Mithras, eyes gazing through the idol in front of him. Eternal life and honour, the deity promised to loyal soldiers. Screw your honour, give me back Olivia! Then he grimaced, emptying his mind of those thoughts, wiping the rainwater from his chin until his knuckles whitened.
‘Oh for…’ Zosimus growled, vexed at the ill-fitting cart wheels. ‘Quadratus, get your back under this side so I can get the wheel on the bloody axle!’
Quadratus, reddened and fumbling at the opposite wheel, scuttled round to Zosimus’ side of the cart, only to drop his side of the vehicle on the legs of another young legionary who yelped out a rather ladylike scream. A roar of nervous laughter halted work momentarily.
Gallus welcomed the distraction. ‘Zosimus! Try not to decimate my century before this mission has begun.’
‘Sir!’ Zosimus’ grimace flushed slightly as he strained to slot the wheel into place.
The rest of the century was forming up into ranks, slotting armour in place, buckling belts and harnessing weapons. Gallus paced the ground in front of his men, screwing his eyes up at the murky grey sky. He looked to his ranks; capped with their intercisa helmets, dressed in mail vests over white tunics, woollen trousers and leather boots. They carried the deadly combination of a spatha sword, a spear and a collection of plumbata darts, slipped in behind their ruby painted oval shields. His mind flitted to the paintings and frescoes of the legions of old. Gone were the lorica segmentata, the square shields and the gladius. Also gone, some would say, was the invincibility of that lost age. He took a deep breath and unravelled a parchment map as the last of the century shuffled into place.
‘We have three more hours of daylight, by my reckoning. That gives us two hours marching time, which should see us to a small clearing in the forest to the north.’ He paused, glancing up at his rain-sodden ranks. The men’s faces said it all. Eyes darted back and forth along the tree line and fingers edged along shields restlessly. Alone on the vast beach, their number looked pitiful. Hastily, Gallus crumpled the map into his pack, biting back his frustration.
He paced before them, silent but glaring, as he thought back to the inspirational words of his predecessors. Then he boomed, ‘Hold your chins high and fill your lungs with air. For we are part of the greatest military machine this world has ever known. Every forest we have entered, every sea we have crossed, every desert we have endured and every mountain we have scaled – we have been victorious. Not without setback, that is for certain, but the fact that we are here at the borders of the world today shows that we have prevailed. It is those barbarians who cower in the undergrowth who should feel fear right now, should they even be so brave to look down on us.’ He saw pride flicker from the uncertainty on their faces, then puffed out his chest and seized the moment.
‘Remember…we are the pride of the XI Claudia!’
He turned to face the forest and pumped the eagle standard into the air, as if mocking the unknown shadows ahead. This ignited a roar of approval from the ranks, and inside his chest, his heart thundered. He spun to his optio and clicked his fingers. ‘Felix, organise fifty men to stay with the ship, then line up the rest – they’re coming with us inland.’ Then he turned to the beneficiarius. ‘Take her round the peninsula, we meet on the eastern coast, as planned, three days from now.’
‘Yes, sir,’
Felix nodded.
‘Yes, sir,’ the beneficiarius agreed.
He frowned as all the mutterings of discontent, skulduggery and what-ifs during the briefing from Tribunus Nerva scampered across his mind. Despite the bullish bravado, which Gallus loved him for, the commanding officer of the XI Claudia could turn even the most trivial of events into a drama. However, this time there were genuine layers of agenda and politics involved. Dux Vergilius had meddled from above and Mithras only knew who was pulling his strings.
‘And Felix,’ he waited for the optio to draw closer before adding quietly. ‘Be on your guard,’ he locked eyes with the Greek, ‘we’re walking into the lion’s jaws.’
Chapter 3
While Constantinople bustled with activity on a very ordinary late winter morning, a lean, tired faced man with receding, close-cropped chestnut hair ambled up to the Palace of the Holy See. He stopped at the side gate and eyed the urban guard furtively.
‘I’m here to see the bishop. He is expecting me,’ he muttered, pulling his rough hemp robe a little tighter.
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