Hibernia (Veteran of Rome Book 2)
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Hibernia
William Kelso
To Mum and Dad
Chapter One - The Stone Merchants - Spring AD 86
Corbulo stood in the prow of his ship and silently cursed the fog that hung over the Thames. His chin and cheeks were covered by two days worth of stubble and his hair was completely white. He looked tired. It was late in the afternoon and the dull grey skies had not changed since he and his crew had left the stone quarry that morning. Somewhere in the mist a sea gull screeched as it hunted for food but in the ship the rowers were silent and the splash of their oars in the river was slow and methodical. Corbulo peered into the fog but he could see no more than a dozen yards ahead. Where the fuck were they? The river was nearly a thousand yards wide at high tide and he could see neither the north or south bank, but they couldn't be far from the port. He lifted his nose, sniffed and caught the faint smell of human sewage. Yes, they weren't far from home. He grunted, opened his mouth and ran his finger over his remaining six teeth. The fog was dangerous. He would need to be careful that they didn't strike one of the multitude of sand banks, mudflats and small gravel islands that made up the south bank. If the boat sank and he lost his cargo it would be a catastrophe and he couldn't swim either.
He turned sharply to look at his crew and the cargo of Kentish rag stone that they were transporting. The rowers, all of them local men, Britons, looked exhausted. He would need to give them some extra rest and maybe a bonus when they reached Londinium. He had timed his return journey up the river to coincide with the sea tide so that the tide would help push them upstream, but the rowers had already been dog tired from the extra shift he'd demanded from them the previous day. He was pushing them too hard he knew, but such was the demand for stone in the fast growing capital of Britannia that he had not dared say no to his clients. There were plenty of merchants in Londinium who would leap at the chance to snatch his government supply contract from him and destroy his little business, for which he toiled so hard. He couldn't allow that to happen. At forty-eight he was too old to learn a new trade and too old to be a soldier again. The Legions were not short of willing recruits and they could and did choose the best and fittest men. No, he would be damned if he allowed his business to go under. It was all he had. He had invested everything in this venture. When he had first come to live in Londinium with his new wife some eighteen months ago, he had sold the amber stone he'd taken from the sea cave in the far north of Caledonia and bought himself a house and a boat. There had been just enough money left to bribe the Procurator's officials into giving him a contract to supply stone to the burgeoning capital and so his business had begun. But he still only had one boat. Tensely he picked at one of his remaining teeth and suddenly he felt it move. Abruptly he shut his mouth. Another one was coming loose. His face darkened. Soon he would be eating soup and milk every day like a newborn baby. He gestured to the helmsman who was standing at the back of the ship.
"Take her to the right," Corbulo yelled.
A moment later the ship started to veer away on its new course and Corbulo felt the oarsman apply some extra strength to their oars. The rowers too had sensed that they were nearly home and they suddenly seemed in a hurry to finish their long journey and get ashore for some well-earned rest. Anxiously Corbulo peered into the mist. It would not do if they overshot the harbour and sailed straight into the bridge. Then he heard it. Men's shouts, the bark of a dog and the noise of sawing and hammering. He turned to his men but the rowers had heard it too and were already scrambling to lower the sail from the solitary mast. Then without warning the dark solid wooden-fronted quayside loomed up out of the mist. Corbulo watched it draw closer as his helmsman expertly manoeuvred the craft alongside the harbour jetty.
"Priscus, Priscus, are you there? We're back! Where are you?" Corbulo shouted looking up at the waterfront.
A group of labourers paused and turned to stare at him from the quayside where they were mending an upturned boat. Corbulo ignored their inquisitive glances.
"Priscus get your lazy arse down here!" Corbulo roared as his ship gently nudged up against the harbour wall. The massive, solid squared oak beams had been hammered into the riverbed in a perfect straight line and were covered in green moss. Corbulo was about to shout again when a small timid figure of around twenty with jet black hair came limping hastily up to the edge of the quay.
"Sorry I am here Sir, I am here now. Throw me the rope and I will tie you up," Priscus shouted in his west-country accent.
Corbulo muttered something under his breath and flung the mooring rope up towards the young man on the waterfront. Priscus always liked to call him Sir even though Corbulo had made him his business partner six months ago. It was, Corbulo had concluded, probably because Priscus had originally tried to enlist in one of the auxiliary cohorts but his limp, a consequence of a childhood disease, had prevented him from passing the medical. The young Briton was fascinated by the Roman Army. Corbulo waited as Priscus hastened to secure the ship to the quayside. His wife was always telling him off for being too hard on his young business partner and maybe she was right, for Priscus was a good, trustworthy and educated man with a genius for maths and accounting which Corbulo knew he himself was no good at. But the young man could also be easily distracted and intimidated and twenty five years service in the Twentieth Legion had taught Corbulo that being distracted, even for a few moments, could cost a man his life. Competition amongst the merchants in Londinium was tough and violent and his rivals were always on the lookout for an opportunity to steal a man's business.
"What have you been up to?" Corbulo cried.
Priscus lowered the ladder into the ship. "I was over in the Forum speaking to the Procurator's staff. They want you to go out again tomorrow morning on the first tide. Full load of stone, same price as always."
"Tomorrow on the first tide?" Corbulo's exclaimed in surprise. "Tomorrow is a fucking festival day, no one works on a holiday."
Priscus shrugged. "That's what they told me. I don't make the rules."
Corbulo shook his head in dismay and turned to look at his crew. The rowers were resting on their benches and all of them were looking up at him. They had all heard Priscus's words and the news had not gone down very well. For a moment Corbulo was seized by indecision. He couldn't piss off his clients, but if he forced his rowers to work on a holiday they may well tell him to go fuck himself. The rowers after all were not slaves but freeborn men. The ship fell silent and for a moment the only noise was the gentle lapping of the water against the side of the boat and the creaking of the deck planks.
"Allright," Corbulo exclaimed in a resigned voice as he looked at his crew, "We will do another run tomorrow morning and I will pay you double the going rate. Does that sound fair?"
The rowers glanced at each other sullenly.
"That sounds fair," a huge oak of a man at the back growled at last.
Corbulo nodded satisfied. He was giving up all the profit he would make from the run but at least he would be able to deliver the stone and keep his clients happy and the rowers decision confirmed something else which had always intrigued and impressed him. The native Britons didn't mind hardship, even extreme hardship as long as they were confident that everything had been handled fairly. To try and swindle them, as Corbulo had seen some of his competitors try to do, would only ignite in them a rage that was truly frightening.
"There is another matter, Sir," Priscus whispered loudly. Corbulo turned to look up at his young business partner and there was something in Priscus's voice that put him on guard. The young man looked uneasy.
"There are some men here," Priscus said quietly as he cast a glance to one side, "They have been waiting to speak t
o you all afternoon."
"What kind of men?" Corbulo frowned.
"The worst kind," Priscus hissed, "bounty hunters Sir. They say they are acting on the Governor’s orders."
Chapter Two - "No Hard Feelings"
Corbulo clambered up onto the quayside. To his left London bridge disappeared off into the mist and along the waterfront to his right ships, lay drawn up along the massive box-like quays, where they unloading their cargoes of Gallic wine, Batavian pottery and olive oil from Hispania. Cranes were hoisting the cargoes out of the galleys and dumping them onto the harbour front, where a steady flow of labourers with carts were whisking them off into the massive timber wharves and warehouses that lined the river. Londinium and its port were thriving and the harbour was full of activity and noise. Further along the river, beside the quays reserved for export business, ships were being loaded with copper, tin, silver, corn and oysters, all destined for the hungry masses who populated the great metropolitan areas in Gaul and Italia. Corbulo glanced around him and laid a hand on Priscus's shoulder.
"Unload the stone and make sure you get the right price from the Procurator's office," he said quietly. "Then take the boat across the river and moor her in the usual spot. I will join you later. Now tell me where I can find these men?"
Priscus turned to look down river.
"They are hanging around outside Lucius's shop," he muttered. "They are a rough lot and they are armed. I don't like the look of them Sir, why don't you take some of the rowers with you?"
Corbulo shook his head. "No, I will be allright," he replied as he set off along the quayside. The smell of fish mingled with the stink of raw sewage and the noise of hammers, rattling wagons, sawing and the voices of a dozen different nationalities. Corbulo picked his way through the throng of labourers, carpenters, merchants, boats men and slaves. What did a group of bounty hunters want with him? Could it be something to do with the amber cave he had discovered in Caledonia some two years ago? His face darkened. If Falco the banker, to whom he had sold the amber stone had talked, he would cut the man's balls off. He had sworn the banker to secrecy about the amber stone. Corbulo stirred uneasily. Had something happened to Marcus, his son? Marcus and he were friends now but that had not always been the case. There had been a time when his son had hated him. There had been a time when Marcus and he had been estranged. Corbulo sighed. He had not always been a good father or husband but he had managed to put those days behind him now. But what could bounty hunters want with his son? Marcus was an auxiliary cavalryman and was with his unit, the 2nd Batavian Cohort at their base in Luguvalium, Carlisle. Had he deserted? Had he run into debt? The last time Corbulo had seen him had been during the Saturnalia festivities, a few months ago.
Lucius's shop was a fast food outlet, a narrow ramshackle wooden hut wedged in between two enormous warehouses. The smell of cooking pig and chicken greeted Corbulo as he noticed the six men lounging around outside. The men were clad in long, grey, muddy travelling cloaks with hoods and they were eating strips of pork and chicken legs, whose bones they kept throwing into a nearby well. Corbulo paused to watch them carefully. They were young and fit and looked like they knew how to handle themselves.
"I am Corbulo. You wanted to speak with me?" he said stepping towards the men.
The bounty hunters turned to look at him with hard, unfriendly faces and their conversation ceased abruptly. For a moment no one spoke. Then behind him Corbulo suddenly heard a voice and as he recognised it, a tremor ran right down his spine.
"It's been a while hasn't it Corbulo," the voice chuckled. "The last time that I saw you, you were surrounded by Caledonian tribesmen, fighting for your life, but I always knew that you would manage to escape."
Corbulo whirled round and stared into the face of a small, tough looking man of around forty. The man chuckled again but there was nothing friendly in his voice or in his manner.
"Bestia," Corbulo muttered as he struggled to overcome his surprise, "The last time I saw you was when you abandoned your master and fled like a coward. So the Caledonians didn't roast you alive after all. That's a shame."
"They tried," Bestia shrugged, "But I too am not so easily caught."
"So have you come to try and kill me again?"
Bestia shook his head.
"Not this time Corbulo," he replied sheepishly, "I am working for the Governor now. It's all legitimate business. No hard feelings eh."
"Fuck you," Corbulo snarled angrily, "I have not forgotten what you are. Does the Governor know that you are a deserter? Or do you suck his cock to keep him quiet?"
Bestia smiled and glanced away along the quayside. For a moment he said nothing. Then he turned to Corbulo.
"Like I just said," he muttered patiently, "I am here on the Governor's orders. I work for him now and he has business with you Corbulo, so shut the fuck up and listen to what I have to say."
Corbulo struggled to restrain himself. It was all he could do to stop himself from smashing his fist into Bestia's face. The man's presence had vividly reminded him of his long journey north into Caledonia in search of Marcus his son and the two separate occasions upon which this small but highly dangerous ex soldier had tried to murder him.
"I am looking for someone," Bestia went on, "The Governor is keen to speak with this man. His name is Quintus, recently retired Centurion from the Twentieth. He and you, I understand, go back many, many years." Bestia paused to study Corbulo. "I understand he was your best friend. So have you seen him recently? Do you know where I can find him?"
Corbulo looked genuinely surprised but instead of replying he stubbornly folded his arms across his chest.
"Come on Corbulo," Bestia growled. "You are his closest friend. Quintus and you spent over twenty years together in the Twentieth Legion. They tell me that you two were like bread and salt. Just tell me where he is and I will leave you alone."
Corbulo cleared his throat.
"No," he muttered, "I haven't seen him recently but he has a farm some six miles due south of Londinium..."
"We have already been there," Bestia interrupted, "It's all locked up. He's disappeared. Do you know where he is gone?"
And as he said the last sentence Bestia took a menacing step forwards. His eyes glinted darkly and behind him Corbulo sensed movement amongst the six bounty hunters.
"Don't lie to me," Bestia said quietly, "I know when you are lying. Just tell me where he is and we will leave you and your family alone."
At the mention of the word family, Corbulo froze. For a moment he glared at Bestia. Then he half turned to look at the men behind him.
"I last saw him about two, three weeks ago," Corbulo replied, "He was in the Forum buying supplies for his farm. I have been busy so there hasn't been much time. If he is not at home then I have no idea where he is." Corbulo paused. "Why do you ask? What has he done?"
Bestia was studying Corbulo carefully. For a moment he didn't reply. Then he gestured to his men.
"Allright, I believe you," Bestia replied, "but if you see him or hear anything about his whereabouts you are to inform me right away. Go to the Governor's palace and leave me a message. And Corbulo, if you hold back information and I find out about it, you are going to be in trouble, you, your little business, your business partner and that sweet wife and daughter of yours. The Governor wants to speak with Quintus urgently and you don't want to annoy the Governor!"
***
Corbulo watched Bestia and his thugs disappear into the throng of people along the waterfront. For a while he just stood there running his thumb over the stubble on his cheek. Bestia was the worst kind of man, a deserter, a killer, a hard, violent man without a shred of pity for others but Corbulo had sensed that he'd been speaking the truth this time, when he'd said he was working for the Governor. He shook his head and sighed. What had Quintus got himself into? What had he done to get the Governor of Britannia so worked up that the man had resorted to hiring bounty hunters to track him down? This couldn't be good. Corbulo sighed a
gain as he pushed through the crowd and headed for the bridge.
"What have you done Quintus?" he murmured. The thought of Quintus being a wanted man troubled him. When he'd last bumped into him in the Forum Quintus had seemed in good spirits and there had been no hint of trouble. Quintus was his oldest and closest comrade. They had been Brothers in Arms. The two of them had joined the Twentieth as teenagers and for over twenty years they had fought, bled, starved, whored and drunken themselves silly across the length and breadth of Britannia. They had saved each other's lives on more than one occasion. It had been Quintus who had revived him and coaxed him back to life at Inchtuthil, the great northern Legionary fortress in Caledonia, when Corbulo, wounded by an arrow and searching for his missing son, had come riding into the camp. It had been Quintus, who the following spring, had helped him rescue Efa and Dylis from the Crannog, the artificial island in the Caledonian lake. Efa was Corbulo's new wife now and he had adopted her daughter Dylis. It was Quintus too who had persuaded him to settle and retire in Londinium. The former Centurion had bought himself a plot of land on a wooded hill some six miles due south of the city, which he had intended to farm. Quintus had said that one day Londinium was going to rival the city of Rome in size and importance. Corbulo's face soured and he muttered to himself. If his old friend was in trouble he would need help and if Quintus came asking for it he would give it despite all of Bestia's threats. There was no question about that. Loyalty to his old comrade in arms came before everything else.
The fog still hung across the river and he couldn't see the south bank. The low wooden bridge disappeared eerily off into the mist. The timber piles had been driven into the soft riverbed at an angle and upon them the engineers had constructed a flat wooden deck, the width of a Roman road. Close to the bridge entrance stood a marker stone proudly proclaiming that the first cohort of Thracians had built the bridge and the waterfront. As Corbulo approached, he noticed the duty detachment of Legionaries from the Second Augusta guarding the entrance. Another detachment would be guarding the southern exit. The soldiers had piled their large oval shields and spears against the wooden railings and were sitting in a circle on the ground gambling on a game of dice. A solitary member of the unit stood guard beside the customs men, who were collecting taxes from the merchants and traders crossing the bridge. Corbulo grunted in relief. Perialis was on duty today, that was good. The officer was not corrupt, unlike that arsehole Cato who was known to force merchants to give him a little extra before they and their goods were allowed to leave or enter Londinium. Corbulo strode past the eagle-eyed customs officials, but as he started out across the water one of the soldiers glanced round and called out to him.