The Eagle and the Wolves c-4

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The Eagle and the Wolves c-4 Page 36

by Simon Scarrow4_


  'We're making good time,' Quintillus was saying conversationally.

  'Yes… good time,' the legate replied, then he straightened his back and stared ahead.

  'What is it, sir?'

  Vespasian did not answer, but urged his mount into a trot along the track as he craned his neck to see more. A few moments later he had a clear view round the hillock. Half a mile ahead of the column a dense mass of chariots and cavalry lay across their path.

  04 The Eagle and the Wolves

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Caratacus had sent his light forces on ahead, even though he knew that they could not defeat the Romans by themselves. But then again they didn't have to, Vespasian smiled bitterly. They just had to delay the legionaries long enough for Caratacus and his heavy infantry to arrive and pile into the rear of the Roman column. If the legate moved quickly, he could form his men into a dense wedge and force his way through the enemy blocking the way ahead. But such formations had never been designed for speed and the natives would simply fall back before the wedge and harry the Romans until their comrades could catch up and throw their weight decisively into the fight.

  'Sir?' Quintillus was looking at him expectantly. 'Shall I give the order to turn the column round?'

  'No. Caratacus will have moved between us and Calleva by now.'

  'Well… what shall we do?' Quintillus stared at the enemy waiting ahead of them. 'Sir?'

  Vespasian ignored the tribune as he wheeled his horse round and raised his arm. 'Halt!'

  The vanguard cohort pulled up and the order was swiftly conveyed down the column. Each century stopped marching and the wagons grumbled to a standstill, then nothing moved on the track. The legate was already assessing the surrounding landscape, and fixed his gaze on the small hillock to their right. He had already decided that the column's best chance of survival was a static defence. If they tried to continue they would be worn down and cut to pieces long before they came in sight of the rest of the legion. If they could inflict enough damage on their enemies they might just demoralise them enough to withdraw so that the column might still reach the legion's fortified camp… Fat chance of that happening, he mused.

  Vespasian drew a breath before he gave the order that would commit him and his men to action.

  'Column… deploy to the right!'

  'Sir?' Quintillus urged his horse alongside Vespasian's. 'What are you doing?'

  'We're making a stand, Tribune. What else can we do?'

  'Making a stand?' Quintillus raised his finely plucked brows. 'That's madness. They'll kill us all.'

  'Very likely.'

  'But, sir! There must be something else we can do… Anything?'

  'What do you suggest? You can't ride for help this time, Quintillus. Not unless you want to chance your arm with that lot ahead of us and make a break for it.'

  The tribune blushed at the barely concealed charge of cowardice, and shook his head slowly. 'I'm staying.'

  'Good man. Now make yourself useful. Ride to the top of that hill and keep watch for Caratacus. Also…' Vespasian wondered how far he should trust to luck after the fates had led him into this trap. 'Also, keep an eye out for that other force the scouts reported. They might be ours.'

  'Yes, sir!' Quintillus turned his horse up the slope and galloped towards the brow of the hill.

  The First Cohort, twice the size of the legion's other cohorts, was marching past Vespasian, following the colour party up the grassy slope. Behind them the rest of the column rippled forward. Century by century they moved along the track until they reached the legate's position, and then turned abruptly to their right. Vespasian was watching Caratacus's blocking force for any sign of movement, but the enemy was content simply to deny the Romans passage along the vale, and sat on their chariots and horses watching the Romans climb up the hill. A more enterprising commander, Vespasian reflected, would have tried to occupy the hill ahead of the Romans, but the Britons' lack of self-control was a defining feature of the way they waged war, and the British commander was probably wise to have his men stand their ground.

  As the wagons turned up the slope their drivers urged their lumbering oxen on with shouts and sharp blows from their canes. The legate watched for a moment, conscious of the slow progress of the vehicles, then he shouted an order.

  'Centurion Cato!'

  'Sir?'

  'Set your men to those wagons. I want them on top of the hill as quickly as possible.'

  Cato saluted and ordered his men to load their weapons into the wagons. Then with a handful of warriors assigned to the rear of each of the eight wagons, the big Celts heaved and strained to move the wagons up the hill. Cadminius and his men took charge of the wagon provided for Verica and did their best to ensure that their king was not jolted. All the while the legionaries marched past them, until only the rearguard remained, tasked with protecting the wagons until they reached the position the legate had chosen. It was back-breaking work that required as much nerve as strength. Every so often the forward momentum would slacken and the big chocks of wood carried in the back of each wagon would have to be quickly dropped into place behind the wheels to ensure that the wagons did not begin to roll back down the slope. Once that started it was almost impossible to stop, and men might be crushed, vehicles might collide and the oxen, harnessed to the wagons would be sent sprawling with a very real chance of breaking their legs. And all under the merciless glare of the midday sun. By the time the incline of the slope began to even out Cato and his men were running with sweat and slumped down beside the vehicles, chests heaving as they struggled to catch their breath.

  'What the hell are you doing? On your feet!' Vespasian shouted at them as he rode up to the wagons. 'Centurion, get your men formed up! I want these wagons drawn up in the centre. Make sure that the king is well protected. I'm holding you responsible for his safety.'

  'Yes, sir.'

  Cato drew himself up and licked his lips, dry – like his throat – from all his exertions. Then, using a combination of orders and harsh curses he ordered his men to manoeuvre the wagons into a dense mass, before the chocks were pounded tightly against the wheels. The sharp smell of the oxen was made worse by the baking heat, but only when the work was finished did the centurion allow his men a small measure from their waterskins. Around them curved the lines of the cohorts, drawn up in a tight circle about the crest of the hill. Down in the vale the Britons had not moved and sat watching the Romans, as still and silent as before. Away along the track towards Calleva, a dark column of infantry was marching towards the hill, throwing up a thin haze of dust that obscured the full extent of their numbers. Still further in the distance was a smudge on the horizon that might be a thin band of cloud, or another force of men on the move.

  Vespasian passed the order for the men to rest and eat their rations. The coming fight might well be their last, but men fought best on full stomachs and the legate was determined to wring every advantage that was available to him out of the situation. They had the high ground, clear lines of visibility and the best training and equipment of any army in the known world. In all this, Vespasian was content. But three and half thousand men, no matter what their quality, would not prevail against many times that number, and every moment that passed revealed more and more of the enemy's strength as their column crept over a distant ridge and headed relentlessly towards the tight ring of legionaries defending the top of the hillock. There seemed to be no end to the enemy forces spilling across the landscape, and the Romans viewed it all with quiet resignation as they chewed on strips of salted pork drawn from their haversacks.

  Macro came over to see Cato, and pulled himself up on to the driver's bench beside his friend.

  Macro nodded towards Verica's wagon. 'How's the king doing?'

  'Well enough. I looked in on him a while back. He's sitting up and complaining about being bumped about.'

  'Think he'll recover?'

  'Does it matter?' Cato nodded towards the approaching enemy column
.

  'No,' Macro conceded. 'Not now.'

  'After all that fighting back in Calleva, we end up here,' Cato grumbled.

  'That's the army for you,' replied Macro, straining his tired eyes as he stared in the same direction as Cato. 'Any idea who that second lot are yet?'

  'No. Too far. Moving quickly, though. Few more hours and they'll be up with us.'

  'Knowing our luck, they'll just be more of those bastards.' Macro pointed towards the enemy column approaching the hill. 'Don't know where they all come from. Thought we'd destroyed their army last summer. Caratacus must have found himself some new allies.'

  'With people like Tribune Quintillus handling the diplomatic side of things, it's a wonder the entire island isn't against us.'

  'Right.' Both centurions turned their heads to look down the slope a short distance to where Vespasian and his senior officers were conferring. The tribune was talking in an animated fashion and pointed back in the direction of Calleva.

  'I expect he's trying to persuade the legate to make a break for it.'

  Cato shook his head. 'Isn't going to happen. Premature suicide isn't the legate's style. The tribune's wasting his breath.'

  'He's proved to be a real asset for our cause all right,' said Macro. 'Things dropped in the shit the moment he arrived.'

  'Yes… yes, they did.'

  'It's almost as if the twat was trying to make a mess of the situation in Calleva.'

  'Well, why not?' Cato replied quietly. 'There was a lot at stake for him. If Verica managed to keep on top of events the tribune would just have had to go back to the general and make a report. I imagine he's been stirring things up as much as he can behind the scenes. Anything to upset the situation, and give him an excuse to use his procurator's powers. Not that he was very successful there. I think he must have assumed that Celtic aristocrats played to the same bent rules as Roman aristocrats. Didn't account for their sense of honour.'

  'Honour?' Macro raised his eyebrows. 'Tincommius didn't seem to know much about honour.'

  'Oh, he did, in his own way. The man wanted his tribe to remain free, almost as much as he wanted to rule it. And he must have been an eager enough student of Roman political techniques while he was in exile.'

  'You've got to hand it to us,' Macro smiled, 'there's not much we can't teach these barbarians.'

  'True. Very true… As it is, the Atrebatans are finished. Plautius will have to annex their kingdom and turn it into a military province.'

  Macro looked at him. 'You think so?'

  'What else can he do? Assuming the general can recover from this balls-up. The loss of a legion is going to stall the campaign for quite a while. And it won't play well in Rome.'

  'No…'

  'But look on the bright side,' Cato smiled bleakly, 'at least Quintillus is going to have to live, or die, with the consequences of his actions.' He waved his hand towards the enemy.

  'I suppose.'

  As they watched, the column started to split in two as Caratacus' forces moved to surround the hillock. The chariots and cavalry in the vale advanced to complete the encirclement and with a last glance towards the distant haze above the still unidentified column closing in from north-west of Calleva, Macro jumped down from the wagon.

  'I'll see you afterwards,' he nodded to Cato.

  'Yes, sir. Until then.'

  04 The Eagle and the Wolves

  Chapter Forty

  As Macro strode off to his century the headquarters trumpeters blasted out the signal to stand to. All across the crest of the hillock men rose wearily to their feet and shuffled into the tight defensive formation that Vespasian hoped would hold off the Britons' assault when it came. The legionaries closed ranks and grounded their javelins and shields in an unbroken ring four ranks deep. Centurions paced along their men, bawling out insults and threats to any man who had committed even the smallest infraction of the rules. An untied helmet or bootstrap, poorly slung sword or dagger – all provided the centurions with an excuse to charge in and give the miscreant the fright of his life. Which was very much to the point. With an enemy massing for the attack, any diversion from thoughts of the coming battle would help steady the legionaries.

  Shortly after noon the enemy made their move. Dense blocks of native warriors surrounded the hill, and worked themselves up into a frenzy of excitement around their gaudy serpent banners as they waited for the order to attack the hated Romans. The deafening war cries and braying of long war horns carried up the slope and assaulted the ears of the legionaries waiting silently on the crest. Then, without a discernible word of command, the Britons rippled forward, walking fast, then breaking into a slow trot as they reached the foot of the slope. Vespasian gauged the distance between his men and the enemy carefully, to judge the best moment to issue his first order. As the gradient increased the Britons slowed down, bunching together as they struggled up the hill to close with the legionaries. When they were no more than a hundred paces away, and some of the men began to look round anxiously at their legate, Vespasian cupped a hand to his mouth and filled his lungs with air.

  'Shields up!' bellowed the legate, and all round the hilltop the red shields with their ornately painted surfaces rose up; metal trims and polished bronze shield bosses glittering in the sunlight. For a brief moment the shields shimmered as each man aligned himself with his neighbour and then the defensive wall was complete and the Romans peered over the rims with grim expressions.

  'Prepare javelins!'

  The men in the front rank took a pace forward and braced themselves, right arm drawn back along the length of their javelin shafts.

  'Ready!…' Vespasian raised his arm in case the order could not be heard above the din of the enemy.

  'Ready!' The centurions relayed the order to their men, and turned back to watch for the legate's next order. Below them, the Britons, howling their war cries and straining every muscle to make sure they smashed into the Roman shields at full pelt, surged forward in a writhing mass of helmets, spiked hair, tattooed bodies and flashing and glinting blades.

  'Release!' roared Vespasian, sweeping his arm down. At once the centurions repeated the order and the men hurled their right arms forward; their effort filling the air with a chorus of strained grunts. The dark shafts of the javelins rose up and out like a thin curtain of water thrown up from a rock cast into a pond. Already the centurions were bellowing out orders for the second rank to pass their weapons forward to replenish the front rank. The iron tips of the first volley passed the apex of their trajectory and dipped down towards the Britons. The foremost ranks of the enemy charge faltered as they beheld the peril. Some sprinted forward, hoping to run in under the volley, others covered themselves with their shields and prepared for the impact. The rest – light spearmen and swordsmen with no armour – either went to ground, or gazed upwards, hoping to duck, or dodge any javelin that fell towards them.

  The volley crashed down in a rolling clatter and thudding that turned to grunts and screams as the javelins found their targets. Then, as if an invisible hand of some giant god had swept through the front ranks of the Britons, scores of them were bowled over and fell to the ground. Other men tumbled over their fallen comrades and sprawled amid the tangle of limbs, shields and the long shafts of the javelins. Then the men behind them forced a way through and charged on up the hill.

  'Javelins!… Ready!… Release!'

  Again, a wave of the Britons was taken down, adding to the confusion of those already lying stricken on the slope. Then the third and the fourth volleys swept into the enemy massing about the crest of the hill and added to the ruin of the Britons' first attack. No longer were they screaming out their war cries. Instead, a deep murmur of shock rippled back down the slope, and at that moment the legate decided to press home his temporary advantage. 'Swords out!'

  'Swords out!' the centurions shouted, and a sharp metallic rasping echoed round the hilltop.

  'Advance!' Vespasian called out, clearly audible in the sudden exp
ectant hush. As the centurions relayed the order the cohorts marched down the slope, shields to the front and swords held at the hip, ready to thrust forward. Before the Britons could recover the legionaries fell upon them, finishing off the enemy injured and then battering their way into the mass of troops milling beyond the carnage caused by the javelins. At first some of the Britons tried to resist, but they were too disorganised to stop the Roman advance. And as soon as they were cut down, or fell back, any spirit to carry the charge up the hill crumbled. The initiative had passed wholly to the defenders, and now it was their turn to attack. The legate ordered his trumpeter to sound the charge. Urged on by the curses and cries of encouragement from the centurions the legionaries threw themselves at their foes, using their broad shields to smash the tribesmen down, and thrusting their short swords into the packed ranks before them.

  The enemy broke, turning down the slope in their desperation to get away from Romans and running back into their own lines, adding to the confusion and panic until the entire force was fleeing down the slope. From his vantage point, Vespasian saw in the vale at the base of the hill a small group of richly adorned nobles. As the attack disintegrated, the largest of the nobles, a tall man with fair hair, immediately began to send his companions forward to rally their troops. That, Vespasian decided, must be Caratacus himself, and the legate was surprised that the king of the Catuvellaunians had been foolhardy enough to risk such a frontal assault. It was not his usual carefully considered style of waging war. But there was no time to dwell on the enemy's mistakes, lest the legate should start to make mistakes of his own. The Roman counterattack had done its job and now there was the danger that the legionaries might get carried away.

  'Sound the recall!' Vespasian ordered, and shrill brass notes blared down the slopes. Regular battle drills proved their worth as the men pulled up, reformed into their units and began to climb back to their initial positions. The legate glanced round at the bodies littering the crushed grass of the hillside and was relieved to see only a few red tunics amongst them. As the legionaries picked their way back through the tidemark of destruction wrought by their javelins they leaned down to recover any undamaged weapons that might be reused when the enemy dared to attack again. Most of the iron javelin heads had bent on impact, or the wooden pegs that bound them to the rest of the shaft had been shattered. But some were still intact and had to be retrieved to deny them to the enemy. As soon as the six cohorts had returned to their starting points their centurions hurriedly turned them about and reformed the units into an unbroken ring around the wagons on the top of the hill.

 

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