The tribune nodded tersely, putting both hands on his hips and forcing a note of civility into his voice, while the messenger lurked almost unseen in the darkness.
‘Good evening, Procurator. Are you joining us for dinner?’
Maximus laughed, and again Scaurus was left with the feeling that there was something he was missing.
‘No, Tribune, I won’t be joining you.’ He stepped around Scaurus, calling out over his shoulder as he continued on down the road, his last words floating away across the darkened landscape. ‘I wish you a pleasant evening, although I have little doubt you’ll find the entertainment to your taste. Unless, of course, all those stories we hear about soldiers preferring masculine company are true. .’
Watching the procurator vanish into the darkness, Scaurus shrugged and turned back to his guide, gesturing with a hand for the man to continue on his path. The messenger led him into a walled courtyard, across a wide, paved garden lit by a dozen blazing torches and decorated with tastefully planted trees and shrubs, and up to the front door of the large villa sheltered behind the high walls. He hammered at the door, which was promptly opened by an imposingly rotund slave who beckoned the tribune inside. Closing the door behind them, the man turned back to him with a slight smile.
‘Good evening, sir. Might I take your sword, before I escort you through into the dining room?’
Scaurus shrugged and eased the weapon’s baldric over his head.
‘I’ll keep the dagger if it’s all the same to you. A man needs something to eat with. And take care with that blade, it’s been in my family since the blessed Claudius was on the throne.’
The portly servant nodded, taking the weapon with the appropriate reverence and then ushering the tribune through a door and into an empty room with two couches set out on either side of a low table, on which stood a wine bottle and two beakers.
‘The lady will join you shortly, sir, I believe.’
‘The lady?’
Whether deliberately or not, the slave had withdrawn too quickly to have heard the question, leaving a bemused Scaurus to pace around the room with one hand on the dagger’s hilt, and a distinct feeling that he was being misled in some way. Glancing at the murals that decorated the walls he frowned momentarily, then raised an intrigued eyebrow as he realised exactly what it was that they depicted.
‘Good, aren’t they? I had to pay an absolute fortune to find an artist with the skill and experience to get them right, but it was worth every denarius if the reaction of the men who see them is any indication of their value. I particularly like that one, where he’s mounting her from behind. Do you see the way her back’s arched? You can almost hear the cries of pleasure as he grinds her into the couch.’
Scaurus nodded, turning to face the speaker with the distinct feeling that his face was a little pinker than might be desirable. Theodora was carefully posed in the doorway on the opposite side of the room, leaning against the door frame with her elegant chin resting on her raised hand and the other hand at her side, gently stroking at whatever gauzy, semi-transparent material had been used to make her gown. He bowed deeply, using the moment to gather his thoughts.
‘Ah, madam. I must admit you have me at a disadvantage. Your messenger led me to expect a dinner party, but your rather exotic clothing indicates that the gathering might be a more select group than I’d imagined?’
She laughed, the sound light and breathy in the room’s silence, and stepped away from the door with a calculating look on her face.
‘The confusion is purely intentional, Tribune. I wanted you all to myself, but I wasn’t sure how you would have responded to an invitation that would appear to be aimed at seeking favouritism with you.’
He raised both eyebrows, putting his hands on his hips.
‘Which is exactly what this is, I presume.’
Theodora smiled with genuine pleasure.
‘Oh yes, of course it is, and how clever of you to see through me. Mind you, I was also hoping to provoke you to come here dressed up in all that lovely armour. I do so love a man in uniform. I wish my artist were here now, I’d have him paint you just like that, looking all stern and manly. .’ She walked across the room and ran a finger down his breastplate. ‘And shiny too. All my birthdays come at once. If only you’d worn your helmet.’
Scaurus smiled.
‘If only I’d known.’
‘Ah, but half the fun of these things is the surprise, wouldn’t you say? Now, what happens if I undo this?’
She pulled at the fastenings that secured his breastplate, her delicate fingers unpicking the hooks.
‘Let’s have all that bronze off, shall we? It’s all very well for intimidating civilians, but it’s not really evening wear, now is it?’
His smiled broadened.
‘I must warn you, madam, that I’ve had a fairly hectic day, and the timing of your invitation allowed me no opportunity to bathe. I may be a little. . ripe?’
She finished teasing open the tight knots securing his breastplate’s two halves, lowering the heavy bronze armour to the floor before bending close and inhaling.
‘Marvellous! That, my dear tribune, is the smell of a man. And presumably down here we’ll find. .’ She darted a hand beneath his tunic and rubbed at his rapidly swelling penis. ‘Exactly what I’m looking for!’ She stood, laughing into his expression of delighted astonishment as she tugged him towards the door by the now thoroughly engorged member. ‘This way, Gaius. I may call you Gaius, I presume, given that I’m just about to mount this rather impressive specimen? Let’s get that first desperate coupling out of the way, shall we? I don’t want you leaking all over my furniture in anticipation when a few minutes of vigorous enjoyment can calm it all down until later.’
‘Later?’
She smirked knowingly at him, knowing she literally had him in the palm of her hand.
‘Oh yes. After a nice long dinner, with enough wine to dull your sensitivity whilst not destroying your ability, during which we can have a chat about how you’re going to defend the Raven Head mine against these beastly barbarians, I’ll be expecting you to impale me on this a few more times. Until, to be perfectly frank, there’s no more impaling left in you.’
3
Julius was busy describing the many and varied faults of the day’s gate sentries to them in the most graphic and violent terms possible when the message from Annia reached him. He had already left the two tent parties in question in no doubt whatsoever that another such failure in their duties would result in significant loss of pay, not to mention a certain flogging.
‘And no, the fact that the boy came back safe doesn’t make it any fucking better, because he shouldn’t ever have been able to fucking well leave unnoticed, and nor should the other lad have got into the fucking camp in the first fucking place!’ He took the message tablet that was being held out to him by a visibly wilting soldier from his own First Century, and scanned the contents before turning back to the waiting man with a wave of dismissal. ‘Tell the lady I’ll be there shortly. And fetch enough of the evening meal for six people. If it’s not at the doctor’s tent when I get there you can join this lot on punishment duty and get your spade dirty cleaning out the latrines.’
The soldier swivelled on his heel and ran, having been on the butt end of his first spear’s evil temper more than once, while Julius turned his attention to the nearest of the current gate sentries, his sharp eyes quickly finding a pair of men clearly struggling to restrain their mirth at their comrades’ predicament. Raising his voice to a parade-ground roar, he bellowed at them loudly enough for half the camp to hear.
‘And I don’t know what you two are laughing at, because according to that message the other lad got back into the camp with our boy just now, and once again not one of you stupid bastards noticed! I want the entire guard paraded in front of my tent when you come off duty, no exceptions!’
He was delighted to discover that by happy coincidence the night guard’s duty centuri
on was Otho, the most foul tempered of his officers, who had long since been christened ‘Knuckles’ by soldiers and centurions alike for his pugilistic tendencies. In a short and vigorous discussion he suggested that the veteran officer might do well to sharpen up the camp’s guards, using both tone and language he judged were sufficiently terse to result in a rich crop of black eyes and fat lips. Still shaking his head in angry disbelief at his men’s failure to detect two children sneaking around the camp in broad daylight, he stamped off to the doctor’s tent where, the tablet written by Annia had informed him, he was invited to dine as long as he provided the evening meal. Poised to walk through the tent’s doorway, he was met by the lady in question who put her hand on his chest and pushed him firmly away from the opening. Her look was enough to make him hold his tongue long enough for his woman to put her face close to his, her features set in the expression that he’d come to understand signified that she meant business. Her whispered warning was delivered in what he’d taken to describing as her ‘command voice’, when he was sure that she wasn’t listening.
‘I knew you were coming this way because I could hear you beasting anyone that crossed your path! We’ve a guest, Julius, and if you barge in shouting the odds about the “fucking sentries” in your usual manner he’ll be out and away before you’ve stopped to draw breath. I’m not sure exactly what happened to the boy, but what little I do know is that some soldiers tore his life apart, as a result of which he’s terrified of a uniform — any uniform — especially one filled by a self-important centurion with the temper of a prize bull who’s been shut away from the cows for too long.’
Julius watched in disgust over her shoulder as the soldier tasked with fetching the party’s dinner took grateful advantage of his first spear’s unplanned delay by hurrying into the tent with a large pot, presumably filled with whatever the man had been able to beg, borrow and in all likelihood steal from his fellow soldiers. He opened his mouth to protest, only to find a hard finger pressed against it. ‘So if you want to be warming your feet in anything better than your cloak tonight, then you’ll put a smile on that big ugly face and follow me into the tent as if the lad’s presence is the best thing that’s happened to you all day. Won’t you?’
Opening his mouth to agree with alacrity, given that he’d learned from grim experience not to take the lady’s favours for granted, he found himself not only silenced but utterly amazed by her parting comment as she turned back to the tent.
‘And besides, it’s about time we found out just how good a father you’re going to make, isn’t it?’
‘Whatever it was she told him, he went as white as a legionary’s arse, according to the soldier he sent to run for his dinner. And when the evening guard reported for a kicking as ordered, rather than ripping them all a new one he just sent them away with no more than a warning not to let it happen again. My mate in the Seventh Century said that the poor bastard looked as if he’d been smacked with an axe handle. And now look at him. .’
Morban and Arminius turned as one man to look at Julius as the first spear strode down the line of the Fifth Century’s tents, his expression that of a man with a deep preoccupation. The standard bearer raised a knowing eyebrow at his companion.
‘I’ve closed the book on whether she’s with child or not, and I’m offering two to three on a boy, evens on a girl. Let’s see if we can get some confirmation, eh?’
He snapped off an improbably precise salute, which Julius ignored other than casting a brief sardonic glance at the standard bearer.
‘Good morning, First Spear, sir!’ Julius’s lack of reaction to his artificially breezy greeting only provoked Morban to continue his salutation. ‘It’s a beautiful clear day, sir, perhaps we’ll get that wall. .’
He fell silent as the first spear stopped in his tracks, turned his head to stare expressionlessly at him, then rotated his body and stepped forward to put his nose only inches from Morban’s face. When he spoke his voice was a low growl.
‘Good morning, Standard Bearer. Yes, it is indeed a good day for building a wall, and yes, we will indeed be completing the initial construction today. As to any questions you may have for me, I’d suggest that this is one of those times when discretion would most definitely be the better part of bravery. Whisper your gossip and lay your odds all you like, but don’t be expecting me to provide you with any encouragement. Now get on fucking parade.’
Julius turned away from the standard bearer, who pursed his lips in silent comment but otherwise sensibly kept his mouth firmly closed. The first spear turned back to Arminius.
‘Centurion Corvus?’
The German pointed down the line of tents to where the medical wagon stood beside Felicia’s hospital tent.
‘Is with his wife, saying his farewells.’
Julius found his colleague sitting on a wooden chest with his baby son cradled in his lap while Felicia fussed around him.
‘Are you ready?’
Marcus nodded, standing and handing Appius to his wife, kissing her gently before turning to follow the first spear from the tent. They walked down to the section of the camp where the cohort’s cavalry detachment had taken up residence, finding five horsemen standing by their mounts, ready to ride, with Marcus’s captured mare in their midst. Julius nodded in return to their leader’s salute and to the tracker Arabus who seemed to have been drafted into the party.
‘Morning, Silus. Have you worked out how you’re going to carry out the tribune’s orders?’
The grizzled decurion pointed to a rough map sketched in the earth before them.
‘According to the miners there’s only one road down which an invader would be likely to make his approach to the mine. The same track we marched up runs on past the end of this valley and away to the north, eventually joining up with another valley, which contains a stream that the locals call the Gold River, aptly enough, which in turn feeds the Marisus, deep in hostile territory. If you were aiming to lead a warband out of the plains and bring them here, then I doubt you could do very much better than to lead them up the banks of the Marisus, turn up the Gold and follow it all the way up its valley. That many men will need a lot of water, and the stream will also provide reliable navigation. I plan to ride down the Gold’s banks, with the centurion’s scout here to look for any tracks they might have left, and if we find nothing of note then I’ll set up a watch post on the valley side and wait to see what turns up. When it’s evident that they’ve arrived we’ll ride back and warn you. Just make sure you leave us a way back inside the wall, eh?’
Julius nodded grimly.
‘You’d best be careful not to outstay your welcome once the barbarians make their appearance. I’d rather find out they’ve arrived some other way than watching your heads bobbing about on spears.’
Silus turned away, jumping into his mount’s saddle.
‘Don’t worry about us, we’ll give the unwashed hordes the appropriate measure of respect. You’ll have plenty to keep you busy, I expect, what with finishing off the defences and choosing a name for the impending arrival?’
Julius nodded without any change in his expression.
‘Indeed. I was discussing that very subject with the baby’s mother-to-be last night, and the two of us were pretty much agreed to call the baby after you. .’ He waited for a moment, allowing the idea to sink in and then, before Silus could muster any reply, shook his head sadly. ‘Until Annia pointed out that any child called “Nosey Arsehole” was going to be at a disadvantage in life.’
Silus threw back his head and laughed uproariously.
‘Harsh but fair, First Spear, harsh but fair. Come along then, Centurion Two Knives, let’s get you mounted and be on our way. I want to be tucked up in our hiding place before the sun gets too high. And since the subject of our first spear’s impending arrival is clearly forbidden, we’ll work out what to call that greedy little mare of yours instead.’
The assembled centurions of the two Tungrian cohorts snapped to att
ention as Julius stalked into the morning officers’ meeting. Some of them stared fixedly at the hills behind him, not daring to meet his eyes, while others, men that had known him longer and in one or two cases had previously outranked him, met his stare with hard, impassive eyes.
‘Gentlemen, the rumour’s all over the camp so let’s lay it to rest. Yes, I am going to be a father. At some point in the future when we’re all staggering drunk in celebration of beating off the barbarians and toasting those of us that don’t survive the experience, you’re all welcome to take the piss as much as you like, as long as you don’t mind having your many and varied shortcomings exposed in return. For now though’ — he looked around at his officers, taking stock of their grim, bearded faces — ‘I couldn’t give a shit about any of that. We have one objective today, to get that wall built high enough and strong enough to resist a determined attack by thousands of gold-crazed barbarians. The tribune is away making sure that the legion centuries on the slopes to either side of the wall will have their defences in place, but we all know that if they’re going to come at us it has to be straight up the valley. Yes, they’ll send patrols round the flanks but they’ll get no joy there. It will all come down to a straight fight to get over the wall, and as far as I’m concerned, we have to have it ready to defend by the time darkness falls tonight.’
He looked around at his officers with a hard stare.
‘So it’s time to stop the soft treatment. We need those miners working like animals today, not taking this as an opportunity to get some sunshine on their backs, so here’s a direct instruction for all of you. The first man you see slacking off, soldier or miner, you take your vine stick to him and you make it clear to all of them that the next one will be getting a tickle from this. .’ He held up the whip, allowing its braided leather straps to hang free. ‘And if you have to, then you send the next man you have to pull up to me. I’ll be setting up a whipping post by the main gate so that anyone who gets to ride it does so in full view of the rest. Now get to it, and don’t let me down.’
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