06 The Eagles Prophecy

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06 The Eagles Prophecy Page 18

by Simon Scarrow


  ‘Oh, shit.’ A marine close by Cato shook his head. ‘Did you see that? Poor bastards . . .’

  Cato was already casting his gaze over the other ships, searching out Macro’s. The Trident had passed through the pirate fleet unscathed and was already struggling to turn round and seek out an enemy to close with. Elsewhere, another bireme had been rammed, the shock of the impact breaking the yardarm of its attacker. But the pirates had their oars out in an instant and as they furiously backed away from their victim the sea rushed into the shattered hull and a moment later the overloaded vessel also capsized. Cato turned back to the Horus, still plodding towards the retreating trireme of Telemachus.

  ‘What the hell is wrong with the prefect?’ Felix slammed his fist down on the side rail. ‘Can’t he bloody well see what’s happening?’

  ‘He knows all right,’ Cato replied quietly. ‘He just thinks it’s a justifiable sacrifice.’

  ‘Sacrifice? It’s going to be a fucking slaughter. Look! There goes another one.’

  Cato stared in silence as the pirate ships continued to cut through the ships on each Roman flank. Only a handful of the biremes had managed to strike back. One had pinned a pirate vessel with its crow and the marines were already pouring across the ramp and dropping on to the pirates, striking them down with desperate savagery. A short distance away another bireme had managed to ram an unwary pirate ship and the latter’s decks were already awash as it settled into the sea. Every other Roman ship was either engaged or struggling to close with the pirates.

  Optio Felix was right, Cato decided. It was going to be a slaughter, unless someone acted. He took one last look at the flagship, still pursuing Telemachus, then turned and pushed his way through his men, and ran aft towards Albinus. Minucius glanced at him as Cato passed, and there was what looked like contempt in the older man’s eyes.

  ‘Turn us round!’ Cato called out.

  The trierarch stared at him blankly, as if he had not heard the order. Cato clambered up the steps to the aft deck and thrust his arm out towards the flank where Macro and the others were battling for their lives. ‘I said, turn us round.’

  ‘No.’ Albinus nodded forward. ‘There’s been no signal from the flagship.’

  ‘Forget the flagship. Look over there. Our comrades need us. Right now.’

  ‘We haven’t had orders.’

  ‘Fuck the orders! Our ships are being cut to pieces. If we don’t act now - right now - we’ll lose them all.’

  ‘But-’

  ‘Turn the ship around. That’s an order!’

  For a moment the two officers stared at each other, and more and more of the marines and sailors turned to watch them, as they became aware of the crisis. At length, Albinus nodded his head.

  ‘All right, Centurion. But I’ll want it in writing that you gave the order.’

  Cato sneered at the man. ‘You can have it in writing, if we survive. Now, do it.’

  Albinus turned to the steersman. ‘Turn to port, hard over!’

  ‘Aye, sir!’ The steersman hauled on the oar shaft, straining every sinew of his brawny arms, and the water churned under the stern of the trireme. Cato found it hard to restrain his impatience as the bows slowly swung away from the Horus and eventually lined up with the sea battle over a mile away. Glancing round at the other triremes, he saw faces turned towards them, and could even read the surprise in those on the nearest ship. Cato drew his sword and thrust it forwards, pointing out over the bows of the Spartan. He cupped his spare hand to his mouth and bellowed across the water.

  ‘Follow us! For pity’s sake, follow us!’

  At first there was no response, then the trierarch called out orders to his men and Cato’s heart lifted as he saw the bows of the trireme start to turn after the Spartan. Two more of the large warships altered course, steering towards the other flank, but the remainder held their course in the wake of the flagship.

  ‘Better than nothing,’ Cato muttered wryly. Then he turned to Albinus.’Steer right at the middle of that lot. Pick out any target that looks promising.’

  ‘Where are you going?’

  ‘We have to lighten the ship.’

  Albinus nodded. ‘All right. But do it quickly!’

  Cato ran back down the deck and sought out Centurion Minucius. ‘Get your men down into the hold. I want anything that’s portable brought up on deck and dumped over the side.’

  ‘Dump it?’ Minucius raised his eyebrows.’But we’ll need that later.’

  ‘There’s not going to be any later if we don’t dump it.’

  Minucius shook his head. ‘You don’t have the authority.’

  Cato stared at him, eyes wide and glaring.’Yes I do. Now carry out your orders or I’ll have you taken below and hand your command over to your optio. I mean it.’

  Minucius saluted and immediately started to give the necessary orders as Cato headed towards his men, seeking out Felix.

  ‘Optio!’

  ‘Yes, sir!’

  ‘Take a section. Go below and bring up the slingshot stores.’

  ‘Yes, sir. How much do you want?’

  ‘All of it. Get moving.’

  The optio had served long enough to know not to question orders, however unexpected they might be. He turned to the nearest men. ‘Drop your shields and javelins and follow me.’

  Felix drew back the cover of the forehatch and dropped down below the deck, quickly followed by the others. A short time later they were handing up small sacks filled with lead shot to the men on the deck. Felix’s head popped up through the hatch. ‘Slings as well, sir?’

  ‘What? . . . Yes, why not? Might as well put them to some use while we lighten the load.’

  As the marines began to stack the sacks in the centre of the deck Cato looked aft and saw that Minucius and his men were already heaving sacks of grain and spare sheets of plate armour over the side. A quick glance at the trireme following a short distance behind revealed that they too had realised the need to lighten their ship. Cato nodded his satisfaction and then pushed his way to the thick timber post at the Spartan’s bow. Below him, the bronze mass of the trireme’s ram lifted and plunged into the sea, aiming at the heart of the sea battle being fought out barely a third of a mile ahead.

  Cato scanned the vessels still fighting it out amidst the flotsam, wreckage and bodies littering the surface of the sea. The Trident, which had passed through the enemy, had turned about and charged back into the fight, ramming into the stern of a pirate ship that had already wedged its ram into the side of a bireme. The crews of all three vessels were locked in combat on the deck of the pirate ship and, as far as Cato could make out, the Romans had the upper hand.

  The sound of forlorn cries reached his ears and Cato noticed that there were men in the water directly ahead of the Spartan, Romans as well as pirates. He was on the verge of crying out a warning to Albinus, before he realised that there was nothing that could be done for these men. The trireme was too unwieldy to set a course to avoid the men in the water. As the warship surged into the fringe of the battle, Cato glimpsed the desperate expressions of the men in their path, and saw them frantically swim out of the trireme’s path. Those who were too badly injured to swim fast enough, or who simply clung to debris, could only watch in despair as the bronze ram bore down on them. A handful of men grasping a shattered length of mast were swept from sight as the bow crashed into them with a dull thud, then there were screams as the survivors of the impact swept along the sides of the warship and were crushed by the blades of the oars churning through the sea.

  Cato tried to ignore their cries and glanced round. He looked back at the Trident and froze. A short distance beyond Macro’s ship Cato saw the front of a pirate ship powering forward under its oars. As the crew of the Roman vessel became aware of the danger their shouts of alarm carried clearly across the water. The marines were still fighting aboard the enemy they had managed to pin with their crow. But now they hesistated and looked back over the deck of their ow
n ship. With a triumphant roar, the pirates they were fighting surged back at them.

  ‘Over there!’ Cato shouted over his shoulder as he pointed towards Macro’s ship and thrust out his arm. ‘Steer over there!’

  Albinus relayed the order to the steersman and the Spartan, a little more nimble now that she had shed some weight, slewed round towards the three ships still locked together, and the fourth rushing in to finish off the Trident and her crew.

  ‘Ready your slings!’ Cato shouted to his men and pointed out the target. ‘Aim for that bastard on the far side! You men, give the slingers some space!’

  Only two hundred paces separated the Spartan from the ships locked together when the pirate vessel slammed into the side of Macro’s ship. The grinding, splintering crash filled the air as the Trident recoiled under the impact, the shock tearing the rigging apart. The mast splintered and crashed down on to the deck moments later. The collision knocked every man off his feet in the three ships that had been locked together, and there was an instant of silence before they recovered, scrambled back to their feet and continued fighting. The pirates aboard the ship that had rammed the Trident launched their grappling hooks over on to the Roman deck and began to haul the vessels closer together as a boarding party crowded the foredeck, brandishing their weapons as they waited impatiently for the moment to spring on board the bireme and wipe out her crew and marines.

  Cato turned away and filled his lungs. He stared down through the grating on the trireme’s deck to the dim faces of the oarsmen below. ‘Come on! Faster, you worthless bastards! Faster!’

  The pausarius increased the rhythm and with the oarsmen straining every sinew of their muscles the Spartan leaped forward, closing down on the tangle of ships ahead. Suddenly Cato was aware that the bows were swinging away from the ships and he felt a surge of cold fury as he turned towards Albinus and began to raise his fist. Then he realised the trierarch’s intention was to pass round the stern of the Trident and take the pirate ship in the side.

  They were well within slingshot range now and Cato bellowed an order to his men.’Slingers! Loose! Let ‘em have it, lads!’

  The air was filled with a whirring of slings and then lead shot zipped out across the sea in a low arc, before striking down into the pirates massing on their foredeck. The chorus of sharp cracks and thuds, and cries of pain were clearly audible to the men on the Spartan, and they responded with a ragged cheer of cruel satisfaction before more shot flew across and struck down yet more men, some falling helplessly into the narrowing gap between the hulls of the two warships where they were crushed moments later. But Cato had no time to observe any more. The trireme was already slewing round the stern of the Trident and there ahead of them lay the defenceless beam of the pirate ship. Some of her crew gazed helplessly at the large warship speeding towards them. Others, with more presence of mind, ran from the side and sought cover as more slingshot rattled across her deck. As the gap between the two ships rapidly closed, Cato found that he could now look down on the enemy and he gritted his teeth as he waited for the collision.

  At the last moment, Optio Felix turned and saw his centurion leaning across the bows of the trireme. He leaped forward, grabbed Cato by the arm and hauled him back as hard as he could. As both men tumbled back on to the foredeck the worn planking leaped up with a great grinding crash and sent men tumbling all across the deck. The impact hurled Cato forward and he cracked his helmet on the bow strake. He gasped at the searing pain, before he looked round at his men. Most were picking themselves up, snatching up their weapons and moving towards the boarding ramp. But there were several casualties: men hurled forward and knocked senseless, others with broken limbs, and a steady chorus of groans and cries of pain from below deck where the oarsmen had been thrown from their benches.

  Felix was already on his feet and he shoved a shield towards Cato. ‘Here, sir. On your feet now.’

  While Cato shook his head to try to clear it of the blurring pain the optio was thrusting men towards the crow. The trireme had struck the pirate ship at an angle, and aft of the mast Minucius already had his men hurling grappling hooks across the gap to try to draw the ships closer together. Cato stood erect and, raising his shield, he approached the prow cautiously and looked down. The ram had crushed the enemy’s timber hull and penetrated six or seven feet inside. Water gurgled and bubbled as it poured in through the breach. He sensed a blur from his left and ducked down just as a light javelin glanced off the angle of his shield with a sharp crack. The men on the foredeck of the pirate ship had also recovered from the impact and now a handful turned to face their attacker as the rest hurried aboard the Trident. The pirates’ trierarch must be fairly cool-headed, Cato realised. He saw that the first fight had to be won before he could afford to take on the crew of the trireme. As Cato glanced at the men dropping down on to the deck of the Trident he saw Macro and a score of his men fighting for their lives in a tight circle about the mast.

  ‘Get that boarding ramp moving!’ Cato shouted over his shoulder.

  As Minucius’ men hauled on the grappling lines the trireme gradually swung in towards the pirate ship. The marines on the crow’s tackle heaved and the pivot groaned and squeaked as the ramp swung out over the side of the Spartan, across the surface of the water and then its shadow fell across the deck of the pirate ship.

  ‘Let go!’ Felix yelled.

  As soon as the men released their grip on the tackle the heavy iron spike under the ramp swung down and pierced the planking with a splintering crash. Cheering, the marines swarmed on to the ramp and ran across to meet the enemy. A few javelins and arrows flitted towards them, but hammered into the protective wooden hoardings on either side and injured no one. Felix was standing by the near end of the ramp, thrusting men along it.

  ‘Go! Go! You lazy bastards! Or there’ll be none left for you! Go!’

  Cato drew his sword and pressed himself in amongst the stream of men crossing to the enemy ship. At the far end of the ramp there was a short jump down on to the deck, then he raised his shield and held his sword ready as he looked around. Several of his men had rushed towards the bows, hacking and thrusting at any pirate that stood in their way. Cato turned towards the stern. A small party of men stood there, heavily built and well armed.

  ‘You there!’ Cato called out to the marines who had been immediately behind him on the boarding ramp.’Follow me!’

  They trotted steadily towards the stern, slowing to pick their way over the tangle of fallen rigging. The gratings had been thrown open and as Cato glanced down he could see that the oars had been abandoned as the crew had armed and thrown themselves at the Romans aboard the Trident. Now there was the glint and glimmer of water sloshing through the bilges as the sea poured through the breached hull. Ahead of them the group of men closed ranks and hefted their round shields towards the Romans. There was no time for formations and tactics, and Cato filled his lungs and roared, ‘Get them!’ before lowering his head, leaning into his shield and throwing himself at the pirates.

  On either side his men charged home and the air was filled with grunts and shouting and the scrape and clatter of sword blades. Cato’s shield slammed back towards him as one of the pirates charged with a savage cry of rage. Light glittered off the side of a blade rising above Cato and he saw the man draw back a heavy falcata to slash it down and through Cato’s helmet. He threw his sword up and parried the blow with a jarring clang and, before the man could recover, Cato slammed the pommel of his sword into the snarling features of the pirate’s face. The man’s head jerked back with a grunt and flecks of blood flickered into the air from a deep gash across his forehead. At once Cato snatched back his arm and slashed his sword into his enemy’s face, the edge cutting through the bridge of the nose and into his eyes. With a scream the pirate stumbled back against the side rail. Raising his shield, Cato shoved him over the side and turned on the next pirate.

  A short, stocky man with blond hair spiking out under a leather skullcap sto
od in a crouch, weighing the Roman centurion up with narrowed eyes. Then he raised the point of his sword and crept a step closer. Cato tensed up, ready for the man to explode into an attack. Instead, the pirate suddenly stopped, frowned and glanced down at his chest where the bloodied point of a sword tip had pierced his leather jerkin. His legs folded under him and he pitched forward. Behind him stood a marine, grinning with satisfaction as he yanked his blade out of the pirate’s back. Cato opened his mouth to thank the man, but a glittering whirl scythed through the air, and right through the marine’s neck, sending the head flying several feet to where it thudded on to the deck. Still swinging the sword in a wide arc the pirate jumped in front of Cato with a triumphant snarl.

  Cato threw up the edge of his shield and the blade slammed into the metal trim, sending sparks flying, and throwing Cato back against the sternpost. As the man recovered his sword and stepped back a pace, Cato’s eyes swept round and to his horror he discovered that he was the last Roman standing at this end of the pirate ship. All the men who had followed him were sprawled in bloody heaps on the deck, amongst the bodies of their enemies. The two pirates had the centurion to themselves.

  The man with the long sword whirling overhead was dark-skinned and fat. A few feet from him stood another pirate; thin and swarthy. He wore scale armour and carried a buckler and light, curved blade that dripped blood on to the sun-bleached planks of the deck. Cato’s eyes flickered from man to man as he crouched low to receive the first attack. The thin man shouted an order, and the long sword sliced through the air towards Cato’s head. Dropping his knees, he hunched down and the edge of the sword cut deeply into the sternpost. So deeply that it was wedged in place and the pirate grunted savagely as he tried to wrench his weapon free. Before Cato could take advantage of the situation the younger pirate sprang forward, his light blade whirling in a flurry of attacking strokes that Cato parried desperately. When his fat comrade was clear of the Roman and had snatched up another sword, the young pirate stepped back, breathing hard.

 

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