Hero of Rome trt-1

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Hero of Rome trt-1 Page 15

by Douglas Jackson


  ‘Welcome to my lair,’ she said laughing.

  It was a cave.

  A narrow fissure cut into the rock formed the entrance, which widened almost immediately into an area as large as a legionary’s eight-man tent. It must once have been inhabited, because niches and shelves had been cut into the rock walls where she had placed oil lamps that now turned their surroundings into a diamond-studded grotto. Tiny fragments set into the stone glittered in the lamplight like unquenchable sparks of blue, green, red and a dozen other colours he had no name for. The atmosphere, almost religious, gave him a sense of wonder magnified a hundred times by the presence beside him. Smoke from the oil lamps disappeared into the darkness above and he had the impression of a great endless void. But his eye was drawn to the back of the cave, where two large fur rugs lay on the earth floor.

  ‘I wanted us to be warm,’ she whispered. ‘Do you like it?’

  Yes.

  Her dark eyes stared back unflinchingly into his and she wiped a tear from her cheek, and raised her lips towards his. The kiss seemed to last an eternity; with every passing second it grew in passion and intensity so that when they finally parted they were both breathless. Now Maeve’s eyes filled with something that might have been fear, but quickly faded to shocked surprise at the new emotions burning like wildfire deep within her body.

  ‘Come,’ she said, and led him by the hand towards the furs.

  Thus far, the day had been Maeve’s to command. Now, by unspoken consent, it was Valerius, the more experienced, who took control. A shudder went through her as his fingers plucked at the tie of her cloak and when he had completed the task she lay back entirely still, uncertain of what she should do or not do. Wanting what was to come, but, at the same time, half fearful of it.

  Valerius sensed her hesitation. Very gently, he reached down and pulled up the hem of her dress, exposing the length of her ivory-pale legs. She immediately understood what was wanted of her and raised her bottom to allow him to take the rumpled wool underneath her body, then sat upright and raised her arms, so he could remove it altogether.

  When she was naked he looked down on her with something close to wonder. Her breasts were full and rounded, with tiny, hard nipples of the most delicate pink. Between them hung the golden boar amulet and it somehow added to the eroticism of the moment. She had a narrow waist which flowed into hips that were seductively wide, but tapered again into long slim legs. He reached out to touch her and then recoiled as if he had been burned. Her smooth skin resonated with life and heat. Impatient, Maeve took his hand and placed it on her breast, then drew it down her body with agonizing slowness that made her draw in her breath sharply.

  ‘Please, Valerius.’ She tore at his tunic and when it was gone grasped him to her, desperate for him now. But Valerius would not be hurried. He fought her grip, knowing how much better it would be for her if she would allow him to be patient.

  Much later, when he gave her that which she had coveted, but feared, her cry of joy split the air.

  There were other times, but when he thought of the cave it was always the first he remembered.

  Afterwards they held each other drowsily in the silky warmth of the furs, well satisfied with what had gone before but full of anticipation for what was still to come.

  ‘My father would kill you if he knew,’ she whispered sleepily. Valerius opened one eye and looked into hers. She wrinkled her nose in a way that made him smile. ‘Well, my father would try to kill you if he knew. And you would have to let him. I could never love a man who killed my father.’

  She talked of her world, and the way it had changed. Camulodunum had been the capital of the Trinovantes and the family of Lucullus ranked high in the royal line, but that was before Cunobelin, father of Caratacus and king of the Catuvellauni, had usurped Trinovante power and installed himself as their king. Lucullus’s father had been spared and exiled to the estate on the hill while Cunobelin took over his palace.

  ‘When the Romans came my father thought to win back his family’s inheritance,’ she said sadly. ‘But nothing has changed.’

  He asked her how women like Boudicca and Cartimandua could hold sway even over great warriors and she shook her head at his naivety. ‘ Because they are women,’ she said. ‘And because, even if Cartimandua is a traitor, they are wise and brave and have the aid of Andraste.’

  ‘Andraste? I do not know that name.’

  ‘The goddess,’ she explained, as if to an infant. ‘The Dark One who holds power over all men and women and breathes fire in her anger and turns the air to sulphur.’

  He told her about Rome and he loved how her eyes opened in amazement at his descriptions of the palaces and the basilicas, the great temples and forests of pillars topped with statues of gold, and the way the whole city looked as if it was on fire when the sun shone in a certain way. ‘I would like to visit Rome one day,’ she said quietly, and he answered, ‘You will.’

  She asked him what it was that made the Roman legions so powerful and he explained about the siege weapons he’d seen used against the Celtic hill forts: catapults and ballistas, siege towers and even something as simple as ladders which the tribes had never thought to use for war. She listened intently, frowning when some fact eluded her, and he loved her all the more for the obvious effort she was making to understand him.

  Occasionally, Maeve would be away visiting some needy tenant or pregnant estate worker’s wife when Lucullus invited Valerius to visit the villa on the hill, ostensibly to discuss business matters or the politics of the province. But these days would inevitably degenerate into marathon drinking bouts which the old man viewed as a challenge to the depth of his wine cellar and the breadth of Falco’s stock.

  During one wine-soaked afternoon Lucullus allowed the clown’s mask to slip.

  The principia, extended, refurbished and unrecognizable now as the old legionary headquarters, had just been dedicated to the god Claudius with a lavish ceremony which the little Trinovante had funded. But it was its function, as they sat well rested and on their second flask of one of his best Calenian vintages, that drew the sharpest barbs of Lucullus’s bleary-eyed bitterness. For the principia stood at the centre of a vast bureaucratic network of officialdom that regulated every facet of British life; which weighed, measured and valued everything that was grown, made or reared under its all-seeing eye.

  ‘You Romans…’ You Romans! This from a man who worked every day and used every deception to try to become one. ‘You Romans think you can rule everything in the world, tree and field, bird and beast, man and woman. Everywhere there must be order. Everything must have its place and its price. Everything must be on a list. It is not our way. Not the way of my people.’ He shook his head to emphasize his point. ‘Before you came we did not have things like this,’ he waved an arm distractedly round the room, ‘but we did not need them. We lived in huts with mud floors, drank beer from clay pots and ate rough porridge from wooden platters, but still we had more than we have now. We had our honour.’

  He paused as if expecting an answer.

  ‘You are surprised that I, a Celt, talk of honour? Yes, Valerius, I know that even you, whom I think of as my friend, consider me a mere Celt. What was I saying? Honour? Yes, honour. You would be amazed at how much talk there is of honour in places not so far from here. We have lost much, but some people’ — he said the words with that particular inflection that meant they were a significant ‘some people’ — ‘some people believe it is not too late to restore it.’

  By now, Valerius was wishing the Trinovante would stop lecturing him and call one of his slaves to bring more of the excellent wine from his cellar. But Lucullus in full flow would not be halted by anything less than a bolt of lightning.

  ‘Your roads and your fortresses are like a boot across our neck and your temple is sucking us dry. Did you know that the cost even of being a member of the Temple of Claudius is ten times more for a Celt than for a Roman citizen? Ten times! If I told you how much I borr
owed to secure the priesthood your head would fall from your shoulders. It is we Celts who must pay back the loans taken out to build it. We who pay for the sacrifices and the upkeep and for that great golden whore of Victory they have placed upon its pediment.

  ‘While we sit here in this,’ the arm was flung out carelessly once more, ‘there are men, Valerius, great men, proud warriors, who live in the ruins of their burned-out huts and watch their children starve, because they once had the temerity to stand up for what was theirs. And there are other men, who were once farmers and wanted only to keep what they had, who now have nothing, because you,’ an accusing finger pointed disconcertingly straight into Valerius’s face, ‘stole everything they had: their land, their cattle, their women. Everything.’

  Valerius shook his head. ‘No. Not me.’ Did he say it or only think it? It did not matter. Lucullus ignored him in any case.

  ‘It could have been different. Did you really think you could grind into the dust with a single blow a people who have survived for a thousand years? Did you believe that men whose courage and prowess with sword and spear was their whole life would simply disappear after one defeat? You could have used their skills. You could have taken them into your service; they would have fought even for you. Better, even, that you had killed them all or sold them into slavery, but no, you did not do any of that. Instead, you did the worst thing possible. You ignored them. You left them to sit in their huts, to see the bones in their little ones’ faces become more obvious every day, and the breasts of their wives grow empty and dry… and to hate.

  ‘They are out there now,’ he said, and the message in his voice was matched by that in his eyes. He had seen them, these Roman-haters, and they frightened him.

  XX

  Saturnalia passed and the snow vanished before the Celts celebrated the rebirth of life in secret ceremonies at their festival of Imbolc. Valerius hadn’t forgotten the concerns of Castus, the Londinium camp prefect. By now he was a regular, if reluctant, attendant at meetings of Colonia’s ordo and, recalling Lucullus’s words and Cearan’s warning of the previous autumn, he wondered aloud if it was worth checking on who attended the celebrations.

  ‘It does not matter who attends, they will all be drunk,’ quaestor Petronius said dismissively. ‘And when they are drunk they play their childish fire games. You are young, tribune, and must leave such concerns to those who understand them best.’

  The exchange was quickly forgotten. Valerius had other things on his mind.

  Soon, probably in a matter of weeks, his orders would come through to return the First cohort to Glevum. When he had completed his duties at the legionary headquarters it was certain the legate would send him directly to Londinium… and a ship to Rome. The thought sent an unfamiliar shiver of panic through him. Maeve’s face continued to haunt him and the need to be with her tantalized his nights. He realized that, whatever happened, he couldn’t leave her behind.

  A few weeks after Imbolc, he set out north on the Venta road to inspect the work his legionaries had carried out and check for any damage that might have been done by the winter frosts or by the floods that followed the great thaw. He took a patrol of twenty, led by Lunaris, and they rode from Colonia’s north gate at dawn on a day when the wind tore in from the coast with the sting of a cracked whip and puffy white clouds scudded like invasion fleets beneath a canopy of leaden grey. Lunaris, marginally more comfortable now on a horse docile enough even for him to control, hunched down in his saddle and wrapped his cloak tightly about him, roundly cursing the British weather.

  ‘I froze all winter and now the damp’s eating into my bones, rotting my straps and rusting my armour: why did we ever come here? The people hate us, even the veterans in Colonia resent us being here, eating their rations, drinking their wine, chasing their women and requisitioning everything we want, knowing that the procurator will take six months to pay.’

  Valerius smiled at an old soldier’s grumbles. If they’d been in Cappadocia or Syria, Lunaris would have been complaining that it was too hot, the wine was sour and the women wouldn’t leave him alone.

  ‘We’re here because we’re soldiers and we go where they want us to go. This is where the Emperor wants us to be. Enjoy it while it lasts. You’ll be warm enough come summer, when the Black Celts are chasing you round their mountains. How far to the next bridge?’

  Lunaris checked his map. ‘About six miles. That’s not what I hear.’

  ‘What isn’t?’

  ‘That the Emperor wants us in Britain. The word is that we’re pulling out soon.’

  Valerius turned to stare at him. ‘Where does that come from?’

  ‘You know how it goes. The procurator’s clerk tells the quartermaster that maybe we don’t need to stockpile so much equipment. The quartermaster tells the armourer to use up the iron he’s got. The armourer tells the smith we won’t be needing so many pilum points and then it’s all round the province. Suddenly we’re moving out. Probably rubbish.’

  Valerius nodded, but he remembered the letter which was still in his chest in the townhouse.

  ‘Why did you bring me?’ the duplicarius asked, shifting uncomfortably in his saddle.

  ‘Because you have a nose for trouble and an eye for everything else. The last big repair is just short of Venta and I thought we would call on our old friend Lord Cearan.’

  ‘You think there’ll be trouble?’ Lunaris’s hand instinctively sought his sword hilt.

  Valerius shook his head. ‘I doubt it. But I have a feeling there are things going on we should know about. In any case, Petronius as good as told me to mind my own business, which is a good reason not to.’

  It was four days before they reached Venta Icenorum. Valerius took time to ensure every repair had been properly carried out and to arrange for any winter damage to be reported. He also inspected the auxiliary unit manning the signal station which flanked the road between Colonia and the Iceni border. The wooden tower, with its pitch-soaked beacon, stood twenty feet above the flat, waterlogged countryside, within a circular rampart topped by a palisade and surrounded by a six-foot ditch. Its garrison consisted of eight surly, unshaven Tungrians who were as alert as he might have expected after three months watching the same piece of road in the dead of winter. Their commander, a decurion with a hangdog expression, made it clear he thought they’d been abandoned and begged him to send food and proper winter clothing.

  ‘Though it’s too late for poor old Chrutius there.’ He pointed to a man with bandaged feet and a pair of makeshift crutches. ‘Stood guard all night in a blizzard an’ lost six toes to the blight.’

  Valerius asked if the man had noticed anything unusual in recent weeks.

  The decurion smiled bitterly. ‘Only you.’

  Valerius reined in when he saw the smoke from Venta’s cooking fires dusting the northern horizon and Lunaris drew up beside him. ‘Why are we so interested in these people?’ the duplicarius asked. ‘Fifty miles from rest and rations, and one lot of tame Celts looks just like another to me.’

  Valerius shrugged. ‘We’re here anyway. It’s only right that we should pay our respects to Cearan. In any case, I suspect he knows we’re coming.’ He pointed to a small group of horsemen by a clump of trees about a mile away. ‘I wouldn’t call the Iceni tame, but they are fortunate. They fought with Caratacus against Claudius and might have ended up like the Trinovantes and the Catuvellauni, with their young men slaves and their lands confiscated. But that’s where the luck came in. Their king, Antedios, died in the fighting and by the time of the surrender he’d been replaced by Prasutagus, who very quickly condemned Antedios as a rebel and asked for Rome’s mercy.’

  ‘Clever.’

  ‘We didn’t have enough troops to garrison this far north and fight in the west, so Claudius, who was also clever, agreed to make them clients of Rome. Ten years ago they rebelled again, or at least some of them did, when Scapula tried to disarm the tribes permanently. But old Prasutagus blamed it on a minority amon
g the western Iceni and the legions had enough on their hands with the Dobunni and the Durotriges, so they were left alone again.’

  ‘The lucky tribe, then?’

  Valerius smiled. ‘Or their god favours them.’

  As Valerius kicked his horse into motion, Lunaris frowned and touched the silver phallic amulet at his neck. ‘Which god would that be?’

  ‘Andraste.’

  The road to Venta Icenorum ran along the west side of a winding stream edged by drooping willows and tall poplars. The town itself lay forty paces beyond the far bank, a strange mix of the old and the new. The usual Celtic community consisted of scattered roundhouses surrounded by fields and linked by walkways and drove roads. At first sight, Venta could have been a provincial Roman town. It lay, part hidden, behind a wooden palisade and its streets appeared to be laid out on the familiar grid pattern, with a gap in the roofscape which suggested a central forum. Only on closer inspection did Valerius realize that the houses, with their pitched roofs, were constructed of wattle and daub and that where there should have been tiles there was thatch. Lunaris looked uncertainly at the river, which was in spate and foamed, a sickly reddish brown, just below the trees, but Valerius pointed to a wooden bridge a little way upstream. Where Cearan waited.

  ‘It is an honour to welcome you to my home.’ The Iceni sat comfortably on the back of a horse considerably larger than the British ponies with which Valerius was familiar. He managed the not inconsiderable feat of bowing gracefully from the waist and hanging on to a curly-haired child of about three who wriggled in the crook of his right arm. ‘My grandson, Tor,’ he explained, lowering the boy to the ground, where he scuttled off to chase a foraging chicken among the bushes by the gateway. ‘It is also unexpected.’ The smile didn’t falter, but there was a definite question in Cearan’s pale blue eyes.

 

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