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The Road To Rome flc-3

Page 15

by Ben Kane


  Soon the Greek pronounced the absence of a fracture. He cleaned the wound with acetum and placed a neat line of metal clamps in the skin to close it. Each one delivered a stabbing pain as it was inserted. After this, a rough linen bandage was wrapped around Romulus' head. Dressed in an old tunic, he was discharged from the valetudinarium. There were countless other casualties who needed the surgeon's care more than he did. Pulling Romulus to his feet, the legionary frogmarched him to the camp gaol, a wooden stockade by the main entrance. There he was flung inside. As he sprawled to the floor, the door slammed shut. Romulus lay motionless for a moment, letting the misery of what had happened wash over him.

  'Romulus?' Petronius' voice was very close.

  Romulus managed to roll on to his chest and look around. There were seven soldiers in the prison, but his friend was the only one who'd come over. Petronius ushered him to a corner away from the rest. They sat down on the hard-packed dirt together.

  'I'm sorry,' said Romulus in a low voice. 'You shouldn't be here. It's all my fault.'

  Petronius sighed heavily. 'I can't say that I wasn't angry when it happened.'

  Romulus began to speak, but the other raised his hand.

  'The way those bastards turned on me like a pack of dogs disgusted me. Made me think, because I was like that once,' said Petronius ruefully. 'Yet I'm a citizen just like them. How was I supposed to know that you were a slave? Didn't seem to matter a damn, though. Not one cared that you've proved your courage to me and the whole Twenty-Eighth. Slaves have fought for Rome before too, against Hannibal.' He sighed again. 'No longer, obviously.'

  Romulus waited.

  Petronius locked eyes with him. 'I owe you — my comrade — more than I owe either those bastards from the Sixth or that centurion.'

  This acceptance negated all the rejection Romulus had received earlier. He and Petronius were blood brothers; they had the same bond as he and Brennus. Overcome with emotion, he could do no more than extend his right arm. Petronius reached out and they gripped forearms in the military manner.

  'Do you know what happens next?' Romulus asked.

  'Caesar and the Sixth will be shipping out to the coast as soon as the mopping up is over, and taking us with them,' replied Petronius with a scowl. 'Apparently there's unrest in Italy. Veterans unhappy with their lot, according to our new comrades.' He jerked his head at the other men.

  'What did they do?' asked Romulus.

  'Broke and ran during the battle,' said Petronius disgustedly.

  'Surprising they haven't been crucified.'

  'I guess Caesar needs plenty of fodder for his games,' Petronius answered.

  They exchanged a look of dread. A month or so later, Romulus, Petronius and the other prisoners travelled to the southwest of Asia Minor, where Caesar's fleet was waiting. Forced to march in chains behind the wagon train, their treatment on the way was brutal. As well as eating the dirt left in the air by the Sixth's passage, they were given hardly any rations or water. If any of them so much as looked at one of the guards, a merciless beating followed. It paid to lay low and say nothing, which is what the two friends did. They shunned their companions, preferring their own company to that of cowards who had fled the battlefield. Impossible to ignore, however, were the visits of the black-haired veteran and his comrades. Every day without fail, insults and derogatory comments filled the air. The ordeals lasted until their tormentors grew bored and left, or the officer on duty sent them on their way.

  Fortunately for Romulus, his concussion had improved quickly. His wound had healed well too. After ten days, the surgeon visited the stockade to remove the metal clips, leaving only a long red scar which was visible through Romulus' close-cut hair. It would serve as a permanent reminder of a rhomphaia. Not that his life would be long, he thought bitterly, staring at the fleet of triremes that would carry them to Italy. Thus far, the routine of marching and pitching camp had maintained a weird air of normality to their existence. The ships brought reality hammering home. So too did the lack of any communication from Fabiola. Even if she had heard his shout and sent word to him, he knew that no one would bother to search the noxii for one man called Romulus. Their sighting of each other in Alexandria now seemed cruel.

  He and Petronius had not been denying their fate, though. In addition to the twenty miles they'd had to travel each day, both had done as much exercise as they could, running on the spot, press ups and wrestling with each other. As soldiers, their fitness, or lack of it, could mean life or death. Yet their hard work was a futile gesture, because in their new vocation, that of the noxius, everyone died. It was the whole premise of their presence in the arena. Despite this, the friends were determined to prepare themselves as well as possible.

  Embarking on to the triremes in balmy summer weather, they had an uneventful voyage to Brundisium. During it, Romulus thought often of Brennus and Tarquinius. He and the Gaul had first met the haruspex on the reverse of this very passage, when they had been sailing to war with Crassus' army. How full of hope he'd been then, and what incredible things he'd seen since. Now here he was, returning by the same route, in chains. It felt lonely and unreal — and hopeless. There would be no lingering revenge on Gemellus. No joyful reunion with Fabiola when he reached Rome, just a terrible death before a baying mob. Tarquinius had been right. His road would take him to Rome — but to a miserable end.

  Only the presence of Petronius, sturdy and somehow cheerful, had made it possible for Romulus not to withdraw completely into himself. Reaching Italy also helped to lift his spirits a fraction. Hearing Latin spoken all around for the first time in eight years was a joy, as were the familiar sights of Roman towns. Romulus even took pleasure from the sight of the autumn countryside filled with its latifundia. What was less welcome was people's reaction to the pair and their companions. While the veterans of the Sixth received rapturous applause and garlands of flowers wherever they went, the prisoners were reviled and spat upon.

  After several weeks of this, Romulus was glad to see the walls of Rome at last. Instead of being instantly disposed of, the prisoners were thrown into a stockade for the night while the Sixth prepared itself for trouble. Caesar had a welcoming party to deal with. Rebellious veterans from, among others, the Ninth and Tenth Legions were camped outside the city walls in their thousands. Gossip about the troublemakers had swept the column as it marched north from Brundisium, even reaching the captives. After Pharsalus, a number of legions had been sent back to Italy, where their promised pensions failed to materialise. Disgruntled, they had soon begun to demonstrate, and threatened worse. Caesar would need them to carry the campaign against the Republicans to Africa and they knew it, so the officers sent by Marcus Antonius to quell the mutiny had been stoned from their camps. Even Sallust, a charismatic ally of Caesar's, could not bring the rebels to heel. He had been lucky to escape from them with his life.

  Uncaring that Caesar had returned, the veterans marched on Rome to demand their rights. Armed to the teeth, they were a brooding threat to the Republic's stability. Nonetheless, Caesar had taken the Sixth to within a mile of their position and set up his own encampment. Knowing that they were greatly outnumbered had filled the Sixth with unease, but nothing happened on the first night. Although his own death was near, Romulus couldn't help wondering what the general would do. Incredibly, by mid morning the next day it was all over. The delighted guards told Romulus and the others all about it.

  Accompanied only by a few men, Caesar had entered the rebels' tent lines in the cold of an autumn dawn. Inside, he had climbed the podium outside the headquarters. As news of his presence spread, a great crowd of mutineers gathered to hear what he had to say. According to the stunned men who'd been with him, Caesar had simply asked them what they wanted. A long list of grievances followed, culminating with the demand that all the veterans be discharged. In a neat manoeuvre that totally disarmed them, Caesar promised to release every man from service at once, and to honour their rewards in time. Crucially, he addressed
the rebels as 'citizens' rather than 'comrades', showing them that they were no longer part of his army.

  At once the shocked legionaries had begged their general to have them back, to help win the struggle in Africa. Caesar repeatedly demurred, even starting to leave, but their pleas grew more frantic. Promises were made that he would need no other troops to achieve victory. With masterful reluctance, he had accepted the service of all except the men of the Tenth. It, Caesar's most favoured and rewarded legion, had disappointed him most, so its soldiers had to be let go. With their huge pride in their unit called into question, the Tenth's veterans had demanded that Caesar decimate them, as long as they were taken back into his army. In a final gesture of magnanimity, he had given in, welcoming the Tenth to his bosom like wayward children, and ending the rebellion at a stroke.

  When he heard the story, Romulus' admiration for Caesar soared. For months, Petronius had filled his ears with talk of Alesia, Pharsalus and other victories. In Pontus, he'd seen with his own eyes what Caesar could do, but this quality made him unique. Not only could Caesar lead armies into battle against terrible odds and win, he could lead men like no other. Crassus had been the polar opposite of this, commanding in an impersonal and uncharismatic manner. Even though he had only served under Caesar for a short time, Romulus was glad he had had that experience before he died.

  Once the mutineers had been dealt with, there was no further delay. Caesar headed into the capital to meet with the Master of the Horse and the Senate. The Sixth was demobbed for the moment, its soldiers beating an instant path to the local taverns and brothels. After a few days, they would go home to their families. The prisoners were disposed of the same day too. With a dozen soldiers as escort, the centurion who had pronounced sentence on the two friends led the group into the city.

  Petronius had never seen Rome before, and was amazed by the thick Servian walls, the sheer size of buildings and numbers of people. Romulus, on the other hand, felt a sense of dread as they walked the streets through which he had run errands as a boy. This was not how he wanted to return home. Even the sight of Jupiter's massive temple atop the Capitoline Hill produced only a flicker of joy in his heart, and this small pleasure was drained away by passing the crossroads near Gemellus' house. Despite the financial difficulties which Hiero had told him of, the merchant might still be living there. A dull resentment filled Romulus' belly. He was only a hundred paces from the door of the man whom he'd dreamt for years of killing, and he was unable to do a thing about it.

  Finally they neared the Ludus Magnus, the main gladiator school, and old fear made Romulus' heart skip a beat. It was from this place that he and Brennus had fled, unnecessarily as it turned out. It had been Tarquinius who killed the fiery nobleman, not Romulus. By now, his initial fury at the haruspex' revelation had crumbled to a lingering bitterness at what might have been. It was hard to feel otherwise. Brennus could still have been alive if they hadn't run, and they might both have earned the rudis. Yet Romulus was not naive: underneath lay the knowledge that Tarquinius would have acted as he thought best — and according to the wind, or the stars. Had his accurate divinations not been a comfort through the ordeals of Carrhae and Margiana? After so long together, Romulus knew the haruspex well; he did not think Tarquinius was a man to act maliciously.

  The realisation helped him to square his shoulders as he read what was inscribed on the stone over the main gate: 'Ludus Magnus'. The first time Romulus had seen them, as an illiterate thirteen-year-old, he'd only guessed the two words' meaning. Thanks to Tarquinius, though, he could now read them. It was odd that they were here, thought Romulus. There were four ludi in Rome, yet here he was, outside his old training ground. An ironic smile flickered across his lips as the centurion demanded entry.

  A moment later, their hobnailed caligae echoed in the short corridor which led to the open square within the thick walls. It was mid-afternoon, and dozens of gladiators were engaged in physical training with each other and against the pali, the thick timber posts as tall as a man. Trainers armed with whips walked among them, pointing and shouting commands. With wicker shields and wooden weapons that were twice the weight of the real thing, the fighters danced around each other, thrusting and stabbing. Romulus recognised none of them, and his heart bled. Sextus, the little Spaniard, and Otho and Antonius, two other friendly gladiators, were probably all long dead. It was also likely to be true of Cotta, his trainer. He scanned the balconies for Astoria, Brennus' Nubian lover, but there was no sign of her either, only the menacing shapes of the lanista's archers, watching for any signs of trouble. It was not that surprising that Astoria wasn't around, Romulus thought gloomily. Memor would have sold her to a brothel.

  Romulus' attention was drawn back to the present by other familiar classes of fighter — Thracians with their square shields and curved swords, and murmillones in their distinctive fish-crested helmets. There were even two pairs of retiarii sparring against the same number of secutores, his own former category of hunter. He stopped for a moment to watch. Instantly, there was a sharp prod in his back. 'Get a move on,' snarled one of the legionaries, poking him again with his pilum. 'Follow the centurion.'

  Romulus swallowed his anger and obeyed. Soon he and the others were lined up in front of a familiar figure, one whom he'd never thought to see again. Memor, the lanista. The years hadn't changed him that much. Maybe his skin was a darker shade of brown, thought Romulus, and his shoulders slightly stooped, but the lanista's mannerisms and the way he ordered the gladiators about were exactly the same as before. So was his sarcastic manner. Romulus' stomach clenched. Would Memor recognise him?

  'What have we here?' the lanista drawled. 'Deserters?'

  'Cowards mostly,' the centurion replied. 'They ran away in the middle of a battle.'

  Disapproving, Memor flicked his whip along the ground. 'They'd be no damn good as gladiators then. Why weren't the dogs crucified?'

  'The games celebrating Caesar's recent victories are short of recruits,' growled the centurion. 'They are to be classed as noxii.'

  Memor's lip curled. 'Not my usual line of business, that.'

  Only because there's no money in it for you, thought Romulus sourly.

  'Taking them on would be seen as a favour to Caesar himself,' responded the other.

  At once Memor was all beams and smiles. 'Why didn't you say? It would be my honour to prepare the sons of whores for death. I might even be able to make them perform well.' He gave the prisoners an unpleasant stare. Oddly, it stayed longest on Romulus and Petronius. 'Why are those two here?'

  The centurion snorted. 'One is a damn slave who had the cheek to join the legions.'

  Memor's bushy eyebrows rose. 'And the other?'

  'His fool of a friend. Tried to defend the slave when he was exposed.'

  'Interesting,' said Memor, pacing before the chained men in an appraising manner. His whip trailed after him, its weighted tip drawing a line in the sand. He came alongside Petronius, staring at him like a leopard looks at its prey.

  The veteran met his gaze with contempt.

  'Still proud, eh?' Memor grinned. 'I can soon change that.'

  Petronius had the wisdom not to answer.

  Memor moved to stand before Romulus, who, keen not to be recognised, looked away. But the grizzled lanista grabbed his jaw and twisted his head around, making Romulus feel thirteen years old again. His deep blue eyes met the black pits that were Memor's, and they stared at each other for a long moment. 'Which is the slave?' Memor asked abruptly.

  'The one you're looking at,' replied the centurion.

  A frown creased Memor's lined forehead. 'Big nose, blue eyes. You're strong too.' He let go of Romulus' chin and pulled up the right sleeve of his russet military tunic. Where a slave brand might have been, there was a linear scar, partially obscured by a tattoo of Mithras sacrificing the bull. To expert eyes, however, it was obvious that Romulus had been a slave once. Brennus' excision had been that of a battlefield surgeon, quite unlike the skille
d art of those who specialised in removing brands from wealthy freed slaves, and the tattoo Romulus had paid for in Barbaricum only sufficed to divert passing glances. Memor knew at once what he was seeing. Stepping back, he sized Romulus up. 'By all the gods,' he said, his face colouring with old anger. 'Romulus? Isn't that your name?'

  Resigned, he nodded.

  The centurion looked surprised. 'You know him?'

  Memor spat a violent oath. 'The scumbag belongs to me! Eight years ago, he and my best gladiator got out one night and murdered a noble. Of course the bastards ran away. Disappeared completely, although I heard a rumour they'd joined Crassus' expeditionary force.'

  The centurion chuckled. 'I don't know about that, but he was certainly in one of Caesar's legions.'

  'I was in Crassus' army,' muttered Romulus. 'Thousands of us were taken captive after Carrhae. I managed to escape with a friend some months later.'

  Petronius' and the centurion's faces were the picture of shock. Apart from Cassius Longinus and the remnants of his command, no further survivors from the disaster in Parthia had returned to Rome.

  Memor spun back. 'You and the big Gaul? Where is he?'

  'Not him,' said Romulus heavily. 'He's dead.'

  Disappointment filled the lanista's features.

  With his grief over Brennus' death scraped raw once more, Romulus could still see Memor's mind working. After all, he too had been an excellent gladiator — at only fourteen years old. Now he was a grown man, who had served in the army. An even better prospect. 'Surely this one could return to me rather than being killed off?' Memor asked. He paused, then couldn't help himself. 'He's my property after all.'

  'Don't try your luck. The whoreson joined the army as a slave, which means he's under my jurisdiction until he dies,' snapped the centurion. 'I don't care if he's fucking Spartacus himself. He and his friend go into the arena and they don't come out.'

  There was to be no way of making back the money he'd lost from Brennus' and Romulus' disappearance. Furious, Memor lifted his whip. 'I'll teach you,' he hissed at Romulus.

 

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