A Gladiator's Dilemma

Home > Fantasy > A Gladiator's Dilemma > Page 7
A Gladiator's Dilemma Page 7

by Oliver Ma

Heracles”told Zing to kill Eric, but Zing refused.

  Eric whispered weakly, “He’s going...to kill us ...both...if you

  don’t. ”

  Zing held his sword over Eric but couldn’t bring himself to

  strike it on Eric. Zing tried to imagine Eric as Vermin, or just a

  tree, but he couldn’t. The gladiator who was lying on the ground,

  waiting for his blade was his life-long friend.

  Before Zing could react, Eric grabbed Zing’s blade and

  plunged it into his own heart. But in his misery, he missed his

  heart completely.

  An agonized cry from Eric brought Siri to her senses. She decided

  to do something.

  She rushed to the body disposer and pleaded himnot to brand

  Eric. The body disposer, dazed by her beauty, was transfixed. He

  left red hot iron with Siri and lumbered toward Eric. Blood had

  been pumping out of Eric’s body, leaving a pool of blood on the

  ground.

  All the Roman citizens were cheering. Sure, they loved Eric

  because he had been very brave in the group fight, but everyone

  knewhe was going to die.

  Eric was dragged off the arena.

  Siri held Eric in her arms, sobbing,“No, Eric, no...”

  She had her servants carrying Eric onto a chariot and driving

  to her house.

  Eric was lying on Siri’s bed, coughing blood. She knew that

  even with her greatest skills, she couldn’t stop the flow of Eric’s

  stomach acid as it inched closer and closer to Eric’s heart.

  Weakly, Eric asked Siri to bring his sword. Siri obeyed. Eric

  plunged it into his own heart. His body went limp.

  Eric Aldon was dead.

  Ten months after Eric’s death, Zing received the wooden

  sword of freedom. His head bowed down. He was excited, but sad.

  Finally his gladiator life was over. Surviving 10 fights, he was now

  an honored Roman citizen. He could see Siri waving at him in the

  crowd, his opponent dead on the ground.

  In a brief blackout, he remembered the day when the crowd

  was shouting like they were now, and Eric was lying on the

  ground, more dead than alive. With a roar, he ripped off the armor

  he had worn for so long, and threwhis sword away. He walked out

  the arena, leaving his fans stunned.

  Siri was waiting for Zing just outside.

  “Zing, let’s go to Carthage. ”

  “What for, my homeland was going to be crumbled away, and

  the Romans would sack it.”

  Siri said,“To bury your friends. I have promised Eric to bury

  themin Carthage.”

  Death and Taxes

  “Sure, ”tears streaming down Zing’s face.

  The two arrived at Carthage one month later, carrying Eric

  and Jan’s bodies with them.

  Eric and Jan were buried by the dock, where they would see

  the first merchant ship that came once again to the glorious city,

  but no ship ever came again.

  It had been a full year after the defeat in the hand of Rome.

  The city was no longer the bustling city it had been before the ethic

  war. No merchants came any more, few ships docked in its

  beautiful harbor, and no more parades held in the city square.

  But the Carthaginian still believed that they had a chance.

  They overthrew the council of 300, who partied and drunk every

  day. They tried to start the trading systemand trained their soldiers

  day by day, made weapons night by night.

  When Eric and Jan were buried, Carthage had just invaded

  and successfully conquered Nubian, another part of the original

  empire. There was hope in the city.

  But in the third Punic war 21 years later, the Romans sacked

  the once magnificent city of Carthage again, burned its beautiful

  walls and structures to the ground, massacred its citizens, sold the

  survivors into slavery and sewed salt into its charred soil.

  Siri and Zing were visiting the graves of Eric and Jan. One

  Roman fisherman stopped at the dock and said hello to them.

  Looking at the ruin at the foothill, Zing asked, “Why did the Romans

  destroy all this?”

  The Roman said, “I am sorry, my friend. If Carthage had not

  been destroyed, Rome would have been.” They looked at the spectacular

  sunset in silence. The color of the peaceful sea was as scarlet

  as blood.

 


‹ Prev