The Zealot

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by Simon Scarrow

Cato turned away and strode back into the village to rejoin his men, and once he had disappeared between the buildings Miriam gave full vent to her tears with a low shuddering moan.

  Bannus and his Parthian allies had not deployed any scouts to mask their movements. Instead they marched directly towards the fort, in full view of Cato and his men. Cato smiled grimly to himself. If Bannus was trying to cow them with the size of his force, then he was succeeding admirably. By Cato’s estimate, they were confronted by over three thousand men, perhaps five hundred of them mounted, and most of those would be Parthians, deadly with bow and arrow and skilled swordsmen if it came to a hand-to-hand fight. The enemy column had been easy to locate under the dense cloud of dust that rose up in its wake. At the rear of the column was a small baggage train, with a handful of carts just visible in the dusty haze, although it was impossible to determine what they were carrying. The column advanced at a measured pace, not hurrying to battle, but confident that it could traverse the land with impunity.

  As soon as he had estimated their number, and noted the extent of their equipment and weapons, Cato quickly etched the information into the wax on a tablet he took from his saddle bag and called one of his men over.

  ‘Take this back to the prefect. Let him know that at the time of this report the enemy were about twenty miles from the fort. At their current pace they should not arrive before tomorrow evening. Got that?’

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  ‘Then go.’

  As the man galloped away, kicking up a thin trail of dust behind him, Cato saw some of the outriders of the enemy column turn and gesture towards the small party of Romans, but no one rode out to chase them away and for the rest of the day they rode ahead of Bannus and his men, being sure to give themselves plenty of room to escape any sudden forays by the Parthian cavalry. As night fell, the enemy column halted. They managed to find enough fuel for only a small number of fires, since firewood was scarce in the barren landscape. Cato did not permit his men to light a fire. It would be dangerous to advertise their presence so openly. Instead, he waited until it was dark, and then moved position across the front of the enemy’s line of advance, to the other flank, in case Bannus decided to try to surprise the Roman scouts who had been scrutinising his movements. Then, after his men had dismounted, and a watch had been set, Cato rolled into his blanket and tried to find a comfortable patch of ground to sleep on as the temperature dropped to a freezing chill.

  * * *

  At first light the next day, Macro rode out of the fort to inspect the work his men had carried out. The holes that they had been digging the previous afternoon had been completed and presented a dangerous obstacle to charging cavalry. Behind the pits was the second line of defence. The men had sown a broad perimeter with the four-pointed iron caltrops that had been brought out from the cohort’s stores. The spikes would pierce the hooves of any horse, or the boots or bare feet of any attacker who plunged heedlessly towards the Roman line, crippling them instantly. Once past the second line of defence only the ramparts of the fort would stand in their way. Macro offered a quick prayer to Fortuna and Mars asking that the enemy would not have brought many assault ladders or battering rams with them. If they had then it was a only a matter of time before the superiority of their numbers decided the result of the coming battle.

  The air was still chilly and Macro shivered as he completed his inspection and headed back towards the fort. As he neared the gate he noticed a rider approaching from the north and reined in, straining his eyes to try to identify the man. No Roman, to be sure, with the swath of cloth covering his body and head. Macro’s spare hand shifted to the handle of his sword as he twitched the reins and turned his mount towards the approaching rider. Evidently the sentries had at last seen the man as well, and boots thudded along the rampart as the duty century turned out. Macro frowned at the sloppy watch-keeping. The sentries should have spotted the rider long before Macro. Someone was going to be on a charge for that, Macro decided.

  Suddenly the rider was waving his hand at Macro as if in greeting, and a moment later he pulled aside his veil and shouted. ‘Centurion! It’s me! Symeon!’

  Macro relaxed his sword arm and let out his breath in a sigh of relief. He raised his hand and returned Symeon’s greeting, and urged his horse forward towards the approaching guide, as Symeon carefully picked his way through the defences.

  ‘You’ve chosen a poor time to visit us,’ Macro said ruefully.

  ‘Is there ever a good time?’ Symeon laughed then gestured towards the men busy setting up the caltrops. ‘Come, Centurion, tell me: why have you laid out all these trinkets around your fort?’

  ‘Bannus is coming. We expect him to arrive before the walls by nightfall.’

  Symeon sucked in his breath. ‘How could he have grown so strong, so quickly?’

  ‘He’s found some new friends. The Parthians have sent him help.’

  ‘Parthians?’ Symeon’s expression darkened. ‘Bannus is a fool. What does he imagine Parthia will do if Rome is ever forced from this region? He is blinded by his hatred of the Kittim. Judaea, Syria and Nabataea would all fall to Parthia.’ He grasped Macro’s shoulder. ‘We must stop Bannus! Right here!’

  ‘Easier said than done,’ Macro said wearily. ‘He’s got us outnumbered. The Governor of Syria has abandoned us. I’m not sure we can hold Bannus off.’ Macro paused as a thought occurred to him. A desperate thought, to be sure. ‘Not unless we get help. How soon could you ride to Petra?’

  ‘I could leave at once, Centurion. It’s two days’ hard ride. Why?’

  Macro smiled. ‘I need to call in a debt.’

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  ‘Well, there they are.’ Macro scratched his chin as he squinted into the distance. The sun was low in the sky and his eyes watered as he made out the enemy. Two miles away a large party of horsemen were riding over a fold in the land. They reined in and seemed to be observing the fort in turn. ‘They won’t be able to do anything tonight. They’ll make camp, post pickets and get a good night’s rest.’

  ‘That sounds like wishful thinking, sir,’ Cato responded quietly. ‘If I’m any judge of the situation I’d say that Bannus will want to crush us as swiftly as possible.’

  ‘And why’s that?’

  ‘As far as he’s aware, we would have sent for help the moment we knew that he was making for the fort. If he’s going to rouse the rest of the province then he’ll need to offer them proof that Rome can be beaten. If he has to give up the attempt on Bushir, then I think his support will melt away quickly enough.’

  ‘But the chances are that there won’t be any help coming. Not from Longinus at least.’

  ‘Yes, but Bannus doesn’t know that, sir. As far as he’s concerned, he’s got six or seven days before a relief column turns up. That means he’s going to have to move fast to take the fort.’ Cato thought for a moment and continued. ‘He’ll be counting on the threat from Parthia to stop Longinus sending any overwhelming force in response to the situation here. Bannus will hope that with Bushir in his hands he can attract enough recruits to counter any troops that Longinus eventually sends his way.’

  Macro looked at Cato. ‘How can you know all that?’

  ‘Just thinking it through from the enemy’s point of view, sir.’ Cato nodded to himself. ‘Seems to make sense. In which case I think we shouldn’t take any chances. Bannus may even make an attempt on the fort tonight.’

  ‘Let him try.’ Macro smiled as he thought of the ground that had been prepared around the fort. Any attempt by the enemy to reach the walls under cover of darkness was going to bring them right on to the obstacles that the cohort had prepared. He indulged himself for a moment, imagining the frustrating delays and injuries Bannus would have to endure. Then his expression hardened. ‘All the same, you may be right. I’ll have two centuries on the wall at a time.’

  ‘I think that would be prudent, sir,’ replied Cato. ‘There’s one other thing.’

  ‘Yes?’
r />   ‘That business about letting Postumus and Scrofa return to duty.’

  ‘We need every man who can hold a sword.’

  ‘Maybe, but I still don’t trust either of them. Those bastards are bound to betray as the moment our backs are turned.’

  ‘How can they betray us? They’re in the same situation as the rest of us. They fight for their lives, or they get massacred by Bannus. They’ll fight.’

  Cato was silent for a while, then sighed. ‘I only hope you’re right, sir.’

  Macro bit back on his frustration. Cato should not be worrying about Scrofa and Postumus at a time when his mind needed to be concentrating on more important issues. He cleared his throat and turned towards his friend. ‘Would you like me to have them arrested again?’

  ‘What?’ Cato frowned. ‘No, I think not, sir. How do you imagine that would look to the men? The prefect doesn’t know whether he’s coming or going. That’s what they’d say. So we’re stuck with Scrofa and Postumus on the strength. I don’t suppose they can cause too much trouble in the reserve.’

  The two officers had been posted to command a cavalry squadron each. These were being held back from the walls, ready to reinforce any weak points in the defences. That had been Macro’s decision.

  Macro rubbed his hands contentedly. ‘Even if Bannus tries a direct assault on the walls, he shouldn’t get very far without siege equipment. I think we’ll get through this without too much trouble, Cato. It’s not as if they’re going to starve us out. We’ve provisions for two months for the men and a month for the horses. And if we eat the horses, then we can last for a while yet. The cisterns are full to the brim so we won’t be short of water. It’s those bastards out there I almost feel sorry for. I doubt Bannus will be able to keep ’em fed for long. And they’ll be short of a drink.’ Macro nodded towards the reservoir, some way off from the fort. The surface of the water was broken by the carcasses of dead sheep and goats that Macro had ordered to be dumped into the reservoir once the fort’s cisterns had been filled.

  ‘We just have to hold them off long enough to make his peasants feel hungry and homesick,’ Macro concluded. ‘Then, once his support has melted away, we’ll get out there and hunt him down. Once Bannus is nailed up, these Judaeans will get the message that there’s no point in defying Rome.’

  ‘I hope you’re right,’ Cato replied. He gazed back towards the distant horsemen. Behind them the head of the enemy column crawled into view over the low ridge and slowly spread on to the barren plain in front of the fort. Thousands of men, and in amongst them, horses and pack animals. The dust that hung over the growing horde filtered the fading sunlight into a glowing red hue that pooled like blood against the paling sky, and Cato felt a cold thrill of fear grip his spine and make him shiver. Macro noticed the sudden tremor in his friend.

  ‘You must be tired. Once the first watch is over, make sure you get some rest. That’s an order. I’ll need you in good shape over the coming days.’

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  Cato was grateful that his friend had misread the gesture, and bitterly reproached himself for letting his fear show in such an obvious manner. If Macro could see it, then so could the men of the cohort, and Cato mentally winced at the impression of weakness he imagined some of the men would see in the officer who had only recently joined the Second Illyrian. Cato glanced at the men spread out along the wall on either side of the gatehouse. A few of them were talking quietly as they watched the enemy approach, but most just stared across the sand and in most cases their expressions were unreadable. Some looked quite calm as they appraised the strength of the enemy they would be fighting. A few of the others fretted, giving away their inner anxiety through a variety of tics as their thoughts were wholly absorbed by the approach of danger: fingers rhythmically rapping the bronze trim of a shield, or the handle of a sword; the tapping of a booted foot, repetitive licking of lips and other gestures that Cato had seen before previous actions.

  He forced himself to look upon the approaching enemy again. He tried to imagine how those men would be feeling. Most of them were simple peasants, provoked into this fight by the ceaseless hardship and injustice of their lives. That would embolden them for a while yet, but they lacked training, experience and the confidence of professional soldiers, like the auxiliaries of the Second Illyrian cohort. What were they thinking as they tramped across the dusty plain, and saw the thick walls of Fort Bushir, with its squat towers at each corner and over the gates? Wouldn’t they feel a twinge of fear, for all their superiority in numbers? Cato certainly hoped so, for their sake as well as his own. There was no satisfaction, let alone any glory, to be had from killing peasants. It was a dirty, thankless and profitless task that would only add to the misery of the people of Judaea. If they were defeated, yet more fuel would be added to the simmering anger and hatred towards Rome that dwelt in their hearts. That was all that Rome would win if Cato, Macro and the other men managed to hold the enemy at bay. But if Bannus won, Cato reflected, the example of Bushir would sweep through the province. A multitude would swell his ranks and no Roman garrison would be safe between Egypt and Syria. And what then? From what Cato understood of these people, there would be no peace. No unified independent nation of Judaea. The inhabitants were simply too divided by class and religious faction to work as one. In that case, it would be only a matter of time before Judaea was broken apart by civil war and then consumed by another empire whether that be Rome, again, or Parthia. As Judaea had always been consumed by empires throughout history.

  Cato smiled as he discovered that he felt sorry for the downtrodden peasants marching towards him.

  Bannus marched his army up to within half a mile of the fort before he halted and set up camp as darkness closed in. The sky was clear, and as the orange hue of the setting sun’s afterglow faded the stars pricked out brilliantly in the heavens above. The sounds of the enemy carried across the sand to the fort and if he strained his ears Cato could hear snatches of laughter and singing between the shouted orders. One by one, fires were kindled and lit and bright pools of light sprang up across the desert, each illuminating a dense ring of humanity clustering about it as night gripped them in its cold embrace.

  Macro waited a while, to make quite sure that the enemy was settling for the night, before he ordered the units that were not on watch-keeping duty to stand down. The men tramped down from the wall and sombrely made their way back to their barracks. Some would find sleep easy enough. Others would continue in the agitated state of anticipation that Cato had observed as they stood and watched the approach of the enemy. At length Macro beckoned to Cato and they returned to the prefect’s quarters for a meal with the other officers. Scrofa and Postumus sat as far from the cohort’s commander as rank permitted and kept their eyes lowered, refusing to meet the gaze of either Macro or Cato. The mood was subdued, even though Macro had ordered his housekeeper to bring out the best jars of Scrofa’s remaining stock of wine. Conscious that his men were looking to him, Macro made himself appear calm and unflustered by the presence of the enemy. He even attempted a few ribald jokes with some of the officers, and ended the evening with a toast to their inevitable victory. The officers responded with forced enthusiasm and then the dinner party broke up as they returned to their rooms at the end of each barrack block.

  ‘Well, that was a storming success,’ Macro muttered as the last of them left and only Cato remained, picking at the dates in the bowl in front of him. ‘Might as well surrender the fort to Bannus right now and be done with it.’

  ‘They’ll fight hard enough when the time comes, sir.’

  ‘Oh? What makes you think that, my esteemed veteran friend?’

  Cato looked up. ‘They haven’t got any choice. It’s fight or die.’

  ‘So what’s new?’ Macro grumbled. ‘I tell you, Cato, if that lot were legionaries instead of auxiliaries the spirit would be different. They’d be thirsting to get stuck into Bannus and his mob.’

  ‘Maybe they would feel t
he same, if Scrofa and Postumus hadn’t got to them. It’s a question of leadership. They’d been badly commanded for months before you took over. You’ve had too little time to return them to battle-readiness.’

  ‘Maybe.’ Macro reflected. ‘Perhaps the first attack might put a little bit of iron back into them.’

  Cato smiled. ‘I hope not. A wound is the last thing they need.’ Macro winced at his friend’s attempt at humour. ‘It’s not a laughing matter, Cato. Our lives depend on it.’ He snorted. ‘The fate of the bloody province depends on it. So no stupid quips please. Not unless we’ve had a skinful of wine first, eh? Even then …’

  ‘All right then, sir. No more jokes.’

  ‘Good.’ Macro was silent for a while, deep in thought. Then he suddenly turned to Cato. ‘How do you suppose Vespasian did it?’

  ‘Did what, sir?’

  ‘Prepared his officers for battle. You remember, back in the Second Augusta, whenever we were about to go into a fight, the legate would find a few words for us, make a toast, and we’d all head back to our men raring to go? How did he do that?’

  Cato recalled their former commander, the stocky frame, the thinning hair crowning the strong-featured face. The steady, deep voice with which Vespasian could equally charm and lambast his men. It was hard to define what made the legate the kind of man you’d fight to the death for. Maybe it was the fact that you believed that he, in turn, would fight to the death for you. Whatever the quality of leadership was, Cato concluded, it was clear that some men possessed it and many more did not. Macro was one of the former; he just had a different style from Vespasian’s.

  Cato smiled. ‘I can’t answer that.’

  ‘Great. Thanks,’ Macro responded sourly.

  ‘Don’t fret, sir. You’ll do well enough. I’d follow you to the ends of the earth.’

  Macro looked at him with a surprised expression. ‘You mean that, don’t you?’

  ‘Of course, sir. And when these men get to know you better, they’d do just the same. Now that we’ve a battle on our hands they’ll see the quality of their new prefect soon enough. Maybe that’s what Vespasian had.’

 

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