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When the Eagle hunts c-3

Page 8

by Simon Scarrow


  The Druid who had killed Maxentius turned his antlered head to. look, then kicked his heels into the flanks of his mount, spurring his beast towards his comrades who were already melting back into the shadows of the forest.

  Vespasian did not linger to observe the pursuit; he ran to the gate and out across the softly crunching snow towards the body of the navy prefect. Behind him followed the men of the Sixth Century, urged on by Macro, who feared for the safety of his commander. But some way short of the body the legionaries hung back, disgust and superstition making them uneasy, for the Druids were held in awe and dread.

  Many of the folk tales heard at the knees of their fathers had featured the dark and sinister powers of the Celtic magicians, and the legionaries were loath to approach too closely. They stood in silence, their breath swirling mistily in the cold air, the only sound was the distant thrum of hooves and crash of undergrowth as the cavalry scouts chased after the Druids.

  Vespasian stood over the torso, lying twisted on its side. Blood still oozed from the severed blood vessels of the neck. Maxentius had worn only a belted tunic, the tattered remnants of which were now drenched and dark. A large leather pouch had been tied to his belt. Biting back the nausea that was filling his throat from the pit of his stomach, Vespasian leaned down and.fumbled with the knot that held the pouch. His fingers trembled as he tried to work the cord free. He was desperate to get away from the blood glistening on the snow, and the awful presence of the prefect's head, scarcely six feet away. Mercifully, the head had rolled in such a way that it faced away from the legate and all he was aware of at the periphery of his vision was the dark, matted hair.

  At last the knot slipped free. Vespasian stood up and stepped hack several paces before he examined the pouch.

  A drawstring held the end closed and in the soft folds only a few lumps indicated that it contained anything at all. He tried not to imagine what the Druids might have left in the pouch, and forced himself to loosen the drawstring. In the dark interior of the pouch he saw a dull gleam of gold and reached inside. His fingers closed on a scrap of cloth and a pair of rings, which he drew out into the sunlight. One was quite small and plain, but broad. Inscribed on the inside, in neat block capitals, was the legend 'Filius Plautii'. The other ring was far more ornate, and bore a large onyx stone on which lay a cameo of an elephant, bone white against the polished background of dark brown. The cloth was finely spun wool, maybe from the hem of a toga. Along one edge ran a thin line of purple dye, the ancient sign that the wearer came from a senatorial family.

  Vespasian suddenly felt very cold, far more so than the late winter morning warranted. Cold and sick, as the connection between the prefect and the contents of the bag registered. He must send a message to General Plautius at once. Carefully he placed the cloth and the rings back in the pouch and cleared his throat. He looked up at Macro.

  'Centurion!'

  'Yes, sir!'

  'Have the body taken back to camp. Take it to the hospital tent. I want it prepared for cremation as soon as possible.

  And make sure that it… he, is treated with respect.'

  'Of course, sir.

  The legate walked towards the gate, head down in silent contemplation as he thought through the awful implications of what he had discovered in the pouch. The general's family were now in the hands of the Druids. The same Druids who were spreading such terror through the border villages and trading settlements of the Atrebates. How had they been taken? The Britons boasted no ships that could overwhelm those of the imperial navy. In any case, Maxentius and his passengers would have been making the crossing from Gesoriacum to Rutupiae, well over a hundred miles from the land of the Durotriges and their Druid allies. A storm must have blown the ship far off course. But why hadn't the prefect made an attempt to reach the shores of the Atrebates, rather than let himself be swept so far down the coast to territory ruled by enemies of Rome? For an instant Vespasian cursed the prefect for his folly, before such unworthy feelings for a man who had died so terribly made him feel guilty. Perhaps Maxentius had tried to beach his ship on friendly soil after all, but had been prevented from doing so by the wildness of the storm.

  The faint noises of pursuit from the forest abruptly took on a new note. Distant shouts and screams were accompanied by the sharp ring of clashing weapons. Vespasian, and the legionaries of the Sixth Century, turned towards the forest. The sounds of fighting quickly intensified and then died away.

  'Form square!' Macro bellowed. 'Close order.'

  The men reacted at once, and hurried into formation around the body of the prefect. Vespasian pushed his way into the centre and drew his sword. He caught Macro's eye and motioned towards the body and head still lying on the snow. The centurion turned to his men.

  'You two! Figulus and Sertorius! Over here.'

  The selected men broke ranks and trotted over to their centurion.

  'Figulus, put him on your shield. The two of you'll have to carry him back to the gate. I'll carry the other shield.'

  Figulus looked down at the prefect's bloody body with a look of disgust on his face.

  'Don't worry, lad, the blood will come out of the shield lining easily enough. It'll just need a good scrub. Now get to it!'

  While the two men bent to their grisly work, Macro turned to Cato. 'You can carry the head.'

  'The head?' Cato went pale. The?'

  'Yes, you. Pick it up,' Macro snapped, then recalled the legate's presence. 'And, er, make sure you carry it with respect.'

  He ignored Cato's glare and hurried over to the legate who was now standing at the edge of the square to get a better look at the forest.

  Gritting his teeth, Cato leaned down and reached out a hand towards the prefect's head. At the first touch of the dark wavy hair his fingers recoiled. He swallowed nervously and forced himself to grasp enough hair to ensure a good grip. Then he slowly straightened up, holding the head away from his body, face out. Even so, the glutinous tendrils of sinew and clotting blood hanging from the severed neck made the bile rise in his throat and Cato quickly looked away.,.

  A riderless horse burst out of the trees and galloped back towards the Second Legion's camp. Two more followed, and then another, this time with a scout in the saddle, bent low and kicking his heels, urging his beast towards the Sixth Century. Nothing else emerged from the trees, which remained still and silent.

  'I shouldn't have ordered a pursuit,' Vespasian said quietly.

  'No, sir.'

  The legate turned towards Macro, eyebrows clenched together angrily at the implied criticism. But he knew the centurion was right. He should have thought. Vespasian felt sickened by the ease with which he had ordered the scouts to their doom.

  Just short of the shields of the Sixth Century the surviving scout savagely reined in his horse, which reared up with a terrified whinny and kicked up a spray of snow. The scout released the reins and tumbled from his saddle.

  'He's wounded!' shouted Macro. 'Get him behind the shields! Quickly!'

  The nearest men ran out, gabbed the scout and dragged him inside the square. He slumped down, clasping a hand to his stomach where the bloody tear in his tunic revealed a long slash, cutting deep enough to expose some intestines.

  Macro knelt down to examine the injury. He grabbed the hem of the scout's cloak and made a cut in it with his dagger.

  Then he sheathed the blade and tore off a broad strip.

  Hurriedly, he worked it round the scout and tied the ends tightly. The man cried out and then clamped his teeth shut.

  'There! That'll do until we can get him to the surgeons.'

  'What happened?' Vespasianbent over the scout. 'Report, man! What happened to you?'

  'Sir, there was scores of'em.., waiting for us inside the forest… We was following=them down a trail… then suddenly they came at us on all sides, shrieking like wild animals… Didn't stand a chance… Cut us to pieces.' For a moment the scout's eyes widened in terror at the vivid memory of the terrifying enemy.
Then his eyes refocused on the legate. 'I was at the back of the column, sir. Soon as I saw we'd had it, I tried to turn my mount. But the trail was narrow, my horse was scared and wouldn't turn. Then one of them Druids burst out of the forest and swung his sickle into me… I got him with my spear, sir! Got him good!' The scout's eyes gleamed with savage triumph before twisting shut as a wave of pain wracked him.

  'That's enough now, lad,' Vespasian said gently. 'Save the rest for your official report, once the surgeons have sorted you out.'

  Eyes tightly clenched, the scout nodded.

  'Centurion, give me a hand here.' Vespasian reached under the scout's shoulders and carefully lifted the man.

  'Help me get him onto my back.'

  'On your back, sir? Shall I get one of the men to do it instead, sir?'

  'Damn it, man! I'll carry him.'

  Macro shrugged, and did as he was told. The scout put his arms round the legate's neck and Vespasian leaned forward and supported the man's, legs.

  'That's it. Macro! Detail a man to lead that horse, then let's get moving.'

  Macro gave the order for the century to move towards the camp. In close formation, the century's pace was necessarily slow, however much the men wished to hurry back to the shelter of the camp. In the centre of the square the legate staggered under his burden. To one side Figulus and Sertorius carried the body of Maxentius on Figulus's shield. Beside them walked Cato, staring directly ahead, his aching arm outstretched to keep the head he held as far from his body as possible. Macro, marching at the rear of the square, kept looking back towards the forest, watching for any sign of the Druids and their followers. But nothing moved along the dark treeline and the forest remained absolutely silent.

  Chapter Nine

  Three days later the snow had almost melted and only the odd patch still gleamed, in hollows and crevices where the low winter sun could not reach. The first days of March brought a little more warmth to the air and the rutted track became slick with mud beneath the booted feet of the Fourth Cohort. They were marching south from Calleva, patrolling along the border with the Durotriges, in an attempt to discourage any more raids. The mission was more of a gesture of Roman support for the Atrebates than a realistic attempt to discourage the Durotriges and their sinister Druid allies. The reports reaching Veriea of the devastation being wreaked on the smaller villages had so unnerved him that he had begged Vespasian to act. So the Fourth Cohort and a squadron of scouts, accompanied by a guide, were dispatched on a tour through the frontier villages and settlements to demonstrate that the threat from the Durotfiges was being taken seriously.

  At first the villagers were nervous of the strange uniforms and foreign tongues of the legionaries, but the cohort had been ordered to behave in an exemplary manner. Shelter and rations were paid for in gold coin and the Romans respectfully observed local customs, which were explained to them by Verica's guide, Diomedes. He was an agent acting for a trader in Gaul and had been living amongst the Atrebates for many years. He spoke their Celtic dialect fluently. He had even married into a warrior clan that had been just liberal enough to tolerate letting one of their less prized daughters become the wife of the dapper little Greek.

  With his olive complexion, oiled ringlets of dark hair, carefully trimmed beard and fine continental wardrobe Diomedes could not look less like the crude natives he had chosen to live among for st) long. Yet he was well enough regarded to be warmly greeted in every settlement the cohort passed through.

  'What use have this, 10t got for cash?' grumbled Macro as the cohort's senior centurion counted out coins for a village headman in exchange for several bundles of salted beef – dark wiered strips strung together by lengths of leather thong. The centurions of the cohort had gathered to be introduced to the headman and now stood to one side with the Greek guide while business was concluded.

  'Oh, you'd be surprised.' Diomedes grinned, flashing his small stained teeth. 'They drink as much wine as they can afford. They've got a real taste for the stuff from Gaul – it's made me a small fortune overthe years.'

  'Wine? They drink wine.' Macro looked round at the motley scatter of round huts and small animal pens within a flimsy palisade that was only intended to keep wild animals out.

  'Of course. You've tried their local brews. All right if you have to get drunk, but not much fun to drink otherwise.'

  'You've got a point there.'

  'And it's not just wine,' continued Diomedes. 'Cloth, pottery, cooking utensils and so on. They've taken to the empire's exports in a big way. A few more years and the Atrebates will almost be on the first rung of civilisation.'

  Diomedes sounded wistful.

  'Why so glum?'

  'Because then it'll be time for me to move on.'

  'Move on? I thought you'd settled here.'

  'Only while there's money to be made. Once this place becomes part of the empire it'll be flooded with traders and my profit margins will disappear. I'll have to move on.

  Maybe further north. I hear the Queen of the Brigantes has developed a taste for civilised living.' The Greek's eyes flashed with excitement at the prospect.

  Macro regarded Diomedes with the special distaste he reserved for salesmen. Then something-occurred to him.

  'How can they afford all of this stuffyou import?'

  'They can't. That's the beauty of it. There's not much coinage about – only a handful of these'tribes have started their own mints. So I let them barter instead. I get a much better deal that way. In exchange for my goods I take furs, hunting dogs and jewellery – anything that commands a high price back in the empire. You'd be astonished at the price Celtic jewellery commands in Rome right now.' He looked at the torc round Macro's neck. 'Take that little trinket, for example. I could get a fortune for that.'

  'Not for sale,' Macro said firmly, and automatically reached for the gold torc with one hand. The heavy ornament had once been worn round the neck ofTogodumnus, a chief of the Catuvellauni and brother of Caratacus. Macro had killed him in single combat shortly after the Second Legion had landed in Britain.

  'I'd give you a fair price.'

  Macro snorted. 'I doubt it. You'd rip me off just as soon as you would one of these natives.'

  'You shame me!' Diomedes protested. 'I'd never dream of it. For you, Centurion, I would pay a good price.'

  'No. I'm not selling.'

  Diomedes pressed his lipg together and shrugged. 'Not now. Maybe later. Sleep on Macro shook his head, and met the gaze of one of the other centurions who raised his eyes in sympathy. These Greek merchants had spread right across the empire, and well beyond its frontiers, yet they were all the same – chancers on the lookout for financial gain. They viewed everyone in terms of what they could make out of them.

  Macro suddenly felt repulsed.

  'I don't need to sleep on it. I'm not selling it, particularly not to you.'

  Diomedes frowned and his eyes narrowed for an instant.

  Then he nodded slowly and smiled his salesman's smile again. 'You Roman army tyles really think you're better than the rest of us, don't you?'

  Macro didn't answer, just raised his chin a little, causing the Greek to explode with laughter. The other centurions stopped their quiet chattering and turned towards Macro and Diomedes. The Greek raised his hands placatingly.

  'I'm sorry, really I am. It's just that I'm so familiar with the attitude. You soldiers think that you alone are responsible for expanding the empire, for adding new provinces to the Emperor's territorial inventory.'

  'That's right.' Macro nodded. 'That's about the size of it.'

  'Really? So where would you be without me right now? How would your superior over there manage to buy provisions? And that's not the end of it. Why do you think the Atrebates are so well-disposed towards Rome in the first place?'

  'Don't know. Don't really care. But I expect you'll tell me anyway.'

  'Glad to oblige, Centurion. Long before the first Roman legionary ever shows his face in the more uncivilised
corners of this world, some Greek trader like me has been travelling and trading with the natives. We learn their languages and their ways, and introduce them to the goods of the empire. More often than not they're pathetically keen to get their hands on the accessories of civilisation.

  Things we take for granted they treat as status objects.

  They develop a taste for it. We feed the taste, until they become dependent on it. By the time you turned up these barbarians were already part of the imperial economy. A few more generations and they'd have begged you to let them become a province.'

  'Bollocks! Utter bollocks,' Macro replied, jabbing his finger at the Greek, and the other centurions nodded.

  'Expanding the empire depends on the sword, and having the guts to wield it. You people just peddle tat to these ignorant fools for your own profit. That's all there is to it.'

  'Of course we do it for profit. Why else would one risk the dangers and privations of such a life?' Diomedes smiled in an attempt to lighten the tone of the discussion. 'I merely wished to point out the benefits to Rome of our dealings with these natives. If, in some small way, my kind has helped smooth the path for the all-conquering legions of Rome then we are gratified beyond all measure. I apologise if this modest ambition in any way 6fiends you, Centurion. I did not intend it to.'

  Macro nodded. 'All right then. Apology accepted.'

  Diomedes beamed. 'And ify0u should change your mind about the tore…'

  'Greek, if you mention it again, I swear I'll-'

  'Centurion Macro!' the senior centurion, Hortensius, called out.

  Macro instantly turned away.from Diomedes and stiffened to attention. 'Sir?'

  'Cut the chatter and get your men formed up. Same for the rest of you – we're moving on.'

  While the centurions hurried back to their units, bawling out their orders, the villagers quickly loaded the salted beef into the back of one of the supply wagons. As soon as the column was formed up, Hortenss waved the cavalry scouts on ahead and then gave the order for the infantry to advance.

 

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