Vespasian nodded to Plinius.
'Artillery!' Plinius roared.through cupped hands. 'Make ready!'
The dawn air was filled with the sound of clanking levers and straining men as the torsion arms were wound back and the bolt ropes locked down against the projectiles. As the last crew finished, the sound died away and a peculiar stillness fell over the scene.
'Open fire!' Plinius shouted.
The crew captains pushed the release levers forward and Vespasian's ears resounded to the sharp crack as the torsion arms sprang back. A thin veil of dark lines streaked up towards the palisade. As was always the case, a number fell short and buried themselves in the slopes. Others overshot and disappeared way beyond the palisade – where they could still be a hazard. The crews would mark the fall of their shots and adjust the elevation accordingly. The vast majority, however, struck home in the first volley. Vespasian had seen the impact of such firepower a few times before, but even he marvelled at the destruction it caused. Whole timbers in the palisade were shattered by the heavy iron-headed bolts, splintered fragments whirling into the air, and the palisade soon had the appearance of a mouth filled with bad teeth.
The second volley was more ragged than the first as the more efficient crews fired earlier, and soon the disparity in loading times led to an almost continuous crashing from the released torsion arms. The palisade was brutally beaten down, and most Durotrigan warriors foolhardy enough to mount the rampart behind and shout their defiance paid the price. Vespasian idly watched as one big man waved a spear, until a bolt caught him high in the chest and simply whipped him bodily out of sight. Another was struck in the faee the blow completely shearing off the man's head. His torso remained upright for a moment, then collapsed..
Less than an hour later the defences about the main gate were in utter ruin, the stakes that had made up the palisade reduced to stumps, streaked with crimson.
Vespasian motioned to his senior tribune. 'Send the cohort in, Plinius.'
The tribune turned to the trumpeter and ordered him to sound the advance. The man put his lips to the mouthpie and blew a sharp series of rising notes. As the first call echoed back from the ramparts, the centurions of the First Cohort gave the order to advance, and in two broad colum they began marching towards the approach ramps. The sun was low in the sky, and the backs of the men's helmets threw. back a thousand reflections' into the eyes of their comrado watching the fight from the legion's fortified camp. A substantial reserve ofmen,:stood ready to reinforce the First Cohort should it be roughly handled by the Durolriges. More men had been sent out during the night to position themselves round the fort and stand off, ready to intercept any enemy attempting to flee the far side of the fortress should the gate fall. Nothing had been left to chance.
The First Cohort, accompan.ied by their engineer detachment, mounted the. first approach ramp and immediately. had to turn parallel to the hill fort as they climbed at an angle towards the first dogleg. Already, some of the bravor souls among the defenders were popping up along the ruin of their palisade and loosing arrows or slingshot into the massed mailed ranks of the legionaries, and Roman casualties began to fall out of line. Most were wounded and tried to cover themselves with their big shields while they waited to be carried to the casualty stations. Some were killed outright and lay still, sprawled on the track leading up the ramp.
Over the heads of the First Cohort the barrage of iron bolts continued to sweep the defences clear, but soon the crews would begin to imperil their own men. Vespasian held off giving the order to cease fire, willing to risk a shot falling short rather than permit the enemy to swarm over the remains of their defences and pour down a far more damaging rain of missiles on the heads of the legionaries.
The cohort reached the first dogleg and turned the corner, doubling back on itself as it climbed towards the main gate.
The bolts were whirring less than fifty feet above their heads now, and the staff officers around Vespasian were getting edgy.
'Just a little longer,' the legate muttered.
There was a splintering noise from the artillery platform, and Vespasian swung round. The arm on one of the bolt-throwers had snapped under the strain. A loud chorus of groans came from the staff officers. Up on the second rampart the bolt from the broken machiiae had fallen short and skewered a file of legionaries, hurling them into an untidy bundle at the side of the track. The succeeding ranks of legionaries faltered for a moment, until an angry centurion laid into them with his vine cane, and the advance continued. Cease fire. Vespasian shouted over to the artillery crews.
'CEASE FIRE! The last few bolts cleared the heads of the First Cohort, thankfully, and then there was an eerie quiet, before the defenders realised the danger was gone. With a roar of their battle cry they ran out from cover and swarmed onto what remained of their defences above and around the main gate.
At once a hail of arrows, stones and rocks pelted down on the men of the First Cohort. The commander of the cohort, the most senior and experienced centurion in the legion, i gave the order to form the testudo, and in a moment a wall of shields surrounded the cohort and covered its Immediately the pace of the advance slowed, but the were now protected from 'the missiles pelting them from above, and they rattled harmlessly off the broad curves of their shields. The clatter of the impacts was clearl3 down where Vespasian and.his staff stood.
The First Cohort rounded the corner of the final dogleg and began to pass between a bastion and the main gate. This was the most dangerous moment of the assault. The m were under fire from two sides and could not begin to the ram against the gate until the bastion was taken. TI: senior centurion knew his job, and in calm, measured ton gave the order for the First Century of the cohort to away from the testudo. The men turned abruptly scrambled up the steep slope to the bastion. The Durotrig who had survived the barrage of bolts threw themselves oa their attackers, making the most of their height advantage., Several legionaries fell to their weapons, tumbling slipping back down the slope. But there were too few of the enemy to hold off the Romans for long, and the vicious thrusting swords of the legionaries made short work of them.
As soon as the bastion had been cleared, men armed with compound bows scampered up and began pouring fire onto the defenders on the main gate, ducking down to string the next arrow behind the shields of the century who had won the bastion. The Durotriges redirected their missile fire onto the new threat, taking the pressure off the testudo standing at the base of the gate. Now the engineers moved up with the battering ram, and under cover of the testudo began a slow rhythmic assault on the stout wooden bbams of the main gate.
The dull thud of the ram reached Vespasian's ears and his mind turned to Cato and his small party on the other side of the hill fort. They, too, would hear the ram, and start making their move.
Below the drainage gully on the other side of the hill fort, the pile of sewage and refuse suddenly came to life. Had there been a sentry on the palisade above, he might have had difficulty believing his eyes when a small party of what appeared to be Celtic warriors emerged from the foul smelling heap and silently swarmed up either Side of the gully, making for the wooden opening set into the palisade.
While the engineers had been busy levelling the ground, a small party of legionaries, the best men of the former Sixth Century of the Fourth Cohort, had quietly made their way round the hill fort, under the command of their optio Simon Scarrow and the tall Iceni warrior they had been introduced to earlier that night. Naked, and daubed in the blue woad designs of the Celts, they were equipped with cavalry long swords, which might just pass for native weapons at a quick glance. Prasutagus had led them orer the ramparts and through the staked trenches to the reeking mound of spoil. There, with silent expressions of disgust, they had hidden themselves amid the shit and slops, and waited, motionless, for the coming of dawn and the battering ram attack on the maila i gate.
At the first distant thump of the ram, Cato pushed aside the rotting deer carcass he
had been hiding beneath and..i clambered on all fours Ul towards the wooden structure.
With natural agility, Prasuta.gus scaled the far side of the gully, reminding Cato of.'ala ape he had once seen at the games in Rome. Around em were the rest of the men Cato had selected, tough and mostly o-f Gaulish extraction, so that they stood a better chaneI of passing for Britons.
By the time they reachod the top of the gully, the thudding from the ram had become a regular beat, sounding the death knell of the hill fort and its defenders. Cato pointed at the space under the opening and,' as before, Prasutagus shifted his powerful frame into position. Cato clambered up, and cautiously looked over the rim into the hill fort's interior, by daylight this time. The plateau] immediately to his front was deserted. Off to the right, beyond the giant figure of the wicker man, a dark mass of bodies was packed around the main gate, waiting to hurl themselves upon the First Cohort the moment the ram burst through the thick timbers of the
gate. Among them were some black cloaks of the Druids and Cato smiled with satisfaction; the odds against him and his small party had lessened.
He pulled himself over the rim, and reached down for the hand of the next man. One by one they clambered through the opening and crawled to the side of the nearest animal pen. At last only Prasutagus remained, and Cato braced himself firmly against the timber frame of the platform before he reached his hands down to Prasutagus. The Iceni warrior grabbed Cato's forearms and heaved himself up, transferring his grip to the rim of the opening as soon as he could.
'Are all the Iceni as heavy as you?' Cato gasped.
'No. My father – bigger than me.'
'Bloody glad you're on our side then.'
They scrambled over to the other men, and then Cato led them along the pens towards the Druid enclosure. At the last pen he signalled for his men to be still, and then slowly poked his head round the wattle panel, cursing softly at the sight of two Druids still guarding the gateway into the enclosure. They were squatting down and chewing on hunks of bread, apparently unconcerned by the desperate fight at the gate. Cato pulled his head back and motioned his men to stay down. They must keep out of sight tmtil the main gate fell, and pray that the Druids had not already executed their hostages.
'This isn't going very well,' Vespasian grumbled, watching the distant battle in front of the gate. Most of the men on the
bastion were down, and the British fire was concentrated on the legionaries massed by the gate. Already the ground was littered with red shields and the grey mail armour of the Romans.
'We could call them back, sir,' suggested Plinius. 'Lay down another barrage and try again.'
'No,' Vespasian replied curtly. Plinius looked at him, waiting for an explanation but the legate remained silent. Any relaxing of the pressure on the front gate would put Cato and his men at risk. For all the legate knew, they might already be dead, but he had to assume their part of the plan was going ahead. Only Cato could save the hostages now.
He must be given a chance. hat meant the First Cohort had to remain in the killing ground outside the hill fort's gate.
There was another reason,' for keeping them there: If he ordered them back down tlae rampart, they would lose more men on the way. Then, while the bolt throwers renewed their barrage, the survivors of [ie first assault would have to wait, knowing they had t0'face the perils of the attack all over again. Vespasian could well imagine what that might do to their fighting spirit. What they needed up there right now was encouragement, something to strengthen their resolve.
'Get my horse, and get another for the eagle-bearer.'
'You're not going up there,'sir?' Plinius was shocked.
'Get the horses.'
While the mounts were fetched, Vespasian tightened the ties under his helmet. He looked at the eagle-bearer and was reassured by the man's easy composure, one of the key qualities looked for in men picked for the honour of carrying the eagle into battle. The horses were rushed to them by running slaves and the reins handed over. Vespasian and the eagle-bearer swung themselves up.
'Sir!' Plinius called out. 'If anything happens to you, what are your orders?'
'Why, to take the hill fort of course!'
With a swift kick of his heels Vespasian urged his horse towards the foot of the ramp, pounding across the open ground with the eagle-bearer just behind him, reins in one hand, the shaft of the standard clenched in the other. Up the ramp they galloped, swerving round at the first dogleg and on to the second ramp. Here lay the first Roman casualties, pierced by arrows or crushed by stones, their blood pooling on the track amid the feathered shafts that seemed to have sprung up from the soil. The wounded, seeing the horsemen approach, painfully hauled themselves to the side of the track, some of them managing to raise a cheer for the legate as he thundered past.
They turned the second dogleg, and quickly reined in as they came up against the rearmost century of the First Cohort.
'On foot!' Vespasian shouted over his shoulder to the eagle-bearer, and swung himself from the back of his horse.
At once they were spotted by the defenders above them, and an instant later Vespasian's horse screeched as an arrow whacked into its flank. It reared up, front legs flailing, before scrabbling round to tear back down the ramp. More arrows and slingshot thudded home around the legate. He looked around and snatched a shield from the ground where it had fallen beside its dead owner. The eagle-bearer found another.
Both of them pushed forward into the tightly packed ranks ahead.
'Make way! Make way there!' Vespasian called.
The legionaries parted at the sound of his voice, some with looks of blank astonishment. " 'What the fuck is he doing up here?' an awestruck youngster wondered.
'Didn't think you were getting the enemy all to yourself, did you, son?' Vespasian shouted as he passed by. 'Come on, lads, one last push, then we'll put paid to those bastards!'
A ragged cheer rippled oat from the men as Vespasian and the eagle-bearer made their, way up towards the gate, arrows and slingshot rattling "off their shields. When he reached the flat ground be,fore the fortified timber gate, Vespasian tried to hide his de,s.pair at the scene before him.
Most of the engineers were d6/t.d, heaped round their ladders and to the side of the battering ram. The ram was now manned by legionaries who had had to lay down their shields to take up their position on the thick iron capped shaft of oak. Even as he watched, anothe man fell, shot through the gap between his helmet and his mail vest. The senior centurion thrust a replacement forward, but the legionary hesitated, looking anxiously at t'he savage faces screaming at him above the gate., Vespasian ran forward. 'Out of my way, son!'
He dropped his shield and. grabbed the rope handle, joining the rhythmic swing of the other men on the ram. As it smashed into the gate, with a shattering crash, Vespasian could see that the big timbers were starting to give way.
'Come on, men!' he shouted to the others along the ram.
'We're not being paid by the bloody hour!'
As soon as the Durotriges saw the legate they let out a great roar of defiance and turned their weapons on the enemy commander, and the man bearing the dreaded symbol of the eagle. The men of the First Cohort responded with a deafening cheer and renewed effort, hurling up their remaining javelins into the marred ranks of the Durotriges. Others snatched at the slingshots lying on the ground to hurl them at the defenders.
Another man fell beside the ram. This time the senior centurion threw his shield down and took the vacant position.
Once again the ram slammed forward. With a crack, the central beam on the gate broke in two, and the surrounding timbers were wrenched out of alignment. Through the gaps the Romans could see the snarling faces of Durotriges and Druids massed on the other side. Through a narrow gap Vespasian spotted the locking bar.
'There!' He raised a hand to point. 'Shift the head to there!'
The line of the ram was quickly adjusted, and they swung again, forcing the gap to open wider. Th
e locking bar shuddered in its brackets.
'Harder!' Vespasian shouted above the din. 'Harder!'
Each blow splintered more of the timbers until with a last wild swing the locking bar shattered. Immediately the gates gave way.
'Get the ram back!'
They backed up several feet and laid it down. Someone handed Vespasian a shield. He slipped his left arm into the straps and drew his sword, holding it horizontally at hip height. He breathed deeply, ready to lead his men through the gateway.
'Eagle-bearer!'
'Sir!'
'Stay close to me, lad.'
Yes, sir.
'First Cohort!' the legate bellowed at the top of his voice.
'Advance!'
With a deep roar from hiandreds of throats, the scarlet shields charged the gates aad crashed into the screaming ranks of the tribesmen beyord. Packed in with the front rank of the First Cohort Vespasian kept his shield up and thrust into the dense mass of humanity before him, sinking his blade into flesh, then.t.'isting and wrenching it back, before striking again. All around him men screamed, shouted their warcries, grunting with the effort of each thrust and slash, crying out in agony as th.ey were wounded. The dead and injured fell to the ground, those still living struggled to protect themselves beneath th6ir shields and avoid being trampled to death.
At first, the dense mass of lomans and Durotriges was locked solid, neither, giving-an inch of ground But as men fell, the tribesmen began'to give ground, thrust back before the shield wall of the Romans. The ground beneath Vespasian's boots was slick with churned mud and warm blood. His greatest fear at that moment was that he might lose his footing and slip.
The First Cohort ground forward, hacking a path through the Durotriges. The defenders, urged on by the Druids in their ranks, fought with desperate courage. Tightly packed as they were, their long swords and war spears were almost impossible to wield effectively. Some dropped their main weapons and used their daggers instead, trying to wrench the Roman shields aside and stab at the men sheltering behind. But few of the Durotriges were armoured and their exposed flesh was easy prey for the lethal swords of the legionaries.
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