The Wolf's gold e-5

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The Wolf's gold e-5 Page 4

by Anthony Riches


  ‘What would you like to know, sir?’

  Scaurus smiled wryly.

  ‘You could start by enlightening us as to why we find this precious imperial asset apparently stripped of any military presence. Surely one of the Dacian legions’ main tasks is to keep this place safe, given its critical importance to the province?’

  The legionary nodded earnestly.

  ‘Indeed it is, Tribune. If it weren’t for the threat from the Sarmatae there would be a full cohort in the barracks, but Legatus Albinus decided to concentrate his forces-’

  Scaurus raised an eyebrow.

  ‘Albinus?’

  Cattanius nodded quickly.

  ‘Yes, sir. Legatus Clodius Albinus, officer commanding the Thirteenth Legion, and my beneficium.’

  The tribune nodded, his demeanour outwardly unchanged, although Julius wondered if he had imagined the slight narrowing of his superior officer’s eyes when Cattanius had first mentioned the legatus’s name.

  ‘I see. My apologies. Do continue.’

  ‘Yes, sir. The legatus decided that in light of the Sarmatae threat-’

  Julius raised a hand to stop him again.

  ‘You’ve mentioned that name twice now. Exactly who or what are the Sarmatae?’

  Cattanius stooped, using his finger to draw a half-circle whose circumference pointed upwards in the dust at their feet, running a wavy line along its bottom where there would normally have been a flat side.

  ‘This is a very rough approximation of a map of Dacia. The wavy line is the river Danubius, and we are here. .’ He made a mark in the dust just inside the half-circle’s radius, halfway between the wavy line and the curve’s topmost point. ‘And here. .’ He pointed to the ground outside the half-circle, waving his hand around its perimeter. ‘Here are the Sarmatae. They’re a loose collection of tribes, nomadic and with an equine-based way of life. The grasslands beyond these mountains are swarming with them, a tribe called the Iazyges, and they breed like rabbits.’

  Julius nodded his thanks, gesturing for the soldier to continue.

  ‘So, my legatus decided that he should concentrate his force at the legion’s fortress, ready to strike decisively in accordance with the governor’s wishes. Our scouts tell us that the main enemy threat is mustering on the north-western border. The knowledge that there were reinforcements from Germania within a few days’ march persuaded the legatus that the risk to the mine complex would be minimal, given what we know of the enemy’s dispositions.’

  Scaurus leant forward with a look of concentration on his face.

  ‘Which would seem to have been somewhat courageous of him, given that my horsemen encountered barbarian scouts not ten miles back down the road. Exactly what do we know about them, Soldier Cattanius?’

  The beneficiarius opened his mouth to respond, but his answer was stillborn in the face of an interruption over Scaurus’s shoulder.

  ‘What have we here, Scaurus?’

  The Tungrian tribune turned away from the beneficiarius, looking up at his colleague Belletor as he loomed over them both from his position on the back of his horse. His fellow legion tribune had reined his horse in behind Belletor’s, and was looking down at Scaurus and his first spear with the poorly concealed curiosity that had been his perpetual expression ever since they had left Fortress Bonna. Scaurus nodded his respect to the horseman, indicating Cattanius with an extended hand.

  ‘A legionary legatus’s beneficiarius, colleague, sent to guide us into the valley and ensure that we settle into the defence of the mine as quickly as possible.’

  ‘Excellent!’ Belletor nodded down to Cattanius, who had snapped back to attention. ‘How very thoughtful of your legatus! You can guide us to the bath house, soldier, I’m positively filthy after so long on the road. I assume you can manage to get the men into whatever barracks the legion left for us, colleague.’

  Scaurus nodded in reply, his face a study in neutrality.

  ‘Of course. I’ll talk to you later, Soldier Cattanius, if you can spare me the time. I suspect there’s a good deal more you can share with us as to the legatus’s plans.’

  Cattanius saluted, shooting a swift glance of incredulity at Scaurus and Julius before looking up into the tribune’s smug face with his own features carefully composed into perfect neutrality.

  ‘This way, Tribune. There are both a heated room and a plunge pool in the commander’s quarters, and I took the liberty of having a fire lit an hour ago when we sighted you coming up the valley. We’ll have you sweating that road dirt out in no time.’

  Scaurus and Julius watched the two officers ride away up the road, the first spear shaking his head in wonderment.

  ‘Every time I think there’s no way for that prick to go any lower in my opinion he finds a new way to look even less of a soldier.’

  Scaurus nodded, turning back to the waiting column of men.

  ‘I know. But standing here mouthing insults at his back isn’t going to get these men into barracks and fed, is it? Get the First Cohort moving, First Spear, and we’ll rely on your colleague Sergius to have the sense to do the same for his legion troops.’

  Julius saluted, his forehead creased questioningly.

  ‘It occurs to me to ask you, Tribune, what a beneficiarius is?’

  Scaurus grinned back at him, hooking a thumb over his shoulder.

  ‘Given that the man in question was clever enough to have Belletor’s bathwater hot, I’d say that in this case a beneficiarius is at the very least a bright boy, wouldn’t you?

  Once Julius had dismissed the Tungrians from the mine’s parade ground to their camp-building duties, Marcus found his wife and her new assistant sitting in their wagon. Bowing to Annia, he stretched his neck to plant a kiss on the sleeping baby cradled in Felicia’s arms.

  ‘Well he seems happy enough.’

  His wife raised an eyebrow.

  ‘Remind me to check your ears for wax, Centurion. He was howling so hard while you were all parading that I was forced to hide in the back of the wagon and feed the little monster again, despite having filled him up no more than an hour before.’

  Marcus wrinkled his nose.

  ‘Is that. .?’

  Felicia nodded wryly, offering the sleeping infant to her husband.

  ‘Yes, as night follows day, so your son has followed a good feed by filling his undergarment with his usual impression of a well-ploughed field, grunting away in his sleep like a pig digging for truffles. The gods only know how Annia manages to tolerate it, because I can assure you that I’ll not be having any more of these little beasts for a good long while. Perhaps you’d like to change him?’

  Her assistant laughed, her voice rich with a happy humour that had seemed impossible only months before, after her ordeal at the hands of the gang members she had believed to be her protectors, during the events of one fateful night in the city of Tungrorum.

  ‘It seems your lady is off-limits, Centurion, at least until the memory of constant feeding and bowel movements fades. Here, give him to me. .’ She reached out for the sleeping baby, taking him from Felicia with a smile of reassurance. ‘You two have a moment together and I’ll see if we have any more clean linen for his delicate little backside. Come on Appius, let’s see what we have back here. .’

  Felicia watched her climb into the wagon’s rear with a smile before turning back to her husband.

  ‘So, what news, Centurion?’

  Marcus shrugged.

  ‘The usual, it seems. There are sufficient stone barracks for one cohort, plus two dozen wooden huts which are in various stages of disrepair since they’ve not been used in years. Tribune Belletor’s legion cohort will take the barracks, of course, and we’ll camp in tents tonight, ready to start work putting the huts into habitable condition tomorrow.’

  ‘Which means that Julius will have every man working on the usual marching fort.’

  Marcus smiled in reply.

  ‘Of course, with your tent right in the middle, and
fifteen hundred Tungrians between you and anyone that wants to take us on. I must go and help my men put up the turf rampart, so I’ll see you later, once it’s all done. Where will you sleep tonight?’

  She smiled, putting a hand to his cheek.

  ‘In my tent, with Annia and that little monster you insisted on dedicating to your father with a name no-one else has used for three hundred years. Come and see me later, and perhaps Annia will sit with the baby and give us a chance for a quiet moment together, once you’ve had a chance to wash away the mud you’re doubtless about to plaster all over yourself. I may not be entirely off-limits to a determined approach. .’

  ‘More wine for you, Tribune?’

  Scaurus shook his head, raising a hand to indicate the tent’s door flap.

  ‘No thank you Arminius, I can cope well enough. You have a child to be training, I believe.’

  The big German bowed slightly, and exited the tent with the same purposeful manner he did everything, closing the flap behind him to afford his master some degree of peace. The tribune poured himself a cup of wine, and another for his first spear, then set the spare cup down on the campaign chest that doubled as his desk. He sat down on his camp chair with the air of a man who had seen better times. Unlacing his boots he eased them off, sighing with the pleasure of putting his bare feet onto the tent’s grass floor, then stood and walked to the door, pushing the flap aside to stare out at the camp’s bustling scene. His Tungrians were hard at work digging out turf blocks for the customary earth fortifications that a commander ignored at his peril with an unknown enemy in the field. The four-foot-high wall rising around their tents was as ever arranged in a precise rectangle with only one opening, and high enough to slow an enemy’s charge and render them vulnerable to the defenders’ spears.

  ‘It doesn’t ever get any easier to watch our lads labouring while the legion cohort sits on its collective fat backside.’

  He started, finding Julius standing at his shoulder with a look of distaste on his face.

  ‘No, First Spear, it certainly does not. Wine?’

  The big man nodded his grateful acquiescence, and stepped into the tent behind his tribune, putting his helmet down and running a spadelike hand through his thick black hair. Both men had long since mastered their amazement at their situation, but neither had yet managed to swallow his deep dissatisfaction.

  ‘Do we have any orders beyond setting up camp, sir?’

  Scaurus shook his head.

  ‘Tribune Belletor was as unforthcoming as ever, apart from telling me that he’ll be sending for the mine’s procurator once he’s settled in properly. I find myself gratefully surprised to have been invited to join the meeting at all.’ He shared a knowing look with the other man. ‘I’ll be taking you as my deputy and Centurion Corvus to carry my cloak. He can act as another pair of eyes and ears for us both, and look for anything that we might miss.’

  Julius sipped at his wine, watching his senior officer over the rim of the cup and seeing the same pain in his eyes as the day their revised circumstances had become painfully clear to them both. Having marched his cohorts east to the First Minervia’s headquarters at Fortress Bonna on the river Rhenus, now over a thousand miles behind them, Scaurus had emerged from a meeting with the legion’s legatus with a thunderous expression. Knowing his tribune’s implacable temper once roused, Julius had guessed that his superior had restrained himself from ripping into the legion’s commanding officer by the narrowest of margins. Scaurus had stalked out of the headquarters building with Julius trailing in his wake before sharing the news in the street outside, his jaw clenched tight with anger.

  ‘We’re to march for Dacia, First Spear, under the command of a cohort of the First Minervia. In point of fact, I am subordinated to Tribune Belletor, who is to act as my superior officer in all matters.’

  Julius could still remember his amazement at the news, and the blazing anger in his tribune’s responses to his disbelieving questions.

  ‘My orders from Governor Marcellus not to become subordinated to any other officer? Tossed aside without even being read. One of the legion’s equestrian tribunes, a man from my own social class if you like, took me aside before the meeting and quietly warned me that the legatus doesn’t care much for the governor of Britannia, having served under him during Ulpius Marcellus’s first spell in command of that miserable island. It was just as well he gave me that small clue as to what was coming, and therefore time to compose myself, or I might have taken my fists to the damned fool. And then where would we all be?’

  After a moment’s pause to further calm himself, Scaurus had related the meeting’s events to his first spear through gritted teeth, shaking his head at the situation that had played out before him.

  ‘The bastard took a long leisurely piss all over our achievements in Tungrorum, Julius, and I had no choice but to keep my mouth shut and listen to his bullshit. He noted our victory over the bandit leader Obduro, in passing mind you, and then spent far longer decrying the destruction of Tungrorum’s grain store. “Levelled to the ground” was the phrase he used, while my halfwit colleague Belletor stood in silence with that shit-eating grin on his face. Never a word of commendation for the fortune in gold we recovered, or any recognition of the fact that the granaries we torched were largely repaired by the time we left, in fact quite the contrary. It was “disgraceful that imperial property and enough grain to feed this legion for a year” had been destroyed. Clearly I wasn’t fit for independent command, and would have to operate under the control of a “more measured officer and a man with better breeding”.’

  He’d spat out the last words, drawing interested stares from the guards on duty outside the legion’s headquarters and the soldiers passing them in the fortress’s street. Julius had found the presence of mind, despite his respect for both the man’s rank and his fearsome temper once roused, to take him gently by the arm and lead him out of their earshot.

  ‘We are to be commanded, Julius, by a member of the senatorial class, a man from an impeccable family. In short, we are to be commanded by that buffoon Belletor. The man who couldn’t even make it to the battle outside Tungrorum for sore feet and lack of wind is now my superior.’ He’d laughed at the anger in Julius’s face, shaking his head in dark amusement. ‘Oh yes, now you know why I nearly went across the man’s desk and took him by the throat. But there’s more. Our orders from Governor Marcellus, to return home to Britannia once we’ve dealt with the bandit threat to Tungrorum, are out of the window I’m afraid. We’re to march for Dacia in company with Belletor’s cohort as reinforcement for the two legions holding the line there. Apparently some tribe or other is getting uppity and needs slapping down, so we get to march twenty miles a day for the next two months in the wrong direction to provide them with more spears. I asked about the chances of being transported by river, but apparently the fleet is tied up watching the northern bank of the Rhenus in case the German tribes choose to take the opportunity to renew their attack on the province.’

  Julius had grimaced, shaking his head in dismay.

  ‘The men won’t be happy marching east.’

  Scaurus had laughed sardonically.

  ‘What, they won’t like not going home? Wait until they’ve endured a few weeks of Belletor’s leadership! He is, as the legatus took great pleasure in telling him in my presence, to keep me on a “very tight rope indeed”. If I show any signs of failing to accept my situation with the appropriate deference to his rank, he is authorised and indeed encouraged to replace me with a young man of equally good family who is to come along for the ride. Lucius Carius Sigilis, another young tribune from the senatorial class, still wet behind the ears and already driving the senior centurions to distraction, I expect. It’s an opportunity for the legatus to rid himself of a pair of daddy’s boys who are no practical use to him, and to gain favour with their fathers for giving them their chance for glory and advancement. If I don’t like it then Belletor can remove me from command and send m
e home with a snap of his fingers, put this boy soldier in my place and, of course, impose a pair of new first spears from his own cohort on our soldiers, just to make sure they do what they’re told. I’d imagine the only thing that will stop him from doing so the moment we’re out of camp will be the sweet anticipation of my humiliation, and after that my happy acceptance of whatever indignity he chooses to throw at me. And if I go, First Spear, then you’ll find yourself back in command of a century with a legion man in control of the cohort. If you or any other of our officers make their feelings on the subject clear then the outcome’s likely to be your dismissal from the service on whatever charge of misconduct Belletor feels like inventing for the purpose, without either citizenship or pension. So we’re all going to have to learn to bite our tongues and wait for the big wheel to turn, aren’t we? Just make sure that your officers are perfectly clear on my expectation that we can all display sufficient maturity to see this temporary inconvenience through. .’

  In the event, Scaurus’s good reputation with his officers and men had resulted in a conspiracy of silence across both of the cohorts under his command, and the soldiers had contented themselves with bringing a particular gusto to those of their marching songs with any relevance to the legionaries marching alongside them. Julius walked to the door, cup in hand, and looked out at the toiling soldiers for a moment before turning back to his tribune with a shrug.

  ‘If it’s of any consolation, Tribune, my colleague Sergius is as embarrassed as ever at being told to sit on his hands while we do all the work.’

  Scaurus nodded his understanding.

  ‘I can imagine. But any soldier sharp enough to reach the rank of first spear in a legion cohort knows very well when to keep his mouth shut. He’s of far more value to us as a friend in Belletor’s camp than for any brief excitement he might whip up by protesting our case. And in any case, I think the worst part of our ordeal is over. Now that we don’t have to dig out a marching camp every night we can get back to some real soldiering. There’s a decent fight waiting for us somewhere out there, and I don’t intend for my men to be found wanting.’

 

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