Page 13 of Hunting the Eagles


  There were grumbling comments about being murdered in their beds, but Caecina’s word was law, so the centurions kept their heads down and prayed to whatever gods they held dear.

  Tullus didn’t pray. He worked on the soldiers of his new century – Septimius’ former one – keeping them busy with training manoeuvres and long marches. When they complained that other men in the cohort weren’t having to do the same, Tullus said that that was because he was turning them into the best soldiers in the whole cursed legion. Using a mixture of flattery, fresh meat and wine, Tullus jollied them along the way an experienced salesman softens up a potential customer. It worked – just – but he knew that his men wouldn’t listen to him forever. All he could do about those in the cohort who’d been prominent in the mutiny was to order Fenestela, Piso, Vitellius and more than a dozen others to keep an eye on them. Keen to keep the soldiers who’d been in the Eighteenth with him, Tullus had managed to have them moved from his former century to his new one.

  It was an exhausting, stressful existence. Every few days, Tullus allowed himself an outlet for his tensions, heading into the settlement late at night, after his soldiers had retired. His destination was the Ox and Plough, his favourite watering hole, and where Artio, the girl he’d rescued during Arminius’ ambush, lived. With no possibility of looking after her himself, Tullus had entrusted Artio to the care of the tavern’s owner, Sirona, a feisty Gaulish woman with a heart of gold.

  Tullus had no children, and over the previous five years Artio had become as dear to him as a daughter. It was apt that she’d been called after a goddess whose favourite animal was a bear, he often thought, because she was fond of sweet things, in particular honey. She was more spirited than was perhaps wise for a girl, something he was secretly proud of. Her temper was ferocious too – gods help the man who weds her, Sirona was fond of saying.

  Under normal circumstances, Tullus visited Artio often when he was off duty, but of course it hadn’t been possible during the uncertain time since his return from the summer camp. A peek into her bedroom, a tiny chamber over the inn, was the best he could manage each time he visited late.

  Eleven nights after the arrival of the news from Ara Ubiorum of the mutineers’ executions, he was doing just this. Artio was fast asleep, her long brown hair trailing behind her on the pillow, her dog Scylax dozing on the floor by the bed. Tullus studied her for a time, his heart swelling. Where does time go? he thought, feeling old. She was a tiny little thing when I found her. He glanced at Sirona, who had crept up with him, and whispered, ‘She’s growing fast.’

  ‘Cherish the time when she’s young,’ replied Sirona with a wistful look in her eyes. ‘One moment they’re babes, and the next, they are adults.’

  It was hard to believe that Sirona had three full-grown sons, Tullus reflected, admiring her still-comely features and generous curves. He had made several advances to her over the years, each of which she had rebuffed. ‘I’ve been made a widow once,’ she had said every time, her smile taking the sting from her words. ‘I’m not about to be one to the army as well.’

  Tullus was distracted at this point by a head butting against his leg, and a tail swooshing the air. Grinning, he reached down to pat Scylax, who had padded out of her room. ‘Good boy.’ When he’d saved Artio during the ambush, he had also rescued a mongrel pup, whom she had named Scylax. Girl and dog had been constant companions ever since.

  At that moment, Artio’s eyes opened. She took in Tullus’ shape at her door, and hurled herself from her blankets into his arms. ‘Tullus!’ she squealed.

  Tullus gave her a fierce hug, then set her back on her feet and gave her a mock stern look. ‘It’s well past your bedtime.’

  ‘You shouldn’t stand outside my room gossiping with Sirona then,’ came the tart reply.

  ‘True enough. We might as well have a talk now that you’re awake,’ said Tullus, ignoring Sirona’s disapproving look. ‘You have to get back into bed, though.’ He perched on a stool, drinking in her chatter of new sandals, the wild birds that Scylax had caught, and what she had got up to with her friends. After the camp’s toxic atmosphere, this was a breath of fresh air. At length, however, Artio began to yawn. Kissing her farewell, and promising to return soon, he gave Scylax a final pat and left them both to sleep.

  Placing his feet with care, so that his hobs didn’t clash off the floorboards, Tullus made his way to the head of the precipitous stairs that led back to the inn. The noise of the tavern’s customers, which he’d been aware of in the background, returned to the fore. He was halfway down the staircase when the front door opened and shut with a bang. ‘Tullus! Are you here?’ Despite the clamour, he recognised Fenestela’s voice.

  Sudden dread gripped Tullus. Had the troops mutinied again?

  He hurried down into the main room, catching Fenestela’s eye with a casual wave of his arm. Plenty of the patrons were ordinary legionaries; whatever the reason for Fenestela’s arrival, there was no point in drawing attention.

  Fenestela reached his side in ten paces. ‘It’s good you’re here.’

  ‘Where else would I be?’ replied Tullus, adding for the sake of those who were nearby, ‘Need some wine?’

  ‘My thanks.’ Fenestela leaned in close, and muttered, ‘Caecina has called a meeting. Every centurion, every optio, tesserarius and signifer in the two legions is to meet him at the principia.’

  ‘In the morning?’

  ‘Now.’

  If Fenestela’s face hadn’t been so grim, Tullus would have thought he was joking. He wondered if it had been wise to come out in his tunic, with only a dagger for protection. ‘At this time of night?’

  Fenestela placed his lips against Tullus’ ear. ‘A messenger arrived from Germanicus not an hour ago.’

  Despite the two cups of wine he’d had, Tullus suddenly felt stone cold sober.

  Tullus was well used to wandering the straight, wide avenues of the camp in the dark, using a torch to guide his way. He wasn’t accustomed to creeping along them in the pitch black, trying not to be heard by a soul. However, Caecina’s orders had been unequivocal – his officers were to arrive at the principia without being seen. As he and Fenestela neared their destination, they had several false alarms, and laid hands to their daggers. To their relief, those they encountered were other officers making their way to the meeting. Apart from the sentries at the camp gates – who had assumed Tullus and Fenestela were returning from a night out – the ordinary soldiers appeared to be asleep.

  At the principia’s entrance, members of Caecina’s bodyguard demanded their names, ranks and units. A second officer had to vouch for each man before he was admitted. This additional security measure was something that Tullus had never encountered before. ‘Whatever Caecina says is going to be bad,’ he said to Fenestela.

  After the blackness outside, the light in the headquarters’ main hall was dazzling. Hundreds of oil lamps – on stands, hanging from chains, placed in the wall niches – lit up the room almost as bright as day. Light glittered off the eagles and standards of the two legions which had been carried from the shrine and placed against the back wall. Caecina had engineered this because the emblems would stir his officers’ emotions, thought Tullus, his heart swelling at the memory of his last visit here, some months before Arminius’ ambush. The standards represented the courage, pride and status of each unit, each cohort, each legion. Men would do almost anything to keep them safe. Losing an arm or a leg, even dying, was preferable to seeing one’s standard taken by the enemy. Gods, but Tullus knew that; he lived with the shame of it every day. Eyeing the Fifth’s eagle, he tried to relish the small amount of pride he took from serving in its legion.

  Hundreds of men were already present, and more were entering with each moment. Each legion contained sixty centuries, every one of which had a centurion, optio, tesserarius and signifer. When the musicians were also taken into account – Tullus saw them gathering too – there would be more than five hundred soldiers present. He spie
d Cordus and Victor, and their cronies, most of whom acknowledged him. Victor didn’t, of course.

  Caecina emerged from the shrine with his legates and tribunes, and as they moved to stand by the eagles, silence fell. Despite the hour, the governor and his companions wore the full regalia of their office. Winks and flashes of light bounced off Caecina’s armour, which had been burnished to a mirror-like sheen. He looked magnificent, from head to toe the important man he was, and radiating the authority to issue the harshest of orders.

  ‘Is everyone here?’ Caecina’s voice carried across the hall to the entrance, where a dozen of his bodyguards stood. Receiving a nod, he ordered the doors shut. His eyes raked the gathering. ‘In these sad and uncertain times, you are the only soldiers I can trust in all of the Fifth and Twenty-First. I have called you together to advise you of Germanicus’ letter, which arrived not long since. He will be travelling here soon with a strong escort.’ Men began to exchange relieved looks, but Caecina’s expression grew sombre. ‘There’s more. Before his arrival, Germanicus expects me to have executed anyone disloyal, else he will do it himself.’

  ‘I knew it,’ said Tullus to Fenestela. Part of him was relieved. Getting the brutal deed out of the way would restore order, and allow life to continue. Part of him felt like the worst sort of criminal, however, left with no alternative but to murder a comrade.

  ‘Two grim choices lie before me – and you,’ Caecina announced. ‘We can complete the task, or wait until Germanicus comes to do it for us. I don’t have to tell you which is the better option. We deal with this tomorrow. By “deal with”, I mean, we kill the foremost mutineers.’

  His words sank in for three, six, ten uneasy heartbeats.

  Tullus cleared his throat. ‘Who is to die, sir?’

  Men stepped aside, both to see who he was, and to allow Caecina a view of him. It felt uncomfortable, and Tullus thought: we’re all in this together, you dogs.

  ‘A pertinent question, Tullus,’ said Caecina. ‘The simple answer is that each of you, from senior centurion down to musician, has to decide on the guiltiest soldiers in your unit. Talk about it now, come to an agreement and compile a list. Some centuries will have more disloyal men than others – that cannot be helped. What’s vital is that we cut every dead branch from the tree with one pass of our blades.’

  Our blades? thought Tullus, bitterness pouring through him. You won’t be bloodying your noble hands, oh no – that’s for us poor fools.

  ‘When is it to be done, sir?’ asked Cordus.

  ‘At midday, while the men are preparing their meal. You will have time beforehand to instruct those of your soldiers who are to aid you in this.’ Caecina’s smile was brittle, cold. ‘Questions?’

  There were none.

  ‘When I return in one hour, you will have your lists ready,’ ordered Caecina. ‘There are writing tablets and styluses by the entrance.’

  An air of foreboding, of doom, sank over the assembly as the senior officers made their way to one of the offices at the side of the hall.

  Men were avoiding each other’s eyes, but Tullus and Fenestela shared a bleak look.

  ‘I never thought I’d see a moment like this,’ Fenestela said, muttering an oath that would whiten a man’s hair. ‘This ain’t what I signed up for.’

  ‘Nor I, but the situation’s like an abscess that won’t come to a head. Besides, Caecina’s given us the order,’ retorted Tullus, feeling angry, sad and resentful. ‘I can tell you the first four names to write down.’

  ‘Bony Face. Fat Nose and the twins.’ Fenestela swore again. ‘I’ll get the tablet and stylus,’ he said, and joined the queue.

  Tullus had a sour, unpleasant taste in his mouth. He and Fenestela were about to draw up a list of men they intended to murder.

  How had it come to this?

  Chapter XII

  THE THIRD WATCH had sounded by the time Caecina’s emergency meeting was over. Urging the officers to ready the best of their soldiers, and to fall on those who’d been selected when the signal came, Caecina had dismissed them. ‘The gods are with us,’ he’d called as the hall’s doors were opened. ‘Right always prevails.’

  Caecina’s talk was hot air, thought Tullus, as he tossed and turned in his bed. None of the men in his old century had been chosen, a small thing to be thankful for, but thirty-eight names had been handed to him by the centurions of his cohort. Naturally, Bony Face and his associates featured high on the lists. There weren’t as many men mentioned as some of the other units, perhaps – Tullus had heard figures of fifty, and even sixty soldiers per cohort being bandied about – but that didn’t mean what faced them the next day wasn’t horrific. He had taken it upon himself to rid his century – Septimius’ former one – of its condemned men.

  He didn’t sleep a wink.

  If the night had been hard to endure, the day was no better. Red-eyed, weary, Tullus had decided on the unorthodox method of leading the soldiers of his old century, including Piso and the ones he’d moved into his new unit. The men who’d served under Septimius couldn’t be relied on to do exactly as he ordered. Tullus had to bring his trusted legionaries in on Caecina’s plan, override their shocked reactions and tell them that this was what had to happen. Upwards of ten seemed so reluctant that Tullus decided to leave them out of it, or at least to keep them away from the actual killing.

  Then he had to get through the hours until midday. Tullus had no appetite – if he’d eaten, the food would have come straight back up again. Many of his old soldiers seemed to feel the same way. Tullus ordered them to their usual routine duties – a training session on the parade ground with their new centurion and optio. He spent an hour walking the cohort’s barrack blocks, scrutinising the legionaries as was his habit, and chatting in private with the officers. They reported that every loyal man had been told of Caecina’s plan.

  As with Tullus’ soldiers, most had accepted their gruesome task. Some seemed nervous, to Tullus’ eye at least, but the men who’d mutinied didn’t appear to have noticed. Whether they would in the time before the trumpets sounded Caecina’s signal – the charge – was a risk they would all have to live with.

  Tullus didn’t check on any of the rest of the Fifth’s cohorts, or the Twenty-First’s. He had his job, and the centurions of the other units had theirs. It was a shitty enough detail without worrying about men and things beyond his control. Once he’d satisfied himself that his co-conspirators were ready, he went to join his old century.

  Time on the training ground helped. There was nothing like the dull monotony of marching to and fro, forming battle lines and engaging in simulated combat to make the hours go by. Tullus usually supervised these tasks, but this morning, he took part. He wanted not to have to think. Sweating, feeling his muscles work, having to bellow orders at the same time, kept his mind from the bloody job at hand. Up and down, over and back, marching as he had in his youth. It was good to realise that he was still fit enough to keep up with his men. I’m not done yet, Tullus realised with pride. He became so engrossed that it was somewhat of a surprise when Fenestela came from the barracks to find him. ‘It’s nearly midday.’

  Tullus glanced at the sun, which had emerged from behind a bank of cloud. Fenestela was right. ‘We’d best get back.’ He ordered his soldiers to halt. Their perspiring, expectant faces regarded him as he stalked down the column. ‘This is it, you maggots. Things have been bad since the mutiny, haven’t they?’ There was a rumble of agreement. ‘I don’t like what we’ve been ordered to do any more than you do, but it has to be done. Let’s get it over with.’

  No one replied – Tullus didn’t really expect them to – but there were no protests either. His men stood there, looking tense but ready. He wanted more than that. ‘Are you with me?’ he cried.

  ‘Aye, sir,’ Piso called out.

  ‘Me too,’ said Vitellius.

  Ten voices joined in, then a few more. In the end, Tullus wasn’t sure that all of his men had answered, but most had. This
wasn’t the time to make them shout back, as he did before a battle. They’d followed him through the mutiny. They were here, combat ready, and prepared to follow his orders. That was enough.

  ‘Form up, usual files. Follow me, and wait for my command. I’ll tell you which men are to die. Go in fast and sure. Gods willing, the dogs won’t know it’s going to happen until they’re already dead.’

  The march back to the camp, usually a reason for good humour, was made in complete silence. Their iron hobnails crunched off the gravelled surface of the road. Leather straps creaked. Metal glanced off metal. Voices, both human and animal, carried to them from over the ramparts. Men called out to comrades, officers issued orders and mules protested – as they always did. Tullus listened, his mouth dry with tension, but could discern only normal, everyday sounds.

  Under the arches of the main entrance, and into the main camp they went. Tullus headed straight for his cohort’s barracks. The avenues weren’t busy, but there were still plenty of legionaries about. The general indiscipline meant that no one had been able to come up with a plan to ensure that all the men, let alone those designated to die, would be in their quarters when the signal rang out. Most would, because midday was a traditional time to eat, but others might not.

  If any of the whoresons aren’t there, we’ll just hunt them down, thought Tullus, trying not to think about how the mutineers could band together if they realised their intended fate.

  At the barracks belonging to Septimius’ old unit – Tullus’ new one – Fenestela readied half the soldiers to move towards the other end of the long building. Tullus’ design was to wait with the rest by the nearest entrance, close by the centurion’s quarters. The narrow corridor between his unit’s barracks and the next was a natural space for men to gather in good weather, and today was the same. Indifferent glances met their arrival, but that would soon change if they didn’t disperse as normal. Troops didn’t ever linger about outside their barracks in full armour.