Throne of the Caesars 01 - Iron and Rust (34 page)

BOOK: Throne of the Caesars 01 - Iron and Rust
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‘I came via the library. He is brave, but his links to Mamaea make him a marked man for the creatures of Maximinus.’

A sudden shout, and the rhythm of the nearest team of slaves faltered and broke down. A struck coin had adhered to the upper die. The speed at which they worked meant it had been hammered down on to the next blank. Cursing, the second slave poked the upper die from its sleeve and used a fine chisel to try to pry it and the ruined coin apart. The other three put down their tools and drank from the water butt by their station. The one with the hammer tipped water over his head. It ran down his bare chest.

An overseer walked across and with a look told the slaves to resume.

The die-cutter waited until the noise of the hammer covered his words. ‘The authorities might have more pressing concerns. The plebs have been restless since the money for the shows was cut back. There have been several incidents over the reduced grain dole. Now Maximinus has ordered the temple treasures seized there is talk in the Subura of keeping a vigil at the temples, stopping the soldiers. They say Gallicanus and the other philosopher Senators will lead them.’

Fabianus looked unconvinced. ‘Pontianus would want us to take precautions. He is not a fanatic like Hippolytus. You can come to the country with me.’

The die-cutter managed to smile. ‘I have never left the city in my life.’

‘Antheros told me to take you. I do not command you as though I were someone of authority. I know my limitations. Those who question are doomed. Do not seek notoriety. Come with me.’

‘I was there when they took Pontianus,’ the die-cutter said.

Fabianus released his arm, looked sharply at him.

‘I watched from the other side of the street. The crowd was jeering, baying for blood. Further than my hand, my vision is not good, but my hearing is sharp. Even above the mob, I heard what was said. Pontianus asked the soldiers why they were arresting him. They said they had orders to take all our leaders, all those who were spreading unrest and corrupting the innocent.’

There was suspicion in the face of Fabianus. ‘You did nothing?’

‘I did nothing.’

‘You might not be so fortunate next time.’

‘I will stay here.’

Fabianus nodded. He went to make a gesture. The die-cutter caught his hand. ‘Do not be a fool.’

Fabianus disengaged himself, and turned to go.

Afterwards, the die-cutter returned to his workroom in the courtyard. He sat at his bench in the open air. He picked up his latest design. Work always calmed his mind.

Rome’s latest goddess, Caecilia Paulina, stared back at him. As with Maximinus at the beginning, he had no idea what she really looked like. A hideous old crone, Acilius Glabrio had said unhelpfully. The other two magistrates had been less offensive, but no more informative. It was a sign of the regime’s lack of concern for anything apart from the northern wars that the arrogant young fools had not been replaced when their normal term of office had come to an end.

He had given the late Empress a hairstyle favoured by women of the previous dynasty: clear waves drawn into a bun at the back. On top he had added a modest veil. For her features he had relied on an obviously spurious resemblance to her husband. Throughout the empire, Caecilia Paulina would be remembered for the prominence of her nose and chin.

It was a good piece of work. The peacock, the empty symbol which tradition demanded for the reverse could not occupy his mind. He had stood and watched as Pontianus was arrested. He had lied to Fabianus. He had not done nothing. In his weakness and his fear, he had denied knowing Pontianus. When the mob chanted, the die-cutter had mouthed the words. In the past, other men had done the same. There were names for them. There were names for him.

CHAPTER 29

The East
Northern Mesopotamia,
the Ides of May, AD237

‘Chaboras River ahead.’

Gaius Julius Priscus raised himself on the horns of his saddle and peered over the heads of the legionaries and archers.

Julius Julianus, the Prefect of 1st Legion Parthica, pointed.

Through the dust raised by the cantering Persian cavalry, Priscus could make out a line of dark trees across the low horizon, a mile or more ahead. He caught flashes of colour against the foliage. Below what he knew must be Sassanid standards he saw a glint of sunlight on steel. It would be another contested river crossing.

‘Here they come again.’

The big shields of the legionaries clattered up and together. Sporakes moved his mount up alongside that of Priscus. The bodyguard covered them both with his shield. With their greater range, the Roman archers on foot and the handful of slingers shot first. Priscus kept his head down. There was no point in watching the effect of the volley. No matter how many easterners went down, there were always more.

With a horrible tearing sound, the Persian arrows rained down. They thumped into wood, dinged off steel. The feathers of one quivered in the shoulder of a horseman near Priscus. He rocked in the saddle. His horse shied, and he crashed to the ground.

‘Help him,’ Priscus shouted. He pointed to another of his Horse Guards. ‘You, get him to the baggage, then rejoin the standard.’

The trooper swung down by his fallen comrade. Another caught the reins of both horses. There had been thirty Equites Singulares when they set out. There were twenty left. Nineteen now.

‘Not far to go, boys.’ Priscus called over the din. ‘One more river, and we will be safe in Resaina. Kill a few more reptiles, then a cool bath, a good meal, a young girl or boy; whatever you want.’

Despite it all, the men gave a shout of mock lust.

‘Hold your places. Silence in the ranks. Listen for your orders. We are almost home.’

Nothing had gone right with this campaign. At the meeting in Samosata the previous autumn, knowing the reluctance of Persian armies to remain in the field over winter, the governors had decided the field army would gather in the new year. They had underestimated the determination of the Sassanid King. The outlying columns around Resaina and Carrhae had withdrawn, but the main force remained encamped under the walls of Nisibis.

In March, when the contingents had straggled into Zeugma, several were under strength. Licinius Serenianus had not come himself. An earthquake had devastated several cities in Cappadocia, and the governor had been forced to remain to quell widespread unrest as the locals sought to lynch every suspected Christian in the province as being the cause of the disaster. He had, however, sent the eight thousand men he had promised. Likewise, Ma’na of Hatra had appeared with the two thousand riders he had pledged from his father’s city. The others had not fulfilled their obligations. Junius Balbus had sent two thousand, not four, from Syria Coele, and Otacilius Severianus just two thousand, not eight, from Syria Palestina. Priscus had never had much time for his brother-in-law Severianus. The family had thought the Senator a good match for his sister, but from the start Priscus could tell Otacilius Severianus had the heart of a deer. Unlike the pusillanimous Romans, the Armenian Prince Chosroes had a justifiable reason for riding up with only a thousand men at his back, not ten thousand. Another Persian army, led by the King of Kings himself, was marching up the Araxes river towards the city of Artaxata. Tiridates of Armenia was fighting for the survival of his kingdom.

It had been April when Priscus had led the army over the Euphrates and to the East. They had gone via Batnae, Carrhae, Resaina and Amouda. They had collected small contingents of the army of Mesopotamia at each town. Manu of Edessa had brought down a levy of five hundred local bowmen. All told, the total number of combatants was less than eighteen thousand.

From Resaina on, they had been shadowed by enemy scouts. But no attempt had been made to hinder their progress. The reason became clear when the vanguard breasted a low hill and Nisibis came into sight. Sassanid banners flew from the battlements. How long it had been since the town had fallen, no one in the Roman army could say. Across the plain before the walls a Persian army was drawn up for battle. It was at least thirty thousand strong: cavalry, infantry, even camels and a few elephants. The Romans had walked and ridden hundreds of miles into a trap.

Priscus had ordered a camp entrenched. The Persians had not interfered. The next day Priscus kept his men behind the palisades. The Sassanid horsemen had spread across the plain. They had come close, and shouted abuse, but had not attacked. Having cut the supply lines, they knew the Romans could not stay there for long. Time was on their side.

The second evening, Priscus had watched the enemy streaming back into Nisibis for the night. The town gates shut behind them. Then, and only then, Priscus had summoned his high command, and some senior centurions, and gave his orders.

They had left the wagons behind. A hundred volunteers from the auxiliary cavalry, including trumpeters, stayed to keep the campfires burning and to make the calls that marked the watches of the night. Before first light, they had galloped after the rest of the army, which had stolen away like a thief in the night.

The third hour of the next day they had been a couple of miles short of Amouda when the Sassanid light cavalry caught up with them. Priscus had ordered the column to halt, the infantry to form
testudo
, the cavalry to dismount behind them. Exhilarated by their wild chase, the Persians must have thought that the Romans were dropping with fatigue, were completely at their mercy. They whooped, and charged. Through the Roman ranks the officers had repeated Priscus’ instruction: no one shoot until the signal. When the Sassanids were no more than forty paces away – already reining in, their charge faltering in the face of such unexpected immobility – a trumpet had rung out. It was picked up by others along the line. Too late, the easterners sawed on their reins. They had run into a deadly storm of thousands of javelins and arrows. Men and horses, both brightly liveried, went down, bloodied and fouled, rolling in the dirt. The survivors raced away. It had bought the army time to reach the gates and cram itself into the alleys, porticos and open spaces of the small town.

Priscus had spent two days in Amouda reorganizing the order of march. He had gone through it again and again, until he was sure that everyone, from the senior commanders down to the most junior officers, even to the common soldiers, knew their part. He had read the view of the Senator Cassius Dio that Ardashir was of no consequence in himself, and that all the troubles in the East stemmed from the licence, wantonness and lack of discipline of the soldiers. He had met Cassius Dio in the reign of Alexander. What little the Senator knew about soldiering had made him a martinet. True, the troops had murdered Priscus’ predecessor in Mesopotamia. But Flavius Heraclio too had understood nothing about discipline. It took great kindness as well as great cruelty. In Amouda, Priscus had visited the men in their billets, had distributed his own private supplies to the army – choice delicacies and expensive wines – and had had a couple of would-be deserters flogged to death and their corpses strung up over the gates to deter any with similar thoughts.

Well handled – as Priscus knew any force he led would be – the Roman army in the East was still a potent weapon, even in adversity. The problems lay elsewhere. Too many men had been taken away to the wars in the North. And Cassius Dio was wrong: the Sassanids were far more dangerous than their Parthian predecessors. The Persians might marry their daughters, granddaughters – even their mothers – they might kill their wives and sons with impunity, they might throw out the bodies of their relatives to be eaten by dogs, but they could fight.

On the third morning the army had marched out and formed up in a hollow square, with the baggage animals and servants in the centre. Julius Julianus commanded the vanguard with the thousand men of his 1st Legion Parthica, the thousand-strong detachment of 6th Legion Ferrata from Syria Palestina and five hundred auxiliary archers. Porcius Aelianus held the right flank with his thousand men of 3rd Legion Parthica, the two thousand from 15th Legion Apollinaris from Cappadocia and a thousand bowmen. Priscus had entrusted the left to his brother. Philip commanded a thousand legionaries of 4th Scythica from Syria Coele, two thousand auxiliaries armed with spears and five hundred with bows. Manu of Edessa and his levy of five hundred bowmen were also stationed there. The rear consisted of two thousand from 12th Fulminata and a thousand archers, all from Cappadocia, and led by the legate of the legion, Caius Cervonius Papus.

Both flanks of the square were backed by a thousand riders from Hatra. Those on the right were under Prince Ma’na; those on the left a Hatrene nobleman called Wa’el. Prince Chosroes supported the rear with his thousand Armenian horsemen. The final troops – five hundred auxiliary cavalry and the same number of infantry, all from Mesopotamia – Priscus himself led, behind the leading edge of the square.

It was a cumbersome, slow-moving formation, but Priscus had been unable to think of anything better. The close-order infantry could fend off armoured cavalry, and the bowmen could shoot back at horse archers. As slingshots were more effective than arrows against the metal armour worn by Sassanid noblemen, he had called for volunteers. Some two hundred men, porters and sutlers, as well as soldiers, had claimed skill with a sling. These were distributed in small packets all around the army. The Hatrene and Armenians could shoot over the heads of the men on foot. The order of march was far from ideal, but it would have to serve.

BOOK: Throne of the Caesars 01 - Iron and Rust
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