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Authors: Simon Scarrow

Tags: #Adventure, #Historical, #Military

The Gladiator (14 page)

BOOK: The Gladiator
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They passed the villa and continued up the track towards the junction with the road to Gortyna. The slaves kept with them, stooping to snatch up stones and rocks to keep hurling at the column. For their part, the auxiliaries kept their shields raised and, when the chance permitted, threw missiles back. The path of Macro’s column was marked by dead and injured slaves, with a handful of civilians and soldiers amongst them.

‘How long do you think they’ll keep this up?’ Atticus called out from where he crouched low by the driver’s bench.

‘Until they get tired of it,’ Macro replied tersely as he ducked to pick up a shield from one of his men who had fallen at the head of the column. A large rock had shattered the auxiliary’s knee and he gritted his teeth as he sat on the ground. Macro turned to the nearest of his men.

‘Get him on to a wagon!’

While they hauled the soldier up and dragged him, crying out in agony, to the rear of the leading wagon, Macro hefted the shield and held it high to cover his body. T h e rain of missiles eased off and he saw that the slaves were pulling back. Two hundred paces away, standing on a stretch of wall, stood a figure shouting orders to them. Unlike the others he was wearing leather body armour, with wrist guards, and a leather skullcap. A sword hung from a strap across his shoulder. Behind him stood several other men similarly equipped. As the slaves gathered in a loose mob in front of him, the man continued to give his instructions. With deliberate gestures he pointed in the direction of the road, and at once a body of his followers ran off in that direction. The rest turned back towards the convoy and continued to bombard it with stones and rocks. But this time they had picked a new target. Their fire concentrated on the leading wagon.

‘They’re going for the horses and mules!’ Macro called out. ‘Cover them!’

The men closed up along the flanks of the leading draught animals, protecting them as best they could. But the targets were too large to miss, and every so often one of the beasts would whinny and leap in its traces as it was struck. Atticus did his best to keep control of them, but the frequent stops slowed the pace of the column to a crawl. Macro gritted his teeth in frustration, well aware that the other group of slaves had raced ahead of them to the main road, no doubt with some plan in mind to renew the attack. Glancing up at the sky, he also realised that it was well past noon. Ifthey did not quicken the pace there was a chance that they would still be on the road to Matala, surrounded by their attackers, as night fell. If that happened, then they could easily be rushed in the darkness.

He looked towards the slave leader again. The man was walking alongside the track, a hundred paces away, pausing now and then to watch the progress of his followers as they kept up their harassment of the wagons.

‘You’re not going to have things your own way for ever, mate,’ Macro growled, then turned to the men following him. ‘When I give the word, first three sections follow me. Go in hard and fast with as much noise as you can make. Get ready . . .’

Macro tensed his muscles as he walked slowly along the track, watching and waiting as the slaves grew more bold in their attack. Some, grinning with contempt, ran up to within ten feet before throwing their rocks and snarling insults at the auxiliaries. Macro waited until there were several of them close by, hurling missiles and defiance. Then he filled his lungs.

‘Charge them!’ He sprang to the side, pumping his legs as he threw himself at the slaves. ‘Get ‘em, lads! Kill ‘em all!’

With a throaty roar, his men turned on the slaves and charged after their commander. The nearest attackers turned and fled, some knocking into their comrades in their haste, sending three of them sprawling in the coarse grass. Macro paused briefly to stab his blade down as he passed one ofthe slaves struggling to rise up on his hands and knees. The sword went in deep between his shoulder blades and the slave fell flat as Macro yanked the blade free and charged on, bellowing at the top of his voice. Even though they were not encumbered by armour, as the auxiliaries were, some of the slaves were aged, and for others the harsh conditions under which they had toiled for years had sapped their strength, and they were run down and killed without mercy as they tried to escape. Macro and his men chased them across the open ground beside the road, slashing at any of their enemies that came within reach.

Ahead of them the leader of the slaves unsheathed his sword and was shouting at his followers to turn and fight. The armed men who had been standing behind him closed up on each side, swords held ready as they made their stand.As the first slaves reached his position, the leader began to rally them. Faced with his ferocious harangue, they turned to confront the Romans, forming up in a crude line as they made ready to fight with their assortment of weapons. Some only carried the rocks they had picked up and others stood with bare hands as they confronted the auxiliaries.

Macro realised that the three sections had achieved all they could with their sudden charge. Ifthey carried on they would be blown by the effort of the pursuit, and now that the slaves were turning on them, the advantage was lost. Macro drew up, panting heavily.

‘Twelfth, halt! Form on me, lads!’

The first of his men ceased their pursuit, and hurriedly edged towards Macro. A handful of hotheads carried on a bit further, before they saw the solid body of the enemy waiting for them. Then they stopped and retreated to a safe distance before trotting back to the rest of their comrades, forming a line on either side of the centurion. ‘Hurry it up!’ Macro yelled at them. ‘Quick as you can!’ One of the slaves shouted an insult after the Romans, but the sense ofit was lost due to the blood pounding through Macro’s head. More voicesjoined in, and a moment later the air was full ofthe cries of contempt, jeers and whistles of the slaves as they watched the Romans retreat. Macro could not help a wry smile as he steadily backed away towards the rest of the column. Despite their noise, the slaves did not seem to be in much hurry to turn the tables on the Romans and chase them back to the wagons.Their leader must have felt the same, sensing the opportunity to counterattack slipping from his grasp. Calling to his immediate entourage, he strode through the milling ranks of the slaves and towards the auxiliaries, beckoning the rest to follow him. One by one they drifted forward, and then as a mass, closing on the outnumbered Romans.

‘Shit,’ Macro muttered irritably. ‘Thought it would take them a bit longer to get their balls back.’

Glancing over his shoulder, he saw that the column had moved on since he had led the wild charge. N o w they were abreast of the last wagon, and the other sections of the century were continuing with their orders, staying close to the animals pulling the wagons.

‘Right then, lads!’ Macro called out. ‘When I give the order, break and run to the last wagon. Then we’ll form the rearguard . . . Now!’ They turned and ran across the fifty paces of open ground separating them from the tail of the column. Behind them the slaves let out a great shout and broke into a charge, leaping over the bodies of their stricken comrades as they surged after Macro and his men. As soon as the auxiliaries reached the last of the wagons, Macro turned and presented his shield. The others fell in on either side, forming a tight shield wall as they braced themselves for the impact of the charge. The first of the slaves struck at Macro’s shield, hammering at the surface with a crude club. An instant later all his men were engaged, blocking blows and stabbing back as they gave ground, staying close to the wagon. Macro glimpsed the slave leader to his right, duelling with a thickset auxiliary.The slave sought for a gap between the shields to strike with his weapon, a finely decorated gladiator’s sword that glittered in the afternoon sunshine. T h e auxiliary struck out, and the slave nimbly leaned to one side, before thrusting his point back at the auxiliary, narrowly missing his face as the tip glanced off a cheek guard. The slave looked up and caught Macro’s eyes for an instant.

There was a flicker of recognition there, Macro was certain of it.

Then the slave launched into a furious series of blows that battered his auxiliary opponent against the side of the wagon. Too late the auxiliary saw the danger, and the solid timber disc of the wheel knocked him down and rolled over him, crushing his hips and snapping his spine, leaving him looking startled. As his mouth opened and shut and his arms flailed uselessly, he began to die in agony.

The one-sided nature ofthe melee told once again as the ground behind the wagon was littered with fallen slaves and only three ofthe auxiliaries. The leader of the slaves called his men off, and they ended their pursuit of the Romans and stood, chests heaving, glaring after the column as it rumbled its way up the track towards the Gortyna road. Macro waited until the gap had opened up to a hundred paces before he sheathed his sword and strode along the column to check on his men and the condition ofthe horses and mules.The rocks and stones had caused numerous minor injuries to man and beast alike, but they still continued steadily along the track.

‘Not far to the road now, lads!’ Macro called out cheerily. ‘Those bastards have learned their lesson. They won’t be bothering the Twelfth Hispania for much longer.’

He spoke too soon. Once a safe gap had opened up between the wagons and the slaves, their leader led his men forward again, keeping level with the Roman column. Macro regarded them warily, but when they made no attempt to close the gap, he took satisfaction in the knowledge that every step along the track was taking them closer to the safety of Matala. Now that he thought about it, he felt there was a good chance his column might get through after all, and the people of Matala would be fed for a few more days at least from the stocks piled on the wagons.

‘Sir!’ Macro turned towards the voice and saw one of his men on a slight rise in the track at the front of the column. He was waving his spear to attract Macro’s attention.

‘What is it?’

The first wagon ground to a halt as it reached the rise, and Atticus stood up on the driver’s bench and stared ahead along the track. Macro trotted forward, past the other wagons.

‘What’s the bloody hold-up? What the fuck are you stopping for?’ ‘Look!’ Atticus thrust out his arm. As Macro drew level with the leading wagon, he looked in the direction Atticus indicated. From the higher ground he could see the junction with the Gortyna road barely a hundred paces ahead, where the track had been built up to meet the height ofthe road.Across the junction stood the slaves who had been sent to cut off the column. They had torn up some ofthe stone slabs from the road.With these, and some hurriedly felled trees, they had constructed a crude barricade. Macro estimated that there were over two hundred men waiting for them, with another two hundred behind the wagons. It was a neat trap, he admitted ruefully. T h e barricade would give little enough protection from Macro’s auxiliaries, but it would stop the wagons from making any further progress before the way was cleared. The banked track meant there was no chance of driving the wagons round the barricade. Not without them toppling over on the slope. The choice was simple. Either Macro would have to abandon the wagons and retreat to Matala empty-handed, or he must continue the advance into the teeth ofthose defending the obstacle and try to cut a path through, while those behind attacked the rear of the column. If the column became stuck, Macro and his men would be surrounded and cut down one by one.

‘What do we do?’ asked Atticus. ‘Well, Macro?’

‘Shit,’ Macro muttered under his breath. ‘We keep going. We take the barricade and clear it away and fight our way through.The food has to get to Matala. Advance!’

Atticus took a deep breath and flicked the reins. His wagon lurched forward. After a short pause the others followed and the auxiliaries trudged on, shields held close to their sides. As they neared the barricade, Macro could see the slaves grimly preparing to defend it. Rough-hewn spears and pitchforks were lowered, ready to receive the Romans. Some collected more rocks to hurl at the men and horses approaching them. Glancing over his shoulder, Macro saw that the other party of slaves had already quickened their pace to catch up with the convoy. It was going to be a bloody business, he reflected, and the odds were lengthening against getting the wagons, the food and his men back to Matala. But there was no helping it, he thought resignedly. T h e only route to safety was through the barricade. He hunched his neck down a little and tightened his grip on his sword and marched steadily towards the enemy.

Suddenly, the slaves on the left of their line turned away from the approaching wagons and stared down the road towards Matala. An instant later some were backing away, and then the first of them threw down their weapons and ran diagonally across the field away from the road, making for the nearest grove of olive trees. The panic spread along the line, and before the Romans even reached the barricade the last of the slaves had fled.

‘What the hell?’ Macro turned to look down the road as the wagons halted. Once the rumbling of the wheels and the grinding tramp of boots had stilled, he could hear a new sound, the distant thunder of horse hooves pounding along the road. Around a corner in the road came the first of the horsemen, wearing red tunics and Gallic helmets, urging their mounts on. They carried spears, and shields were slung across their backs, except for the rider at the head of the column. He was dressed in scale armour and wore the helmet of a centurion, his crest swept back as he led his men towards the junction.

‘They’re ours!’ Macro beamed. ‘Ours!’

Behind the wagons the second party of slaves was melting away. Except for their leader and his companions. He stared at the approaching horsemen for a moment and then back at the wagons. When he saw Macro, he raised his sword in a mock gladiator’s salute and then turned to follow the rest of the slaves running for the safety of the olive trees.

Macro turned his attention back to the approaching horsemen as they slowed to a trot and approached the barricade.The leader reined in, and steered his mount round the obstacle to the wagons on the other side.

BOOK: The Gladiator
7.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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