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Authors: Peter Darman

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BOOK: The Parthian
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‘Where were you, Parthian?’ he shouted. ‘Where were you?’

It was useless to try to talk to him. He was obviously still possessed of blood lust. We rode through the remnants of his command back to our camp with his words ringing in my ears.

‘Where were you, Parthian?’

We still lived, but the army of Spartacus was no more.

Chapter 19

W
e built a massive funeral pyre that night on a knoll near to the entrance to the camp and burned the bodies of Spartacus and Claudia upon it, laying them side-by-side so that they were together in death as they were in life. Diana stood next to Gallia holding the infant as the flames consumed the bodies in a huge fireball that hissed and crackled with fury. We stood in silence, thousands of us, and watched our lord and general and his wife depart from this world to take their place in heaven. I said a prayer to Shamash and hoped that He would be kinder to them in the afterlife than the Romans had been in this life. I looked around at the ocean of faces that stood illuminated by the red and yellow flames, a myriad of different races — Thracians, Spaniards, Dacians, Gauls, Germans, Jews, Illyrians, Greeks and Parthians — all of whom had been forged into an army by a former gladiator, a man who had nothing and yet one who had commanded the respect, love and loyalty of thousands. But then what were positions, titles and possessions? I was a prince by an accident of birth, called highness by those who did so not by choice but because they had to, and who had lived in palaces and been given the best things not because I had earned them, but because of who I was. I was proud to be a prince of Hatra, but I was prouder to have fought for Spartacus and my pride burned as bright as the flames before me when I considered that I had also been his friend. And as his friend I would carry out his and Claudia’s wish to take their son back to Parthia. But what about the rest of the army, what would those who had fought for Spartacus these past years do now? The answer came in the days following.

I had stood and watched the fire diminish and die, until in the dawn light it was only a large mound of smoking black ash, the bodies of Spartacus and Claudia seemingly whisked away by invisible phantoms to bear them to heaven. Or so I liked to believe. The camp was full of those who had fought the day before, the dying, the badly injured, those like myself who had been in the foremost ranks and never suffered even a scratch, and those whose bodies were untouched but whose minds had been turned to mush by what they had seen and experienced. The morning and afternoon were filled with screams and groans as doctors sawed through mangled limbs and probed wounds for fragments of arrowheads and splinters of steel and iron.

I sent out cavalry patrols to determine if the Romans were going to attack us, but they returned to report that the enemy was shut up in their two camps and showed no signs on movement. I was not surprised. Thousands of them lay rotting on the battlefield and many more must have been wounded. They were probably in a worse state than us.

‘Exactly,’ said Afranius, ‘and now is the time to strike and finish them off.’

Godarz laughed. I had convened a meeting to determine what course of action should be followed now that Spartacus was dead. Amazingly, Cannicus still lived, but he was pale and weak and I feared that it was only a matter of time before he succumbed to his wounds. His entire belly and chest had been wrapped in bandages, but the blood was still seeping through. Two of his men had carried him to the meeting in a chair and had wrapped him in a cloak to keep him warm, for the morning air was cool. Nergal was present, as was Gafarn.

‘We are going home, Pacorus,’ said Cannicus, breathing heavily with the effort of talking.

‘You speak for all the Germans?’ asked Afranius.

‘I do, what’s left of us. We will go north through the mountains and then head for the Alps. We wish to see the great forests of Germania once more before we die.’

‘And you, Afranius, what will you do?’ I asked.

He looked at me with contempt. ‘I have spoken to others in this camp who do not want to flee when victory is within our grasp. We will attack the Romans and destroy them.’

‘Did a Roman hammer strike you on the head yesterday and knock out any little sense you may have had?’ said Godarz incredulously. ‘They are down in their camps waiting for another thirty thousand troops to join them, and once they do, they will march up this valley and slaughter anyone foolish enough to remain here.’

‘What Godarz says is true,’ said Nergal. ‘I fought them on the Appian Way and you will not prevail against those soldiers.’

But Afranius was living in a fool’s paradise and our words had no effect on him. If anything they made him more contemptuous of our opinions.

‘I will lead an army against the Romans,’ he said. ‘And when we have destroyed them, I will fulfil the dream of Spartacus and march on Rome itself.’

‘It was the dream of Spartacus that we should be free, not lying dead on a battlefield,’ said Cannicus.

‘There is no more fight left in this army,’ added Godarz.

‘Will you make yourself emperor, Afranius?’ I asked.

He said nothing, only snorted dismissively, then rose and walked from the tent. I never saw him again.

During the next few days the main camp and my cavalry camp across the river were hives of activity as the various contingents made provision for their journeys.

I held a final parade of the cavalry. Now reduced to seven hundred riders, such had been the scale of our losses at Brundisium, Rhegium, on the Appian Way and here, on the Silarus. Companies reduced to mere shadows of their former selves, but still the men sat proud on their horses, even Byrd’s ragged band of scouts, and Vardanes held my banner as I addressed those assembled.

‘Friends, today we depart this valley and embark on many journeys. Some of you have elected to come with me to Parthia, others have decided to march south to Bruttium, and there are those who will head north to the Alps and over the mountains.

‘We have fought many battles and won great victories over the Romans, and in all the time that we have been together we have not been defeated. We are undefeated still.’ They gave a mighty cheer at this, which startled some of the horses.

‘So I say to you all, wherever you go, each of you can take pride in your achievements and know that you were once part of a great army under the command of one of the greatest generals in history, Spartacus, whose name will live on long after we have departed this world. Go with pride, my friends, and let us look forward to day when we are done with this world and shall once again be reunited.’ I drew my sword and held it aloft.

‘Spartacus.’

They shouted his name long and hard and on that spring day, while on the other side of the river those who had elected to follow Afranius mustered into their centuries and cohorts under a brilliant blue sky. It was a decent showing, and I was tempted to join them. Godarz, who had been working with his quartermasters to ensure that what supplies were left were distributed fairly, must have read my thoughts.

‘They are fools and you know it,’ he said dismissively.

‘For wanting to stay free?’

‘No, for refusing to face facts, and the plain truth is that we cannot win now. A year, six months ago, perhaps, but the gods have turned against us and nothing we can do can change that.’

Byrd arrived on his scruffy horse, much to my surprise. He nodded at Godarz, who nodded back.

‘We have more important matters to attend to,’ said Godarz.

I was bemused. ‘We do?’

‘It is time to plan for the future, highness. And for that I must have your trust.’

‘I trust you, Godarz.’

‘Very well.’ He was obviously possessed of a great purpose, though what it was I could not discern.

Byrd dismounted and ambled up to us. Godarz frowned at the state of his horse and his appearance.

‘You remember the spot, Byrd?’

‘I remember, of course. Can find easily.’

Godarz smiled contentedly. ‘Good.’

‘Would one of you care to explain what this is about?’ I asked.

‘Our way out of Italy, highness,’ replied Godarz. ‘I believe that I can get us passage out of this accursed land and back to Parthia. If you are in agreement.’

In truth I had no plan to get us through the next day, let alone get us out of Italy. ‘Our fate is your hands, Godarz.’

It took us most of the day to get organised, to load mules with food for men and horses, and to burden others with spare weapons and arrows. Godarz insisted that the only shelters we should take were
papilios
, the eight-man oiled leather tents of the Roman Army that we had captured. There were to be no command tents, ovens, braziers, kitchens or field forges. Weapons and food were the priorities. One of Byrd’s scouts, a local man named Minucius, would lead us into the Apennines and through to the other side. He had lived all his life in these hills and knew every track, gully and valley. He had joined Spartacus because his master had refused to purchase a new cloak to see him through the winter, and I privately thanked his master for his parsimony.

And so it was, on a warm spring afternoon in the upper Silarus Valley, that I began my final journey through Italy. We were a motley collection of different races, all bound together by loyalty to Spartacus and Claudia and their living child, whom we had sworn to protect and lead to safety. It was a strange fate that a swaddling babe could command the lives of those who took him into the mountains. We were but a handful, but not since that day have I travelled with such cherished companions. Accompanying me were Gallia, Gafarn, Diana, Byrd, the scout Minucius, Godarz, Nergal, Praxima, Domitus, Alcaeus, fifty Parthians, twenty Amazons, a score of Thracians, thirty Dacians and five Greeks. All my Parthians and Gallia’s Amazons were mounted, the rest walked. As they set off in a long line pulling a host of ill-tempered and heavily laden mules, I rode Remus over to where the Germans were about to strike northwest into the hills. They had placed the deathly pale Cannicus on a sled, which they fastened to a horse, though that was the only one they took. There were five thousand of them, all that remained of Castus’ legions, and I tried to shake the hands of as many as I could before they departed. They wore their hair long and their language was coarse, but they had met and bested the finest that Rome could throw at them.

I knelt beside Cannicus. ‘So, my friend, you go back to great forests of Germany.’

He looked at me with eyes filled with resignation. ‘To hunt boar and bear, and spread my seed among the young women.’

‘Your fame will make you a king among your people, or the young women at least.’

‘I feel that we let him down, Pacorus.’

He was talking of Spartacus. I felt the same. ‘I know, but he will forgive us.’

‘The child?’

‘Is safe.’

‘Promise me that you will tell him about us all and what we did, Pacorus.’

I took his hand. The grip was weak. ‘I promise, my friend. He shall hear of his father and mother and all those who were their friends and who fought beside them. And especially of the fierce and wild Germans led by Castus and Cannicus.’

He smiled and let go of my hand. A giant man with a shaggy beard and thick black hair stood beside me.

‘We have to be going now, sir.’

I shook Cannicus by the hand once more. ‘We will meet again, my friend, but not in this life.’

I watched as he and his men began their ascent. I stayed there until the last group had disappeared into the trees and then there was silence. Remus chomped on his bit and scraped the earth with his hoof. I rode into the camp that had been the home of my lord and that was now deserted. The tent of Spartacus, the smaller tents of his troops, arranged in neat lines, the captured Roman standards planted in the earth for everyone to see, mute testimony to the brilliance of the man I had followed. I halted Remus in front of his tent and sat in silence. For a brief moment I thought I saw Spartacus and Claudia both standing arm-in-arm at the tent’s entrance, both smiling at me, her head resting on his muscled shoulder. But then the wind blew and the vision was gone and I rode away to rejoin my comrades, and the tears ran down my cheeks.

The rest of that day we walked on foot and led our horses, all except Diana who rode carrying the infant in her arms. We maintained a brisk pace, lest the Romans sent patrols after us. I doubted that they would, though. For one thing many groups, both large and small, had scattered in all directions that morning, some heading south to the wild hills of mountainous Bruttium, others going north to find sanctuary among the Gauls living on the other side of the Alps. Others had a desire to seek a glorious death under Afranius. Ironically, most of the surviving Thracians had elected to join him, though I suspected that it was their desire to die fighting rather than serve under the young Spaniard.

Soon we were moving along a narrow track through a dense forest of fir trees, occasionally coming across grassy clearings and lightly wooded ridges filled with wild pear and apple trees. After two hours we came to a saddle in the mountains and descended out of the trees to skirt a hillside filled with scented broom, and then down still further to travel beneath a ceiling of cypress trees. It was a beautiful and peaceful country and I almost forgot about the Romans, though I was mindful to always have at least a dozen men as a rearguard, just in case we had unwelcome visitors. The dense woodlands masked our group, though Godarz prohibited the lighting of any fires for the first five days of our journey, which was a pity because we saw brown bears, deer and boar, and I would have loved to have killed some game so we could eat some hot meat. But we were in Godarz’s hands so we ate bread and hard biscuit instead. After ten days he relented, though, and so Gafarn and myself left the party camped in the lee of a cliff face near to a fast-running stream and took our bows to find some prey. We rode through broom and juniper brushes and then woodland until we came to a group of old oaks, through which ran a well-used animal track. There was no wind to carry our scent and betray us to the keen senses of any prey, so we tied the horses behind a tree, crouched in the undergrowth and waited. After half an hour five red deer ambled into view, two stags, their antlers beginning to show, and three hinds. The stags were big, standing at least seven foot high and weighing around four hundred pounds, I guessed. They could not see us but stopped and stared all the same, their noses twitching. We were about two hundred feet from them.

BOOK: The Parthian
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