Colosseum (16 page)

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Authors: Simone Sarasso

BOOK: Colosseum
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The cutthroat moistens his lips; he does not need to say a thing. He stares Priscus in the eye and slaps him on the shoulder.

“Welcome, men. You'll feel at home here…”

The sky over Rome is frozen, the color of wine.

It is sunset. On the streets, the plague has not yet had its fill.

Another bubble, another Island.

With its rules and its rhythms.

A world in a box, again. To Verus life seems like a series of concentric circles, one much the same as the next, only larger and larger. Twinned orbits, on to infinity, with the same sun at the center, the same nothing. Always distant, he circles around without ever reaching it. Verus can see no sense in it, but he knows as long as he has breath in his lungs, his arms will earn him his bread.

Work is hard on the site, being theoretically freedmen means little: exertion is colorless, classless, faceless. Verus and Priscus lift enormous loads, feeding hoppers filled with water and clay, soft earth forming a solid future. They rarely speak as they talk, and when they do it is almost always of money: how many
sestertii
so-and-so got for that bronze nail job, how much what's-his-name blew on the dog races, how much is up for grabs at the evening fight.

The site is an image of Rome itself, ulcerated and dying. All the wealth that stems from joining stones flows back where it came from, through the gashes and holes of work-ravaged flesh. This is the source of Draco's strength: every coin earned by the freedmen is spent on betting, wine and prostitutes.

There is no need to toil to support a family, no need to fear beatings, because the women are dead and the masters have fled. The children spared by the pestilence wander through the streets of the Eternal City like weakened insects in search of honey. Faced with his own end, man feels melancholy and alone, regressing into larval form.

He is blind. He wishes only to live, with no interest in tomorrow.

Marcius and his Misene contingent are the exception: they are soldiers and try to behave honorably, even now that the city has lost its mind and the kingdom of Pavos, god of terror, reigns everywhere supreme. Rules are everything to the
classiarii
, the sail their reason for living. The daily training and the expertise with which they carry out their duties help to keep dark thoughts at bay. The shield of Rome is in safe hands with the sea lords.

Verus and Marcius see little of each other, what with work on the site leaving them with almost no free time. From time to time in the evening they have time for a drink at the bar Draco has had set up right in the middle of the Amphitheater. Open from dusk until dawn, it is the home of the hopeless, a place of melancholy talk.

After his third cup of wine, Marcius gets to talking about the sea, and after that there is no stopping him. Verus would like to open up to him, tell him he is worried about the direction his life is taking inside the belly of that monster, but Marcius does not listen. Like shrimps on a skewer, one tale follows another, fishing trips and sea battles. The old sailor allows his tales to stew in the warmth of the wine and the cool of the night air.

Priscus is wary: he has sensed for some time that Draco has his eye on him and his friend. More and more often they find themselves running into him in the underground passageways, or talking of muscles, violence, and brute force.

“You know there's no need to be embarrassed…for being a slave or for the trade you have chosen. Gladiators are gods on Earth and you, if this plague had not started, would surely have found your place among the gods.”

Priscus knows very well what the slimy bastard is hinting at, and cuts him short, trying not to show too much disrespect: “I did not choose this life. It is not my fault if I have been trained to kill…”

Draco normally nods understandingly. But all the while he has that same look in his eye, both distracted and heedful at the same time, the same look Ezius the physician had the first time he squeezed Priscus's balls when they first joined the barracks.

Draco does not need to place his fingers where he should not in order to try the wares. A quick glance suffices; he grew up on the street. And on the street there is nowhere to hide.

The surprise comes at the end of the first month. As usual, Verus is totally unprepared.

He is no fool; the carpenters' looks and sculptors' smiles have been telling him for days now that something is amiss. The clink of coins in pockets becomes deafening every time he and Priscus cross the site. But it is only when they arrive in front of the Cage that Draco makes his move.

He is surrounded by malevolent thugs. The terraces are already crowded for the big event.

The Cage is a gigantic iron structure, originally used to hold blocks of wood pressed together until the glue between them has dried. As the work went on however, the Cage was left empty more and more often, its imposing bulk dissuading anyone from trying to move it from where it had been abandoned. For a time the few hens scratching around the site had used it as a refuge, but the harmless fowls were soon replaced by game cocks fitted with milled-iron spurs. In the Cage, though, there is enough room for twenty people to stand with arms outstretched, one behind another, and the underground fight fans were quick to realize that the space was too big for chickens. Or even dogs. So the Christians starting getting inside the enclosure there to beat each other to a pulp.

The Christians are good fighters; there is a small group of them among the workers at the Amphitheater. Very quiet, keep themselves to themselves. A shame their God does not much care what happens to them. The plague has taken half the community, spreading the pestilence to women and children beyond the stadium walls.

And so in the space of a few weeks the betting king Draco has found himself short of fresh meat. Without a single fighter worthy of the name.

That is why he is there, standing in front of the Cage with an escort that would turn Leonidas of Thermopylae pale. That is why he gets straight to the point with Verus and Priscus, without any foreplay: “Are you ready to fight?”

Verus tries to slip away, but one of the thugs grabs hold of his arms. The Briton pulls free and smashes his nose with a head-butt, but another of the guard dogs is faster and holds seven inches of sharpened metal against his jugular.

Priscus spits on the floor.

This is what you call a damned stalemate.

Around the Cage, the crowd throbs with excitement.

The head thug walks up to the two slaves: “Perhaps you'd prefer to leave the site this very day? Up to you, my friends!”

Verus and Priscus are itching to snap Draco's neck. To close their hands around his windpipe and Adam's apple, squeeze until they hear the pop of cartilage. But that would be the end of the line for them, and they know it. In that murky air of dust and depravity.

Verus looks Priscus in the eye and grips his shoulder: “Strength and honor, brother.”

“Strength and honor,” answers Priscus.

A moment later they are in the Cage.

One against the other, like wild beasts.

Verus takes the head-butt with a grunt. Priscus has never done things by half measures and he is not the sort to hold anything back in a fight. The Briton's eyes fill with blood. In the Cage you take each other apart with whatever you can: rocks, sticks, a butcher's hook that opens up slashes in the flesh as wide as thick sausages. The two of them go at it with every trick they know.

First with sticks, and the son of the Island comes out of it pretty well. More than once Priscus ends up in a corner, on the defensive. Then with rocks, their daily bread for months on end.

But when the aim of the game is smashing heads in with sharpened stones, there is no way to alter the final outcome. The flesh can only go on lunging and dodging for so long before muscles interlock in a suffocating dance, a symphony of elbows, knees and blows below the belt. Until the rocks fall to the ground and the rasping breaths of the fighters tell them it is time to start again.

Soon enough the slaves are wielding the meat hooks, exhibiting everything they learned at Ircius's house. With every lunge the crowd roars, the red that spatters the ground from the torn bodies is rain in the desert. The blood brings them back to life, more than a cock's crow at daybreak. The rabble grunts and foams at the mouth, a lamed beast.

Verus throws all he has into it. Fire pumps through his veins, slashed by the iron. But Priscus is ice and will, and gives nothing away to his adversary.

Both know it would be a bad idea to kill the other.

But staying alive is no joke for men who have studied as gladiators, trained to see things through.

Priscus pushes things to the limit when he finds the chance to land another head-butt on Verus from below. He decides not to, but they both know who has really won.

Priscus pretends to lose his weapon in the counterattack and Verus throws his own to the ground, accepting the adulation of the raucous crowd as a tribute to the honor that is not his.

The Briton feels terrible. There is nothing worse than to win by cheating.

Priscus tells him not to worry. He does so with a wink; no more is needed between the two of them.

The farce goes on, brother.

The farce is our home.

But Verus is boiling with rage, unable to convince himself. He charges headlong into his friend's belly, lifting him from the ground and slamming him up against the iron mesh of the Cage. Metal scratching the blond man's flesh, the scrape of teeth and gums. A piece of incisor goes flying, smashed away by the pressure and counterblow.

He has the upper hand but his fury keeps him from thinking straight and Priscus punishes him with a double hammer to the back: he joins his hands and brings them down on his companion, who falls to the ground gasping.

Verus tries to get back up but the other silences him with a kick to the lungs, forcing him to puke his guts up and, finally, to calm down a little. Then he throws him a final glance and commands in a cold, flat voice: “Stay down. The night is still young.”

Priscus raises his arms and a roar acclaims him the winner.

Money changes hands and a sack of silver coins ends up decorating his belt, carefully secured in place by Draco himself.

The Gaul bows his head and returns to Verus, helps him to get up and half carries him to the makeshift infirmary a short distance away. While the field doctor—a docker by trade who, given the circumstances, does what he can with a scalpel and cautery—sews up the offending wounds, Verus turns to his battered companion: “So that was how it was supposed to go, then? Our first match in the arena and we're both still alive…”

You're alive because I decided to keep you that way. But the other gladiators won't be so generous, my friend.

But Priscus keeps this thought to himself and merely smiles.

They clasp their hands together firmly, and in the end their sutures are not so painful.

“I would say we've earned our damned names on a tablet,” growls Verus as the field doctor's needle repairs his flesh, one stitch at a time.

Priscus chuckles as he thinks back to a prize now light years away, a life lost along with all the others in the belly of the trash heap the world knows as Rome.

Where has the future they dreamt of gone, the life they thought they deserved? What has happened to the Ludus Argentum? How is it that all their hopes have slid down into this miserable abyss?

But what is more, what the fuck happened to Decius Ircius?

Good question. The lanista is panicking.

He has only been back in the Eternal City a few hours and he is already risking his skin.

Damn it, these guys do not mess around.

“Drop the pouch or I'll gut you, little lord…”

Despite the fact he has not had to make daily use of it for years, he still handles his razor with a certain skill. But the razor is no use. The ruffians outnumber him; to be sure, he underestimated them.

There are twelve of them but from the way they growl and drool they look more like the hordes of Pluto himself. Determined to drag their enemy down to the underworld, whatever the cost.

Rome has changed; Ircius has underestimated her too.

The disease is loosening its grip, but has left its mark on the withered flesh of its denizens. Those still standing have lost so much, too much to leave any room for negotiation.

Public order is being gradually restored, as Imperial centurions bring each neighborhood to heel, day after day, reminding the wretched scavengers who is in charge. But anger cannot be brushed away with sword thrusts and public works. The wounded heart of the citizenry struggles to get back on the straight and narrow, and human jackals roam largely unchecked.

The lanistahas returned to put things in order. Basically he is a man of honor, the type that does not leave things unfinished. Few know he is also a good father, that this is his true nature. He swore an oath to himself that his family would survive, and so it did. Thanks to his money and astuteness he is still alive today, and his wife and children have been taken to a safe place, where they can take shelter and pass the winter far away from the poisonous fumes of the plague-ridden city. When spring arrived, however, Decius began to feel deep down that he must do the right thing. His conscience ate away at him all winter: he asked himself what kind of fate would have befallen the school and its pupils. He imagined the worst, fearing that the flames of chaos had perhaps consumed every last brick of the Ludus Argentum, the place he once called home.

He breathed a sigh of relief when he found it again right where it should be, albeit infested with tattered-looking thugs, rats, and corpses. At least the walls were still standing. The arena was filled with trash and excrement, and of course there was no trace of the gladiators' weapons, but at least he could begin again.

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