Flame of the West

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Authors: David Pilling

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BOOK: Flame of the West
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CAESAR’S SWORD (III): FLAME OF THE WEST

By David Pilling

 

More Books by David Pilling

 

The Half-Hanged Man

The White Hawk (I)

The White Hawk (II): Rebellion

The White Hawk (III): Restoration

Caesar’s Sword (I): The Red Death

Caesar’s Sword (II): Siege of Rome

Robin Hood (I)

Robin Hood (II): The Wrath of God

Robin Hood (III): The Hooded Man

Nowhere Was There Peace

The Best Weapon (with Martin Bolton)

Sorrow (with Martin Bolton)

 

The John Swale Chronicles

Folville’s Law & 12 mini-sequels

 

Follow David at his blogs at:

www.pillingswritingcorner.blogspot.co.uk

www.davidpillingauthor.com

http://www.boltonandpilling.com

 

 

Or contact him direct at:

[email protected]

 

 

Map of
Italy c.6
th
century AD

 

 

1.

 

Abbey of
Rhuys, Brittany, 571 AD

 

No father should have to bear the loss of his son. Of all the cruelties and hardships God saw fit to heap upon my head, this was the worst.

   Abbot Gildas, who knows something of my history, sometimes asks to join me in
praying for the soul of Arthur. He does not know I pray for my son’s wellbeing, not his soul.

  
I last set eyes on him almost twenty years ago, near the banks of the Po in northern Italy. If I shut my eyes, I can picture him clearly: a tall, proud, soldierly figure, with his mother’s wiry frame and the flaming red hair of his royal British ancestors. He rode as well as any Scythian or Hunnish horse-archer, and Caledfwlch gleamed in his hand.

   “Go!” I screamed, pointing my spear west, towards the distant border of
Liguria, “go now, or bear a father’s curse!”

   Arthur might have disobeyed, for he was ever a strong-willed brute
, but he carried a sacred charge. Caesar’s sword, wielded by his famous ancestor (and namesake) at Mount Badon, could not fall into the hands of our enemies. I had made him swear an oath to that effect, and taught him to keep his oaths.

  
Our eyes met for the last time. His were green, so much like his mother’s, and blazing with fury. It was against his proud nature to turn and run, but there was no help for it.

  
The thunder of hoofs sounded behind us. I twisted my neck and saw the dark shapes of horsemen thundering across the plain to the south. A dozen at least, Frankish lancers in gleaming mail and white cloaks.

   The
y had been pursuing us for days, remorseless as hounds after a couple of fleeing deer. I tried every trick I knew to evade them, but the Frankish captain was no fool, and saw through all my deceptions.

   I glanced back at Arthur. To my relief, he had obeyed my last instruction, and was riding away to the west at the gallop
. We had fled with remounts, and ridden the first pair of horses to exhaustion, but his fresh mount would carry him over the border to safety.

  
He urged his horse up to the crest of a little ridge, and there halted and wheeled her about. For a moment his superb cavalry figure was silhouetted against a backdrop of rolling hills and the light of the rising sun, Caledfwlch raised high in salute. The length of the blade rippled with silvery light, as it had done in the caves on the shore of Amorica, so many years ago.

  
“Virtus et fortitudo!”
I heard him shout: ‘Courage and strength’, the old battle-cry of the legions. My eyes misted as I recalled the first time Arthur heard it, chanted by a phalanx of Isaurian spearmen marching on parade along the Mese in Constantinople.

   Then he was gone,
vanished behind the ridge, and the light of Caledfwlch snuffed out.

  
I dragged my horse around to face the Franks. They were coming on at the charge, triumphant war-shouts tearing through the still air. It was Caledfwlch they wanted, not me, but I would die rather than let them slay my son and deliver Caesar’s sword into the hands of a barbarian king.

   Blinking away
tears, I urged my horse straight at the Franks, aiming for their captain. He was a typically burly officer, his auburn hair twisted into pigtails, face partially hidden behind the nose-guard and hinged cheek-pieces of an elaborate golden helm.

  
“Belisarius!”
I shouted as I surged in for the kill, the name of my old chief rising in my throat. I had not shouted his name in many years, and would never see or serve under him again. Despite everything, all the bitterness and disappointment he had caused me, I still honoured the man.

   The Franks spread out to encircle me. I ignored them and cast my spear at their leader. It was a good throw, and pierced his right shoulder, just above where a silver brooch held his cloak in place. The impact made him jerk in the saddle, and his horse came to grief, her legs tangling and folding up under her.

   His men screeched in rage and closed in around me. I dragged back on my reins with one hand and reached for my spatha – a poor substitute for Caledfwlch – with the other.

   A spear clanged against the shield strapped to my left arm. I bi
t back a spurt of pain, tore the blade free and turned to face the nearest Frank as he came plunging at me, axe raised high.

   At fifty
-one, my reflexes had lost their edge. I tried to lean sharply to my left to avoid the blow, but was too slow. The edge of his axe slammed into my breast. It split the mail, drove the breath from my body, and hurled me backwards out of the saddle.

   Red blotches flashed before m
y eyes. The world spun crazily. My horse bucked and shrieked in panic. I landed with a jarring thump on my back.

   I tried to rise, but a dark shadow fell over me, and flailing hoofs crunched into my ribs, my pelvis, my spine. One of the Franks had ridden his horse straight over me.

   Pain, and numbing despair. I lay curled like a worm on the end of a hook, unable to move, scarcely able to breathe. Waiting for the blow that would finish me, and usher my shade into the next world.

   It didn’t co
me.

 

 

 

 

 

2.

 

I am ahead of my tale, and must go back some thirteen years, to the coast of Naples. There, along with Procopius and a few other companions, I saw the Roman fleet anchored in the glittering blue waters of the bay.

   We had crept out of
Rome, on the orders of Belisarius, to make our way through the Gothic siege lines and hence to Campania, to try and raise reinforcements from our scattered garrisons.

  
Procopius let out a cry of joy when he sighted the fleet. The troops from Constantinople were so long-delayed we had despaired of them ever arriving, and he was of the opinion that the Emperor Justinian had abandoned his army in Italy to its fate. Procopius always held a low opinion of Justinian, and those unfortunate enough to read his
Secret History
(as I have) will know how his dislike of the emperor eventually congealed into madness.

  
He had to swallow his bile on this occasion, and clawed at my arm in excitement as he watched the soldiers disembarking in the harbour. They were Isaurians, tough infantry from the rugged hill country near the borders of Cilicia.

   “
Look to the south,” he cried, stabbing his finger at a point further down the coast, beyond the city. I strained my eyes to see, and thought I made out a thin column of dust. Then I caught the flash of sunlight on spear-heads.

    “M
ore reinforcements?” I said. He nodded vigorously, his oversized head wobbling on the end of its skinny neck.

   “Must be,” he replied, lifting himself awkwardly into the saddle, “let us go down and meet them.”

   I fetched my horse from where I had tethered her, and together – there were eight of us in all, including six Hunnish warriors and a native Roman who had guided us through the Gothic lines – we rode down the coast road, skirting the white walls of Naples and heading south-east, towards the advancing trail of dust.

   The banners of Roman
cavalry soon became visible. They turned out to be a mixture of Huns and Scythians and Heruls, two thousand men in all. Having made landfall at Otranto on the southern Italian coast, they had force-marched across Campania to meet the rest of the Roman reinforcements at Naples.

   We learned as much from their commander,
a nobleman named John the Sanguinary. You will gather from his name what kind of man he was. I had known many hard, bloodthirsty officers in the Roman army, such as Bessas and John Troglita and Constantine, but John the Sanguinary beat them all.

  
The son of Vitalian, a treacherous general who had rebelled against the Emperor Anastasius and was finally murdered by Justinian, he lived under the shadow of his father’s accursed memory. Constantly under suspicion, constantly aware of Justinian’s displeasure, he had somehow survived to adulthood and looked to forge a career in the army.

  
If I had known how much trouble this man would cause me, and the Roman cause in general, I might have thrust Caledfwlch into his heart. As it was, I respectfully saluted the tall, leathery-skinned nobleman, and listened while he spoke with Procopius.  

  
Belisarius’ secretary was not the sort to defer to anyone, but even he seemed overawed by John’s languid, aristocratic air, and (most unusually for him) made an effort to listen instead of dominating the conversation.

  
“Ye-es,” John drawled after Procopius had provided a hasty explanation of how we had escaped from Rome, “so General Belisarius is still shut up inside the city, is he? I feared as much. The general is a decent strategist, but rather too cautious.”

   I was eating while
he spoke, and almost choked on a bit of dried meat. Belisarius had risked his own life many times during the siege of Rome, and performed wonders in defending the city against obscene odds. This arrogant, perfumed young noble, in his rustling silks and polished lamellar armour, knew nothing of the hardships of war.

   No-one heeded my spluttering. “
I have studied the approaches to Rome,” said John, shading his eyes to study the fleet bobbing at anchor in bay, “and I believe the garrison still retains control of Ostia, am I correct?”

  
Ostia was the main harbour with access to Rome, about twenty miles northeast of the city.

   “Yes,” replied Procopius, “but the Goths have seized the Portus Claudii. Thus we cannot get supplies into
Rome via the sea.”

   John gave a limp little flick of his
gloved hand. “Then the supply wagons will travel up the Appian Way,” he said, “escorted by our cavalry. If they are attacked, the men can dismount and the wagons form into squares. A mobile fortress, yes?”

  
It was an original idea, and I started to wonder if John was something of a soldier after all. Our last detachment of reinforcements had reached Rome via Ostia, and he had the same notion.

  
We did not advance north immediately, but marched to Naples. I had no sooner found a billet than Procopius insisted I ride out with him, to look for more reinforcements. 

   Knowing my duty, though resenting it, I consented to be dragged all over
Campania. The secretary was seized with one of his periodic bouts of furious energy, and in the space of two or three days managed to raise some three hundred men from various occupied towns and villages.

   “Not a bad tally,” he said as we cantered back towards
Naples, exhausted from our labours, “we might have levied more, but it is dangerous to strip the countryside of troops. I don’t trust the Italians. They need the presence of armed men to remind them of their loyalty to Rome.”

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