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When Cato had finished the older centurion let out a deep laugh. 'The gods help me if you ever decide to take to politics. You've got a bloody devious mind, young Cato.'

Cato blushed a little at the implied criticism, before he shrugged. 'I'll leave politics to those who are bred for it. I just want to survive. Right now, we're sitting on the top of a scorpions' nest. We've got two cohorts of native troops, dangerously cocksure that they can take on anything. We've got a town packed to the seams with a starving rabble, and an old king who's jumping at every shadow because he fears that his own nobles are plotting against him. Outside the walls there are enemy columns raiding Atrebatan lands and butchering our supply convoys. And now… now we have some jumped-up tribune on the make, just itching for an excuse to a

'You've got a point.' Macro nodded. 'Let's get something to drink.'

04 The Eagle and the Wolves

Chapter Nineteen

Tribune Quintillus walked slowly through the soiled thoroughfares of Calleva. Behind him trudged the bodyguards he had brought with him from army headquarters: six men selected for their toughness; each as tall and broad-shouldered as the tribune. He knew what kind of impression he wanted to cast before these barbarians. As a representative of the general, and by extension the Emperor, he must be the very image of the all-conquering race, chosen by the gods themselves to subdue the backward peoples who blighted the world beyond the frontiers of the Empire.

Quintillus glanced curiously around as he made his way between the thatched huts towards the royal enclosure. Most of the townspeople were sitting around the entrances to their huts, a tableau of gaunt faces with desperation etched into their expressions. They had not quite reached the stage where starvation made them too listless and apathetic to act. Accordingly, the tribune calculated, they still constituted a danger. They might yet have the energy to respond to an appeal to rise up against Verica and Rome.

The quiet was eerie after the noise of training in the depot and Quintillus was relieved when he turned the final corner and caught sight of the wooden gates and raised palisade of the royal enclosure. To the tribune's surprise the gates were closed. It would seem that those inside the enclosure were well aware of the simmering tensions wreathing the hot streets of Calleva. At the approach of the Romans one of the sentries on the walkway over the gates turned towards the king's great hall and bellowed notice of the new arrivals. But the gates remained closed as Quintillus strode towards them. He was just begi

'Do you speak any Latin?' the tribune asked, with a smile.

The man nodded.

'Then please be so good as to tell your king that Tribune Quintillus desires an audience. I have been sent by Aulus Plautius.'

The Briton's eyes widened a little at the sound of the general's name. 'Wait, Roman.'

Then he was gone, and the gate was shut again. Quintillus glared at the shadowed timbers and slapped his hand against his thigh in frustration. The Romans waited in the bright sunshine, between the crude huts lining the rutted street. The stench from a nearby midden, heated to a sharp pungency, filled the still air and the tribune wrinkled his nose in disgust. Flies buzzed lazy looping paths around the tribune and his bodyguards, and a short distance away a dog barked endlessly. Quintillus affected an air of detachment and slowly paced up and down in front of the gate, hands loosely clasped behind his back. The entire town was crying out for demolition, the tribune decided. He began to visualise Calleva as the seat of government for this province: neat ranks of tiled houses arranged around a modest palace and basilica that would proclaim that Roman law and Roman order had triumphed once more.



At last there came a heavy rumble from behind the gates as the locking bar was removed. Moments later one of them slowly swung inwards. The Briton they had seen earlier beckoned them inside, and then the gate was swung back into place.

'This way.' The Briton waved a finger and turned towards the great hall. Quintillus bit back on his anger at the blunt lack of ma

The enclosure was almost as quiet as the town beyond the gate. A handful of guards walked slowly along the palisade, keenly watching over the spread of thatched roofs. Other men sat, or slept, in patches of shade, and Quintillus was aware of several pairs of eyes watching him closely as he marched past. At the entrance to the great hall stood four warriors, squatting in the shadows. They rose to their feet as the small party approached. At the doorway the Briton turned towards Quintillus.

'Your men will wait here.'

'They're my bodyguards.'

'They wait here,' the Briton said firmly. 'You come with me.'

After the slightest hesitation, to indicate that he was making a concession to his hosts, Quintillus followed the man inside. The contrast with the bright sunlight outside was striking and Quintillus wondered at the echoing darkness as he followed the dim form of the Briton across the roughly paved floor. A small opening in the apex of the roof allowed a shaft of light to fall between the beams, and tiny motes of dust glided through the soft golden hue. Quintillus noted that the air was pleasantly cool, but smelled of beer and cooking. At the far end of the hall was a small doorway with a leather curtain hanging across the inside. A guard stood to one side of the entrance, his sword drawn with the point resting on the ground between his feet. The tribune's companion nodded to the guard, who stepped aside, and then rapped on the wooden doorframe. A voice answered and then the Briton pushed the leather curtain to one side, stepped through the door and beckoned the tribune to follow him into the chamber.

The king's private quarters were crudely appointed by Roman standards and Quintillus had immediately to suppress an undiplomatic betrayal of his distaste and condescension. The daubed walls were hung with animal skins and lined with chests to store the king's possessions. Close by the entrance was a large table with several chairs arranged around it. At the far end of the chamber was a large bed covered with yet more skins. Verica stood beside the bed, pulling a long tunic over the sagging wrinkled flesh of his ski

'Would you like her?' asked Verica, walking stiffly towards him. 'After we've talked, I mean. She's good.'

'Most kind of you, but I fear I shall be too busy to enjoy her. Besides I prefer them slightly older – they have more experience. '

'Experience?' Verica frowned. 'I grow more sick of experience every day. At my age one craves the life one had before experience soiled it… Sorry,' Verica smiled and raised a hand. 'I've become a bit too preoccupied by questions of age lately. Please sit down, Tribune, here at the table. I've sent for some wine. I know how my Roman friends prefer wine to our beer.'