A FLAME IN BYZANTIUM
Olivia Book 1
By Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
PART I
At Neapolis there was chaos as those who could flee Roma came to this port seeking escape. Carts, wagons, litters, and every beast of burden had been pressed into use for the rout, and reports from Belisarius' forces indicated that the flood of refugees ran all the way back to the walls of Roma itself.
'What has become of the Romans, that they do this?' Belisarius asked the officer who rode beside him against the surge of terrified humanity.
Drosos shrugged. 'They're frightened. Small wonder.'
'Romans were supposed to be made of sterner stuff than this,' Belisarius said, a faint regret in his words. He shielded his eyes against the sun and squinted down the road through the dust.
'Perhaps they were once,' said Drosos, dragging on the reins to keep from running into a heavily laden oxcart.
His horse quivered with dread as the vehicle lumbered by them.
'That beast of yours is as bad as the Romans,' said Belisarius, doing his best to make light of the situation now that he was faced with it. 'The Emperor will be disgusted to learn of this. I hope we can give him a better report of Roma itself once we arrive there.'
'Do you still intend to go there?' Drosos asked, sweating with the effort to hold his mount.
'I am ordered to do so. And I confess that I want to see if any of the old Roman virtues still survive in the people. Surely they can't all be running away, can they?' Belisarius was not a big man, but he sat a horse like a giant and he carried himself like one of the most noble. There were lines around his eyes and his mouth was framed by deep creases.
Drosos was a stockier version of his General, and his junior by eight years. He was as steadfast as Belisarius was forceful and as such was an ideal subordinate and Captain. 'What are the plans now?'
'We leave for Roma at first light tomorrow.' He said it as calmly as if he had discussed the weather or the breed of horse he rode.
'Who rides with you?' As always when he asked such questions, Drosos had to fight the urge to hold his breath as he waited for the answer.
'You, of course, and one or two others; I haven't decided who yet.' He indicated a group of monks in filthy habits. 'Even they are leaving. What does that say of their faith and devotion? How can the Romans claim any right to the favor of God if His servants fly with the rest of the people?'
'Totila has not been kind to monks and priests,' Drosos offered, embarrassed for the religious men whose vocation had shown itself to be so inadequate.
'And the people of Judah chose Barabbas over Our Lord,' said Belisarius more sternly, not willing to excuse the cowardice he saw.
Drosos had no answer for this; he busied himself with his horse and with watching the wretched parade that wound from the gates of Neapolis to the quays.
At nightfall, when the gates had to be closed, there were many hundreds of people still on the road, and they made what little they could of this, some banding together to make a more secure camp to afford some protection from the Ostrogoths as well as from the other Romans. All along the branch of the Via Latina the way was marked with cooking fires and makeshift tents, and the sounds and odors crowded together in the air.
A delegation from the city of Neapolis visited Belisarius early in the night. They were exhausted men, most of them wary and a few angry with what had befallen their home.
'We are thankful to the Emperor for sending his aid,' began the oldest, who boasted his family went back to the time of the ancient Roman Republic.
Belisarius recognized the note of disapproval in the man's tone and he raised his eyes from the report that had been handed to him only moments before. 'Yes? What are your objections?'
'They are not objections, precisely, General,' the man said, glancing at his companions uneasily.
'Then what are they?' Belisarius sensed that the visit would be a long one unless he brought the others to the point as soon as possible.
'Reservations,' said the oldest man. 'We are concerned, as you must be yourself. There are so many people leaving Roma and while we are willing to do what we can for them, we haven't the room or the supplies to care for all of them.'
'And what supplies we have are already reduced,' added one of the others. 'We cannot continue to give out food and cloth at the rate we have been doing. It isn't possible.'
Belisarius looked at the men before him and tried to find a virtue in them that reflected all he had been told of Roma in her days of glory. He could find nothing but exhaustion and the venality that was the chief complaint of most of those who dealt with Romans in these days. 'What do you propose?' he asked them patiently.
The youngest scratched his head and flicked away lice. 'We need to know what the situation is—what we really have on hand and how much of it we can spare. We must find out what the farmers can actually supply us