could get these freed slaves under some form of shelter the better; weak from work, hunger, the strain of their escape and now this foul weather, many were already being carried. Surprised to see Gadoric at his rendezvous, he rode ahead, leaving the rest of his men to bring in their charges. There was no welcome in the Celt’s eyes and he beckoned Aquila away from the encampment so that they could speak privately. They dismounted and huddled in their cloaks under a tree, Gadoric eyeing the line of slaves shuffling into the camp.
‘We must stop for the winter.’
Aquila cast an ironic look at the grey, cloud-filled sky. ‘We might be too late.’
‘I’ve tried to persuade Hypolitas but he won’t listen. He’s obsessed with freeing as many people as possible, even if we can barely feed them. He thinks the more we have the stronger we’ll be.’
‘Surely it’s your decision, Gadoric. You’re a free man now, you can stop this when you like.’
The Celt ignored the barbed remark. ‘Tell that to Hypolitas. He’s not so keen to take my advice these days.’
‘I doubt he was ever keen.’
The two of them looked at each other, one a tall, fully grown man, scarred from numerous battles, the other a golden-haired youth, nearly as tall but unscratched. Neither wanted to be the one to say what was on their minds: that the Greek was falling victim to his own rhetoric. Hypolitas was beginning to think of himself as invincible and in that mood had no desire to take advice from anyone.
‘If we can persuade Tyrtaeus to join with us, Hypolitas will have to give way. We must find him and persuade him.’
Aquila just nodded, unconvinced, and went off to see to his charges.
It was still raining steadily when they found Tyrtaeus’s encampment. The rain ran off his arched back and down the flanks of the horse. Gadoric lifted his head to examine the throat, cut raggedly from ear to ear.
‘That’s what happens when you’re soft,’ snarled Pentheus, who, with grey hair plastered over his head, looked more like a corpse than his late leader. ‘He was like you, afraid to spill blood.’
‘What happened?’ asked Aquila.
Pentheus shrugged, as though what he had to say mattered little. ‘One of the guards had a knife. He wasn’t searched properly.’
‘Stay here,’ snapped Gadoric. ‘No more attacks till you hear from me.’
Pentheus opened his eyes in surprise and he looked at Aquila with that deep, ingrained suspicion which was now habitual. He also looked as though he was about to protest, for as second in command, the leadership of this group would naturally devolve on him and with Aquila holding a similar position, his lack of years could not be held against him. Gadoric, towering over him, spoke first.
‘You’ll get your fill of fighting, Pentheus, never fear. Maybe a bit more than you really want.’
Persuading Hypolitas was not easy. He saw himself as the sole cause of the banditti’s success, forgetting that he, personally, could not wield a weapon. Aquila was right when he had hinted that the man had fallen prey to his own speechifying, but those who surrounded him contributed too, slavishly agreeing with everything their leader said, often flattering him outrageously. Gadoric soon realised that the Greek would not yield for all the right reasons, so the Celt wisely decided to play him at his own game, painting a golden vision of a great slave army making stupendous conquests. Towns would open their gates, cities would offer tribute, not to slaves but to their leader Hypolitas, and Rome itself would tremble at his name, but all this would be jeopardised if they continued with piecemeal raids.
To begin with Hypolitas made no attempt to hide his disdain for Gadoric’s most recent military advice but that changed inexorably as this image of personal greatness was outlined for him. His eyes, slightly raised, looked above the other man’s head at the sulphurous smoke rising from the distant, smoking volcano, just visible against the grey overcast sky, then they began to glaze over, as if he could see everything that was being offered quite plainly in his mind. His lips moved silently as Gadoric, in the tradition of his race, borrowed freely from one epic to create another. The Greek’s lips had started to move first, soon followed by his head, nodding at each imagined triumph. Gadoric ended up almost singing his tale, but he brought his voice under control, returning it to normality.
‘But to do all this we feed our men to make them strong. We must train them to fight properly, as a real army, or they will take the field as a rabble.’
Aquila interrupted; he thought that Gadoric had gone too far, since Hypolitas was clearly harbouring dangerous God-like tendencies. This feeling was evident in his voice when he spoke, carrying, as it did, a hint of irony. ‘You wouldn’t care to have your name associated with a rabble, would you, Hypolitas?’
The Greek came out of his near trance-like state to stare at the younger man and for the first time Aquila saw undisguised dislike. Then the eyes dropped to the gold charm at his throat, and the look changed to one of greed. Knowing that Hypolitas coveted it, Aquila took the eagle in his hand, wondering if he had spoilt Gadoric’s whole idea by that one mundane, slightly ironic comment, and the look his friend gave him certainly indicated that he had.
‘You are a wise man and such a man moves with care,’ he continued, trying to repair the atmosphere. ‘We must take a city, you have said so yourself. Which city? How will we attack it? How many men will we need? These things cannot be left to chance.’
This string of questions brought matters to a head, since Hypolitas, even in his most deistic mood, knew that he was unqualified to made such judgements. Slowly, now without difficulty, he was forced to concede each point. He would stop the raids, except where there was a need to acquire food, initiate more training and set others to the forging of weapons. Gadoric, with Aquila and a small band of mounted men, would reconnoitre the various Sicilian cities and decide which one was most susceptible to attack.
‘Can we really take a city?’
The question was asked as they gazed at the distant walls of Agrigentum. To Aquila they looked just as formidable as all the others he had seen these past weeks and even though he was at home in the saddle he was tired out by their endless travels. Not all the time had been spent in riding, or gazing at walls, a great deal had been expended talking to the local inhabitants, all of whom seemed to hold similar, unflattering opinions on the benefits of Roman rule.
Here in the south, if they knew of the slave revolt around Messana, it barely registered. They had no suspicion that these well-fed, mounted men, who spoke near unintelligible Greek with such barbaric accents, were anything other than legitimate travellers, so they were free in their criticism of Rome, hankering for a golden age, long before the tutelage of Carthage, when the island had been ruled by the Greek oligarchy in Syracuse. And following on from that, Gadoric had gone off on his own to look at the landscape with the eye of the warrior he was. It was after one of those lonely excursions that they had come to this place. He acknowledged the question, smiled, and spoke quietly so that only the boy could hear.
‘Not by assault, Aquila. We’ve none of your Roman siege engines and the like to batter the walls, nor do we possess the skill to make them. But perhaps by negotiation.’
The reply was larded with heavy sarcasm. ‘We’d like your city, please surrender?’
Gadoric pointed past the walls they overlooked, his finger aimed towards the angry, grey-blue sea. ‘Agrigentum is the closest Sicilian city to Africa. It lies, unsupported, between two wide rivers, something which, if the local farmers are to be believed, has always made it vulnerable.’
‘Why?’
‘Any city under siege looks at the means of relief. Agrigentum is a port, so it should most easily come by sea. That was true when the city was Carthaginian, but where is the Roman fleet? Most likely scattered across the whole of the Middle Sea.’
‘Soldiers?’
‘Any army coming by land has to cross an easily defended river, whichever route they choose.’
Aquila cast his mind back to his childhood, to Clodius teaching him to swim, something every legionary was trained to do. ‘That won’t stop a Roman army.’
Gadoric grinned at him. ‘What Roman army? Imagine you’re inside those walls, which are not as formidable as they appear from this distance. I know, I have looked. Lacking any credible threat, they’ve been left to rot. You’ve heard rumours of trouble in the north, a few slaves raiding and looting, then one morning you wake up and