“That will be unlucky for you.”
“Why? Do the Romani still eat their prisoners?”
I laughed. “Not these days. Besides you are too skinny for our tastes.” I knew to what she was referring. Years before, two war leaders of the Franks, captured in battle, had been given to the wild beasts in the arena; and the story was a familiar one on both banks of the river.
She said in a low voice, “What will you do with me?”
“I could get a good price for you in the slave market at Treverorum.” I put my head on one side. “On the other hand, you would fetch more if I sent you south to Rome. They pay twenty solidii nowadays for an unskilled woman.” She flushed at the insult. I went on: “There is a demand for white-skinned girls there. And then again, you would fetch a better price still in Mauretania.” I paused. “Or I might keep you for myself. I could do with a woman in my house; and I shall need servants when I retire from the army to my villa.”
“If you did I would kill you when you were sleeping, and escape.”
I smiled. “I believe that you would.”
“But you—you would not dare to sell me. We are not at war so I cannot be a slave.”
“So you know our law, do you? You are a clever girl. Yet you are wrong. Yours is a race with whom we now have no friendship and no hospitality. If you capture a citizen of ours he is your slave, as you are mine.”
She was very white. She said in a whisper, “But there is a treaty, made by your general, Stilicho.”
“I agree. But you were taken in an action of war. Marcomir is an ally of ours. So you are still a slave for that reason.”
She was silent.
I said, “How many sisters have you?”
“Three.”
“Are you the eldest?”
“Yes.”
“One will not be missed over-much.”
She began to cry. I stepped forward. “There is no need. No harm will come to you if your father is sensible. I want you to write him a letter. I will have it written for you, and all you will have to do is to sign it.”
“He cannot read,” she muttered.
“There will be someone in his camp who can. Sign it and I will see that no harm comes to you.”
She cried again and swayed forward, sobbing, so that I was forced to hold her. I looked at the roof of the office.
I said, “There is nothing to worry about. Don’t cry, my child.”
She raised her face. “I will be your slave, if you wish.” She pressed her body against me, and her lips parted. She was young enough to be my daughter; but she was very beautiful, and I was still a man. I began to push her gently away. Then her arm moved from her cloak and I felt a terrible pain in my shoulder. I staggered back, shouted, and then half turned and fell across the table. The door burst open and the sentry ran in as she clawed at my face, trying to reach the dagger that was still inside me.
“Get a doctor,” I said. I tried to reach the dagger but it hurt too much. The room was full of people now; I was sitting on a stool, blood all over me; and the girl, a great bruise on her face where the sentry had hit her, was standing in a corner, her arms twisted behind her back; the sentry holding her as though he would like to cut her throat.
“You must lie down,” said someone.
“Get him to his bed.”
“What about that bitch?”
“Kill her,” said another voice.
“No,” I said faintly. A face loomed above me that I recognised. “Find out how she got the knife—punish them.”
“And the girl?” asked Aquila grimly.
I was sick and dizzy with pain. “Flog her,” I said.
“It’s not enough.”
“My orders,” I said.
It was a burning, hot day and I lay on my stomach and sweated, for the wound was deep and gave great pain. It would be a month before I could use that arm again properly. Out in the sun, the girl, her back lacerated, hung by her wrists from a wooden bar and moaned for water. She was lucky. If it had been a man I would have executed him.
Late that night when I was trying to sleep, Fabianus came and asked how I was.
“I shall live,” I said sourly. “She put it in at the wrong angle. Just like a woman—thank the gods.”
He said awkwardly, “Could we cut the girl down, sir? She’s in a very bad state.”
“So am I.”
“You said she wasn’t to die.”
“She won’t.”
“She might, sir.”
I glared at him. “Not that one. She tried to seduce me one moment and murder me the next. Girls like that don’t die so easily.”
He said quietly, “It was a severe beating. When they salted the wounds afterwards, she screamed and screamed.”
I tried to sit up. “They all do that,” I said. “Did she ask you to speak for her?”
He flushed and shook his head. “No, sir.”
“What did she say?”
He hesitated. He said, “She tried to spit at me and then said that she hoped you were dying.”
I lay down again. “She’ll live,” I said. “Haters like that are tenacious of life.”
The wound was clean and I made a good recovery. So did the girl, though her hurts took longer to heal. It was a long time before she left her bed, and each day the blue haze of smoke from the camp fires on the further bank seemed to grow thicker and more impenetrable.
Word reached me from Marcomir that he was happy, that his wife was a fine woman and that Goar had done as he promised, had left the barbarian camp and was now in the hills to the north. No other news came from across the river; no boat pushed out from the banks, bearing an invitation to a meeting; no embassy arrived, offering terms or insults. Nothing happened and I began to worry at the silence, at the inactivity. Where would they strike and when? It must be soon. They could not delay much longer, surely. In an excess of irritation, I sent suddenly for Quintus. He came, and I was driven to anger by the sight of his impassive face, his rigid salute and his carefully controlled politeness when he asked how my arm was getting on.
I said icily, “If you wanted to know that, you could have come to my hut more often when I was laid up. You want some fighting; well you can have it. Get six hundred of your men across the Rhenus with horses into Marcomir’s territory, and then report to me. We shall need help from Goar, from Marcomir and from Gallus. We shall want Fabianus also. You will be in command, and in the unlikely event of the expedition going wrong I shall hold you personally responsible. Is that understood?”
He flushed. I had spoken to him as I would to a young and inexperienced tribune. “Yes,” he said. “It is understood.” He went out quietly and I was left alone with my bad temper and my thoughts for company. Out in the camp the trumpet blew for the evening meal.
XIII
TEN DAYS LATER the Rhenus Fleet moved into the mouth of the Moenus. It was a little after midnight, and I stood on the poop of Gallus’ flagship, listening to the strong beat of the oars. Behind us, following in our wake, came all the merchant ships and small boats that I had been able to muster. On board them was a mixed cohort of heavy and light infantry, under the command of Fabianus. At the same time, Goar and Marcomir, with five thousand men, stiffened by a cohort of my own, together with the cavalry under Quintus, moved