Illeana stood. âAnd your real name?'
âPyrrha,' the girl said again.
Illeana was prepared to let that drop: she was not being insubordinate after all, even though the name was evidently prepared. It was an excellent fighting name, a feminised one from history and myth that the crowds would recognise and remember. âYou've had some training, Pyrrha. I can tell.'
âI've had some training, yes.'
âFought in the arena before?'
âNo.'
That was intriguing. âHow so?' she asked.
âMy former owner was a gladiator. He taught me.'
âReally,' Illeana arched an eyebrow. âWhat was his name? Perhaps I have heard of him.'
âIf you know the gladiators of Greece, you will have,' the girl tried to inject some bluster into her voice. âHis fighting name was Aristodemus. When he was granted the wooden sword, he moved here from Greece and bought me. He wanted to enter me into the games when I was old enough. Which I am now. Unfortunately, Aristodemus fell in love with the drink a little too much. A fight in the Subura and that was the end of him. First I knew about it was when the
quaestor
's men came and took everything for the Imperial treasury. All I have is a few sesterces, the clothes on my back and what he taught me. '
The story seemed to have a ring of accuracy to it but there was something in Pyrrha's eyes that told Illeana that she was not hearing the full truth. She noted the girl's dark eyes flare in defiance as she realised that she herself was being read in return. That almost false arrogance had returned. It was, she realised, time to knock it out of her.
âWhat style did this Aristodemus teach you, Pyrrha ?' she asked.
âI can fight as a
thraex
and
dimachaeria
,' she responded with a slight smile.
Illeana raised an eyebrow in surprise. â
Dimachaeria
,' she repeated.
âThat's a rare skill. The double swords are difficult to become proficient with.'
âYes,' Pyrrha agreed. âThey are. But I had a
very
good teacher.'
The gladiatrix could not resist chuckling at that. Forced or not, Pyrrha's cockiness had an endearing quality. âCome then,' she gestured to a rack of wooden training swords. âPut on your tunic and we'll see how good you are. Do well and you stay here. Do badly and you'll be sent to one of the schools outside Rome â which really don't have the facilities of the Magnus if you take my meaning.
Life is hard â and often short.'
As Pyrrha made her way to the swords, Laenus finished with his examination. âWell?' he asked quietly as he approached her.
Illeana's green eyes narrowed as she watched the younger woman stretching and warming herself up. âNo doubt about it. This one knows what she's doing.'
âBut you can beat her, right?'
Her responding glance was withering.
âI was just making sure.'
âGet me two swords, Laenus.'
This was the reason that â day in, day out â the crowds gathered around the Magnus. It was an endless fascination for the Roman populace to watch gladiators at their work, training, exercising and light sparring. But often there would be a mock battle between two fighters. There would be no blood spilled but to be this close to the action was something that most people could never hope for in the Flavian. It was something that they could boast about in the taverns and some of the cannier would hope to use what they had seen to gain advantage from the bookmakers.
As Laenus marked out an area in the sand, work on the
palaestra
began to slow down as gladiators and trainers watched with grinning interest, nudging one another as Illeana made her way to the circle.
She glanced over at her male peers, knowing precisely what they thought of her. Despite the emperor's support, they believed that gladiatrices were a fad of his reign and not to be taken seriously.
Rome was for men and the world was Rome. It did not matter that, a few scant years before, the champion, Aristos, had been defeated by the Germanian tribeswoman, Auriana, before their very eyes. They had called her a sorceress and a witch and claimed that she used magic on their champion. Magic or not, Aristos was dead and Auriana had walked away alive, but it was a bout that was deemed churlish to mention these days. Aristos's end had been less than honourable â Auriana had strangled him with her hair, which was both unique and humiliating.
Illeana switched her attention to back to the miniature arena that Laenus had marked out. Pyrrha was now striding purposefully towards the fighting area, training swords held loosely in her hands.
All work had stopped now. The other gladiatrices who trained at the Magnus were shoving their way to the front, their interest in the bout the keenest. Illeana noted that the new slaves and
auctoratae,
now clothed, were loitering at the periphery of the crowd unsure of where they should be.
It was only a training bout, but Illeana still felt a thrill coursing through her as the contest neared. There was nothing to compare it to: alcohol, narcotics, even sex â nothing came close to the heady buzz of combat. The shouts and jibes coming from the crowd around her faded to a distant hum as the would-be gladiatrix Pyrrha became her sole focus. Sweat beaded on the girl's forehead and Illeana was certain it was not from her brief warm-up: Pyrrha was nervous and was right to be. She was about to face Aesalon Nocturna before the eyes of those she would call her peers and the people of Rome.
Training bout or no, it was a harsh test.
Pyrrha stretched her neck from side to side and dropped back into a fighting stance. She held her swords in guard position, leading with her left, the right held back to counter strike. So far, Illeana thought, so good. She had not yet adopted her own stance, preferring instead to stalk around her opponent, seeking to make her even more edgy than she was. But to her credit, Pyrrha would not be drawn at this stage. Her narrowed eyes followed Illeana as she circled, shifting her stance to ensure that she was always face on.
âAre you going to attack me or just stand looking aggressive all day?' Illeana asked, her voice light and mocking.
âI'm not a barbarian to chase you round the
palaestra
waving my swords,' came the taut reply. âYou want to fight, get into the arena.'
Illeana chuckled. âI think this kitten has claws,' she said, winking at Laenus who looked as though he was enjoying this immensely.
âCome, Aesalon,' he said. âEnough posing.
Pugnate!'
Illeana dropped into her stance, raising her wooden blades. Like Laenus, she was having fun with the situation and she smiled through her guard at Pyrrha. âReady?'
Pyrrha's speed took her by complete surprise. Viper-quick, the
tiro
's blade lanced out, spearing straight for Illeana's throat. Her leading weapon parried the blow by instinct alone and the automatic riposte was met with the unyielding wood of Pyrrha's
rudis
.
The younger woman disengaged and stepped to Illeana's left, striking out with a double attack, the left sword cutting towards her temple, the right aiming for her side. Again, Illeana parried the assault but this time Pyrrha gave her no chance to respond, upping the intensity of her attack, forcing the gladiatrix to retreat.
Illeana was impressed.
Pyrrha's footwork was excellent as she pressed her attack. Most novice
dimachaeria
could not change their leading leg as they moved forward, but Pyrrha had clearly mastered the âcircle-step' as it was called. She bore down on Illeana at pace, her face fierce and alive with concentration. Using the momentum provided by her footwork she exploded into a violent attack, alternating between left and right hand blows that Illeana was hard-pressed to deflect.
The girl, she decided, was almost the finished product.
Almost.
As Pyrrha tore in again, this time it was Illeana who stepped off to one side. The movement was only slight as she pivoted away from the other fighter's blades but it was enough. Now it was she who owned the centre-line of attack and she decided to end the contest before it got out of hand. Pyrrha must have known that she was in trouble and Illeana fully expected her to try to fight her way out of it, but the younger woman surprised her again by hurling herself away and executing a wrestler's shoulder roll to carry her out of harm's reach.
Resisting the urge to grin at the audacity of the move, Illeana pursued her, allowing her no time to readjust as she regained her footing.
Now it was Illeana who had the initiative and she was not about the relinquish it. Her attack was relentless as she lashed out at the
tiro
with both swords. She was aware only of the thrill coursing through her body, the staccato clack of their weapons as Pyrrha worked desperately to stave off the inevitable. The girl was good, but she was not the
Gladiatrix Prima
and Illeana determined it was now time to put an end to the bout. Like the cat toying with the mouse, she let her assault falter, offering Pyrrha an angle of attack which she took. The girl's sword once again sought Illeana's throat, but this time she stepped inside the attack as she parried it, bringing her close in. Too late Pyrrha realised her error and she froze as the tip of Illeana's wooden sword pressed under her chin. The gladiatrix forced the issue a little and pushed her
rudis
up and making Pyrrha stand on tiptoe before she stepped away.
Her body was wet with sweat and tingled with the singularly unique pleasure that she always felt after battle. The applause of the onlookers washed over her and she raised her arms in victory. It did not matter that this had just been a training bout against an untried novice. It had been a contest and she had emerged as
victrix
.
âYou fought well,' she said to Pyrrha. âYou have a future here, I think.'
âI had a very good trainer,' the girl said again.
âI can tell. Come, we will bathe together and then I will show you around your new home. Laenus!' she called the trainer who came sauntering over. âI trust that you can handle these other girls on your own?'
âIf you can handle this one.'
Illeana ignored that as she led Pyrrha away. The girl had potential and she was determined that it would not be wasted.
The port of Brundisium was as chaotic as Halicarnassus and, after being used to the clean sea air, Lysandra was painfully aware that it stank even more. She leant on the side rail looking out over the crowded panorama of the docks, marvelling at how so many people could cram themselves into a seemingly small space and continue their work.
âWell,' Bedros wandered over to join her. âWe made it, thanks be to Poseidon. I love the sea, Lysandra, but it is the finest thing to reach your port.'
âI cannot argue with that, Bedros,' she turned to face him. âThank you for seeing me to a safe harbour,' she said, hoping that it sounded nautical enough.
âThank you for saving my life,' he offered her his arm in the warrior's grip. âAs I said before: if there is any way I can help youâ¦'
âI will be sure to take you up on that, Bedros â even if it is just to get home when my work is done.'
He acknowledged that with a nod of his head. âFarewell, then.'
âFarewell, Bedros.' Lysandra turned away and shouldered her pack of belongings. As she staggered down the gangplank her legs felt as wobbly as a newborn faun's. Still too used to the roll and pitch of the sea, the sensation of being back on dry land was discon-certing and almost alien.
âTake it slowly,' Bedros called. âI didn't get you all the way here to watch you fall and break your neck.'
Lysandra looked back and gave him a sarcastic half-smile which caused him to laugh aloud. He raised his arm, waved once and then turned away. As she forced her way through the crowds, Lysandra promised herself that she would keep her word and use the
Galene
for her return voyage.
There was a part of her that felt nervous about being in this new place, far from her friends and the
Deiopolis
. She had become used to only speaking in Hellenic and hearing the Latin language in all its colourful diversity was unusual. Unlike her own tongue, it was vulgar, direct and lacking in subtlety â much like the Romans themselves.
Not that she could tell who here was Italian and who was not.
The port teemed with different colours and creeds, black skins, brown skins, sun-burned white skins like her own, everyone pushing, shoving and shouting: it was a scene of pure chaos.
Despite the general confusion, however, locating the offices of Memmius Grumio was not difficult; if there was one thing the Romans did well, apart from warfare, it was functional architecture. The merchants' offices set back from the port were clearly marked by signs written in Latin, Hellenic and several barbarian scripts that Lysandra did not recognise. She made her way along the promenade till she found her agent's bureau and made her way inside, grateful that it was cool and dark â a welcome relief from the torrid mayhem of the docks.
âYou must be Lysandra!'
Her eyes adjusted to the gloom in time to see a thin, admirably coiffed Roman bearing down on her.
âI am Memmius Grumio, your agent here in Brundisium!' he said, deftly sweeping her pack from the floor. He scrutinised her for a moment. âYou look awfully tired and in need of a bath and some refreshment.'
âGreetingsâ¦' Lysandra was about to say more, but Grumio had seemed not to have heard her.
âI will have a
lectica
brought at once to transport you from here to my home â I have made my slaves aware of your dining preferences which I know from my correspondence with your man, Telemachus. After dinner, I have arranged for a recital â a
Greek
recital of courseâ¦'
âI am capable of riding to your home, Memmius Grumio,'