Saviour of Rome [Gaius Valerius Verrens 7] (19 page)

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Authors: Douglas Jackson

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BOOK: Saviour of Rome [Gaius Valerius Verrens 7]
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‘I am called Tito, stranger; look upon me and see your death. Pick up your spear.’

‘I don’t need a spear to kill you, puppy.’ Serpentius marched unarmed towards his enemy. A murmur went through the Reburi.

The young man frowned. ‘This is not right.’

‘You want to kill me?’ The Spaniard continued his advance. ‘I’m making it easy for you. So kill me.’

Tito moved to meet him, the spear balanced and the leaf-shaped iron tip aimed at Serpentius’s chest. The Spaniard didn’t flinch at the sight of the polished metal and when he came within range Tito rammed the needle point at his heart. It was a perfect thrust, fast and well-aimed. Tito was already experiencing an odd mix of exultation and regret when he realized his victim was no longer where he’d aimed. Serpentius had
slipped past the point in a blur of movement and now he danced round his attacker so Tito had to spin to face him.

Anger clouded the younger man’s face. He’d felt almost sorry for the interloper, but now the man had humiliated him. With a snarl he rammed the spear at Serpentius’s throat. This time the Spaniard simply swayed aside and allowed the point to slide past his neck, flicking the shaft away with his right hand and dancing clear. It looked so easy that Placido laughed, and he was joined by a few of the men standing in front of the
castro
.

Serpentius wasn’t so cheerful. He’d made it appear easy, but Mars’ hairy arse the boy was quick. He had to end this soon.

Tito attacked again, with the same result, and now confusion replaced the anger on his savage features.

‘If you’re going to kill someone,’ Serpentius kept on the move so the spear point had to follow him, ‘don’t jab at them as if you only want to scratch them. Ram it in and twist, so their guts spill out on the ground when you withdraw. Of course,’ he kept his tone conversational, ‘some people don’t have it in them to kill another man. The thought of splitting another human being open makes them puke. They’re the men who die screaming in the arena and on the battlefield. Are you one of those, Tito?’

The jibe lit a fire in Tito’s head and he charged. This time there would be no mistake.

‘That’s better,’ Serpentius encouraged him. He let the spearhead almost touch him before he twisted clear and grabbed the shaft in both hands so he could rip it from Tito’s grasp. In the same movement he spun so the length of ash caught the younger man behind the knees and whipped the legs from under him. Before he knew what was happening Tito was on his back staring at the sky with the point of the spear at his throat.

Serpentius’s gaunt face appeared in his vision. ‘That’s how you kill a man,’ the Spaniard’s voice dripped ice-melt. ‘You know how to kill a man, but do you know how to die?’

Tito closed his eyes.

‘Does any among you remember a man called Barbaros,’ Serpentius continued, ‘who once lived in thi
s castro
?’

Tito opened his eyes and stared at the man above him. What was this? A moment passed before he heard the voice of Valuta, the grey-beard. ‘I know of Barbaros. He brought the Romans down upon this place and then left its people to their fate. He had a wife, called Lyda.’

‘Yes,’ said Serpentius. ‘And a son called Tito.’

XX

Melanius’s ‘bodyguard’ Aurelio turned out to be an unassuming fellow of medium build, with mousy hair chopped short across the brow and at the neck. Eyes a little too close together, nose a little too long and a mouthful of crooked teeth. To Valerius’s eye, the face of a rogue, but the type who could blend in with any crowd and never be noticed.

Aurelio bowed and introduced himself before pulling a piece of parchment from the folds of his tunic. ‘This is a warrant from the
praefectus metallorum
for the district of Asturica. Julius Licinius Ferox instructs his officers to give you every assistance and allow you access to any site or process, providing there is no danger to your person.’ He shrugged. ‘It covers mines, dams, aqueducts, canals, crushing and smelting houses, but not storehouses.’

Valerius didn’t hide his astonishment. ‘I thought I’d be fortunate to get within five feet of a disused shaft,’ he laughed. ‘How did Melanius arrange this kind of access?’

‘My master doesn’t tell me these things, lord.’ Aurelio shrugged. ‘He says go there and do that and that’s what I do.’

‘When can we start?’

‘With your permission I thought we could begin this morning, lord. We can be at the Red Hills by dusk and you’d be able to see the mines
in the morning. With respect, though, I wouldn’t be wearing your best finery. It’s a dirty business.’

‘I’ll bear that in mind,’ Valerius said, wondering if the man was mocking him.

‘There is one other thing. Because of the hostility against Rome from some of the hill tribes the
praefectus metallorum
insists on providing you with an escort.’

‘I thought you were my escort?’

‘I don’t count, lord,’ Aurelio said with a tight smile. ‘I’m only here to make sure you get what you’re looking for. It’ll be three or four men, and the prefect is right. We’ve had word of attacks by bandits and ruffians and the like. Six men is better than two, especially if four of them are likely lads carrying spears.’

Valerius packed his travel clothes in a leather bag while Aurelio fetched his horse from the stables. They rode together to the city gate where the escort waited. Valerius felt his gut tighten when he recognized the four heavily bearded men who studied him from the saddle of their ponies.

‘Parthians?’

‘The prefect has the use of a squadron of cavalry and a century of infantry from the auxiliary unit at Legio to supplement the security provided for the mines. My master believes Councillor Severus mentioned your name, and the great honour awarded you by the Emperor, at a meeting of the
ordo
last night. The prefect decided he couldn’t risk losing someone of your rank and fame.’

Valerius looked the men over. They wore the same pot helmets and fish scale armour as the troopers he’d seen exercising outside the fort. Valerius had faced Parthians in the battle of the Cepha gap and had reason to be wary. They were as sly as the desert fox and as unpredictable as snakes. ‘So we can’t send them back?’

‘That would be seen as an insult to the Prefect of Mines,’ the guide advised, ‘and,’ he dropped his voice, ‘my master’s ability to influence his decisions in future.’

It was full dark by the time they saw the lanterns of the mining
camp that served the Red Hills. The four Parthians had proved as taciturn during the ride as they had been on first meeting. Barely a word passed between them, and none with the men they were escorting. Nothing had occurred to justify Valerius’s initial wariness and he’d finally relaxed. He allowed himself to enjoy the magnificence of his surroundings, which were extraordinary even for a man so far travelled: glorious mountain vistas to left and right, the slopes patchworks of emerald meadow and olive forest, and deep gorges with clear fast-flowing rivers. On arrival, Aurelio showed the mining prefect’s warrant to the commander of the gate guard. He led Valerius to a crude guest house while the Parthians laid their blankets in the nearby barracks. The Roman fell asleep almost instantly, with the sweat stink of the bed’s previous occupant in his nostrils, and a curious bittersweet scent that for some reason reminded him of a fresh-dug grave.

The grave smell was still with him when he woke the following day. Valerius washed in a stone basin while Aurelio went to see the officer in charge of the camp. He returned a little later with a basket of bread and ham and a stone jug filled with small beer.

‘Fortuna is with you,’ the guide announced. ‘I spoke to a
praefectus cuniculi
,’ he saw Valerius’s blank look, ‘a tunnel manager – of one of the mines a little way from here. He believes it will be ready for the final stage of the mining process later today, or tomorrow morning at the latest. I took the liberty of telling him you would be interested in inspecting the interior of the mine and then watching the process happen.’

‘Thank you, Aurelio,’ Valerius smiled. ‘I don’t know what I would have done without your help and that of your master.’

‘Then we will leave as soon as you are prepared,’ Aurelio said. ‘There is no need of the escort in the mining area.’

They loaded their horses and set off with the sun on their backs. Valerius had expected the tunnel manager to be a big man, of the type he had often seen overseeing slave gangs on building sites in Rome. Instead, Hostilius Nepos was small and fat, with a twitchy, nervous manner and a tic in his left eye. He clearly enjoyed the sound of his
own voice and would have given Valerius the entire history of the mining industry and every stage of the process. ‘You will be astonished, I assure you—’

‘Please, sir,’ Valerius stopped him in full flow. ‘I beg you to wait until I can actually see what you are describing in such technical terms.’

Nepos reluctantly agreed and immediately launched into a description of his workers’ failings.

‘We feed, clothe and house them and they repay us by failing to turn up for work and barely doing any when they do appear. If it wasn’t for my supervisors nothing would get done on time. And there are few enough of them, these days, since the war, when Emperor Galba, of blessed memory …’

‘Blessed memory,’ Valerius and Aurelio mumbled together.

‘… took the very best of them to serve in his legion and never to return to their native land where they could do something productive …’

‘Are the workers well paid for their labours?’

‘Why no, sir.’ Nepos shot Valerius a look of outraged innocence. ‘They are not paid at all. The heads of their villages pledge their services to offset the tax burden imposed upon them. A magistrate with responsibility for, say, ten
castros
, that is settlements, will set the tax at a certain amount and it is up to the headmen of the clans to decide whether to pay in cash or in kind. Since they seldom have any gold, and are loath to part with what they have, they send their menfolk to work in the mines and their surplus food to the granaries.’

Valerius didn’t hide his bewilderment. ‘But surely the reason they do not have gold to pay their taxes is that we don’t pay them?’

‘But that is the joy of the system.’ Nepos smiled complacently. ‘A bonded man will produce more gold in a single month down the mine than he will pay in taxes in his entire lifetime.’

It seemed a very one-sided system to Valerius, but he supposed it was better than slavery.

Nepos shook his head dolefully. ‘From my own point of view slaves would be an advantage. At least you can always get work out of a slave.’

They passed a group of grey stone buildings in a walled enclosure and Valerius asked if this was where the workers lived. Belatedly, he realized the houses had no roofs.

‘No, these are the hovels their ancestors lived in. Since Tiberius’s time we have provided them with houses on good Roman lines sited close to the mines where they are needed.’

They came upon one of the settlements less than a mile later. Built of the same grey stone, the windowless houses were laid out like barrack blocks and surrounded by a high wall. As they passed the entrance Valerius saw women listlessly washing clothes and sewing on the doorsteps of their homes.

‘Look.’ Nepos drew his attention to the hillside above them. ‘There is one of the canals that supply my mine.’ He pointed to what looked like a score across the broken landscape and Valerius followed it upwards to an improbable height where the linked arches of an aqueduct hung as if suspended in mid-air between two peaks. ‘It runs for twenty miles, fed by a mountain stream, and goes through mountains or round them. Every foot of it has to be monitored, maintained and repaired. And that is only one of seven.’

‘It sounds like an enormous task.’

‘The Red Hills mines are an enormous project. Possibly the largest in the Empire.’ The tunnel manager couldn’t hide his pride.

‘Yet I hear there have been problems,’ Valerius ventured. ‘Poor yields. Bandits.’

He sensed Aurelio stiffen in the saddle, and wondered why. Nepos looked at him warily.

‘I take interest only in my own problems,’ Nepos said defensively. ‘Lazy men and lack of manpower, and rock too stubborn to be shifted. My yields have never faltered, let no man say that. As for bandits, I have heard the stories, but there are always stories.’

Valerius would have liked to ask him why, if his yields were unaltered, others’ had fallen. Why else would the flow of gold to Rome have slowed to a trickle? But this wasn’t the time. A proper talk with Nepos could wait for another day.

They approached a rise in the ground where the road forked. Aurelio took the path to the right, reining in at the top of the ridge, and beckoned Valerius forward. Valerius rode up to where he sat. When he saw what lay below, the breath caught in his throat. ‘Mars save us.’

‘I said you would be impressed,’ Nepos cried.

The scene that greeted Valerius was another world from the mountains and valleys they’d traversed on the way from the camp. It was as if a giant hand had reached down and clawed the earth with huge nails, or an enormous beast of legend had savaged the very hills with its terrible fangs. The landscape had been quite literally torn apart, its entrails glowing blood red in the sun and strewn in great heaps for miles around.


Ruina montium
,’ Valerius whispered.

‘Precisely,’ Nepos said proudly. ‘This area has been worked out using the hydraulic method,’ he explained. ‘We use the immense potential of water to expose and extract the gold from the ground, but it is not just a question of brute force, as you will discover.’

‘It’s astonishing.’ Valerius turned to find Aurelio studying him as if gauging his reaction. The guide’s face twisted into a sardonic smile.

‘It comes as a shock when you first see it. Now let us continue and Nepos will show you how it is done, and why.’

A shock indeed, and Valerius’s heart was still fluttering as they rode down into the chaos of disturbed red earth that gave these hills their name. He was familiar enough with destruction perpetrated in the name of Rome. He’d watched as the blackened shell of the Great Temple of Jerusalem was torn down and that once beautiful city taken apart stone by stone. And he’d walked the streets of Cremona as the houses and apartments burned around him, and their occupants with them. Yet somehow this tearing asunder of the very earth he stood upon felt worse. An abomination against the gods.

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