Legionary: The Scourge of Thracia (Legionary 4)

Read Legionary: The Scourge of Thracia (Legionary 4) for Free Online Page B

Book: Read Legionary: The Scourge of Thracia (Legionary 4) for Free Online
Authors: Gordon Doherty
Tags: Historical fiction
of the Danubius, a thick blue line snaked south to north. The River Rhenus. Stationed along this great waterway was another cluster of the broad, tall legionary pieces and another plumed figure on horseback. Traianus gathered these with the bronze hand and swept them towards Thracia, following the banks of the Rhenus, then the Danubius, then down through the passes that snaked through the Dioceses of Pannonia and Dacia. ‘What you might not know is that Emperor Valens has called upon his western counterpart. Emperor Gratian will bring his Praesental Army to Thracia also.’
    Pavo gawped at the two model armies, trying to imagine what such a force might look like. Sixty thousand men. The Praesental Armies of East and West were the core of the empire’s finest soldiers. Many legions of comitatenses , elite auxilia palatinae infantry and scholae palatinae cavalry, specialist troops and siege engineers. Together, they could surely end the strife in Thracia, maybe even recover the northern chunk of the diocese – the lost province of Moesia between the Haemus Mountains and the River Danubius, including Durostorum and the XI Claudia fort.
    He glanced across to Gallus, expecting to see at least a glimmer of enthusiasm from the iron tribunus. But instead, Gallus’ face was ashen, fixed on the figure of the Western Emperor and his army. Then once, twice and again, Pavo noticed Gallus’ top lip twitch, betraying gritted teeth behind.

     

     
    Later that day, as the sun was setting, Pavo wandered alone in the quieter streets of the city’s north-eastern wards. They were to set off for the Great Northern Camp in the morning, and he hoped a stroll would tire him enough to enjoy a good sleep. Just a few dozing drunks and enthusiastic traders were to be seen, and the market babble was replaced by cicada chatter, sailing from the gardens, orchards and groves dotted in between the great marble structures of this, the finer quarter of the capital. He bought a small loaf of fresh bread from a baker, then set off again, tearing off and eating pieces of it absently. His thoughts flashed again with the promise of what lay ahead: Felicia and the Great Northern Camp. This stirred a frisson of anxiety and excitement in his belly and when he looked up, he realised he had strolled to the Augusteum – the site of that curious dream that morning. The majestic square was bathed in deep-orange light and deserted, the only sign of life being just the few sentries on the walls of the Imperial Palace area that formed the square’s eastern edge. The light of the setting sun glimmered on the tip of the Milliareum Aureum – the gilded bronze column used as a starting point for measuring distances from the capital. The Hippodrome nearby the square’s western edge was for once free of cheering crowds, with only the sound of the imperial banners rippling gently in the warm breeze from the Golden Horn. Resting in the shade of the magnificent Baths of Zeuxippus by the square’s southern edge was a series of small, stone tables and benches, each with a latrunculi board painted onto its surface. He sat at one of these chewing on his bread, looking out across the square and wondering: all those years ago, the day he had been sold into slavery, had there really been someone watching him so keenly from the shadows? His eyes swept round to the point where the slave-trading platform had been set up that day, right at the centre. Then on to the painted colonnade on the north edge of the square. Just like the dream, pools of shadow lay beside each column. He peered into the deepest shadow, trying to conjure the image from the dream and place it there. An odd chill passed over him as he did so. For a moment, dream and reality became one as he gazed into the blackness, the shadows forming shapes of all those long dead. Tarquitius, Salvian . . . Father. Nightmares of Father’s fate had haunted him for years. Was this dream of the shadow-man another that would blight

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