Steven Saylor - Arms of Nemesis

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He pursed his Lips. 'My own relations with Marcus Crassus are not exactly warm.'

'Oh?'

'They're strained, actually. I suppose you know all about the slave war, the decimation, all that.'

'Not from your point of view, Marcus Mummius.'

He sighed and folded his hands. Clearly, he had come to unburden himself. I had said before that there is something in me that compels others to bare their secrets. I took a stiff draught of wine and tilted my chair so I could lean back against a pillar.

'It happened early in the campaign,' he began. 'Crassus had his six legions, raised with his own money. He assigned the Senate's two legions to my command, the ones that had already encountered Spartacus and been defeated. I thought I could whip them into shape, but they were already badly demoralized, and there wasn't much time.

'The Spartacans were bearing down on Picentia from the south, heading for the Cup. Crassus sent me to observe and report back on their movements. It's true, he ordered me not to engage them, not even to skirmish with them, but a lieutenant in the field has to use his judgment. A group of Spartacans became separated from their fellows in a narrow valley; no reasonable military man would have failed to attack them. In the midst of the battle, word spread that Spartacus had set an ambush for us and that his whole army was closing in. It was a false rumour, but panic spread through the ranks. My men bolted and fled. Many were killed. Many were captured and tortured to death. Many threw down their weapons and ran.

'Crassus was furious. He berated me in front of his other lieutenants. He decided to make an example of my men.'

'So I heard,' I sighed, but Mummius was determined to tell the story anyway.

'They call it "decimation" — the removal of one in ten. It's an old Roman tradition, though no one I know can remember it ever happening before in his lifetime. Crassus is a keen one for reviving grand old traditions, as you know. He ordered me to identify the first five hundred who had fled — not an easy task among twelve thousand soldiers. Those five hundred he divided into fifty units of ten men each. The men drew lots. One man in ten drew the black bean. That's fifty men in all who were chosen to die.

'The units were formed into circles. Each victim was stripped naked, his hands bound behind his back and his mouth gagged. The other nine in each unit were given clubs. At Crassus's signal a drumbeat commenced. It was done without honour, without glory, with no dignity at all. There are those who say that Crassus did the right thing-'

'There certainly are,' I said, remembering the grunts and grave nods of approval when the story had been told in the marketplaces of Rome.

'But you'd be hard-pressed to find a soldier who believes that. Discipline had to be maintained, certainly, but it's no way for a Roman warrior to die, clubbed to death by his fellows!' He bit his lips and shook his head. 'But I'm not telling you this story simply to brood over my own bitterness. I thought you deserved to know what became of Faustus Fabius.'

'What do you mean?'

'Did you ever hear of his fate?'

'I know that he never came back from the war. I kept my ears open in the Forum for news about him. I heard he died in combat against the Spartacans.'

Mummius shook his head. 'No. Crassus somehow arranged to have Fabius inserted among the men chosen for the decimation. Naked, bound and gagged, there was nothing to identify his rank or station. When the clubbing began, I forced myself to watch, along with Crassus and the other lieutenants. They were my men, after all; I couldn't turn my back on them. Among the victims there was one who managed to spit out his gag; he kept screaming that a mistake had been made. No one else paid any attention, but I ran over to take a closer look.

'A moment later and I would never have recognized him, not after the clubs struck his face. But I saw him clearly enough. It was Faustus Fabius. The look in his eyes! He recognized me; he called my name. Then they knocked him to the ground. They crushed his skull and beat him to a bloody pulp, until you could hardly tell he was a man at all. What a horrible way to die!'

'No more horrible than the deaths of Lucius Licinius or Dionysius; certainly no more horrible than the fate that Crassus had in mind for the slaves.'

'Even so, for a Roman patrician and officer to die such a shameful death! I stared at Crassus in horror. He wouldn't look back at me, but I saw a smile on his Lips.'

'Yes, I know that smile. Here, drink more wine, Marcus Mummius. Your voice grows hoarse.'

He swallowed the wine like water and wiped his lips. 'The war didn't last long. Six months, and it was over. We trapped them like rats at the southern tip of Italy and destroyed them. Crassus had the six thousand survivors nailed to crosses along the Via Appia.'

'So I heard.'

Mummius smiled faintly. 'Fortune nodded to Marcus Crassus, but she smirked as well. A small band of the Spartacans escaped and made their way north, just in time to meet Pompey's army returning at last from Spain. Pompey crushed them like ants beneath his heel and then sent a letter to the Senate, claiming that while Crassus had done a worthy job, it was he, Pompey, who had finally put an end to the slave revolt!' He laughed, and some of the colour returned to his cheeks.

'Why, Mummius, you sound as if you'd changed camps and become a partisan of Pompey.'

'I'm no man's partisan now. I'm a war hero, didn't you know? At least that's what my family and friends told me when I came back to Rome. They're the ones who made me stand for Praetor Urbanus. I'd rather be in a tent under the stars, eating out of a wooden pot.'

'I'm sure you would.'

'Anyway, Pompey and Crassus have made peace with each other, for the moment. After all, there are two Consuls every year, so each of them gets to be Consul. Of course, Pompey received a full triumph for defeating Sertorius in Spain, and the Senate would only allow Crassus an ovation for defeating Spartacus; there can be only so much glory for beating a slave. So while Pompey entered the city with trumpets and a chariot, Crassus followed behind on horseback to the sound of flutes. But he did manage to talk the Senate into letting him wear a laurel crown, not just a myrtle wreath.'

'And the great feast he hosted this month?'

'In honour of Hercules. Why not, since Pompey dedicated a temple and held games in honour of Hercules at the same time! They go back and forth, stealing one another's thunder. Still, Pompey can't claim to have sacrificed a tenth of his wealth to Hercules and the people of Rome, as Crassus did. It takes a very rich man to be a successful politician these days!'

I looked at him sceptically. 'Somehow, Marcus Mummius, I don't think that you came to visit me after all this time just to gossip about politics, or even to tell me the fate of Faustus Fabius

He looked back at me with equal shrewdness. 'You're right, Gordianus. I can't fool you for long. Though I will say that you're one of the few men in Rome with whom it would be worth sharing gossip — I feel I can speak to you honestly. No, I came with other news, and to offer you a gift.'

'A gift?'

At that moment one of the slave girls caught my eye. 'More visitors,' she announced.

Mummius was smiling from ear to ear. 'Yes?' I said.

'Two slaves, master. They say they belong to your guest.' 'Then show them in!'

A moment later two figures appeared in the peristyle. It was Apollonius who caught my eye first. He was as striking as ever. From behind him a smaller figure came racing headlong into the garden and was upon me before I could steady myself in my chair. Meto wrapped his arms around my neck and sent me tumbling backwards. Eco laughed out loud.

Mummius rose and extended his hand. Apollonius stepped forward, walking with a slight limp. Together they pulled me to my feet.

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