S. Turney - Ironroot

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Varro’s smile faltered for a moment before returning with a slightly forced look.

“I’m not going to be around much longer, Martis. You need to look for new employment. I’ve informed the fort commander that you have full control of my house in my absence. Stay as long as you need until you can secure a new position, and I’ve left a few months’ wages in a secure pouch. You know where to look.”

Salonius was surprised to see tears in the servant’s eyes and straightened, realising he himself was close to showing far more unhappiness than was seemly. He stood quietly as Varro clasped hands with the servant and wordlessly turned, striding out of the door to the stable at the rear.

Salonius grasped the bag being proffered by the servant and nodded gratefully at him.

“I hope everything works out for you, Martis.”

Casting a last sympathetic look at the suddenly frail looking man, Salonius turned and walked out into the late dusk breeze, across the small garden and into the stable. Martis had arranged for a fine chestnut mare for a very reasonable price from the settlement outside the walls. As an officer, Varro owned his steed, but that assigned to his companion remained the property of the cohort. Their efforts during the afternoon had been thorough, the horses laden with well balanced packs, all done within the privacy of the captain’s stable.

As he entered, the captain was just fastening the straps on his saddle bags. He walked round the horse, tugging straps and pulling at bags to test the fastenings as Salonius attached his own saddle bags and made final checks. He looked over at Varro, satisfied with the results, and the captain walked over to the stable doors and peered through the narrow gap.

“Dark enough. Let’s go.”

The two men led their horses a couple of steps forward and Varro threw back the wooden beam, swinging the doors wide open. The street, as they’d predicted, was all but deserted. Most of the men were now off duty, relaxing in the baths or in their rooms, or making the most of their free time in either the fort’s own bar or one of the less reputable drinking and whoring establishments in the civilian settlement.

The pair drew a few interested looks as, fully armoured, they led their mounts along the paved road between the officers’ houses and toward the fort’s west gate. Their exit had been carefully selected as the only road that passed between nothing but quarters, granaries and workshops, giving them the lowest number of personnel to encounter.

Varro eyed each man they passed with deep suspicion, though apparently unfounded. The few looks they drew were from the ordinary soldiery going about their evening business. Five minutes later they approached the gate with its burning braziers and torches and half dozen guards leaning on their spears until they saw a superior officer approaching and came hurriedly to attention.

The gates stood half open and would do until the evening guard came on duty and these men fell out. The guards saluted as they passed but made no move to question them. Such freedom was a novelty to Salonius, but then why would the guard be expected to question the authority of a senior officer leaving the camp. And then the two men were out in the night, the burning lights behind them making the darkness ahead seem that much deeper.

As soon as they were out of the circle of light from the gate, Varro gestured to his companion and the two of them mounted up and wheeled their horses at a right angle, away from the road and along the line of the fort wall, lit at intervals with braziers and patrolled by now distant shadowy shapes. Ahead the faint lights and brooding shapes of the civilian buildings stood out against the ever darkening skyline.

With another gesture, Varro directed them down the slope and behind a small knot of trees. Wordlessly, listening to the distant murmur of the men on the walls, they removed the crests from their helmets and slid them down into the open bags beside them. Then, removing the helmets altogether, they fastened the chin straps and hung them from the saddle horn in front of them before pulling the hoods of their cloaks up over their heads and drawing the woollen folds tighter around themselves. And no longer displaying openly their rank and position the two now mundane riders returned to the grassy slope and pressed on into the civilian settlement, between the houses and out onto the main north approach road to the fort.

The few figures wandering around in the open were entirely indifferent to the two cloaked figures trotting gently through the town, concerned as they were with making the most of their off-duty time, filling their free hours with cheap wine or beer, women of low moral virtue and games of chance. Reaching the end of the occupied area, Varro and Salonius began their journey north toward the mountains.

As they disappeared from view, shapes detached from the shadows cast by one of the fort’s towers and trotted out into the night, taking the northern road at a leisurely pace.

Chapter Six

The sun rose slow and blood red over the hills to the east, casting a strange and eerie light across the plain, punctuated by the shadows of the lonely trees dotted about. The first hungry birds of the day called mournfully from the scant bushes and the undergrowth thronged with rustling creatures. The road from Crow Hill to the mountains passed through a number of native settlements and Varro and Salonius had passed through the first a little after midnight; the only sign of life, a dog barking at the passing riders from behind the gate of a farm.

And now, weary from a long night’s ride, Salonius turned his heavy head to the captain and cleared his throat. It had been a strangely quiet night, the two men remaining almost entirely silent throughout by mutual unspoken agreement. Now, riding in the ever brightening sunlight, the quiet seemed less necessary.

“Captain?”

“Varro” the captain reminded him.

“Yes, ok… Varro?”

“What is it, Salonius?”

The young guard shifted slightly, his stiff and achy bones clicking as he moved.

“Are we intending to sleep during the day and ride at night? I’m getting a little tired now.”

Varro shook his head.

“I think now that we’re this far out, we’ll keep going today and stop for the evening.” He pointed ahead and Salonius followed his gaze to the distant peaks and the valley snaking up ahead of them, too far yet to pick out any details.

“The valley,” Varro said, “is a clear place to stop. There’s a village near the entrance with a good inn and we should reach it late this afternoon, allowing for a couple of breaks today to rest and eat. More important, there’s an Imperial way station about an hour’s ride up the valley from the village and given our position, I really don’t want to end up waylaid there. We can stay at the inn and eat there and set off several hours before dawn tomorrow. I want to use the darkness to get well clear of any watchful eyes.”

Salonius nodded. Whoever was behind all of this had one officer poisoned and a soldier stabbed. Caution would seem to be the order of the day.

Varro glanced across at his travelling companion and raised an eyebrow.

“Think we should stop and have a break for something to eat then?”

“Oh yes, Varro. I certainly do.”

The captain grinned. “Come on then.”

Stretching as much as his saddle allowed, Varro steered his horse off the road toward a small enclosure formed by a horseshoe of thick undergrowth and a grassy bank dotted with rabbit burrows. Dismounting in the little dell, they tied the horses to the sturdiest branch of a young elm growing on the edge of the undergrowth, and rummaged in the saddle bags for more of the food packed lovingly by Martis yesterday.

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