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Destroyer of Cities t-5 Page 9
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An arrow hit his shield.
‘Need some help, here!’ he called.
There was no answer. Another arrow hit his shield, and this one punched through the bronze facing to gleam three fingers clear of the inner face of his aspis.
‘Herakles, Son of Zeus,’ he roared. Then he slammed his shield face into the wall next to him to break the arrows and ran at the stairs, holding his shield in front of him.
Another arrow hit the shield when he was halfway up the stairs, and then he reached the top.
There were three of them.
One shot him, point blank. The man was partly behind him, and the shot should have been deadly, but in his excitement the man hurried, or simply missed, and the arrow vanished into the night.
I have as long as it takes him to reload, Satyrus thought.
Satyrus leaped forward, slammed his shield into the larger man and sliced hard to the right with his sword at the same time, at the other opponent. His blade touched home — high, somewhere on the man’s face or head — and then Satyrus was rolling to the left, keeping his shield pressed against his opponent.
The man cut under his shield and Satyrus couldn’t do much about that, as his aspis was entangled and his sword elsewhere. His greaves took most of the blow, and his right shin suddenly exploded in agony and he stumbled back, placed his good foot and sank to one knee with his shield facing the archer.
‘Let me shoot!’ the man was screaming, but Satyrus’ first attacker had blocked the other man who was also screaming, and the three of them were uncoordinated. Satyrus backed up a step, and the closest man came at him — blocking the archer.
Satyrus let him come, and then slammed his shield forward, his shoulder in the blow, stepped up close and cut at him overarm, and their swords rang together. The other man backed up a step and Satyrus cut at him again, another heavy overarm blow and the man flinched and parried, but his much lighter — and cheaper — sword had had enough, and the blade snapped and he lost fingers. He cried out and fell back, trying to get his shield up, back-pedalling across the roof and into the archer.
Satyrus didn’t give them a moment to untangle, but cut at everything he could reach, blows too fast to count in the dark — and then he whirled, wondering where the third man had gone.
He was kneeling with his head in his hands. ‘I’m blind!’ he screamed with the raw intensity of a woman in childbirth. Satyrus’ blade had cut through his ocular region and his nose. There was blood everywhere, shiny black on matt black in the fire-stabbed darkness.
Satyrus decapitated him.
The roof was still. Women were screaming in the courtyard, but the roof was clear, and against the fires back by the wharves, he could see the great grain ships landing.
They weren’t full of grain.
They were full of two thousand Macedonian veterans, who poured out onto the newly secured wharves, formed up in a rough approximation of their usual formation and proceeded to storm the town. They were ruthless, they were thorough, and the pirates had nothing with which to match them.
There was more fighting, but Satyrus was out of it — his ankle burned, he had a nasty cut down his leg and his damaged greave needed to be pulled clear of the wound.
He stumbled back off the roof, his right sandal squelching blood at every step. In the courtyard, the slaves lay prone amid so much blood that it appeared they might all have been butchered.
A thin trickle of blood flowed out of the courtyard and into the street’s central gutter.
His Macedonians were pouring up the street, bellowing, scenting victory and a town to rape. Satyrus had to flatten himself against the wall to avoid be trampled — or worse — as a taxeis fought its way through the skein of alleys towards the town’s agora and public buildings. Satyrus saw Draco emerge from the warehouse behind him. The Macedonian officer gave him a sketchy salute and plunged into the river of phalangites screaming orders, and vanished, leaving the King of the Bosporus to bleed in relative peace.
Satyrus swayed, caught himself on a warehouse wall and limped back down the cobbled street towards the wharves. He was losing blood, but he could see where men had fallen — a marine with his face a red ruin from a paving stone, another with a javelin in the back. At the corner where they’d started their charge, Helios was lying on his aspis. There was a deep dent in his helmet.
Satyrus bent and picked the boy up. Even in armour, he didn’t weigh much. Helios coughed and spat and cursed. Several steps later he gave something like a choked scream.
Satyrus carried him down to the wharves where the iatroi, the healers, were gathering the wounded. They were a recent innovation — every ship had one — and Satyrus didn’t really know any one of them from the others. He stumbled over a bale of cloth and fell with his hypaspist on top of him. They both cried out.
‘My lord!’ called a man, and suddenly he was surrounded by men with torches.
‘You take the king, I’ll get the man he carried,’ said a voice, and then Satyrus was gone.
He came back to life stretched across a pair of upturned barrels. After a long — and painful — moment of disorientation, he realised that he was in the courtyard of what had once been Abraham Ben Zion’s warehouse, having his shin bandaged tight in a whole length of superfine linen while around him, men screamed under the knife or murmured thanks to the men who tended them. The courtyard was bright with new sunlight and the air reeked of dirty smoke — burning buildings, charred meat.
Diokles found him about an hour later, when the pain had started to build in his leg and in his shoulder. He didn’t even know why his shoulder hurt, and he’d had to decline the poppy juice that kept most of the other wounded men quiet.
Helios was lying on the cobblestones on top of his cloak, deeply unconscious and with a line of sewing up his sword arm and a bruise on his head so deep that the iatros feared that his skull was broken. Satyrus was looking at him and contemplating his bold, rash, brilliant attack in the light of the cost.
‘I think we won,’ Diokles said.
Satyrus was light-headed from blood loss and some related drunkenness. ‘Oh yes. Very glorious. Any idea of losses?’ He took a pull on the wineskin in his hand and shook his head. ‘Losses beyond those I can see here?’
Draco stepped up out of the street and seized the wineskin. ‘Lost a dozen in the first fights, before we had the numbers,’ he said. He had blood dripping from under his helmet and his right arm was brown-red to the elbow. He took a long drink. ‘I haven’t taken a town in a long time. Makes the boys happy, it does.’ He grinned. ‘Once the rest of the boys were ashore, there wasn’t much fighting.’
‘Not that we took a lot of prisoners,’ Diokles said.
Satyrus shrugged. Pirates were vermin. That some of them had once been his allies was — Moira. He fought with that thought to establish it in his head as what he really felt. Because otherwise he would vomit, and be unfit to command men. Or be a king.
He sat up, forced himself to look away from Helios and nodded. ‘Light casualties and, I assume, some worthwhile loot.’
Draco nodded. ‘A good start. We’ve been lax — and the boys have had three easy summers. This will get their blood up.’
Satyrus considered a number of replies — their blood was all over the courtyard — but finally shook his head. ‘I want to be away before nightfall,’ he said.
Diokles saluted with his fist and Draco grunted. ‘Easier to pull a drunk out of a brothel than a soldier out of a taken city,’ he said. ‘Brothel costs money.’
Satyrus tried putting weight on his shin. That made it hurt more, which seemed to clear his head. ‘Nightfall,’ he said.
Satyrus sacrificed to Apollo at the setting of the sun, and before the calf was split for butchering and burning Draco declared the town secure. The captured ships — those worth saving — were towed. The rest were burned. The town, save only the wharves and warehouses, was burned. The survivors were either herded aboard ships to be sold as slaves, or,
if too old or useless, were pushed into the chora, the farms around the city, to make their own way. Many would be taken by Thracians and sold as slaves anyway. Others would starve, or succumb to disease, or simply be killed as useless mouths.
Satyrus hardened his heart and reminded himself that these were pirates. Their fate was justice.
Of course, he knew perfectly well that most of them were the pirates’ baggage — wives, whores, slaves, servants and the small craftsmen who were attracted to any community. They had chosen to come here to live. Most of them were innocent of any crime save poverty.
Four days of no news — of an ever more restless grain fleet anchored off Heraklea. And then the warships returned.
Stratokles watched Satyrus of Tanais sail up the coast. He had good eyes, and he could see at quite a distance that Satyrus’ warships had either bred like rabbits or met with friends.
Or taken enemies. Stratokles shook his head. The boy was good. Stratokles hurried to his mistress.
‘He’s taken Timaea?’ Dionysus asked. He was quite calm, for a man who had just heard that a potential rival now owned the closest sea base.
‘That’s my guess, lord,’ Stratokles said. ‘I’m sure he’ll be here soon enough, ripe with his triumph, to explain.’
Amastris was not amused. ‘He might have told us!’ she said.
Dionysus watched the fleet now at anchor. ‘He might,’ Dionysus said slowly. ‘But he did not, nor did he allow his sailors to land. He didn’t trust us. This is the man you wish to marry, my dear?’ he asked Amastris.
Amastris shrugged. ‘Yes. Although I am not happy with this turn of events. It’s your fault, Uncle! You’ve kept him dangling for so long — he will find another wife and come here-’
‘Silence,’ Dionysus said. He sat up on the kline, and it protested. ‘Let me think. Dekas has lost his base and a third of his fleet. And probably his treasure.’
‘Now he has no choice but to serve Antigonus,’ Stratokles put in.
‘And Satyrus of Tanais holds the entrance to the Dardanelles,’ Dionysus said. ‘He can control our grain.’
‘We won’t know until we hear what he has to say,’ Amastris said. ‘I will speak to him.’
‘He may just come and take you,’ Dionysus said. ‘I hadn’t considered the possibility that Demostrate was a better neighbour than Satyrus.’ He laughed without mirth. ‘And to think that I gave that boy his start.’
Stratokles nodded, because he hadn’t considered the weakness of the pirate position at all, only its strength. I’m getting old, he thought.
‘Satyrus, King of the Bosporus, and attendants,’ intoned Nestor.
‘You might have told me!’ Amastris said as soon as they were alone. Alone meaning together with a dozen attendants, slaves and Nestor.
Satyrus was not wearing armour. He had imagined, in the winter, coming ashore to her wearing his splendid scale thorax and his magnificent silver helmet, itself a trophy. He’d imagined coming fresh from a sea fight.
The taking of Timaea wasn’t something he cared to brag about, nor was he interested in wearing armour. He wore an old sky-blue chiton that had been washed so often it felt like an old friend on his shoulders. He wore Boeotian boots because he always wore them at sea. He did not look like a warrior king, and he could see the plainness of his appearance reflected in her glance.
‘I needed to move swiftly,’ he said. He was surprised to hear how normal his voice sounded.
‘You needed to reassure your allies, who include my uncle and me. My uncle thinks, even now, that you might pounce on us, seize Heraklea and put it under your crown as “king”.’ Amastris didn’t sound angry — just detached. A good stateswoman, he realised. Probably far better with ambassadors than he would be. Her beauty — more than beauty — made his loins ache. Her breasts showed — just the very tops of the rich fruit of them, pale — he could remember the feel of them-
‘I’m sorry,’ Satyrus said. He changed the tone of his voice; no more the detached statesman. ‘Amastris, if I had come ashore, when would I have ever left?’ He reached out and took her hand, but she pulled it away before he touched her and turned her shoulder.
‘You paw me. It makes people talk.’ She stood suddenly. ‘I think that you have to make me a better apology than that empty flattery, based solely on lust.’ She only came to his chest, but her eyes burned into his. She was angry — so angry that her shoulders trembled. ‘You didn’t trust me!’
‘How could I?’ he said, before he thought too much about it. ‘You employ the man who murdered my mother.’
‘You know that is not true,’ Amastris said. ‘I defy you to prove it. Anyway, even if he was involved, it was just politics. Nothing personal.’
Satyrus shook his head. ‘That’s exactly what he said, or so my sister tells it.’
‘So what?’ Amastris said. ‘You don’t want me to have a councillor as good — as thorough — and as deep as Stratokles. Better I be a nice ignorant virgin, ripe for the wedding market. You can tell me whatever you see fit, and I’ll at least pretend to be happy to have such jewels of your manly wisdom shared with me. You are no better than my uncle, except that you are better to look at.’
Satyrus had never seen her like this. He wasn’t sure that he didn’t like this Amastris — enraged, uncaring and strong — better than the complacent temptress of Ptolemy’s palace. ‘Very well,’ he said. ‘Let’s talk like rulers, shall we?’
‘Don’t patronise me,’ she spat.
‘I’m not patronising you, Amastris. I’ll tell you the unvarnished, unflattering, unstatesmanlike truth.’ He sat carefully on a couch. ‘My attack depended on speed and surprise. Speed to catch Dekas’ warships still in their berths. Surprise because it saves casualties and, as it turned out, I was hideously outnumbered. I-’ He fingered his cup, ‘I miscalculated pretty badly, and only the favour of divine Herakles-’
‘You are such a depressingly pious man,’ Amastris said, shaking her head. ‘The favour of divine Herakles. Did you grow up in a mighty city? Or are you secretly a shepherd from Attica?’
Satyrus began to smile — much the same sort of smile that came to his face in a fight, although he didn’t know it. ‘Perhaps I am a shepherd boy, at that,’ he said. ‘Nonetheless, I needed surprise to take Timaea. I don’t trust Stratokles. I’m sorry that you like him — sorrier that you trust him.’ He paused to take a sip of wine.
‘He helped you win your throne,’ she said carefully.
‘I suspect you pushed him to it, and I further suspect that it coincided with the interests of Athens.’ Satyrus shrugged. ‘It’s not about Stratokles, my dear. We always argue about him — and for nothing, this time. Even if he was not at your side, I would not have come ashore. Most of my oarsmen and marines already know too much. If I had landed here, rumour would have gone on falcon wings over the isthmus to Timaea.’
She shrugged. ‘So? Perhaps some things should be more important to you than the lives of a few mercenaries.’ She smiled at him, her dimples appearing as if summoned.
‘I thought we were speaking as statesmen?’ he asked her. He wasn’t sure what he felt. He had come — why had he come? Leon was waiting, and he was wasting a day.
Suddenly, in the space between heartbeats, he felt the change, like the moment when the rim of the sun appeared above the world.
‘My lady, I need to be in Rhodes,’ he said.
She appeared confused for a moment. Satyrus had never seen her confused.
‘I am sorry if my tactics confused you, or your uncle. I meant no harm to you or yours. The straits are open to your ships. I must be gone.’ He leaned forward to kiss her cheek, but she bolted from her chair and put it between them.
‘You are leaving? Do you have any idea what you are doing? We have plans to make-’
Satyrus shook his head. ‘Plans we can make another time. The wind is fair for me, and my uncle is waiting for me at Rhodes. I’ll be back in a few weeks and we can make arrangements then.�
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‘Aphrodite, stand with me. Are you leaving me, Satyrus? Are we not lovers? What service is this?’ She was angry again — or perhaps had been angry all along.
Satyrus was angry too, although he was only just discovering it. ‘Perhaps if we were married, I’d take these protestations more seriously,’ he said. ‘As it is, we are a pair of rulers duelling for power. I can do that elsewhere, and I am needed elsewhere. I long to marry you, Amastris — but until your uncle agrees, what’s the point in these meetings? Anger, recrimination-’
‘Then go,’ Amastris said. ‘You’re quite right. There is no point. Please leave, immediately.’
Satyrus picked his chlamys off a stool. He’d said too much — said the unsayable. And now he regretted it.
But there was nothing he could add without surrendering, and he’d never been much for surrender.
So he looked at her, hoping to communicate with his eyes, but she swept from the room. He heard the sound of metal impacting plaster.
Satyrus sighed and left the room. He collected the silent Helios from the kitchens, and found his guard of marines waiting under the eaves of the palace. Nestor was there, talking to Apollodorus.
‘Evening, Nestor,’ Satyrus said as he came up.
‘Lord,’ Nestor said, inclining his head. ‘A famous victory.’
‘A lot of dead women and children,’ Satyrus said with some bitterness.
‘Nest of vipers, if you ask me,’ Apollodorus said.
‘I didn’t ask you,’ Satyrus said.
‘Not a good day with my mistress, then?’ Nestor said with half a smile.
Satyrus shook his head. ‘I think it’s over,’ he said. He felt like weeping — felt that saying it aloud might make it so.
Nestor shook his head. ‘Not unless you no longer want her,’ he said. ‘It is just the poison of that Athenian hyena.’ He shrugged. ‘Perhaps one day I will kill him for my king — and for you.’
Satyrus shook his head. ‘Heraklea has never been lucky for me,’ he said. He caught the eyes of his escort. ‘We’re needed in Rhodes. We should be gone.’