armour would have been handy, though, shield and helmet too.
The warrior stomped forward, axe held high. Ursus looked for a weak spot but the man clearly took his personal protection seriously; he was also wearing arm-guards and greaves.
Ursus stepped back. He’d just realised he didn’t particularly want to die at the end of some barbarian’s dirty, bloody axe blade.
‘The army will find you.’
He turned his sword upward and placed the tip against his throat. The last thing he saw was the warrior lower his axe.
Ursus drove the blade in. Cold iron gave way to warm blood and he slumped to the ground, his head coming to rest on Apelles’s leg. The sound of the raiders’ voices and their boots on the road grew faint as the black fog took him.
His last thought was of the girl. She was probably still waiting in his quarters: alone, confused and scared. It was not a good thought. Not good at all.
Gutha looked down at the Roman and shrugged. A centurion, perhaps. Hardly a glorious death but he
had
led a glorious charge; and he seemed like a man who’d done his fair share of fighting for the Empire. At least he’d chosen the manner of his death. Gutha could understand that.
‘Any of them left?’ he shouted in Nabatean. The only replies were the moans and prayers of the injured. He walked over to the bank and wiped his axe blades clean on the turf, then placed the weapon in the cart. He unbuckled his helmet, removed it and put it beside the axe.
He pointed at Reyazz, his second in command. The young man had already sheathed his sword and was flicking blood off his hands.
‘Place ten riders in a cordon around us until we’re ready to move. I don’t want any more surprises.’
Reyazz relayed the orders.
Gutha walked up to the front of the cart. The men were struggling with the other horses, all of which were desperate to get away from the dead animal. Gutha could see that some of the riding gear had been damaged. Another warrior came up from the front of the column.
‘They did the same to us, sir. We’re clearing the horse out of the way now.’
Gutha turned to Reyazz. ‘How long before you can get us moving again?’
‘Half an hour?’
‘Make it a quarter. Who did you send to check the barracks?’
‘Syrus. Commander, please, don’t—’
Unsure where the man was, Gutha shouted: ‘Syrus, come here!’
He heard a cry and saw a man running up from the rear.
As he waited for him, Gutha watched the others checking the fallen. From the looks of it, not one Roman was left alive.
‘You.’
The closest man turned round, a hulking fellow with a patch over one eye. ‘Commander?’
‘Put the Romans on the other side of the road. Nobody is to take anything from them. Our dead and those too hurt to move – lay them here on the bank.’
‘Yes, sir.’
Syrus came to a stop, breathing hard, already chewing his lip.
Gutha rested his hands on his belt and looked down at him. ‘You were sent to check the barracks?’
‘Yes, Commander. My men and I got very close. There wasn’t a single soldier. You were right: the festival, the drink—’
‘You were told to wait. To watch. To send a runner if anyone appeared.’
‘We did wait, sir. But we saw no one. We returned—’
‘Too early. Far too early.’
Syrus dropped to one knee. ‘My apologies, Commander. The fault is entirely mine.’
‘I’d say so, yes.’
Gutha watched as a fifth injured warrior was laid out on the bank. ‘That the last of ours?’
‘Yes, sir,’ said the man with the eye-patch. ‘Plus six dead.’
‘Strip all but their tunics.’
‘Yes, Commander.’
Only two of the wounded were moving. One man’s tunic had been slashed open, exposing a glistening cut across his chest.
‘Water,’ he gasped. ‘Water.’
‘Thing is,’ Gutha told Syrus, ‘we can’t take him and the other four. We’re in enemy territory. We need to move quickly, without drawing attention. And we can’t leave them alive because they know