‘You can’t intend marching into enemy territory with a handful of men, Tribune, it’ll be no better than taking a knife to your own throat!’
Scaurus shrugged.
‘Possibly. Or possibly there’s strength in stealth and guile, rather than numbers. Either way you have my orders — select ten men from your century to accompany us across the Rhenus. And while you’re choosing them please keep in mind that I’m not recruiting for a weightlifting contest, and neither do I want men who despise their fellow men for not being six feet in both height and breadth. Bring me your thinkers, Centurion, men who are as quick on their feet as they’re good with an axe. If I see any of the usual sneering suspects from your front rank when we muster then I’ll make my own choice of their replacements and leave you behind along with them.’
The big man nodded grimly.
‘Understood, Tribune.’
Scaurus smiled tightly.
‘I hope so. It would be a shame to have to abandon my senior centurion before we’ve even marched a step.’ He smiled at the Briton’s baffled expression. ‘You heard me. Your plans to relax back into the role of big brother to my cohort’s centurionate will have to wait. Responsibility calls, Centurion.’
‘My ten best archers? The selection will be an easy matter, Tribune, but surely a stronger force would be advised?’
Scaurus shook his head at the Syrian.
‘Ten men are all that we’ll need, thank you Centurion. But as to your selection, it’s not going to be as simple as lining them up in front of a row of targets and taking the men who can hit their mark with the greatest frequency.’
The Hamian inclined his head in respectful question.
‘Rather than picking men who can hit the same spot ten times with ten arrows when the greatest pressure on them is nothing more dangerous than the approval of their peers, I need you to select those men who are your most prolific hunters.’
Qadir nodded his head slowly.
‘You want me to choose those among my command with the ability to move through the forest without disturbing leaf or branch? Those with the ability to bring down a startled deer as it turns to flee, with sure aim and the nerve to use it in the moment of greatest advantage?’
Scaurus patted him on the shoulder.
‘I think you discern my intentions clearly enough, Centurion.’
‘I need ten men.’
‘Ten?’
The chosen man’s expression was a perfect match for the face Dubnus himself had pulled when Scaurus had made his requirements clear, and he found himself smiling wryly at the man despite his continued sense of disbelief.
‘It’s worse than that.’
‘Worse? How can it be worse, Centurion? The tribune plans to ride north with only a handful of archers and ten of our lads to stand between him and an entire German tribe. The only way it could be worse would be if-’
‘Enough, Angar.’ Like Dubnus and most of the Tenth Century’s men, his chosen man had declined the option to take a Roman name on joining the cohort. ‘It’s worse, because the Tribune’s requirements of those ten men are very specific.’
‘Specific, Centurion?’
‘Specifically these …’
Dubnus looked across the transit barracks parade ground, taking stock of his century’s men as they exercised as was their practice each afternoon once the morning’s drill had been completed under Julius’s watchful eye. Lifting improvised weights, performing press-ups with a comrade on each man’s back, they were sweating in the sun without regard for the heat in pursuit of physical perfection.
‘The tribune wants men who will back down from a fight if doing so will keep the detachment undetected.’
He waited in silence for his deputy to digest what he had said.
‘He wants … cowards?’
‘No, Angar, he wants thinkers. He wants men who have enough brains to know when it’d be better to crouch in the cover of the forest and allow a stronger enemy to pass by, rather than sell their own lives, and those of their brothers, for a brief moment of furious bloodletting.’
The chosen man looked at the ground, shaking his head slowly.
‘It goes against everything we teach these men. We select the biggest and most capable-’
‘Not to mention those with the hottest temper.’
Angar shot him a hard glance.
‘- and we train them, make them stronger, harder, unbeatable in a fight — brothers until death. Ten of these men are worth fifty of any other century in the cohort when the blood’s flying! We are the tribune’s proudest and most dangerous men, and with that danger comes a sense of …’
He groped for a word, and Dubnus took his opportunity.
‘Arrogance.’ He spoke the word quietly, raising a hand to forestall any retort. ‘Cocidius as my witness, I feel it too. I strut around in front of my fellow centurions like a muscle-bound prize fighter, and I’ve even taken to calling some of them “little brother” in just the same way the Bear used to.’
Both men fell silent for a moment, remembering the centurion that his men had idolised, and his assumption of the role as their warrior king, the only man capable of snapping them out of their misery and making them fight like madmen at a desperate time.
‘We make them arrogant for a reason, Dubnus.’
The Briton smiled at his subordinate’s use of his given name rather than his formal title, a relaxation of formality that was taken for granted by the Tenth Century’s tightly-knit brotherhood.
‘We make them-’
Angar shook his head impatiently.
‘Hear me out, Centurion.’
He raised an eyebrow, but gestured with a hand for the other man to continue.
‘We make them arrogant because they have to believe in themselves and each other over anyone else. So that when the tribune gives the word they will run at the enemy with their axes ready to kill, taking far greater risks than those delicate flowers in the other nine centuries. They hide behind their shields and kill with the first few inches of their swords, dainty little stabs and thrusts to open their opponent’s arteries and let them bleed to death. Whereas we-’
‘I know. We court death every time we raise our axes to strike, and invite the man facing us to stab in with their spears.’
‘Exactly. We fight like tribesmen, smashing and hacking at the enemy. We leave the battle blasted with the blood of men we have cloven in two. We don’t kill on the battlefield, we slaughter, we decapitate and we tear men apart. We are warriors, Dubnus, where the rest of them are only soldiers. Our men need that edge of arrogance, or why would they throw themselves into the fight without concern for their own lives?’
Dubnus slapped him on the shoulder.
‘Well argued. You make me wish for a pack of tribesmen barking at our shields, and the command to take our axes to them. There is nothing finer in life …’
‘But?’
‘Exactly. But. In this case Tribune Scaurus has asked me — ordered me, to select ten men who have cooler heads. I know, there’s not a warrior among us without that sense of being the equal to three men from any other century, and I won’t back away from that pride, but I need you to find me the thinkers among us. You’re the first, by the way.’
‘Me? A thinker?’
Dubnus shook his head again in amusement.
‘You. A thinker. How else did you get to be the Tenth Century’s chosen man? And besides, if I’m going to prance around a German forest playing nursemaid to Qadir’s archers while they pick flowers and pull each other’s pricks like the eastern perverts they so clearly are, I’m not going to suffer the indignity on my own. So get thinking, Angar, and find me nine more thinkers to share my pain.’
Qadir smiled thinly as the two men before him snapped to attention, waving a hand at them and shaking his head in disgust, addressing them in the language of their mutual homeland.