‘Uncle Leon?’ Melitta asked. ‘Will he be there?’
‘I doubt it,’ Philokles said. ‘Gods, what a salvation that would be. Zeus Soter, let Leon be there.’
PART II
FORMING
4
316 BC
S tratokles rode up to the wall of the barn before the Macedonian mercenary could get the girl’s knees apart with his own. He had her hands pinned and he’d headbutted her to stop the screams, but she was a tough woman with a farmer’s muscles and she wasn’t giving up without a fight, as the Macedonian’s face testified.
Stratokles slid down from his horse, pivoted on his left foot and kicked the man in the head so hard that his body made a gentle thump as it hit the stone barn.
‘Who allowed this?’ he asked the ring of mercenaries who had gathered to watch. ‘You – you’re a phylarch, aren’t you?’
The man so addressed, a Sicilian from far-off Syracuse, flinched at the man with the livid red scar across his face. ‘Yes,’ he muttered.
‘Are you aware that without these people, we’ll never catch the fucking children?’ Stratokles was furious – not just from the constant pain of his face, but from the stupidity of the men he was saddled with.
‘They know where the children are!’ the Macedonian spat. He sat up and retched. ‘Fuck me.’
‘I may, at that,’ Stratokles said. He had a knife in his hand and it was pressed against the Macedonian’s temple. ‘Don’t move around too much.’
The Sicilian phylarch shook his head. ‘It’s been a hard ten days, lord. The boys need some-’
‘Some rape? I recommend that they practise on each other, then. Listen, you fuckwit. These people are Heron of Pantecapaeum’s citizens .’ Stratokles shook his head.
‘We done worse when we took that town – Tanais. You weren’t so high and mighty then.’ The phylarch knew he had the rest of the men with him.
Stratokles shrugged. ‘Sometimes men have to do evil deeds to attain an end. Tanais had to be sacked. It was a symbol – a symbol your master can’t afford. But one day of sacking a town – an event that should have sated your urges for a little longer – does not give you the right to rape your way across the countryside.’
The phylarch shrugged. ‘They all hate us anyway.’
Stratokles nodded. He sheathed his dagger, and the Macedonian breathed again. Stratokles shook his head. ‘Are you surprised?’ He picked the girl up. She had a broken nose, two black eyes and blood all down the front of her chiton, but she tried to resist him. He grabbed her wrists and threw her over his shoulder, then carried her around the barn to where other soldiers had the wife and the farmer himself penned in the house.
‘Let me past, you idiots,’ Stratokles roared. He walked up the steps to the stone house and put the girl on the floor. ‘I’m sorry for what my men have done here, but her virtue is not stolen, and her nose will heal. Sooner than mine,’ he said with an attempt at humour, but it fell to its death on the iron-hard faces of the farmer and his wife. She leaped to her daughter, put her arms around her and the two began to talk – fast – in the local tongue.
‘We know you had the twins here – three days back? Perhaps four?’ Stratokles looked at the boy, cowering against the hearth. ‘I’m doing my best to restrain these animals, but it could get ugly here and I’m just one man. If you tell us what we need to know, we’ll be gone the sooner. And no one needs to get hurt.’
‘This is what Heron of Pantecapaeum stands for, is it?’ the farmer spat.
Yes, it is, Stratokles thought to himself. Politics made strange allies – and for Stratokles, a democrat of the most rabid sort, a man of principle, dedicated to the freedom of Athens, to be forced into a yoke with the tyrant of Pantecapaeum was the richest sort of irony.
‘Please,’ Stratokles said. ‘Help me to help you. When were they here?’
The farmer wilted. His eyes went to his son and daughter. Outside, the mercenaries were moving around with heavy footsteps, their very silence ominous.
‘Three days back,’ the farmer said. ‘They took our horses.’
The best of the mercenaries was an Italian named Lucius, a big man with a brain who had stood by Stratokles repeatedly during the chase. Stratokles demoted the phylarch on the spot and promoted the Italian in his place. There was a lot of ugly muttering.
Stratokles rode in among them, pushing his horse right up against the Macedonians. ‘Listen, children,’ he said. ‘I could have killed fuckwit here for mutiny and rape – but I chose to assume that his useless phylarch shared some of the blame. So you get to live.’ Stratokles grinned around at the ten of them. ‘If you annoy me enough, I’ll just start killing the ones I find most annoying – get me? I can take all ten of you – together, apart, one at a time, any way you want it. Care to start dancing? If not, shut up and soldier.’
‘You ain’t our officer,’ the ex-phylarch said – in a whine. ‘We’re paid men – mercenaries. We have our own rules.’
Stratokles’ smile widened. ‘I’m your officer now.’ He looked around at them again – a useless assortment of boys and thugs. ‘And the only rules here are mine.’
They were badly mounted, and he suspected that the children he’d been sent to kill were now better mounted, but he knew horses and they made the best time he could manage, five days across the hills and down the valleys to the Hypanis. There should have been a ferry across the swollen torrent, but instead they found an angry ferryman and a cut rope.
‘Yesterday, the thieves! The fucking catamites!’ the ferryman shouted.
He had a dozen or more customers camped around his stone house, waiting for the water to go down.
Stratokles looked at the river, and then at the horses and men he had with him. He was tempted to curse the gods, but he knew from experience that the gods give what they give.
‘We swim,’ he said.
‘Fuck you,’ the former phylarch said. ‘I ain’t swimming. They’re a day ahead – downriver, into a port and gone.’
Stratokles looked at Lucius, who shrugged. ‘I’d put it a nicer way,’ he said. ‘But the man’s got a point.’
Stratokles nodded. ‘Well, I’m swimming,’ he said. ‘Lucius, I’d appreciate it if you came. The rest of these scum aren’t worth my trouble. Ride back to Heron, tell him you failed, and see what you get.’
As it was, they rested the horses overnight, ate a hot meal in the man’s barn and the river was down in the morning. Even with that, though, the swim across the Hypanis was one of the scariest things Stratokles had ever done. Halfway across, when an underwater log thumped against the ribs of his horse and both of them rolled under for a moment, he thought he was done.
Oh, Athens, the shit I do for you.
But then he was up the far bank. He had brought a light rope from the ferryman, and he tied it to the big oak at the top of the bank, and the ferryman gave him a wave and a cheer.
‘Service restored,’ Stratokles said to Lucius, who’d also made the crossing.
‘Aren’t we going to wait for the lads?’ Lucius asked when Stratokles rubbed his gelding down and got back up on him.
Stratokles watched the ferryman and one of his sons inching across in a light boat, using the line Stratokles had carried to keep from racing away downstream. ‘It’ll be all day before he gets his hawser across,’ the Athenian said.
‘You’re the boss,’ Lucius said. ‘You think we can take six men all by ourselves?’
‘I have to try,’ Stratokles said.
‘Well, I’m with you,’ Lucius muttered. ‘I’m a fool, but I’m with you.’
They made Bata in three more days. There was a heavy trireme beached by the stern, and Heron of Pantecapaeum was just coming up the beach when they rode their tired horses down to him.
‘They got away,’ Stratokles said.
Heron nodded. ‘This morning. About five hours ago.’ He looked at Lucius, and then back at the Athenian. ‘You’re a better man than I took you for. You stuck it out all the way across the countryside.’