Oenomaus waited until he was in position and then he too stepped forward. This time, however, instead of standing next to the scarred attendant, with the tip of his nose almost touching the metal of the gate to afford him the best possible view of proceedings in the arena, he quietly and deliberately stood a couple of paces behind him, legs slightly apart, hands hanging loosely at his sides.
Spartacus and Varro walked a third of the way into the arena, their strides long and easy, their demeanor deceptively casual. Eventually they came to a halt and looked, with equal indifference, around them. To their left, perhaps forty paces away, were Solonius’s men, a hoplomachus, with his spear and his short sword, and a thraex, clutching a sica and a short rectangular shield, his visored, wide-brimmed helmet crested with the head of a griffin. Directly facing them, again around forty paces away, were Hieronymus’s gladiators-a retiarius, with his net and trident, and a secutor, who compensated for the limited range of vision through the round eye holes in his egg-shaped helmet by having a large rectangular shield with which to protect himself, and a longer than average stabbing sword.
For several seemingly interminable seconds all six gladiators in their three pairs regarded one another, standing as if on the points of a large invisible triangle. The crowd, quietening a little now, watched expectantly, waiting to see who would make the first move.
With an almost lazy turn of the head, Spartacus looked at Solonius’s gladiators, who looked back at him with no apparent malice, their shields only half-raised, their weapons pointing toward the ground. If they gave any kind of signal, it was not immediately obvious to those looking down from above-but suddenly Spartacus raised both his swords and began to run toward Hieronymus’s men, slowly at first, but quickly gaining speed as he covered the distance between them.
When he was around twenty paces away, he let loose a blood-curdling battle cry, full of rage and venom, which was immediately taken up by the crowd. Both Hieronymus’s men-belying their supposed status as savage and fearless Morituri-took a stumbling step back, clearly unnerved by the sheer ferocity of his lone attack.
As he closed with them, the retiarius rallied slightly, adopting a fighting stance and casting his net with one sweep of his arm, hoping to ensnare Spartacus within its barbed mesh. Spartacus, however, was far too quick for him. As the net first billowed through the air toward him, and then began to sink back down to earth, he crossed his swords in front of his chest and dived into a forward roll, his body passing completely beneath the descending net.
Before the retiarius even seemed to realize what had happened, Spartacus had closed the remaining distance between them. Springing back to his feet, he uncrossed his arms in a single blur of movement, the swords in his hands slashing out in a double-arc of sun-white metal. His right-handed blade cut the Retiarius’s legs from under him-literally-whereas the one in his left went a little higher, opening a long slash across his opponent’s unprotected stomach.
The retiarius didn’t even have time to scream before he was falling, his legs, hacked off just beneath the knees, flying one way, and his body the other. As he hit the ground with a heavy thud, his slashed belly burst open like a paper bag and blood and slippery internal organs gushed out of him.
His partner, the secutor, meanwhile, simply stood and gaped, his reflexes far too slow to match the sheer speed and agility of Spartacus’s assault. He had barely raised his shield before Spartacus, his momentum continuing to carry him forward, was upon him too, his twin swords a whirling blur of lethal metal.
Desperately the secutor brought up his own sword in defense, only to find less than a second later that his hand, with the sword still clutched in it, was flying across the arena, trailing blood, having been severed neatly at the wrist. The gladiator hadn’t even reacted to the pain before Spartacus’s other sword was flashing up and across, unerringly finding the narrow gap between the top of the secutor’s shield and the bottom of his helmet, and severing his head with one blow.
As the helmeted head landed on the sand with a heavy thud, the secutor’s body, blood spurting from the stump of the neck, folded at the knees and waist and crumpled to the ground.
Spartacus rose slowly from his half-crouch, the blades of his swords dripping blood on to the sand, and glanced round briefly at the screaming, leaping, delirious crowd. Then, without even raising a single sword in acknowledgement, he turned and trudged casually back to where Varro was standing waiting for him, the hacked, bleeding remains of Hieronymus’s gladiators already attracting flies on the sand in his wake.
Varro nodded, and Spartacus nodded back, and then the two of them turned to face Solonius’s men.
“Now that unworthy dogs are despatched, we can fight like true gladiators,” the thraex growled, his voice muffled beneath his helmet. “Prepare to die, Thracian.”
Marcus Crassus lowered his head briefly, his hand rising from his lap at the same moment to cradle it. His thumb and middle finger gently massaged each side of his temple for a few seconds, and then he lifted his head slowly once more and glared at Hieronymus.
The Greek merchant was sitting and shivering on the floor of the pulvinus, out of sight of the crowd, his back pressed against the inside edge of the balcony. He had drawn his knees up to his chin and was now pawing at his lips with his hands, as if in an attempt to drag coherent words from his unresponsive mouth. His black eyes, wide and staring, darted this way and that, as if they were witnessing unimaginable terrors bearing down on him from every direction. Since accusing Batiatus of poisoning him, he had withdrawn into himself, muttering and gibbering, resisting all attempts to draw him out of his shell. Brutilius’s wife had tried for a while, but Hieronymus had flinched as though he thought she meant him harm, and in the end she had given up. Then it had been time for Solonius to announce the primus, since when all eyes had been on the arena.
Now that Spartacus had perfunctorily, even contemptuously, despatched Hieronymus’s gladiators, however (men selected especially for the primus, and therefore, theoretically, the best that his ludus had to offer), Crassus, his professional interest in the contest effectively over, turned his withering attention back to Hieronymus.
“I have invested considerable coin in venture, and will have explanation for this disgrace,” he muttered, spitting out his words like cherry pits. “Speak, Grecian, or prepare to be dragged back to Rome behind my horses and see truth torn from body.”
Hieronymus looked up at him, his mouth opening and closing silently for a moment. Then finally, in a harsh and tortured whisper, he said, “Water.”
The expression on Crassus’s face was less than encouraging.
“What of it?” he snapped.
Hieronymus raised a finger and pointed it waveringly at Solonius and then at Batiatus.
“They …” he gulped, his eyes rolling. “They have … poisoned me.”
Crassus’s dark gaze swept across the faces of the two lanistae.
“Is there truth in his babbling?”
Batiatus smiled, seemingly unruffled.
“I don’t endeavor to speak for the man. Let him offer explanation for belief in such a thing.”
Crassus’s attention snapped back to Hieronymus.
“Yes. Do as he suggests and make clear your meaning.”
“I …” Hieronymus had the wretched look of a man who had a number of paths from which to choose, but who suspected that whatever decision he made would ultimately lead to nothing but his own damnation.
Finally, pointing at Batiatus, he said, “The deception lies with him. He … he claims to provide me with water from Rome. But the water he offers … is not Roman.”