“Permission to speak plainly, sirs?”
Balbus nodded as he unfolded a seat next to the door.
“That was a bloody miserable prank, and not worthy of a shit-ditch digger! If you was a centurion and not an officer, I’d…”
He ground to a halt as he realised that he was starting to look foolish in front of the others in the tent. The high colour slowly draining from his face, he sank into a pile of cushions.
“As it goes, I’ll just have to strip you both of a month’s wages to even up the score, eh? Do you two both know how to play ‘Kill the King’?”
The two legates shook their heads.
“Good. Then we’ll start with that.”
The ten men sat in their circle around the dice pit, Balbus taking the only campaign chair in the tent to ease the pain he occasionally felt in his knee.
The dice game began in earnest. Fronto fished his purse out and emptied the pile of coins onto the floor in front of him. Balbus, likewise, emptied his coins, ready to place his bet. Cominius, the chief centurion of the Second Cohort, took the dice and shook them, blowing on his hands for luck. Raising his eyes heavenward, he muttered a brief prayer to Nemesis, the Goddess of Retribution. Priscus clicked his tongue.
“We’ll have no time to win anything tonight if you don’t hurry up and throw the bloody dice!”
Cominius grinned at Priscus, winking slyly at the others.
“Come on Nemesis, Cominius needs a new pair of boots.”
Raising his cupped hands to his ear, he put on an expression of confused surprise.
“Did anyone else hear that? They said Priscus is going home broke! Looks like the Gods have already decided for you Gnaeus. Might as well give us your cash now and piss off.”
Priscus gave a throaty cough and nudged Cominius so hard in the arm that the dice left his hand and bounced across the floor and under a cushion.
One of the minor centurions, Fronto couldn’t remember his name, cried “Out of play! Cominius is out this round. Cough up man!”
Cominius leaned toward the junior centurion as though he were going to whisper in his ear. As soon as the younger man leant in, Cominius punched him mid-upper arm, deadening the muscles.
“Now lets see you throw, you prat.”
“Get your hands off him.”
“Get him, Priscus.”
Fronto smiled at Balbus as a small melee developed on the other side of the tent.
“Think we’d best break this up. Caesar’ll have a real go at the Tenth if half the officers turn up with a black eye.”
As Fronto grabbed Priscus, pinning the primus pilus’ arms to his sides, Balbus, with a speed belying his age, lunged for Cominius. The two legates dragged the principal brawlers apart. Fears that there might be bad feeling were soon assuaged as Priscus and Cominius collapsed onto the cushions laughing.
“You fight like a girl.”
“Yeah? Well you punch like a chicken.”
Fronto stood between them. The two glanced at him apprehensively, aware that this was their senior officer and that he had every right to discipline them. The look on his face, however, told them Fronto had taken the whole thing in good spirits.
“Alright you two. You want to mess around? This is why the camp prefect doesn’t allow gambling on camp. Fights! You lot can’t resist kicking the crap out of each other over a couple of denarii, can you?”
“You.” He pointed at Priscus. “Make it up to everyone. Go and get two jugs of wine out of storage. You’re paying for them too.”
Grins split the faces of the watching officers. Cominius smiled smugly at Priscus.
Fronto wheeled on Cominius.
“And you can go to my tent and get my dice. They haven’t been weighted. And while you’re there you can pick up the folder of paperwork on my desk. Casualty reports for the general that need to be in tomorrow night and you’re running the figures, lad.”
Muttering, Cominius left the tent, hot on the heels of Priscus. Fronto looked around at the self-satisfied faces of the others. “I don’t know what you lot are smiling about. Get this tent cleared up and ready. We’ve some serious dice playing to get on with.”
As the various centurions went about clearing up spilled wine and charred cushions, Fronto and Balbus sat sharing the remaining wine and smiling benignly at their juniors. Balbus leaned forward.
“I sometimes wonder if Caesar hasn’t got more than he bargained for. He could have selected any legates he wanted to control these legions, but he stuck with us. Don’t think he realised how many old-school commanders he was taking on.”
Fronto looked around in surprise.
“Caesar doesn’t like new men. In the political climate of Rome these days, the only people you can trust are old-school. Anyone else has political motives for everything. He should know; he has to be the worst of them.”
Balbus frowned.
“I thought you two were old friends. You’ve campaigned with him before. Why so hostile?”
Fronto took a huge tug straight from the neck of the wine jar.
“He was different back then. Another politician trying to climb the ladder, but he seemed to care more than most. A man the army felt at home with. He’s changed. I don’t know what’s happened in the few years since Spain, but he’s become cold. I don’t know quite how to put it. Nasty, I suppose. He’s still a great general, don’t get me wrong, but I’m not sure I trust him any more.”
Fronto suddenly became aware that the various centurions had stopped their cleaning and were listening intently to what he was saying.
“I don’t hear much cleaning. And incidentally, if any of you are bootlicking sons of bitches, this conversation is off the record. I will categorically deny anything that has been repeated and anyone I suspect of passing opinions on will be emptying latrines as an excused duty legionary within a day. Do I make myself clear?”
The others all nodded humbly and in silence.
“Remember why you’re here. Anyway, here comes Priscus with the wine.”
The primus pilus threw open the tent flap and staggered in carrying not two, but four jugs of wine.
“Hell with it sir, we’ll be packed and ready to go an hour before the other legions anyway.”
Fronto smiled.
“Dish it out, Gnaeus. Dish it out.”
Balbus nudged Fronto.
“That other centurion of yours has been gone a long time considering he’s only in the next tent.”
A young centurion from the Sixth Cohort stood to attention, a cushion in his hand.
“I’ll fetch him sir!”
Fronto smiled in a friendly manner.
“Sit down son and have a drink. It’s my tent and my orders. I’ll fetch him myself.”
Staggering slightly and rubbing his hip, Fronto stood and made his way out of the tent.
The grass was yielding and light beneath his feet as he crossed between the two tents. He was enjoying the sensation of the springy turf so much that he was tremendously surprised when he slipped and came crashing down on his back. His head hit a flat stone with an unpleasant ‘crack’. Momentarily, his eyes glazed and his mind filled with an explosion of white light and roaring sounds.
‘Too much wine already, I must be getting old’ he thought through the mire and blur.
It was at that moment that his groping hand came across something hard and edged. He lifted it into the glow of the guttering torches and saw the finely carved dots staring back at him. Squinting to focus his eyes and to concentrate his swimming head, he glared at the object. The colour of the bone cube was all wrong.
All wrong.
Cube.
Red.
Slipping whilst trying urgently to pull himself up, he lifted his hand to his face and sniffed the sticky liquid he had been lying in. Smelled of tin. Warm. His or someone else’s? Couldn’t be his. He hadn’t been lying there long enough to lose all that. As he swayed, eyes continually focusing and defocusing, he saw the rest of the blood, trickling down the slope from the entrance of his tent.