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Yet these men were no beggars, and pulled themselves erect as they stood behind Mandrax and his Wolf standard. Cato made no attempt at stirring them on to yet greater valour, as the generals in all the history books did. He simply told them to take the place of every man who fell defending the breastwork. Then he saluted and took his position in a cart to the left of Macro. A short distance to Macro's right he saw Figulus and returned the wave that the optio made to him.

'Here they come!' shouted Macro.

The enemy rippled forward, then all at once a roar swept through their ranks, and they charged towards the redoubt.

'Hold steady!' Macro bellowed above the din. 'Just keep them out!'

Cato tightened his grip on the shield handle and braced it against the inside of the breastwork. Over the rim he watched the enemy rushing towards him, a sea of woad-patterned flesh and spiky lime-washed hair. They closed on the redoubt, clambering over the bodies of their comrades who had fallen in the first assault. Then they reached the hastily erected defences and tried to get at the warriors thrusting at them from above. The advantage of height and reach was with the Romans, and scores of Durotrigans fell to quick thrusts of the spears. Cato had only his sword and watched for his opportunity. Then directly below him a man threw himself forward and braced his arms against the side of the wagon Cato was standing on. Immediately the warrior behind scrambled on to the man's back and launched himself towards Cato. The centurion slammed his shield boss into the man's shoulder and the warrior toppled to one side. As he fell he grasped the shaft of the spear being wielded by the legionary fighting beside Cato, wrenching the weapon from the Roman's grasp.

'Shit!' The legionary snatched at his sword, but was too late to spot the spear thrown from one side. The tip caught him under the chin and passed straight through his neck, the impact hurling him back so that he crumpled over the rear of the wagon.

'Get a man up here!' Cato shouted over his shoulder. 'Now!'

As soon as the gap opened in the defenders' line a group of the enemy swarmed forward to press home the advantage, and Cato found himself facing three men, armed with swords, hacking and thrusting at him. He pressed himself inside the curve of the shield and slashed and hacked back at them in a desperate frenzy that bore little resemblance to the rigorous sword training that had been harshly drilled into him by the legion's instructors. There was a lucky strike as his blade caught one of his opponents across the knuckles, shattering the bones of his sword hand. The man screamed and fell back into the swirling mass of the warriors thrusting their way towards the redoubt. But his two comrades were more wily, and while one feinted at Cato the other waited for a chance to strike round the edge of the centurion's shield, and only the curved surface of his segmented armour saved him from injury as a blow glanced off the side of his chest. Then the gap was plugged as an Atrebatan took his place at the breastwork and thrust his sword down towards one of the men trying to kill Cato.

How long the fight raged around the redoubt, Cato could never be sure. There was no time for thought; only the instinct to fight and survive. As he stabbed and parried with his sword, and blocked savage blows with his shield, Cato shouted out encouragement to the men around him, and called for replacements whenever he was aware that one of them had fallen out of line. Even though five or six Durotrigans must have perished for every one of the defenders struck down from the breastwork, they could afford to take the punishment. Indeed, the very number of their losses seemed to provoke an ever-greater desire to close with the Romans and their Atrebatan allies, and they pressed forward tighter than ever, heaving against the defences so forcefully that Cato could feel the wagon shifting beneath him.

As the sun began to dip behind the bulk of the hall the redoubt fell into shadow and the slanting light illuminated the enemy with an intense contrast of light with dark that made them seem all the more vivid and fierce. Cato's arms felt drained of strength, and desperation was no longer enough. Only iron will forced his shield arm to stay up and his sword arm to thrust with enough punch to strike a lethal blow. But for every man he sent reeling back into the mob, another took his place with the same implacable urge to obliterate the defenders.

Then, strangely, Cato found himself waiting for his next opponent. But as he readied his shield and steeled his trembling sword arm, the sea of hostile faces before him thinned, and ebbed away from the redoubt. A glance to either side was enough to reveal that the Durotrigans were all falling back. Their war cries faded away with them and, looking across the enclosure, Cato could see them running through the gate. Soon, only a few stragglers were in view, making best speed to catch up with their comrades, and the full extent of the battlefield was revealed to Cato's eyes. Hundreds of the enemy lay strewn on the ground before the hall, many still living so that the tangle of bodies glistening with sweat and blood seemed to shimmer in the fading heat and light of the late summer afternoon. Cato looked across to Macro and the older centurion pursed his lips and shrugged.

'Now, where the hell are they off to?' Figulus said loudly.

The men on the breastwork stayed in position, watching for the enemy's next move, not yet daring to believe that they might not come back. The clink and clatter of the Durotrigans' armour and weapons faded into silence and then there was just the sound of the injured.

'Cato!'

'Yes, sir!'

'Strength return, right now.'

Cato nodded, and slipped down on to the ground. He staggered a moment on his tired legs and then began to count off the survivors at the breastwork, and the handful of men still standing in reserve.

'They're coming back!' shouted a legionary, and Cato ran to take up his position. In the fading light dim figures could be seen making their way through the gateway into the enclosure.

'One last effort, boys!' Macro called out, even his voice cracking under the strain.

Each defender tightened his grip on shield and spear and steeled himself for a final struggle. Then Cato laughed – a high-pitched nervous sound – and he lowered his spear and leaned forward to rest his elbows on the breastwork.

Striding through the gate was a broad man with a red cloak. The sun gleamed on his highly polished helmet, and above the helmet curved a brilliant red crest. The man barked an order and a screen of troops fanned out on either side of the gate, and cautiously picked their way across the enclosure towards the hall. As they approached Cato's keen eyes recognised the officer.

'It's Centurion Hortensius!' Cato laughed with nervous relief.

Hortensius marched up towards them, smacking his vine cane into the palm of his spare hand.

'Macro and Cato,' he called. 'I might have guessed. Only you two could have ended up in a fucking mess like this!'

04 The Eagle and the Wolves

Chapter Thirty-Eight

Once Vespasian had sent off the scouts to make sure that the Durotrigans were keeping clear of Calleva, he led the relief column in through the blackened frame of the town's main gate. The legate immediately made for the depot, and the charred ruin of the headquarters block and the grisly remains of the hospital. Although the Durotrigans had razed the Roman buildings to the ground they had at least left the supplies largely untouched. No doubt they had intended to gorge themselves and carry off what they could, but the sudden arrival of the legate and his six cohorts had caused the Durotrigans to panic and flee the Atrebatan capital empty-handed.

Vespasian gave orders to begin repairs to the depot's defences and then, with tribune Quintillus at his side, they rode off to join Hortensius' cohort, which had been sent on ahead to secure the royal enclosure. As soon as he caught sight of Macro and Cato the legate had demanded to know the full story.