They heard a metallic rattle — the canteen lid shaking against the container as Annia tried to screw it back. She didn’t seem to have noticed the blood that had splattered her neck when Procyon was killed.
‘I can do that, miss,’ Cassius said, taking the canteen.
Annia looked at him for a moment, then stared down at the weeds and nettles that carpeted the bottom of the ditch. She hadn’t said a word since collapsing at the pit. Cassius knelt beside her and tried to take one of her shaking hands, but she recoiled and turned away.
Cassius looked over at Indavara, who was examining his broken finger. ‘Bad?’
‘Need to strap it.’
‘With what?’
Cassius felt a hand on his shoulder.
Annia was pointing at the shredded hem of her long tunic. She tried to tear it but her hands were still shaking too much.
‘I’ll do it, miss. If you don’t mind.’
Cassius picked up the javelin and used the blade to cut off a section of the cloth.
‘Thank you, Miss Annia,’ said Indavara as Cassius waved him over.
‘This might hurt.’
Indavara didn’t make a sound as Cassius pushed the broken little finger next to the adjacent one and tied them together. Cassius then inspected the broken skin on Indavara’s forehead. ‘And how’s that?’
‘Sore. How’s the nose?’
‘Very sore. How does it look?’
The expression on Indavara’s face told Cassius all he needed to know.
‘Wonderful. Come on.’
This time Annia took his hand. He helped her to her feet and across the ditch. Indavara retrieved the bow and quiver and fell in behind them.
As they got further from the battle, it became even harder to tell what was going on and soon they could see no more than the scattered Maseene horses and sparks of glinting metal between the barracks and the mansion.
As they approached the track they’d used the previous day, Cassius heard a rustling sound up ahead. Leaving Annia, he took a few steps forward and stopped. The grass in front of him was moving. Something was coming towards him.
The plump brown bird took off at a low trajectory and missed his head by inches. It flapped away to the south, leaving Cassius on his bottom. He blew feathers away from his face. ‘Caesar’s balls.’ He turned to the others. ‘Sorry.’
‘Quiet,’ said Indavara, ten paces behind him. He ducked down and jabbed one end of the bow towards the Via Roma. Cassius peered over the grass and saw three Maseene warriors on horseback. One pointed at their position and the trio guided their mounts off the road. Cassius wondered why they weren’t fighting. Had they fled, or had the Romans broken up the attack? It hardly mattered; they were coming their way.
Cassius and Annia crawled back to where Indavara was kneeling. Cassius looked down at the broad-bladed head of the javelin in his hand. Whichever warrior it had belonged to had looked after it well; the gleaming iron had been tapered to a lethal point.
Considering their horses were walking, the tribesmen seemed to cover the ground quickly. They were in a line, five paces between them, now less than a hundred feet away.
Indavara still hadn’t put an arrow against the bowstring.
‘What are you waiting for?’ asked Cassius.
Indavara grimaced and looked thoughtfully down at the ground.
‘You think they’ll hesitate to kill us?’ continued Cassius. ‘Because unless you’ve suddenly developed the ability to speak their language, that’s exactly what they’ll do.’
Indavara gave a brief shake of his head, then fitted the arrow against the string. ‘We wait until they’re almost on us. The one to the right is yours. Aim for the chest.’ He glanced at the javelin. ‘Know what you’re doing with that thing?’
‘Of course. I was fifteenth in my class with these.’
‘Out of fifteen?’
‘Thirty-two actually.’
Cassius tightened his grip on the javelin and tried to swallow the lump in his throat.
Annia was lying on the ground between them, eyes shut once more.
‘Just listen and keep your head down,’ Indavara told Cassius. ‘We’ll know when they’re close enough.’
Cassius turned himself side-on to make the throw easier. Before long he could hear the horses’ legs brushing through the grass, see dark shapes through the swaying, bright green stalks.
Indavara brought the bow up level with his shoulder and drew the string halfway.
Cassius looked at the point of the javelin, imagined it slicing into the bare skin of the warrior’s chest.
Him or me.
He could see the riders now: their dark, wiry frames; their lean, striking faces.
‘Wait,’ Indavara breathed.
Cassius shifted slightly towards the man to the right. The warrior’s hands were on the reins. Cassius drew back his arm.
‘Ready,’ said Indavara, tightening his fingers on the bowstring.
Him or me. Him or me.
The three Maseene suddenly looked to their left. Cassius realised he could hear horses somewhere behind him. The tribesmen urged their mounts towards the track at a trot.
‘Down,’ Indavara whispered.
Cassius was already down and he watched the closest horse slip through the grass not ten feet away. Had the warrior looked to his right he would have seen all three of them.
Once he was past, Cassius and Indavara lifted their heads and spied four more tribesmen coming along the track from the east. After a brief discussion, the seven of them set off back towards the Via Roma. Cassius lowered the javelin and sat down. ‘I can’t take much more of this.’
‘Could have been a lot, lot worse,’ replied Indavara, at last letting the bowstring go slack. ‘What hour do you think it is?’
Cassius glanced up at the sky. ‘Seventh or eighth.’
‘It’ll be hard to reach the harbour before nightfall.’ Indavara pointed towards Darnis. Five plumes of smoke were rising from the town. ‘What do you think that means?’
‘Nothing good. Let’s just get to the bridge and hope Eborius can make it there too.’
‘C–Cassius. Indavara.’
Annia, still sitting on the ground, pushed her lank hair away from her face and looked up at them.
‘I–I’m sorry. Truly. I–I should never have left the ship.’
‘What’s done is done, miss,’ Indavara said after a while.
‘Quite,’ said Cassius. ‘We know you didn’t set out to do any harm, miss. We’re all still in one piece. And once we’re over that track, it’s only a mile or two to the bridge. Mostly olive grove as I recall, which unfortunately won’t hide us half as well as this grass.’
‘Miss, you should take those off,’ said Indavara, pointing at the two silver bangles on each wrist.
‘They’ll catch the sun, miss,’ added Cassius.
Annia set about removing them. Her hands were shaking less now.
‘You can call me Annia, you know.’
‘Yes, miss,’ they said.
Once across the track and into the olive grove, their progress slowed. Without the reassuring shelter of the grass, Cassius felt terribly exposed (especially as he was leading the way), but he soon developed a workable routine: they would stop beside one of the larger trees, check the Via Roma and the surrounding countryside for signs of movement, then dash to the next piece of cover. Five times they had to wait for danger to pass; on each occasion groups of Maseene horsemen. Cassius decided he couldn’t glean much from the direction of their movements; two groups had been on the road heading north, another heading south, and the last two cross-country.
He reckoned an hour and a half had elapsed since their escape when they finally reached a high date palm thirty yards from the bridge. Crouching in welcome shadow, the three of them caught their breath and looked out at the empty Via Roma — the sloping section that ran north from the ridge down to the gorge. The only sound was the shrill cries of the black kites.
‘We cannot wait,’ Cassius said, gazing across at the patchy scrub on the other side of the gorge. ‘We must cross while we have the chance.’