The procurator bowed, opening his hands to gesture his assent to the suggestion.
‘It would be my pleasure to donate such a sum to the imperial treasury.’
Cleander nodded.
‘Excellent. And now I really must get back to my duties. I think it’s time we ran an audit of arena gamblers’ takings and losses. I do so like to know exactly what monies are changing hands, and where the throne might request a small percentage as a means of meeting its incessant outflow of gold to safeguard the empire’s frontiers.’
He turned away but then, exactly as Scaurus had expected, he turned back with a faint smile.
‘Tribune Scaurus, you do get around.’
Scaurus bowed.
‘I make a point of introducing my officers to as many new experiences as possible, Chamberlain, and Julius here has never seen the Flavian amphitheatre.’
Cleander raised an eyebrow.
‘And how do you find our entertainment, Centurion?’
Julius smiled wanly.
‘Informative, sir.’
‘Informative!’ The chamberlain guffawed. ‘I’m sure you do, given the bestial nature of the lunchtime show. But never fear, there’s nothing more in that line planned for the rest of the day, although I suspect that dear old Glaucus’s death will have left the crowd in the mood for some red meat. Let’s hope your men can provide them with a good-sized portion! Oh, and Scaurus?’
‘Chamberlain?’
‘I really do think it’s time your men were given a break from all that tedious sitting around and waiting for their next set of orders. I’ll send a man to you in the morning to detail the time of a meeting and we’ll find you something more interesting to do. Something involving travel …’
9
Velox led the three friends through the Gate of Life, his face still betraying the fury he was feeling at the death of his friend Glaucus. The gate guards on duty did no more than nod respectfully as he escorted the three soldiers out into the open space between the arena and the gladiatorial schools clustered around its eastern side. The square was almost empty, most of the people who had thronged it a few hours before now in their seats high above the arena’s sand, and those few who remained were easily turned away by the pair of ludus guards walking before them with their heavy knobbed wooden clubs.
Leading them across the square, his mood seemed to soften slightly as he pointed out each of the gladiatorial ludi in turn, from the Ludus Gallicus’s comparatively humble establishment, to the Ludus Magnus’s massive square-sided barracks, the height of its walls fully two-thirds of the arena which faced it across the intervening open space.
‘They’ve got a full-sized arena in there to make the training realistic for the horse boys, and big enough that they can stage chariot fights and massed battles when the aristos want to pay for some private bloodshed. It’s always been the same. The Great School turns out most of the mainstream acts, and so it has all the money and all of the power. The rest of us are always running to catch up.’
He led them up a side street and into a huge stone building.
‘But here’s a place where that doesn’t matter, because these boys are managed by the Flavian procurator, and they treat everyone with exactly the same disdain. You’ll be here a lot over the next few years, getting your gear sorted out before a fight.’
If the champion’s reputation had the power to open almost any door, there was little sign of that influence in the dour-faced man who confronted them when they reached the arena’s armoury, protected by three sets of heavy iron-studded oak doors.
‘Equipment for these three? I was told about it less than an hour ago, so you’ll just have to make do with what we’ve got in store. It’s not as if we’ve not already got enough work to keep us busy for the rest of the week!’
The chief armourer waved a hand at the ordered chaos behind him, half a dozen muscular men with their heads down over their work, hammering at armour and sharpening the weapons required to equip the men who would fight in the Flavian arena. The air in the workshop was heavy with the stink of sweat, and the four men were barely spared a second glance by the toiling craftsmen. Velox put a hand on their overseer’s shoulder.
‘Don’t worry about it, I know your store well enough to find what we need. We’ll bring it back to show you before we carry it off, never fear. After all, if we wait for those idiots upstairs to come and sort it out, these lads’ll be going out onto the sand naked.’
The armourer nodded, happy to have the problem taken off his hands, and turned back to his workshop with a final admonishment.
‘Off you go then, but no trying to sneak off with any of the good stuff!’
The store was cooler, if no better lit than the workshop through which they had walked to reach it, and the four men walked down its long central aisle looking at the equipment stacked in both sides with an eye for anything military. Velox picked up a sword, testing its edge with his thumb.
‘Let’s hope this is going to feel the touch of a stone before it’s used in anger. Of course, once a man’s fought and won a few times he gets to use his own gear, since it makes him more recognisable to the crowds and encourages them to gamble on him, with the arena taking a healthy cut of course, but most of the tiros get something from this rather dull collection thrust at them just as they’re about to go out onto the sand, poor bastards. A few practice swings and suddenly you’re out there face-to-face with another man who has to go through you if he wants to make his way back through the Gate of Life. No wonder so many of them don’t survive their first two or three … Ah, here we are then!’ He waved a hand at the racks of gear that ran the length of the storeroom. ‘Designed by veteran soldiers, tested to destruction in foreign wars and then eventually made by the lowest bidder with the cheapest materials possible, so you’d better make sure that anything you choose isn’t ready to fall to pieces!’
The soldiers looked up and down the racks of equipment before them, each of them selecting what they needed in their own size. Horatius paused in the middle of buckling on his armour, realising that the Tungrians had both chosen to wear mail rather than the legion standard-issue body protection.
‘You’re sure you want to wear that stuff? Plate armour’s better protection against a spear point, because the plates are layered two and three thick. And see, the shoulder guards will hold off a sword blade better as well …’
His voice trailed off as Dubnus turned a strained smile on him, fastening a thick leather belt tightly about himself to carry some of the heavy mail shirt’s twenty-pound weight.
‘On the other hand, see how the shirt protects my thighs, nearly as far down as my knees. And I’m used to this, whereas it could take me days of practice to be able to fight as well with that thing on.’
Velox reappeared from the back of the store with three helmets piled in his arms.
‘Here you go, these look like they’ll do the job.’ He passed one to each of them, watching as they pulled on arming caps to pad out the space between head and helmet, then dropped the heavy iron headgear into place. ‘Now you look like soldiers, and not just particularly well-muscled tourists. Find yourselves some military-looking shields and I think that’ll more or less be you three ready for the sand.’
Picking out a sword and spear for each of them, he led them back into the workshop. The armourer stared at the three men as they walked through his toiling men, his head shaking slowly from side to side as they stopped in front of him for inspection.
‘First time?’
Marcus nodded, frowning down at the man.
‘Yes, but-’
‘How could I tell? It’s in the eyes, lad, in the eyes. You lot are looking about you as if this is some sort of big adventure, rather than the never-ending bloodbath that it really is.’ Having noted the equipment they were wearing and made each of them sign for it, he detailed a slave to carry their spears and swords. ‘If you walk out into the streets carrying that lot you’ll start a bloody panic.’