But now was not the time to dwell on those poor lost souls and what had been done to them by a foreign force encamped in their city. Food was still becoming all the more scarce, and every day the besieged warriors watched the horizon and waited, desperately.
Too much to hope. But then, what other reason could the Romans have for standing to and pulling their force within their walls entirely? He watched, tense, expectant, trembling slightly.
Cavarinos almost cried as the first wave of horsemen appeared among the trees atop the peaks known locally as Dead Men’s Mountains, beyond the plain and the Roman fortifications crossing it. In a matter of heartbeats, the hillside was flooded with horsemen, gathering like a swarm of ants. The reinforcements!
Even as the cheer went up from the watching army on the walls above him, Cavarinos watched the cavalry moving across the range of hills on some unknown set of orders. Into the gaps that opened came the warriors on foot, filling the hillside with a mass of tiny dark figures. Small groups of horse moved among them, presumably the commanders and nobles. Lucterius would be there somewhere, the hero of the hour to the beleaguered men of Vercingetorix’s army.
His eyes slid, involuntary, back to the sad figures of the starving Mandubians on the slope below. Amid the elation of the besieged, the black spot that corroded the soul was the knowledge that no matter how many men had gathered on that hill, none of it would do the Mandubian refugees any good. Indeed, the moment the reserves made a move to the outer Roman walls, Vercingetorix would order an attack on the inner defences and those people would be little more than an obstacle, pushed out of the way or simply cut down by the army who had supposedly come to free the tribes from oppression.
Curse you Fronto, for not letting the people go. His fingers brushed the pouch that contained the curse tablet. Of course, he knew why the Romans had not done so. Any astute, if cold-blooded, general would have done the same. Somewhere in his heart he hoped that the Romans had at least argued over it before Caesar had essentially condemned them to death. Well, Caesar and Vercingetorix between them, anyway.
Tomorrow there would be a battle.
Not a foray, or a skirmish. Not a cavalry engagement on the move. Nothing like that. Now, Vercingetorix knew he had the numbers. He would not be able to move until the relief force did, but he would be ready to attack immediately thereafter. Hopefully the battle would easily fall in their favour. If so, it might conceivably be the last battle.
Cavarinos reached up to his chest and gripped the dangling figure of Fortuna, the irony of calling upon a Roman god for their destruction not lost upon him.
Chapter 19
Lucterius stared at the relief army’s commander with wide, disbelieving eyes.
‘You cannot be serious?’
‘I am most serious,’ Commius replied, his face stolid and straight. ‘I have seen the might of Rome first-hand many times and if they are to be defeated they must be taken by surprise. Think back on the few times the Romans have suffered in our lands, Lucterius… most recently at Gergovia where your insane charge and the mix-up with the Aedui cavalry led to their defeat. The destruction of Sabinus and Cotta’s legion two years ago by Ambiorix’s surprise attack. Even the battles when the Romans first encountered the Belgae… the Nervii almost finished Caesar by springing a trap. Not once have the Romans lost a fight in our lands when they were prepared for it.’
Lucterius ground his teeth in the silence. Nothing he could say would refute those facts for what they were: the plain truth. And yet to do nothing was to lose anyway. Beside him, Molacos, his nephew and second in command glowered, his already skeletal face twisted into a rictus mask.
‘What do you intend then, might I ask?’
Commius shrugged as he shot a faintly annoyed glance at the outspoken Cadurci chief. ‘We simply cannot attack those defences. We will lose, and with us all hope for the tribes will die. No; an attack is out of the question. What we must do is starve the Romans. They will have supplies within their lines, but only a finite supply, and if they send out foraging units… well, those we can defeat. We will besiege Caesar. We have adequate numbers to harry them if they sortie, and if they choose to come out in force to deal with us, the army in Alesia will be able to attack from the rear. But unless the Romans leave those defences in force, we will wait and let them die of hunger.’
The Cadurci chieftain felt the faint trembles of anger and fought to control his temper, keeping his voice controlled and level. ‘I was in the oppidum before I came to Bibracte, and the Mandubii had inadequate supplies in storage even for their own town. If you starve the Romans, the army in the oppidum will die first, and you cannot waste eighty thousand of the best men the tribes have to offer; men who have already been tried and tested against Caesar this summer.’
‘We have no other choice, Lucterius!’ snapped Commius. ‘I will not commit to a suicide attack on those defences. Now stop pestering me and see to the quartering of your men.’
With a last glare of loathing at the army’s leader, Lucterius turned his horse and trotted off across the lush grass, the late evening sun gleaming between the trees atop the hill — a sun currently bathing the town of Alesia across the plain in its last golden rays. The Cadurci and Arverni, both serving under his command, were busy making camp in a position with a good view of the oppidum and the Roman siege works some half mile to the north. In the midst of the activity, his second-in-command, Molacos, was busy honing a gleaming blade with his whetstone. This newly-appointed infantry commander was one of the best in the army and a man Lucterius knew of old. A hunter by trade, he was as sharp and accurate as an arrow, as quiet and deadly as a snake. He also was loyal to the hilt.
If anyone could do it, it was Molacos.
Lucterius slipped from the saddle, tied his horse to one of the hastily-erected hitching posts, and wandered over to the Cadurci hunter, stepping close and speaking in low, hushed, tones.
‘Our illustrious leader will not attack the Romans.’
Molacos simply spat on the ground, his face twisting beyond its normal sour grimace at the news.
‘Precisely. The leaders here are largely a credulous lot and they’ve been put off my command by the Aedui. As long as Commius is in charge they will listen to him and there’s nothing we can do. If we want to act, we must change things.’
‘You wish me to kill Commius?’ murmured the hunter, running his finger down the blade’s edge with a hint of satisfaction.
‘No. It may come to that, of course, but I do not think that will help our cause at the moment. I need you to get past the Romans and tell Vercingetorix of the problem. His should be the decision. He is our king, after all.’
The hunter nodded and put away his whetstone, sheathing his blade with an air of regret.
* * * * *
Cavarinos reached the rampart top above the oppidum’s north-west gate and peered down into the darkness. Irritably he removed his cloak and draped it over the wall. The temperature this evening was troublesome, not quite warm enough for a cloak, but with enough of a bite to chill a man in just a tunic.
‘What are they up to?’
The warrior who had called him to the parapet creased his brow. ‘A scout or a hunter, perhaps? They have scouts patrolling from time to time, and foragers across the lowest slopes.’