The Last Caesar Read online




  The Last Caesar

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  I

  II

  III

  IV

  V

  VI

  VII

  VIII

  IX

  X

  XI

  XII

  XIII

  XIV

  XV

  XVI

  XVII

  XVIII

  XIX

  XX

  XXI

  XXII

  XXIII

  XXIV

  XXV

  Timeline

  Historical Note

  Acknowledgements

  Next in Series

  Copyright

  I

  The battle was lost before it had begun. Any fool could see that. We were just a thin red line, two legions hemmed in by dense forest on either side, our retreat blocked, and that British witch Boadicea’s horde surging over the field to meet our battle line. Every man launched his javelins at the sea of Celts, smeared and striped with woad all over their ugly faces, and the first wave of their attack faltered. They died in their thousands, but they had thousands to spare. We were two legions against perhaps a hundred thousand. We would have been three legions, but that fool of a legate Cerialis had tried to relieve the town of Camulodunum with only half of the Ninth Legion. They were massacred. We had at most 10,000 footsore, weary men, and it seemed like half of Britannia had come to send us to Hades. The Celts were so assured of victory that their women had arranged the baggage train into a crescent and clambered up to watch the massacre, as if in a barbaric theatre.

  I was barely into my twenties, and here I was commanding a few detachments of my legion, the Twentieth Valeria Victrix. I stood about ten paces behind my men, a little way up the gentle slope to have a better view of the battle. The first waves of the enemy had been cut to ribbons by volley after volley of wicked spears that bent on impact. But those men we had killed were the young and foolish ones who wanted to make a name for themselves by being the first into the fray, and hoped perhaps to break our line. Now the older, wiser men were coming forward, and stopped just short of us. The grim blue faces stared at us for what seemed like an age, then the enemy began beating sword on shield. It started slow and menacing, with no noise but a steady thump, thump, thump. The beat got faster and faster, until it became an almighty clatter as tens of thousands of swords struck leather-bound shields. Finally the clashing was drowned out by a yell, a wild cry to the heavens as they began their charge. My men stood still, a solid line on which the Britons would break themselves. Or so we hoped.

  While the Celtic roar was still ringing in my ears they charged us, and the maelstrom of battle took over. The first screams of pain pierced the air, as iron tore through flesh and shield bosses were punched into faces. We were holding them! Thank the gods I had found this narrow defile, or else we would have been surrounded by now, and I would have died in some cold, wet, far-flung province of the empire only invaded at the whim of the Emperor Claudius. As it was, the Britons could only assault our troops in a battle line no longer than our own. The whistles blasted shrilly for the ranks to rotate, letting fresh men replace those at the front, and the Britons found themselves facing a new set of foes.

  But our thin line could only take so much. Soon my men began to edge back up the slope towards me. I took off my helmet and started to shout encouragement to the tiring men, but I felt so helpless. All I could do was watch as we began to crumble. It was the same along the rest of the line. Even General Paulinus and his staff had edged ever backwards towards the forest at our rear. Suddenly I was aware of galloping hooves behind me, and I turned to see a young staff officer, his face ash-white, who called to me from his mount.

  ‘General Paulinus is about to sound the retreat, sir. He says be ready to break off and run for the cover of the woods.’

  * * *

  And then came one of the most extraordinary moments in my life. I am not a pious man, I believe that the gods have little regard for the affairs of men. Rome has flourished and thrived for over eight hundred years, so we must have done something to please them. But what does one man mean to a god? We must seem like insects scratching a living out of the earth, our lives over in a fraction of a moment. So when we are confronted by these life-changing moments, whether orchestrated by gods or Fate or just the sheer randomness of our existence, we should grasp them with both hands. We only have one life. We must make it count.

  The young aide rammed his heels into the horse’s flanks, so that the terrified beast reared up and flung its rider out of the saddle and sent him crashing to the ground. Now, I would not call myself a coward, but it was painfully clear that our men were flagging under the weight of the Britons’ onslaught, and it was only a matter of time before the enemy opened up a breach in the line and flooded through to begin the rout. As it was, our two flanks had been pressed back, and the centre risked being encircled at any moment. The instinct for self-preservation took over, and I grabbed the dangling reins and hoisted myself into the saddle. I had a beautiful wife and a baby boy back home, a son who had never seen his father. Thoughts of them were running through my head as I prepared to ride for my life to the cover of the trees, when the stupid nag took fright, and instead charged full tilt towards our beleaguered centre. The horse scattered our rearmost ranks, and the momentum of the charge carried me straight through.

  Cursing with rage, I found myself in the front rank, confronted with a churning mass of half-naked barbarians. I shouted at the legionaries to bring a shield forward and to form a wedge. Drawing my sword, I knew that I had to get off the infernal beast before it sent me careering into the heart of the enemy horde. Not to mention the fact that I was a prime target for anyone who had a spear to hand. I slipped out of the saddle. Mercifully the horse was still between us and the Britons, giving me vital time to grab the spare shield. I slid my left arm through the cords and put myself at the front of the wedge.

  Now the only hope for men formed up in a cuneus, a pig’s head or wedge, is to press forward at all costs. You have to keep scything through the enemy ranks or you lose momentum, grind to a halt, flounder, and then it is your turn to be cut to ribbons. By this time some lucky Briton had mounted my horse and was riding it back to the encampment, screaming his good luck. That left about a five-pace gap between me and the sea of woad.

  Suddenly the horns blew for the advance. Old Paulinus must have seen the wedge forming up behind me, and was taking a huge gamble by throwing the full weight of the army behind it. With fear surging through my limbs, we strode towards the enemy. The first Briton charged me head on. I let him get so close that I could see his bloodshot eyes, then rammed my shield boss in his face. There was a sickening crack as his jaw broke, and he went down like a felled ox. Just keep going forward, I thought, someone behind will finish him off. As I stepped over the sprawled Celt, I looked to see where the next attack would come from.

  You might think that the head of the wedge is the most dangerous place to be, and you’d be right. But once you’re there, you just have to hope that the two men behind you have your flanks covered, and look straight ahead. If the men behind are useless, then you’re dead. But I didn’t choose the men behind me, so all I could do was look to my front and pray those two knew their business.

  They did. The next man I faced came at me from my right and jabbed at me with his spear. I took the blow on my shield, but exposed my left flank. Out of the corner of my eye I spotted another lunging for my open side, when the legionary behind scythed his sword downwards, there was a spurt of blood, and my attacker had lost his sword arm. There was no time to shout my
thanks, as I skewered the man who had first attacked me, and we kept going forward. I lost count of how many times those two saved my life, and my arms grew weary from striking, parrying, bashing and stabbing as we marched inexorably forward. After what seemed a lifetime, the seething mass in front of me appeared to thin. To my delight, I saw hundreds of those vile Celts at the rear scrambling to get past their wagons and away from the battle.

  I learned later that day that the battered wings of our army had seen the centre charge headlong into the enemy and had taken heart. The whole army formed up in the wedge that we had created, like an arrowhead punching through the entire enemy horde. Soon what had appeared to be a certain defeat for us became a rout of the Britons, as those wagons, the grisly British theatre, were turned into a barricade, trapping them.

  When at last there was empty ground between us and the wagons and the immediate danger was over, I turned to thank the two men who had followed me into the bowels of Boadicea’s army. One, a small grimy man, smiled awkwardly and said that he had reached the space behind me just a few minutes ago, replacing the original man who had fallen to a spear thrust. The other, however, had been with me from the start. There was little time for thanks, as the battle was not yet over. Quickly I asked his name.

  ‘Legionary Gaius Tadius, sir. Second century, third cohort of the Fourteenth.’

  ‘Well then, Gaius Tadius, I owe you my life.’

  ‘No, sir,’ he said. ‘It was an honour to follow you.’ And by the gods I swear that he was blushing like an eager little boy who’d just met his hero.

  ‘Caecina! Caecina!’ someone called out. I recognized the voice.

  ‘You took your time,’ I shouted back.

  The two legionaries saluted the rider; the narrow purple stripe on his cloak denoted the rank of tribune, which I also held. My friend and companion, Julius Agricola, was on the general staff.

  ‘You infantry boys have done bloody well,’ he hooted. ‘Now the cavalry can do what they’re damn well paid to do. The general is grateful to you, Caecina.’

  Just as the first cavalrymen raced past to sweep the Celts from the battlefield, Agricola struck his chest with his fist and saluted. The brave, bloody, breathless men followed his lead. I’m not ashamed to admit it: there were tears in my eyes as I returned their salute.

  * * *

  I, Aulus Caecina Alienus, write this brief history of what truly happened 820 years after the founding of Rome. It was a time of schemers, plotters, traitors and warriors, the time of the last of the Caesars. And as I write these memoirs here in Rome, those times may be upon us all over again. It is a strange sensation, addressing posterity directly, but something I shall have to get used to if I am to tell my story. I suppose I ought to explain why I am writing this account: in the first place, the gods alone know what garbled rendering his imperial majesty’s minions will make of it. No doubt they will ensure he gets all the credit. Though I can’t promise to be entirely objective, there are precious few alive, just a few years on, who really knew the men in this story. There will be those who say that I do this out of vanity; of course I am vain, and this is just another way of ensuring that people will remember me, and remember me favourably, when I’m gone. But it’s not all about vanity… the truth has to be recorded, and you’ll surely forgive an old soldier the odd embellishment or two?

  As I say, this history is not all about me, more my perspective on (and role in) the astonishing events that led us from one imperial dynasty to another, with a few rebellions along the way. So I shall not bore you with too many tedious details about my past, or the empire’s, as the one is not important, and the other irrelevant. One thing I should perhaps explain is why my name changes during this work of history. I was born Aulus Caecina Severus, and that is how people knew me until recently. However, in special circumstances men can acquire a new cognomen, like Scipio Africanus, or even Tiberius Caesar. You will come to understand why I became Alienus, ‘the stranger’, but not yet. I have started this history with a brief account of my part in that terrible battle where we ended Boadicea’s rebellion. Though you may find it hard to believe, I do this not out of pride, but because I can think of no better way to give you an idea of the man I used to be: young, idealistic, and with fresh laurels of victory, but nevertheless a man subject to the whims of Fate, for want of a better word. Fate threw me into the thick of that ghoulish army, and Fate kept me unharmed throughout that day. Well, that and a few good sword arms. I like to think that this is the story of a good man, buffeted by events out of his control, trying to survive each day as it comes. And if by doing so I occasionally covered myself in glory, so much the better.

  * * *

  At the time of Nero’s reign I was a young senator of Rome, an officer and, to some extent, a gentleman. More specifically, I was the new quaestor of Hispania Baetica. To put it simply, my role was to administer and oversee the finances of my province, assisting the propraetor, who in my case was one Cornelius Tacitus. It is viewed as the first step on the political ladder, as well as a chance to fill your purse before returning to Rome. The joy of a quaestorship is that if you can find an ambitious clerk, you can spend the year as idly as you like, and all the while the grubby clerk will pilfer a profit for you. For a small commission, of course.

  After serving in the legions for a few years I fancied a spell in an exotic province doing not very much, and doing it very well. I shipped out from Ostia on a frosty January morning, leaving my wife Salonina and our son Aulus to themselves in Rome while I enjoyed the fruits of others’ labour; which was the done thing, I hasten to add. No man had ever left his province poorer than when he arrived. A young senator with a career to make must have funds. I had no qualms about leaving my family behind. One of my ancestors famously gave a speech to the Senate on this very subject, lecturing them against taking their wives to the provinces, lest they distract the husband from his duties. Salonina was pretty in a graceful, delicate way, and highly distracting when she wanted to be. But I ought to admit that I’d married her for her father’s money, never having set eyes on her; the grubby tradesman was delighted to have found a noble suitor for his daughter, and the family coffers desperately needed a refill. My great-grandfather had managed to pick the wrong side in the civil war, and the Divine Julius confiscated everything my noble ancestor hadn’t been able to cart with him to his exile in Greece with Cicero, so I had a duty to my family to marry for money, not for love. Salonina’s beauty had been a welcome bonus. Our first years of marriage had been difficult, I’ll admit. She was little more than a slip of a girl, and soon afterwards I was posted to Britannia for two years, which was more like three once you count the time it takes to get to Britannia and back, and that I was needed to stay a little longer as we made sure Boadicea’s rebellion was well and truly over. I left her a spoiled girl and came back to a young woman with a two-year-old son, and he brought us closer together. We were phenomenally lucky. Most if not all marriages in Rome are for money or power. Love doesn’t enter into it. But being a mother changed her as much as going to war had changed me. We grew into each other, if you see what I mean. But I still subscribe to my ancestor’s belief that a wife in the provinces is at best a distraction and at worst a dangerous hindrance. Furthermore, it was Salonina’s appetite for spending that made a year in the provinces a matter of some urgency!

  * * *

  After a thoroughly unpleasant voyage, I took up my duties in earnest, and set out to do as little hard work as I could get away with. The first task was to find a villa that would suit my needs. Obviously the propraetor had first pick, but I found a lovely place on the lower slopes of the hills overlooking the province’s chief city, Corduba. Of course it had all the creature comforts, private baths, stables and so on, but the best thing of all was the spectacular setting of the place. Hispania seems quite a dusty country to me, but Corduba itself sat in a rich floodplain, and looking south from my chamber I could see the river Baetis snaking its way through the valley, givi
ng its name to the province. From my vantage point the whole expanse of the plain seemed to stretch out for miles, which is appropriate because it did, about sixty of them, until the far southern mountains merged with the sky in a hazy blur. Having found my modest abode for the next year, I went about employing the clever clerk I was telling you about, to make sure my funds, and to a lesser extent those of the province, were in good order. I had a slave sent into town to find the best clerks in all of Corduba, and had him bring me the second-best man they had on their books.

  The next day, he duly arrived for his interview with me. He was a small and greasy individual, whom the slave announced as Melander. Unsurprisingly, he looked a little overawed.

  ‘So, they tell me you’re the second-best clerk in the province…’ The man winced, proving I’d been right to ask for him. There’s nothing an able man hates more than being called second-best. Going straight to the point, I asked, ‘How would you like to be the second-best clerk, but also the richest?’ He looked puzzled at that. ‘You do have a voice, I suppose?’

  ‘Yes, my lord. I can’t think how to thank you enough.’ He knelt down in gratitude and subservience, just how I like my staff.

  ‘Get up off the floor, man, and “sir” will do, I’m only a quaestor.’

  Rising up, he asked the all-important question: ‘How exactly am I to be of service, sir?’

  I beamed, thinking that the interview was going better than I could have hoped. Lying back on my couch, I reeled off his orders.

  ‘You will be my right arm in governing this juicy little province. You shall be in charge of all the accounts, making sure that all my financial duties are carried out and that I return to Rome a good deal richer. You follow me?’ The man nodded. ‘Good. In return, I shall allow you a commission of 10 per cent on all the profits I make, so it will be in your interests to make me as wealthy as possible.’