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Companions
Companions
Companions
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Companions

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  • Ancient Civilizations

  • Loyalty

  • Slaves

  • Friendship

  • Parthian Empire

  • Power of Friendship

  • Evil Overlord

  • Chosen One

  • Reluctant Warrior

  • Wise Mentor

  • Loyal Friend

  • Big Bad

  • Wise Old Mentor

  • Corrupt Official

  • Forbidden Love

  • Soldiers

  • Shields

  • Spears

  • War

  • Adventure

About this ebook

They called themselves Companions – those who escaped from Italy with Pacorus in the aftermath of Spartacus’ uprising, travelling across the Mediterranean to make their home in Parthia. They subsequently assisted Pacorus in turning the Kingdom of Dura into one of the strongest realms in the Parthian Empire.

But one Companion was unwittingly left behind and condemned to the living hell of Roman slavery. When Pacorus discovers this he and a band of comrades embark on a perilous quest to find and free him. Thus begins a journey that will see the King of Dura follow in the footsteps of Spartacus himself as he heads for gladiatorial games being held in the Roman-controlled city of Ephesus.

This, the fifth volume in the ‘Parthian Chronicles’ series, is set in the time between ‘Parthian Dawn’ and ‘Parthian Vengeance’.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherPeter Darman
Release dateJul 9, 2014
ISBN9781310558627
Companions
Author

Peter Darman

I was raised in Grantham, Lincolnshire and attended the King's Grammar School after passing the Eleven Plus exam. In the latter I clearly remember writing an essay on Oliver Cromwell – my first piece of military writing. Then came a BA in history and international relations at Nottingham followed by a Master of Philosophy course at the University of York. The subject was the generalship and cavalry of Prince Rupert of the Rhine, my boyhood hero, during the English Civil War. The year I spent researching and writing at York, Oxford and at the British Library in London was a truly wonderful time. I moved to London and eventually joined a small publishing company as an editor. Thus began my writing career. I now live in Lincolnshire with my wife Karen.

Read more from Peter Darman

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    Book preview

    Companions - Peter Darman

    Companions

    Peter Darman

    Copyright © 2014 Pete Darman

    Published by Peter Darman at Smashwords

    All rights are reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without written permission of the author.

    Formatted by Jo Harrison

    Smashwords Edition License Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.

    Contents

    List of principal characters

    Introduction

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Chapter 12

    Chapter 13

    Chapter 14

    Chapter 15

    Chapter 16

    Chapter 17

    Epilogue

    Historical notes

    List of principal characters

    Those marked with an asterisk * are Companions – individuals who fought with Spartacus in Italy and who travelled back to Parthia with Pacorus.

    Those marked with a dagger † are known to history.

    The Kingdom of Dura

    *Alcaeus: Greek physician and chief of the medical corps in the army of Dura

    *Arminius: German, former gladiator and now a centurion in the army of Dura

    *Byrd: Cappodocian scout in the army of Dura

    Dobbai: Scythian mystic, formerly the sorceress of King of Kings Sinatruces, now resident at Dura

    *Drenis: Thracian, former gladiator in Italy and now a centurion in the army of Dura

    *Gallia: Gaul, Queen of Dura

    * Godarz: Parthian governor of Dura

    *Lucius Domitus: Roman soldier, former slave and now the commander of the army of Dura

    *Pacorus: Parthian King of Dura

    Rsan: Parthian governor of Dura

    †Surena: a native of the Ma’adan and an officer in the army of Dura

    *Vagharsh: Parthian soldier who carries the banner of Pacorus in the army of Dura

    The Kingdom of Hatra

    *Diana: former Roman slave, now the wife of Gafarn and princess of Hatra

    *Gafarn: former Bedouin slave of Pacorus, now a prince of Hatra

    Other Parthians

    *Nergal: Hatran soldier and formerly commander of Dura’s horse archers, now the King of Mesene

    †Orodes: Prince of Susiana, now an exile at Dura

    *Praxima: Spaniard, former Roman slave and now the wife of Nergal and Queen of Mesene

    Non-Parthians

    †Akrosas: Thracian, king of the Getea tribe

    Athineos: Cretan sea captain

    †*Burebista: Dacian gladiator

    Cleon: Greek patriot

    Decebal: Dacian king

    Draco: Thracian, king of the Maedi tribe

    Hippo: High Priestess at the Temple of Artemis, Ephesus

    Kallias: High Priest at the Temple of Artemis, Ephesus

    Malik: Agraci prince, son of Haytham

    Marcus Aristius: Roman tribune

    †Quintus Caecilius Metellus: Roman governor of Ephesus

    Radu: Thracian, king of the Bastarnae tribe

    Timini Ceukianus: senior editor of the games at Ephesus

    Introduction

    ‘Halt!’

    Asher pulled on the reins to stop the mule as it walked past the open gates into the Citadel. He smiled politely at the burly centurion who had been standing to one side outside the guard room, two more mail-clad guards armed with spears walking in front of his beast to prevent it going any further. One grabbed its reins and looked with disinterest as the centurion halted a few paces from him.

    ‘Get down and state your business.’

    Asher smiled politely and alighted from the driver’s seat. He unconsciously fidgeted with one of his long side curls as he did so.

    ‘You are a Jew?’ said the centurion, a note of condescension in his voice.

    Asher smiled politely again. ‘Indeed, sir.’

    He pointed to a beautiful cedar box positioned in the rear of his cart.

    ‘I have an appointment with the queen, regarding some documents of her father’s.’

    The centurion’s ears pricked up. ‘King Pacorus?’

    Asher placed his hands together and nodded solemnly. ‘Indeed, God rest his soul.’

    The centurion must have been at least six inches taller than Asher, and was twice as wide as the lean Jew standing before him. Dura’s army may not have been the force it once was but its soldiers were still a credit to the kingdom, their weapons and armour the finest that money could buy and their discipline legendary. The spirit of the old king lived on, Asher thought. The centurion’s helmet was burnished and sported a magnificent white transverse crest that indicated his rank, as did the silver greaves that covered his shins. He carried a short sword at his left hip and a dagger in a sheath on his right hip, though Asher noticed that the ordinary soldiers by his mule carried swords in scabbards that hung on their right sides. No doubt one of the many idiosyncrasies associated with military life.

    The centurion tapped the vine cane he was holding against his right thigh. He turned and shouted towards the office.

    ‘There’s a Jew here says he has business with the queen.’

    He turned back to Asher.

    ‘Name?’

    ‘Asher, sir.’

    ‘Says his name is Asher.’

    A clerk dressed in a plain grey tunic came from the office.

    ‘Asher, grandson of Aaron, is listed as having an appointment with the queen, centurion.’

    The centurion waved the clerk back to his office and pointed his cane at the box in the back of the cart.

    ‘Open it.’

    ‘It is for the queen,’ protested Asher.

    The centurion casually rested his left hand on the top of his sword but said nothing. Asher understood the implied threat well enough.

    ‘It might be full of snakes or scorpions,’ said the centurion. ‘You might be an assassin sent by one of the queen’s enemies to murder her. Can’t have that. Now open it.’

    ‘Does the queen have any enemies?’ said Asher, trying to lighten the mood.

    The centurion’s dark eyes narrowed as he moved menacingly closer. Asher smiled once more and scurried to the rear of the cart, pulling the box towards him and opening the lid. Inside were rolls of papyrus, half a dozen of them arranged side by side.

    ‘As you can see, sir, no snakes.’

    ‘Take them out,’ ordered the centurion.

    Asher was going to protest but thought better of it. So he took each roll out of the box and laid them beside it. The centurion placed his cane on the cart and picked up the box, holding it aloft and shaking it a few times. Satisfied, he placed it back on the cart and walked off.

    ‘Let him pass,’ he ordered the guards who retook their positions at the gates. They rested their oblong shields on the ground as Asher replaced the rolls in the box, secured the lid and climbed into the driver’s seat. He ordered the mule to walk forward and nodded his head at the guards as he passed. They ignored him as he entered the courtyard of Dura’s Citadel. On his right was a large barracks block that occupied almost the whole southern wall, and beyond it the great stables where the warhorses of the cataphracts were housed. He felt strange to be back in this place, where once he had been a frequent visitor when his grandfather had been the kingdom’s treasurer. That seemed like another life.

    He halted the cart at the foot of the stone steps leading to the entrance porch of the palace. Guards standing sentry by the stone columns ignored him as he walked up the steps carrying the cedar box. How much history had been made on these steps? He stopped and turned to look at the open gates. Once kings rode from those gates to decide the fate of empires.

    ‘The queen awaits.’

    He snapped out of his musings to see a short, elderly man with thinning hair dressed in a long white robe with red leather sandals on his feet standing at the top of the steps. He had an imperious air and waved Asher forward with his right hand. He turned and walked into the porch, Asher hastening up the steps to follow. They passed more guards in the reception hall that led to the throne room, the doors to which were closed. The steward turned and pointed at the box Asher was holding.

    ‘I will take that.’

    Slightly taken aback by his brusque manner, Asher frowned but handed over the box. He was beginning to regret his visit to the palace. It was well known that the queen could be testy and short-tempered but it appeared that her staff shared the same attributes. It was most tiresome. More pleasing was the agreeable aroma of myrrh that filled the hall, the incense being burned in the stands either side of the doors to the throne room. The steward turned and ordered him to follow as one of the guards opened a door and they both entered Dura’s centre of power.

    Light lanced into the chamber through small windows set high in the walls, their footsteps on the stone tiles the only sound as they made their way to the far end where Queen Claudia sat on her high-backed throne. Once there had been two thrones on the stone dais when King Pacorus and Queen Gallia had ruled Dura but the latter had been dead for many years and the old king had renounced his powers long before his recent demise. Those powers had been inherited by the middle-aged woman sitting before him, who observed him like a spider watches its prey. He bowed his head to her.

    ‘Hail, Queen Claudia.’

    Her lip curled lightly in acknowledgement as her dark eyes watched the fussy steward place the cedar box on the floor in front of the dais. Once he had done so she waved him away with a curt swipe of her hand. He walked backwards across the tiles, bowing his head as he did so, being careful not to fall over as he withdrew from the queen’s presence. There was a time when Princess Claudia was reckoned a great beauty, having inherited her mother’s lithe frame, thick locks and high cheekbones. But that was long ago. Now those locks, though still thick, were as dark as night and her once beautiful face had taken on a severe countenance. Her mother had dressed in white and blue and had worn dazzling gold jewellery that complemented her great beauty and blonde hair. But her eldest daughter wore no adornments and dressed entirely in black, thus increasing her intimidating appearance.

    Her black eyes continued to study him as the steward left the chamber and the door was closed. To avert her uncomfortable gaze he looked up at the standard hanging on the wall above the dais behind her. The large square banner was white with gold edging and sported a red griffin. It had accompanied Dura’s army on many campaigns down the years but looked as though it had been made yesterday. Asher blinked and took a closer look. It appeared pristine though he knew this could not be. Perhaps his eyes were failing him.

    ‘Asher, grandson of Aaron.’

    The queen’s words made him jump. He smiled and bowed to her.

    ‘Your servant, majesty.’

    She pointed a bony finger at the cedar box.

    ‘You said you had something that concerned my father. Is that it?’

    Asher nodded. ‘We all grieve for you, majesty. It is hard to believe that the king is dead.’

    Her face remained an emotionless mask. ‘He was lonely in his autumn years. He is with my mother now.’

    The notion that the queen might now be lonely flashed through his mind, but he remembered that she had always refused any suitors. And so rumour had it she had her mystics and sorcerers that always surrounded her. Today though, only her Amazon guards surrounded her. As a boy he had remembered them as long-haired beauties attired in mail and white tunics. But today, though they still wore mail armour, their black tunics and leggings gave them the appearance of demons of the underworld. Perhaps that was the idea. Those closest to the queen rested the tips of their swords, made of the magical Ukku steel, on the floor. The others lining the walls had their swords in their scabbards.

    There was a time when the Amazons rode into battle beside Queen Gallia but now they did little fighting. Their task was to protect their queen who rarely left the confines of the Citadel, let alone the city. Of course they still practised with their bows on the shooting ranges outside the city, but unkind rumours circulated that the queen used them as assassins on occasion and had trained them to use magic against her enemies.

    ‘What is in the box?’ asked the queen.

    Asher smiled, bent down and lifted the lid to reveal the papyrus rolls.

    ‘Before he died my grandfather suggested to your father, the king, that he record his experiences for posterity. At first the king was reluctant, afraid perhaps that his memory would fail him, which would lead him to omit important details. But my grandfather persisted; employing scribes to write down what your father told them. After a while the king became accustomed to dictating his experiences and took to the task with relish.’

    Asher held out a hand towards the box. ‘These are the result. Or at least what we have discovered so far.’

    The queen rose from her throne and stepped off the dais, stooping to pick up one of the scrolls.

    ‘So far?’

    ‘Yes, majesty,’ replied Asher. ‘My grandfather left a mountain of documents that my family have yet to go through. I myself have had little time to catalogue them, being swamped by business matters.’

    The queen carefully placed the scroll back in the box and returned to her throne. She waved over one of her guards.

    ‘Take it to the terrace.’

    The Amazon bowed, replaced the lid and took the box from the chamber, disappearing through a door that led to the palace’s private quarters.

    ‘And what business would that be, Asher, grandson of Aaron?’

    ‘Papyrus, majesty,’ replied Asher. ‘My family owns a plantation to the north of the city.’

    The papyrus plant is a reed that grows in marshy areas around rivers, and whereas it was forbidden to create marshes near the city, further upstream the crown gave licences to businessmen that allowed them to create artificial marshes where papyrus could be grown. Such areas attracted mosquitoes and disease and the workers who harvested the reed often succumbed to illnesses. But the trade was lucrative for papyrus was in great demand throughout the Parthian Empire and beyond.

    ‘And business is good?’ enquired the queen.

    Asher smiled. ‘Very good, majesty.’

    ‘Tishtrya has smiled on you, has she not?’

    ‘Tishtrya, majesty?’

    ‘The Goddess of Rainfall and Fertility who fills the Euphrates with water and provides you with the marshes where you grow your papyrus.’

    The queen stared at his curly side hair.

    ‘You follow the same religion as your grandfather, grandson of Aaron?’

    Asher nodded. ‘Yes, majesty.’

    ‘You believe that there is only one god?’

    ‘That is what my religion teaches, majesty,’ answered a now sweating Asher. He knew all too well that the queen was the protégé of Dobbai, the sorceress who had befriended King Pacorus and Queen Gallia and who had hated his grandfather. Many of his faith had feared persecution when the old king had died, but thus far it had mercifully failed to materialise.

    The queen nodded. ‘Well, my father always believed that Dura should be a kingdom where men and women were free to worship what gods they chose to follow.’

    ‘He was a great man, majesty,’ said Asher.

    ‘Thank you. You may go.’

    A relieved Asher bowed deeply to her, turned on his heels and quickly made his exit. Halfway across the tiles the queen called after him.

    ‘You will of course send any further documents pertaining to my father to the palace.’

    He stopped, turned and bowed again.

    ‘You can count on it, majesty.’

    He breathed a deep sigh of relief when he left the Citadel. Normally a hard-headed businessman, he had been unnerved meeting the queen. Perhaps it was her remoteness, the aggressiveness of her guards or the air of foreboding bordering on malevolence that hung over the entire Citadel. Or perhaps it had been nothing more than a figment of his imagination. After all, Dura had been good to him and his family. He lived with his wife and children in a mansion inside the city. He and his relatives were free to follow their religion and the kingdom’s soldiers ensured that his business and its workers were unmolested. The bureaucracy put in place by his grandfather and his friend Rsan, who had been the governor of the city, ensured that taxes were collected with the minimum of corruption. And for her part the queen ensured that the defences of the kingdom were maintained. Trade flourished, taxes were well spent – if such a thing was not a contradiction in terms – and the kingdom prospered.

    He pulled up his mule and looked back up at the Citadel atop the rock escarpment where it stood like an eagle guarding its nest, or griffin for that matter. Around him the main street that led from the Citadel to the Palmyrene Gate was heaving with people, camels, carts and people. He prayed to God that Dura would continue to prosper now that King Pacorus was dead.

    Behind the palace’s throne room, reached via a corridor in the private quarters, was a large terrace that sat atop the high rock escarpment upon which the Citadel was built. It overlooked the blue waters of the River Euphrates below and the lands east of the river. Across the waterway was Hatran territory, which was formerly ruled by King Gafarn before his death. It was now the realm of his son, King Pacorus, named in honour of the man who had made the Kingdom of Dura such a force in the empire.

    Claudia settled herself down in the large wicker chair on the terrace, the same chair that had belonged to Dobbai, the mystic who had been the sorceress of King of Kings Sinatruces, to date the greatest supreme ruler that the Parthian Empire had ever known. Claudia smiled as she recounted the tales that Dobbai had told her of Sinatruces when she had been a small girl. How he had coveted her mother, Gallia, but had been outwitted by Dobbai into giving Pacorus a kingdom all of his own and keeping her mother out of the amorous embrace of the king of kings. As a male servant placed the box of scrolls on the table nearby and bowed, Claudia remembered the days of her childhood. Of the frequent gatherings on this very terrace that were held to decide the fate of Dura and the empire. She remembered the fierce black-robed Haytham, king of the Agraci, his son Malik and his daughter Rasha. The stern and uncompromising Lucius Domitus, commander of Dura’s army. The lanky, smiling Nergal and his red-headed wife Praxima, the dear friends of his parents who went on to become living gods at Uruk. But it was Dobbai she remembered the most, the one who had helped to bring her into the world and who instructed her in the ancient knowledge of spells and charms and how to catch glimpses of the workings of the gods.

    She picked up one of the scrolls and looked up to see the land bathed in sunlight. Across the river the road to the two pontoon bridges that spanned the Euphrates, giving access to the city, was full of camels, mules and carts. An endless stream of commerce that coursed both east and west to satisfy Rome’s and Egypt’s insatiable desire for silk, the luxurious material produced far to the east in China. The latter sent other products west, of course – ironware, medicines, bronze mirrors, and farming and metallurgical techniques – but it was the demand for silk that gave the great trading route its name. The commerce was not just one-way: camel trains transported alfalfa, grape, flax, pomegranate, walnut and cucumber to China. The rulers of the latter also had a taste for more exotic goods from the west: peacocks, elephants and lions. So every day camel trains criss-crossed Parthia loaded with goods, every one paying small dues for safe conduct along the Silk Road. The latter was the lifeblood of the empire just as it was for Dura’s prosperity.

    Claudia glanced at another wicker chair a few paces away, the one her father had sat in every day as the sun began its descent in the western sky and the temperature on the terrace became bearable. She smiled at the memory of him laying his aching left leg on a padded foot rest as he told her that his greatest achievement was not on the battlefield but securing peace with the Agraci that meant the trade caravans could travel west from Dura to the oasis city of Palmyra and on to Syria and Egypt. Prior to this historic agreement the Kingdom of Dura and its wild lords had been at war with the Agraci but her father’s peace with Haytham had changed everything. She smiled as she remembered Haytham himself sitting on this terrace, a thing once thought impossible. They were good times, even though her memory of them was as a young girl.

    She unfolded the papyrus roll on the table. Because it had been used for a long work the text was written horizontally along the roll and divided into columns. She began to read the neatly written words, keeping a segment of the roll flat in front of her, the ends on the left and right rolled up for convenience. The writing was not her father’s but as she began reading the words she soon heard his voice in her head, recording an episode from the early years of his reign as the King of Dura.

    As the gods have decreed that I will have to wait a while longer before I can join my dear, beloved wife in the afterlife, and to put an end to the incessant nagging of Aaron, my aged treasurer, I have decided to record a number of my experiences so that posterity will remember me. Or at least that is what Aaron has told me. I actually think that my miserable attempts at being a scribe will be quickly forgotten, notwithstanding that Aaron has provided me with enthusiastic, attentive scribes to write down my words. They will write in Greek because Aaron has told me that all the great books of history are written in that language and therefore stand more chance of being read by future generations. I am not confident that the next generation of Dura’s citizens will be interested in my ramblings, let alone future generations. But for the sake of putting an end to Aaron’s hounding I have decided to become a scribbler.

    When I first suggested the topic of this work Aaron began his pestering again, insisting that it was not a suitable subject for the reminiscences of a king. But I politely informed him that after having finally surrendered to his demands to write about my life, I should at least be free to choose the subjects. I suggested that perhaps it would be better if I acted as his scribe and committed to papyrus the experiences of his long life. Whereupon he became irritable and said that sarcasm did not suit me. But he said no more on the matter and so I began this tale of an episode that took place many years ago and even after this great passage of time still seems remarkable. Because it has been so long and because so much has happened in the intervening years, I hope I have remembered the sequence of events accurately. Those who took part deserve that at the very least.

    Chapter 1

    Phraates was dead.

    My father had arrived at Dura with this sad news just before the army had arrived back from its campaign in Mesene that had seen King Chosroes deposed and Nergal and Praxima installed in his place. Chosroes had joined the faction of Narses and Mithridates and had attempted to capture Dura itself, but not before he had endeavoured to have me executed. His plans had come to nothing, however, and his army had been defeated before the walls of my city. He had scurried back to his capital at Uruk and I had followed him. The army’s machines had breached Uruk’s ancient walls and we had stormed the city. Chosroes had taken his own life rather than be captured and so a new era had begun in Mesene.

    I had been in high spirits on the march back to Dura but the news of Phraates’ death had saddened me greatly. In truth he had not been a great high king; indeed, some might say that he had been a weak and vacillating one who had been responsible for the outbreak of civil war in the empire. But he had always been generous to Dura and its king, making me lord high general of the empire after the great victory over Narses at Surkh and giving me a large amount of gold as a reward after the battle. The treasure had allowed me to speed up the strengthening of Dura’s army, which had been fortuitous as I was able to use it to destroy a Roman army that had invaded my kingdom. I was thus indebted to Phraates and even though he had, as a result of the machinations of his poisonous son Mithridates and his scheming wife Aruna, subsequently stripped me of the rank of lord high general, I would always regard Phraates with affection and respect.

    ‘Really? Even though he made you look like a fool at Ctesiphon, sent you off on a fool’s errand into Mesene that nearly resulted in your death, and sat idly by while Chosroes and the soldiers of Persis tried to reduce your city to rubble?’

    Dobbai was rubbing her hands with relish as she recounted the slights that Phraates had dealt me, or so she believed. I was standing at the foot of the palace steps and was about to hand a note I had written the day before to a courier who waited beside his horse.

    ‘This is not the time nor place to discuss matters of high strategy,’ I told her.

    She cackled as she descended the steps and pointed a bony finger at the leather tube that held the note.

    ‘What’s that?’

    ‘Nothing.’

    ‘For the king himself to be busying himself with handing a document to a courier would suggest that it is far from nothing.’

    I cast her a sideways glance. ‘It is a letter to the one who masquerades as the king of kings, if you must know.’

    She raised an eyebrow. ‘An invitation to a feast, perhaps?’

    I chuckled. ‘Hardly.’

    ‘May I see it?’

    I was tempted to hand the message to the courier so he could be on his way. However, I had to admit that I was rather pleased with myself concerning what I had written, believing it most erudite. I shrugged and passed it instead to Dobbai. She opened the case and extracted the letter, her hawk-like eyes darting over the text:

    To King Mithridates

    Word has recently reached me that your father, King Phraates, has died of a broken heart. It indeed breaks my heart to think that such a good man has departed this world, and sickens me greatly that the one who was the cause of his death has stolen his crown and now dares to call himself the King of Kings.

    I have also heard that you hold me responsible for your father’s death, and have used this lie to deceive numerous other kings of the empire into electing you to your present high office. And now you seek to make yourself master of all the Parthian Empire, but I have to tell you that while I still live you will never know peace. For you are a poison at the very heart of the empire, and every day that you sit upon the throne Parthia dies a little.

    The only cure for the empire is to remove this ulcer, this rottenness, and that includes your lackey Narses, another traitor who fouls the empire by his mere existence. I will not rest until you and he have suffered the same fate as those other traitors Porus and Chosroes. This I swear by all that is sacred.

    I remain, your implacable enemy.

    Pacorus, King of Dura.

    Dobbai said nothing as she rolled up the letter, carefully inserted it into the tubular case and handed it to the courier.

    ‘It is to get to Ctesiphon as speedily as possible,’ I told him.

    He placed the case in a leather pouch slung over his shoulder. ‘Yes, majesty.’

    He vaulted into the saddle, turned his horse and trotted from the courtyard, the iron shoes on his horse’s hooves clattering on the flagstones. I watched him exit the gates and smiled to myself. He would ride over the pontoon bridge across the Euphrates and head southeast towards the great sprawling palace complex at Ctesiphon, the political heart of the empire, located on the eastern bank of the River Tigris. The courier would probably reach the court of Mithridates in around five or six days, making use of the post stations that could be found throughout the empire. Simple mud-brick buildings surrounded by a wall with stables attached, they held fresh horses where couriers could pick up a new mount before proceeding to the next station. Established along all the main roads in the empire, usually thirty miles or so apart, they greatly facilitated communications within Parthia.

    ‘And now we wait,’ I said.

    ‘Wait for what?’ asked Dobbai.

    I walked back up the steps towards the palace, Dobbai trailing after me.

    ‘For Mithridates and Narses to march against me, of course. They will not be able to ignore such a challenge.’

    Dobbai cackled as we walked through the colonnaded porch into the palace’s reception hall, guards snapping to attention as we passed and court officials bowing their heads.

    ‘You think that they will risk their lives fighting you, son of Hatra?’

    We walked into the empty throne room, my griffin banner hanging on the wall behind the two thrones on the dais.

    ‘I have issued a challenge and they will not be able to ignore me.’

    Our footsteps echoed on the stone tiles as we walked to the door at the far end that led to the palace’s private quarters. I opened it and went through into the corridor that led to the bedrooms where we slept. There was a small guardroom at the corridor’s entrance and another door opposite that led to the palace terrace. Servants on their knees were scrubbing the floor and two guards stood sentry outside the guardroom. They brought their spears to their chests in salute as I passed and the servants stood up and bowed their heads as I walked on to the balcony.

    ‘You are wrong, son of Hatra,’ said Dobbai as she walked over to her wicker chair and sat in it.

    It was going to be another blisteringly hot day, the sun already roasting the Citadel from a clear blue sky. More servants arranged a sunshade over Dobbai and offered her cool fruit juice as I too took a seat and stretched out my legs. The terrace faced east so the Citadel could welcome the rising of the sun each morning and the journey of Shamash, Lord of the Sun who blessed the earth with warmth and life each day.

    A nursemaid brought Claudia, my young daughter, from the nursery, holding her hand as the infant gingerly placed one foot in front of the other. Her eyes lit up when she saw me and I swept her up in my arms, kissing her on the cheek.

    ‘You are the one who is wrong,’ I told her as Claudia saw Dobbai and held out her arms imploringly to the old woman. Even at this tender age there was a strong bond between the two. I took Claudia over to the old witch and placed her in her lap. She may have had a haggard, fearsome visage but Dobbai was remarkably tender and affectionate with Claudia, who soon began to close her eyes. I dismissed the nursemaid.

    ‘Narses and Mithridates will not be able to resist raising an army and marching against me,’ I announced. ‘And just like I did with Chosroes I will defeat them both before the walls of this city and send their heads back to Ctesiphon as a present for Queen Aruna.’

    Dobbai took a sip of her juice.

    ‘You have it all worked out, don’t you? You will kill Narses and Mithridates just like you did Porus and Chosroes, peace will return to the empire and you will be instrumental in choosing a new king of kings, one more to your liking.’

    I emptied a cup of juice. ‘Why not? We all want peace in the empire and there can be none while Mithridates and his pet dog rule at Ctesiphon.’

    Gallia appeared on the terrace after her early morning training session with the Amazons. Every morning it was the same. She would rise early and ride from the city with her guards to the training grounds south of the city to practise shooting from the saddle at different sized targets. The training also involved riding fast at melons placed on top of posts and slicing them open with sword strikes. Despite having changed into baggy leggings and a new white tunic her cheeks were still flushed and she was wiping her neck with a towel. Her blonde hair was arranged in a single plait down her back to make wearing a helmet more comfortable. She gladly accepted a cup of juice from a servant before kissing Claudia and flopping down in a chair.

    ‘I swear it gets hotter each day,’ she complained.

    She looked at me. ‘I did not see you at the training fields earlier.’

    As well as the Amazons the training fields were also used by Dura’s horse archers and cataphracts, and the early morning hours were very busy as officers endeavoured to put their men through their paces before the fierce midday heat arrived.

    ‘I had no time today. Affairs of state.’

    Dobbai chortled. ‘What he means is that he is endeavouring to provoke Mithridates.’

    Gallia emptied her cup and looked at me. ‘Provoke Mithridates?’

    ‘Your husband has written a letter to the high king informing him that he is a malignant poison that should be removed from the empire,’ stated Dobbai before I could reply. ‘By doing so he hopes that Mithridates, filled with wrath, will raise a multitude and march against Dura, thereby granting the King of Dura another opportunity to employ his fearsome army on the battlefield. Have I summed up your intentions succinctly, son of Hatra?’

    ‘We all know that Mithridates and Narses are thieves and murderers,’ I said. ‘The world would be a better place without them.’

    Gallia appeared underwhelmed. ‘Why should they dance to your tune?’

    Dobbai chuckled. ‘The crux of the matter.’

    I looked at my wife. ‘Why? Because I have insulted the office of high king, that is why. Once Mithridates has received my insult the eyes of the empire will be upon Ctesiphon, watching to see what actions he takes.’

    ‘Or he could ignore you,’ said Gallia.

    ‘A more preferable option for our devious high king, I think,’ added Dobbai.

    I tapped my nose with a finger. ‘He cannot do that. The office of high king will mean he has to answer my provocation if the holder wishes to maintain credibility in the eyes of the empire.’

    Dobbai looked at Gallia and rolled her eyes.

    ‘What a ridiculously romantic fool you are, son of Hatra. I doubt that Mithridates has even considered what the office of high king entails, aside from the prospect of great wealth and power. You think your insult will provoke a response? It will, though not the one you expect. But if you think that Mithridates will march against you then you will be disappointed.’

    ‘He is a coward,’ I sneered.

    ‘And worse,’ agreed Dobbai. ‘But consider this. The other kings of the empire may despise and ridicule Mithridates but he has achieved something that they all crave.’

    I looked at Gallia whose face wore a confused expression. Dobbai stroked the forehead of the sleeping Claudia.

    ‘He has brought peace to the empire, admittedly of a sorts. But from the Indus to the Euphrates there is now a general peace.’

    ‘Peace?’ I scoffed. ‘What sort of peace is it where the Romans occupy the Kingdom of Gordyene, once the domain of King Balas? Where the traitor Narses helps himself to the Kingdom of Sakastan and the high king tries to barter away my own kingdom to Rome?’

    ‘The one where there is no war,’ replied Dobbai casually. ‘Your experiences with the kings of the empire must have made you realise that only you among them have a relish for war. Phraates, poor fool that he was, recognised it straight away. That is why he made you lord high general.’

    ‘I do not relish war,’ I insisted.

    ‘But war relishes you, son of Hatra. Have you ever wondered why it has been relatively easy for you to turn the backwater of Dura into one of the most feared kingdoms of the Parthian Empire?’

    I had to admit that I had given the subject no thought. I shrugged indifferently.

    ‘It is because you are beloved of the gods, son of Hatra. Your path was determined long before took your first steps. The immortals have made things easier for you.’

    ‘Everything I have achieved I have done so by my own efforts,’ I snapped.

    Dobbai continued to stroke my daughter’s head. ‘Let us for the moment leave to one side the fact that you were born into the Hatran royal family, rulers of one of the empire’s richest cities that has one of Parthia’s most formidable armies.’

    Gallia laughed but I saw nothing amusing in Dobbai’s comments.

    ‘Many men who are born into wealth and power end up as fat, licentious tyrants,’ I said.

    ‘Then consider this,’ continued Dobbai. ‘Do you not think it strange that in your first battle you managed to capture a Roman eagle, which the commander of your army informs me is a wondrous thing? And then you get yourself captured by the Romans and shipped to their homeland. But instead of ending your days as one of their slaves you are rescued and become a great warlord in an army of slaves. Now Lucius Domitus has also informed me that when the slave army was crushed the survivors were nailed to crosses as an example of what happens when slaves rebel. But you miraculously manage to escape the Romans and return to Parthia. Do you think all these things are mere coincidences or just an endless stream of luck?’

    ‘If the gods truly love me as you say,’ I replied, ‘then they would have given Spartacus victory over the Romans.’

    ‘Don’t be petulant, son of Hatra. It is not proper that slaves should be running around slitting their masters’ throats. It is against the natural order of things. Would you wish to see the slaves in your own parents’ palace rise up and slaughter Hatra’s royalty?’

    I said nothing.

    ‘I thought not,’ said Dobbai smugly.

    ‘Mithridates will not march against you, Pacorus,’ said Gallia. ‘You defeated him and Narses at Surkh, you destroyed the army of Porus before that and your army still has blood on its swords after defeating the Romans and Chosroes. Only a fool would lead an army against you.’

    ‘You are wise, child,’ said Dobbai. She gave me a sly glance.

    ‘Of course you could always take your army to Ctesiphon if you are at a loose end.’

    I was appalled by the idea. ‘I will not instigate hostilities. Besides, to do so would entail marching through Hatran and Babylonian territory and I will not violate the territorial integrity of those two kingdoms.’

    ‘Well, then,’ said Dobbai. ‘You had better find something else to amuse yourself with for I tell you now that the sun will fall from the heavens before Mithridates marches against you.’

    The city council was underwhelmed by my announcement that I had written to the high king, challenging his rule in the hope that he would take the field against me. As usual we met in the headquarters building that was opposite the palace in the Citadel. It was the official office of Lucius Domitus, the commander of the army, who liked to reside in the command tent in the legionary camp immediately west of the Palmyrene Gate. But the headquarters building was never empty, being the location of the army’s records where clerks worked administering its business. Now he was sitting in a chair in the spacious room looking out onto the courtyard that we used for the meetings of the city council, as usual toying with his dagger, occasionally staring out of one of the open windows when a detail of soldiers marched or rode by.

    Lucius Domitus looked as though he had been carved out of a block of granite, there being not an ounce of fat on his stocky frame. He was as fighting fit as the army he led and I could tell that he would rather be leading a twenty-mile route march than be sitting in this room.

    ‘And so I expect our new high king to march against Dura as soon as he receives my letter.’

    I was expecting a reaction but there was silence. Domitus was trying to balance the point of his dagger on the end of a finger and Rsan, the city treasurer, had clasped his hands together and was staring at the smooth surface on the table we were sitting round. The lean, cropped-haired city governor, Godarz, wore a confused expression while Orodes, Prince of Susiana and step-brother of Mithridates, who had been banished by the new high king, stared blankly out of the window.

    Eventually the prince looked at me and shook his head.

    ‘He will not come, Pacorus. He will regard your insults and provocations as small prices to pay if it means Dura’s army stays on the western bank of the Euphrates and leaves him and Narses free to rule the empire.’

    Domitus frowned as the dagger fell and clattered on the floor.

    ‘I hope I have your attention, Domitus,’ I said.

    He picked up the blade and slipped it back into its sheath.

    ‘You want to kill Mithridates? Then let us take the army across the Euphrates to Ctesiphon and storm the place. Simple.’

    Orodes’ mouth opened in horror. ‘Whatever we think of Mithridates, he has been elected high king by a majority of the kings in the empire. To march against him would plunge the empire into civil strife once more.’

    ‘I will not be marching against Ctesiphon,’ I reassured him. ‘I have no wish to incite another civil war.’

    Domitus grunted. ‘Orodes’ brother is a coward. You will have a long wait.’

    ‘My step-brother,’ Orodes reminded the army’s commander. He was always keen to emphasise that though they shared the same father they had two different mothers.

    I pointed at Rsan. ‘We will be withholding the annual tribute to Ctesiphon until further notice. Let us see how the king of kings likes that.’

    The tribute was a yearly payment of gold that every Parthian kingdom sent to the treasury at Ctesiphon, based on the number of horse archers every king could raise.

    Rsan appeared alarmed. ‘Is that wise, majesty?’

    ‘Very wise,’ I replied. ‘I would rather use the gold to raise and maintain my own soldiers than see Dura’s money being spent by Mithridates.’

    Domitus laughed. ‘First sensible thing you have said all day. But it still won’t provoke Mithridates or Narses. What is the King of Persis doing, anyway?’

    Godarz ran a hand over his crown. ‘The reports garnered from the trade caravans is that he has returned to Persepolis, prior to marching east to consolidate his new kingdom.’

    I had won a great victory over Porus of Sakastan and his elephants prior to the even greater victory at Surkh. But it continually irked me that so complete had been my victory over Porus that his kingdom, Sakastan, had a vacant throne, his sons also being killed in the battle near the Euphrates. Sakastan was located immediately east of Persis and following Narses’ intrigues he had been given the crown of Sakastan by Mithridates. Thus did Narses become the king of both kingdoms thanks to my actions.

    Dobbai opened her eyes. ‘Narses plays the great king and will amuse himself in his new domain for a while. He is no fool and knows that to offer battle to you, son of Hatra, will result in his defeat and possible death. As such the prospect offers little attraction. However, that does not mean he will not try to strike at you.’

    ‘Or those closest to you,’ said Gallia.

    Everyone looked at her.

    ‘You fear an attempt on your life?’ said Godarz with concern.

    Gallia shook her head. ‘Not me, or indeed anyone here, but there are others who are vulnerable.’

    I wracked my brains. ‘Who?’

    ‘Nergal and Praxima,’ she replied.

    Before I had stormed Uruk I had made plans to install an ally on Mesene’s throne, and in the aftermath of my victory had asked Nergal, the former commander of my horsemen, to become King of Mesene. I had promised that Dura would always support him until he was able to rebuild his kingdom’s army. Gallia had vehemently opposed the idea, believing that Nergal and Praxima would be too isolated and vulnerable at Uruk.

    I pointed at the hide map of the empire on the wall behind me.

    ‘You are right, my love, that Mithridates could strike at Mesene from Susiana, but if he did then we would receive intelligence from Babylon and Elymais, which would give us time to reinforce Nergal.’

    Gallia stood and walked over to the map, pulling her dagger from her right boot. She rested the point at Susa and then pointed it at Uruk.

    ‘Mithridates is closer to Uruk than we are and could reach our friends’ city before we can.’

    ‘You are right, Gallia,’ agreed Domitus, ‘but such an eventuality would be welcomed by Pacorus.’

    He looked at me. ‘Am I right?’

    Gallia spun round to look at me as I felt my cheeks flush. She then eyed Domitus.

    ‘What do you mean?’

    The chiselled features of Domitus’ face broke into a broad grin.

    ‘Let’s say, for the sake of argument, that Mithridates and Narses send an army to attack Nergal. We’ve all seen Uruk’s high walls. Which means that an army will have to lay siege to the city to capture it. Only one kingdom in Parthia has siege engines to batter down defences and that is Dura. So an army lays siege to Uruk to starve it into surrender.’

    Domitus rose and laid a hand on my shoulder. ‘And that gives Pacorus time to march his army south, cross the Euphrates and destroy the besieging army before the walls of Uruk.’

    ‘Is this true, Pacorus?’ asked Gallia.

    ‘If Mithridates or Narses attack Uruk then I will march to its aid,’ I answered.

    ‘That is not an answer, son of Hatra,’ smirked Dobbai. ‘What your wife wishes to know is are you using Mesene as a bait to entice your enemies to walk into your trap?’

    ‘There is no trap,’ I protested. ‘Dura is Mesene’s ally and will stand by Nergal. Mithridates knows this and so does Narses.’

    Gallia returned to her chair. ‘You should write to Nergal warning him that his kingdom faces an attack.’

    ‘He already knows that, my sweet,’ I said. ‘Besides he is no fool. He has the city garrison, eight hundred Margianans to stiffen his forces, plus whatever Surena can raise among the Ma’adan.’

    Domitus chuckled. ‘The marsh dwellers? About as useful as a paper sword.’

    I wagged a finger at him. ‘You underestimate them, Domitus. They will prove useful allies to Nergal.’

    For years Chosroes had waged a war of annihilation against the Ma’adan, the people who inhabited the great marshes through which the Tigris and Euphrates meandered before they emptied their waters into the Persian Gulf. Surena, my former squire and now an officer in Dura’s cataphracts, was one of those people and was currently helping Nergal enlist recruits from among the Ma’adan.

    ‘You should recall the marsh boy,’ Dobbai said suddenly. ‘His destiny does not lie among the swamps and reeds of his people.’

    ‘I’m sure Nergal will send him back to us presently,’ I replied.

    Orodes leaned forward to look at Dobbai. ‘Have the gods revealed his true purpose to you?’

    Dobbai flicked a hand at him, rose and walked towards the door.

    ‘The gods have better things to do than whisper in my ear, prince. But I will say this: Mithridates will never set foot on the western bank of the Euphrates and neither will Narses. If you wish to kill them you will have to go and get them.’

    With that she opened the door and departed, mumbling to herself as she did so. Gallia was still studying the map as Dobbai closed the door behind her.

    ‘What is this place?’ she said, turning to Rsan who had spent his whole life at Dura. She was pointing to a settlement at the spot where the Tigris and Euphrates entered the Persian Gulf.

    ‘That is Charax, majesty,’ answered Rsan. ‘A port that was formerly under the control of the King of Mesene, but no longer.’

    ‘No longer? Why?’

    ‘It was established by Alexander of Macedon nearly three hundred years ago, majesty,’ said Rsan. ‘Since then its fortunes have declined sharply. It has been destroyed by floods at least twice.’

    ‘It is part of Mesene?’ queried Gallia.

    ‘Technically, yes,’ said Rsan. ‘But it has been many decades since Uruk has exercised control over Charax. Today the port exists as a sort of independent city, though only because it is out of the way and no one has the inclination to subdue it. But it too pays dues to the empire.’

    Gallia was intrigued. ‘In what way?’

    ‘Boats dock at Charax and then sail up the Tigris or Euphrates to trade their goods in either Babylon or Seleucia where they are taxed.’

    ‘Who rules Charax?’ I asked Rsan.

    He stroked his beard. ‘Let me see. Ah, yes, a man named Tiraios if my memory serves me correctly. The port was prosperous many years ago but the Silk Road has reduced it to a backwater in every sense of the word. Alas for Tiraios.’

    After the meeting I wrote letters to King Vardan at Babylon and King Gotarzes at Elymais, both allies, alerting them of my missive to Mithridates and asking them to keep watch for any troop movements in Susiana and Persis. But with the news that Narses was travelling east to Sakastan I thought it improbable that Mithridates would attempt anything on his own. And so I waited. After two weeks nothing had happened, and after a month it became obvious that my letter had been ignored. Frequent messages came from Nergal reporting no activity on his eastern border, and from Vardan stating that nothing was happening at Seleucia. Even Gotarzes bewailed the torpor. He hated Mithridates and Narses more than I did and would have liked nothing more than a war against them. But Ctesiphon sent envoys to Elymais to maintain cordial relations with its king and pointedly ignored the Kingdom of Dura and its ruler. The army trained, the trade caravans travelled through the kingdom on their way to Palmyra and I paced the palace terrace waiting for an invasion that would never happen. I received a letter from my father, admonishing me for insulting the high king and reporting that the Romans in Gordyene were quiet. Zeugma sent protestations of peace and my mother wondered when we would be visiting Hatra again. The whole empire appeared to have been gripped by an outbreak of peace that was as infuriating as it was welcome.

    The only bright spot was the gathering of the Companions.

    This annual assembly was a feast for all those who had travelled with me from Italy in the aftermath of Spartacus’ defeat. As well as the survivors of the force of Parthians that I had led into Cappadocia they included Greeks, Gauls, Italians, Germans, Dacians and Thracians. After the night of revelry, when I sat on the palace terrace nursing a hangover, Byrd paid me a visit. Though he was not the most sociable of individuals he always made the effort to attend the gathering, usually ending up sitting on his own at the end of a table in the banqueting hall, alone with his thoughts.

    He looked more like an Agraci in his flowing black robes, black headdress and dark, unkempt features. But then he had made his home among the desert people, residing at Palmyra with Noora who never left the settlement.

    ‘I trust she

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