It
was a fresh spring morning when one of the sentries in the fort first noticed
something glinting on a far hill to the north.
“Cave!
Timere!”
“Barbarians!”
He pointed frantically towards the northern horizon where over the whole
hillside, several hillsides, arms and armour were glittering in the early
sunlight. The centurion dashed towards the principia, shouting. NCOs emerged
from their quarters and began shouting. The praefectus was shouting from the
front doorway of his villa whilst he struggled into a cuirass that he had
obviously outgrown.
“Where’s
my gladius? Someone get me a gladius.”
The
caligati, the army’s rankers or grunts, stumbled onto the parade ground in
their underwear. They did not shout, but muttered amongst themselves.
“Stand
to!” The vexillarius planted the regiment’s banner firmly alongside his
commander. A cornicen began to blast out the strident Call to Arms, but there
was an impossibly short space of time between the alarm being raised and the
arrival of a crazed hoard of Picts and Geordies at the settlement, wielding an
assortment of dangerously sharp-edged implements. It was a hectic time, a panic
stricken scrabbling for war gear time, too short a time for the completion of
defensive preparations. Battlements were manned by half ready troops, torsion
ballistas loaded with iron tipped bolts, Palmyran archers crowded onto the roof
of the gatehouse. Fire-buckets were filled and someone was dispatched to find
Marcus, the nearest thing they had to a field surgeon. The doomed lad was
pierced through with a broad, leaf-bladed Pictish spear before he had crossed
the street, and was trampled under foot as a tightly packed mass of barbarians
crashed, screaming into the vicus, firing the buildings and slaughtering all
before them.
Terrifying,
fair skinned, naked warriors, unstoppable in their blood-rage, led the assault
on the fort. Ornate bronze helmets and gold torques flashed fire. Long iron
swords slashed against soldiers’ scuta, gaudy lozenge shields, like outsize
knuckle-dusters, battered into soft tissue. Roman blood spattered onto blue
painted, barbarian flesh, and soaked darkly into their woollen plaid short
capes and long trousers, stained the ground crimson. Individual screams melded
into a homogeneous roar of pain, and greedy ravens gathered in expectation of
the carnage.
By
the time a relief column of the Cohors I Tungrorum arrived from Vercovicium
fort the barbarians had moved on. The would-be rescuers found a butchers’
shambles. Large areas of charred earth and rubble stretched back from the
roadsides. No identifiable building stood above ground except the burned out
shell of the hostelry and the wreck of the principia. Tatters of clothing and
flesh hung in the gorse, picked over by ominous black birds. Smoke rose still,
from the smouldering peat.
First
Tungrorum also had a medicus ordinaries, with the unlikely name of Anicius
Ingenuus. He had accompanied the auxiliary column in the hopes of tending to
the wounded, but there was no work for him. Nothing lived. If there had been
survivors these too had long since dispersed.
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