Read Poseidon's Spear (Long War 3) Online
Authors: Christian Cameron
And in fact, gold is always good.
When Doola rode south to find his wife, he found Oiasso destroyed – the villages burned, the hall flattened. But the people were scarcely touched; they simply retreated into the hills.
The Carthaginians encouraged the local Iberians to attack again. And winter set in with no crops harvested. The whole community of Oiasso had to depend on relatives in neighbouring communities
for food.
As soon as the hill thawed, Neoptolymos and Alexandros led a hundred men on a counter-raid into the mountains, and they took flocks and grain. And tin.
Doola convinced them that they should pack their belongings and leave. It was a fine tale, and one that I heard told several times and never fully understood. I did learn that Tara and her
brother died defending their hall; that the Phoenicians had come back twice, and had four ships the second time and five ships the first time.
‘They were hunting us,’ Doola said.
We said goodbye to Gwan at Lugdunum and rode south, moving in easy stages. I was still recovering, and our Gaulish horde needed food and rest. But it was a fine summer, and we had Doola’s
tin to trade – ill-gotten gains from the Iberians.
Midsummer saw us at Arelata, and men said that Phoenician ships had been on the coast all summer. And there had been raids.
Massalia had been attacked, and had repelled the attack.
My stomach clenched, and then rolled. No one at Arelata knew where Tarsilla was, but they all agreed that the Phoenicians had attacked every town on the coast that was Greek.
At Arelata, we prepared for the last dash to home. We elected to do it by land, because everyone at Arelata said the coast was too dangerous. There were no tin shipments moving into – or
out of – Massalia.
And Sittonax and Daud were leaving us. They had helped get the convoys out to Arelata, where all of Tara’s people were planning to settle. There was good farmland all the way up the
hillsides, and these were people used to terracing.
But the last night, Sittonax and Daud both changed their minds. Daud and I embraced, and we both wept a little.
And then he said, ‘Fuck it. I’m coming.’
Sittonax looked at him as if he’d grown an extra head. And then shrugged.
‘Fine,’ he said. ‘I’ll come too.’
So we all drank more wine. The next day, we offered sacrifices for our own safety and for that of our friends at Tarsilla, and we headed for home.
Tarsilla was not a smoking ruin. We came down the steep ridge behind, already aware that the town was safe from our friends among the herdsmen and shepherds, but still peering
over every hill for a sign.
The timber temple of Apollo was still there. The theatre – a small one – was still there.
There were ships on the beach.
I knew
Lydia
as soon as I saw her. She was perfect – the finest trireme I had ever seen. Vasileos had outdone himself. And her twin sister was next to her. Gaius’s vessel,
and although I did not know it at the time, she was at that moment just a day old, all complete, the traditional ceremony just complete, the oarsmen sleeping off the festivities under awnings.
Gaius called her
Iusticia
. Justice.
Demetrios’s house was closed and boarded. The wine shops certainly looked as if the Phoenicians had landed and smashed the town, but the rest looked good, and our house was secure, the
main gate closed. Giannis opened the gate and embraced me, and we were home.
The thing I remember best about that homecoming was Doola and Seckla. Doola had brought his wife, of course. Seckla helped her down from her mule, and we all knew – right there –
that all was well. She smiled at him, perfectly aware that this was an important moment. Then Doola went and embraced him. Seckla cried.
Well, lots of us cried. But we were home, and we’d done it.
We had done it.
I haven’t mentioned Neoptolymos. Of course he was with Doola. He had done great deeds of arms in the south, with the Vascones, and against the Iberians. And when I
recovered from my wounds, I found him as big as ever, his frame filled out, but calmer and happier, too. He had married a Vascone woman, Brillix, who was as much the opposite of the blond Illyrian
as a human being could be. Where he was tall and pale, she was small and dark. He was taciturn and morose, and she was cheerful, funny, endlessly talkative. I’ve heard that opposites attract,
but Brillix was the most opposite I could imagine to my vengeful Illyrian friend. And she made him – better. She made him happy. Happiness is better than revenge.
Nonetheless, she also gave him a reason to want both wealth and security. He was no longer a sword for hire. He was a husband and, it was obvious, about to be a father. Brillix was as close to
perfectly spherical as a woman could be when pregnant.
We drank a lot of wine that day, and handed out more to the oarsmen.
It’s not all war, my friends. Sometimes, life is just sweet. The next few weeks – oh, there’s no story to tell, except that watching Brillix wander the house, cooking,
cleaning, feathering her nest – watching Doola and Seckla rebuild their friendship, with Doola’s wife as an ally – caulking and preparing our triremes for sea, training our
oarsmen, drinking at the edge of the Middle Sea—
It rivals any time in my life. I missed having a love of my own, but to be honest, watching Neoptolymos and Brillix, or Doola and his wife, I was not interested in buying a slave and pumping
away at her. I wanted a wife.
I wondered if Lydia were still available. But it had been more than two years. And to a marriageable young woman—
Still, one of the things my teacher, Calchus, had taught me over and over again, when I was a boy at the
tholos
tomb above Plataea, was that you never know until you ask. I had thought
about Lydia many, many times in two years. I had behaved badly – shockingly badly, really, by my own standards. But her father was not without error, either. It began to occur to me that in
my new status, as a rich shipowner, I might have a certain appeal.
Other things were occurring to me, as well. Riches – real wealth – the wealth to buy and maintain a ship, retainers, warehouses – have a cascade of effects.
Have I mentioned that I knew by then that Miltiades had died? Pointlessly, of a minor wound, in prison? The fucking Athenians – pardon me, thugater – had imprisoned him for failing
to take the island of Paros. Heh. That’s what they said, anyway. I loved the pirate, but he was scheming to make himself tyrant, I guarantee it, and I wasn’t there to save his
aristocratic arse.
Themistocles was building Athens a mighty fleet. All the Inner Sea was talking about it, because the Phoenicians were rumoured to be allied to the Persians. In Massalia, over wine, Dionysius
told me that two sets of Persian envoys had come and gone from Carthage.
And everyone in the Inner Sea knew that Persia was going for Athens. Again. But this time, not with a provincial satrap and a hastily raised army. The word was that the Persians were going to
throw a thousand ships and a million men at Greece.
Well, that’s what Dionysius said, anyway. And Demetrios was gone.
He’d taken
Sikel Herakles
to sea as soon as I was gone. He’d also taken a quarter of the tin.
And he hadn’t come back.
There’s time for rage, friends. Time to swear revenge and get it.
There are other times to shrug and call it a day.
It was only tin. There were fifty-six pigs still under the floorboards of our house, and another eight we’d brought all the way from the Vascones’ land. Interesting that Doola
insisted we all share, even though he and Neoptolymos and Daud had done all the work.
So we had sixty-four pigs left, less four pigs that Gaius used and four I used, sheathing our ships and our rams, and two more that we sold in Massalia to cover expenses and to do favours for
bronze-smiths who helped us. That left us fifty-six pigs. We sold ten pigs – a
lot
of tin – to Dionysius, both to keep him sweet on us and to raise the cash to pay my oarsmen
and hire oarsmen for Gaius. In the view of all of us – except, unfortunately, Demetrios – these were group expenses.
We ballasted our triremes in tin – twenty-four pigs each ship. It was a lot of tin.
Those forty-eight pigs were pure profit, and every man of us was due one-sixth in cash.
At the same time, I threw all my remaining silver and all the gold torcs I’d earned into the common pot. Doola and Neoptolymos had loot, too – and in it went. That came to a tidy
sum. Vasileos was voted a full share of the tin, and so was Sittonax, which reduced our shares to one-eighth.
Getting all this? Merchants are always surprised at how well soldiers can divide profits, but listen, honey – the rules for dividing spoils are in the
Iliad
. We’re good at
maths. I had run the tin as a profitable military venture, not as a trading concession – or at least, that’s how it had ended. Vasileos was deeply moved to be offered a fortune, and
Sittonax laughed. He just laughed.
Of course, we had one last task – to sell the tin.
Forty-eight pigs of tin was enough to wreck the trade in a small market, or make other men rich in a large market.
Doola had other plans. He wanted to sell the tin at the top of the market, a month or so before the yearly convoys from Iberia reached Carthage. He studied such things, and he sat on the beach
at Massalia and listened to the merchants – no Phoenicians this year – and made his plans.
Sometimes, you wander lost in life and you feel abandoned by the gods, and you move fecklessly from one day to another without purpose. Other times, it seems as if the hand of the gods is on
your steering oars, and no matter what you might plan, the gods point you to a certain act, or in a certain direction. That is how I felt that summer. We had four glorious weeks of preparation, and
then, after a night without wine and a good sleep, I rose in the dark with all my friends and all my people, and we got the two new ships manned, and friends – shepherds and fishermen –
pushed our heavily laden ships down the beach and into the sea. And as the sky lightened to the east, we pulled our swift ships over a calm sea, bound for Sicily and Syracusa and the largest market
for tin in the Inner Sea.
We rowed east and south, and stayed on open beaches with a heavy guard. Fishermen fled us, but when we managed to convince one we were safe, off Etrusca, he reported that a
heavy Carthaginian squadron was operating in Sardinian waters.
We rowed south the next day, giving Sardinia a wide berth by continuing down the Tyrrhenian coast. We seemed to push the trade right off the seas – we did, after all, have a pair of sleek
warships, and everyone ran. Which was just fine with all of us.
We passed the Tiber without entering the estuary. Gaius didn’t want to go home until the tin was sold, and I appreciated his willingness; we didn’t want to stay at sea with our
cargoes. We wanted to get to the Sicilian market as soon as possible.
Let me wander off my topic to say that by this time I had begun to consider returning to Plataea. Euphoria’s death was far enough behind me now, and I had begun to think of taking my tin
and going back to start again. So I did mention to Doola that the very best market at which to sell our fortune in tin was Athens.
Doola just shrugged. ‘I don’t know Athens,’ he said. And that was that. Listen – when the storm was roaring, we listened to Vasileos and Demetrios. When there were spears
drinking blood, they all listened to me. When there were things to be traded, we listened to Doola. That’s what made us strong.
We had three days’ bad weather south of Tiber. We were headed by winds and the seas were short and choppy and a misery for the oarsmen, and I did something I hate – I turned tail and
ran for a beach, landed and spent two days watching the weather. I remember so well, because without it—
Well, talk about the hand of the gods. The gods had me in both hands, that summer.
Two days later, we weathered Pelorus in a fine west wind, passing Charybdis under sail with the rowers making jokes about their godsend of a vacation. With the wind under our sterns, we ran west
as far as we could, tacked, rowed and did it again. I mention this because it was a tactic I used to work up a rapid response in my crews, and always have – it’s neither faster nor
slower than rowing, but it does give the men a rest, and it also trains them in the rapid switch from sailing rig to rowing and back, which is essential to survival. Well, I laugh – survival
as a pirate, anyway.
Both of our ships had the new Tyrrhenian rig which men now call the
triemiola
, so we no longer took our mainmast down – ever – and we had a half-deck aft instead of a
catwalk making for a heavier, but more stable, ship; a wide platform for our marines and archers, and a permanent station for the deck crew who worked the sails. Again, none of this was
revolutionary. There were a hundred triemiolas in the Inner Sea. But we had a pair, and we had trained our crews the way the best military crews were trained. We’d been together a long time,
too – the core of our crews were the men who’d gone to the Outer Sea and back.
You can tell we’re coming to a fight, can’t you?
Heh.
We were tacking and rowing our way down the Strait of Messina, with me in the bow watching our tacks and trying to decide whether I was going all the way to Syracusa, or whether to make do with
Regium on the port side – the mainland side. I passed the city, noting three triremes in the harbour, yards crossed and ready for sea, and we crossed the strait one more time and ran south
along the Sicilian coast, watching for the beaches north of Katania as Aetna grew to starboard to dominate the horizon. The wind abated – blocked by Aetna – and we found the beach I
remembered. I missed Demetrios, and that’s the truth; he knew these waters like a pilot, and I was a mere duffer by comparison. But we got our heavy hulls ashore, and we hired rollers from
the fishermen and ran our hulls right up the beach to give them a good drying. Wet hulls are heavier and slower, and when you have a ballast of tin—