Chapter 6

In the attic of a stall-house in the heart of Dardarus, Gallus knelt, alone, whispering the last few words of his prayer to Mithras. He clutched the wooden idol to his heart, all the while seeking out the wraith-like memory of his long dead wife, but begging the deity of the legions for the strength to go on without her. He took a breath to begin the prayer yet again, but hesitated on noticing an orange glow of torchlight dancing outside the open shutters. At that moment he realised he had been praying since mid-afternoon.

Enough for today, he told himself, standing. He tucked the idol into his purse, stifling the long-buried, stinging sensation of sorrow behind his eyes.

He firmed his jaw, then wrapped his ruby cloak around his shoulders. Then he glanced around the timber floor and whitewashed stone walls of his room in search of some form of distraction. The room was sparsely furnished; tucked into the corner was a bed topped with a hay mattress and thick woollen blankets. In the other corner, by the open shutters, there was a chair, an old oak chest and a table, stocked with a jug of fruit wine and a jug of water, plus a loaf of wheat bread and a bowl of cherries. He lifted the water jug and filled a pewter cup, before draining it in one gulp. Then he found his gaze was drawn to the shutters and the vista of the winter’s night outside.

He rested his palms on the window ledge, framed with thick thatchwork, and studied the scene; it had begun snowing heavily, he realised. The Goths shuffled through the wide streets, cloaked in snow. The jagged tongue of the locals intermingled with the crackling of torches. The firelight from the city houses and streets cast a haunting glow up the side of the sheer mountain that formed the northern wall of the citadel.

He chuckled wryly; the setup inside the walls of Dardarus only served to further blow away the Roman misconception of the Gothic lifestyle. Yes, the citadel lacked the finesse and architecture of Roman cities, but the streets were wide, the defences sturdy and well thought out. The buildings, although mostly timber, wattle and daub with thick, thatched roofs, were stocky and hardy, their foundations sunken firmly into the bedrock. But there was one aspect of the skyline in particular that kept drawing his gaze: the feasting hall, where the talks were to take place.

That afternoon, when they were escorted through the streets of Dardarus they were, no doubt intentionally, taken past this impressively long and sturdy structure that seemed to be central to the citadel. Outside the hall was what looked like a muster area with a tall pole erected in its centre, bearing a pagan banner depicting a boar on an emerald background. Any doubt that this was testament to Athanaric’s firm rejection of Christianity was dispelled with one look at the bloodstained earth around the foot of the pole. How many young women’s throats had been opened on that spot in sacrifice and in search of Allfather Wodin’s approval of their warmongering? Gallus’ eyes grew distant; andhow many poor souls have died on Rome’s swords?

He spun from the shutter and placed his intercisa helmet on his head, the short plume adding to his height. They had been told that Athanaric had chosen to wait until the evening to meet them — a blatant show of power and control, Gallus thought. But now evening was upon them. Any moment now they would be summoned to eat and then talk with the Gothic Iudex and his trusted men. Gallus had never felt less hungry or talkative. He had once dined with Emperor Valens himself and almost felt choked by the formality of it all, but this would be something different entirely. This would be like dining in Hades.

He glanced through the door of his room, lying ajar, and across the corridor to Salvian’s room; the ambassador’s door lay shut. In the briefing scroll delivered by Ennius the rider, Dux Vergilius had rambled like a poet. Tarquitius and Salvian are men with gilded tongues and jewels for minds. Gallus was sceptical of the rhetoric as usual, and the description was certainly ill-fitting of the odious Tarquitius. But he liked what he had seen of Salvian so far; a sincere man who could also employ a dry wit when it was called for. Then he remembered the dux’s insistence that Gallus was to stay with the pair at all times to ensure their safety. Their loss would be more costly than an entire cohort of your men, Tribunus; guard them with your life!

Gallus grimaced, drained his cup of water, then strode across to Salvian’s room. He lifted a hand to knock on the door, but it opened silently under his weight on the floorboards. The door swung open to reveal a neatly made bed with Salvian’s satchel upon it, and then the ambassador, in the corner of the room, pulling on his white, eastern-style tunic.

‘Ambassador, I expect we will be summoned. . ’ Gallus begun.

At this, Salvian started, spinning to face Gallus. ‘By the gods!’ He exclaimed, wrenching his tunic on. ‘You mustn’t creep up on me like that, Tribunus.’

Gallus cocked an eyebrow in bemusement; so the man was flappable after all.

Then Salvian composed himself and cocked his familiar, half-mouthed grin as he slid his legs into his woollen trousers. ‘You should see about getting new hobnails in the soles of your boots!’

Gallus chuckled despite himself.

Then, without warning, a jagged voice spoke, right by his shoulder.

‘Iudex Athanaric is ready for you now,’ a granite-featured Gothic warrior spoke in broken Greek, ‘follow me.’ With that, the warrior turned and strode down the corridor.

Gallus shared a cagy glance with Salvian, then darted back into his room to pick up the rolled-up snake banner before following the big warrior.

When they reached the end of the corridor, Gallus was warmed by the sight of Felix and Paulus, equally adorned in polished armour, with Tarquitius in his senatorial robe.

‘The empire’s finest, eh?’ Then he turned to address Tarquitius and Salvian. ‘Remember that we’re there by your side. Just give me a nod or a glance if things start to spiral out of control.’ He eyed each of them. ‘Are you ready for this?’

Salvian gave a subtle nod of affirmation.

Tarquitius wore a tormented expression of bagged-up fear and desperate ambition. ‘I was born for this,’ he proclaimed, his shrill tone filling the corridor.

As the Gothic warrior led them from the stallhouse, Gallus walked beside Felix. ‘I’m more concerned about that overfed snake than the Goths right at this moment,’ he whispered, the creaking boards disguising his words.


Pavo’s ears were still ringing and his vision was little more than a pool of murky shapes. He felt hands grapple at him, lifting him to standing. He groaned, swaying on the spot, squinting at his surroundings: he was in some kind of stony basin. A ring of blurry shapes writhed and it seemed as if a thousand harpies were screeching all around him. Then, one voice cut through the din, barking in a jagged Gothic tongue, then repeated the message in broken Greek.

‘And facing mighty Adalwolf, crusher of skulls, drinker of blood, grinder of bones, is. . ’

Pavo almost spluttered out in dry laughter. As his vision began to clear, he wondered what poor sod was being pitted against such a creature. Then he wondered what the dark mass right in front of him was. Then he realised it was a man. A giant of a man whose bald head seemed to be fused to his shoulders without the need of a neck, and his expression was one of indulgent rage. He was clad in an iron scale vest over a woollen tunic and he carried a weighty longsword in each hand, the veins in his tree trunk arms bulging as if trying to escape from the skin. His eyes were trained on Pavo and his face was split with a predatory grin. Pavo had a distinct feeling that this was Adalwolf.

Oh, bugger!

‘. . the brave but foolish Roman warrior, who comes to storm our village with two men by his side. Ready yourself, Roman; meet your fate with the honour your people talk of as if it belongs to them alone.’

His senses sharpened by this, Pavo blinked at the warrior, then shot glances all around: they were inside Istrita and in some crude stone-ringed gravel pit with a large timber cage at the far edge. A triple tier of timber benches encircled the pit and formed an arena, the seats packed with baying, snarling Goths — the whites of their eyes and their teeth glinting like hungry wolves in the torchlight. All of them were warriors — no women, elderly or children in sight. He glanced up at the Goth who had announced the bout. The stocky man was sitting on a timber chair, erected on stilts about the height of two men above the other benches of the arena.

Pavo made to roar at the speaker, when unseen hands pressed a spatha hilt into one hand and a round, wooden Gothic shield into the other. Then his helmet was pressed onto his head. He spun round to see the two Gothic warriors who had armed him, scuttling away, climbing out of the pit to their seats.

‘Pavo, duck!’ A hoarse voice called out from his side.

‘Sura?’ Pavo swayed around to the direction of the voice. Blinking, he saw his friend, bound at the wrist with Crito, the pair kneeling at the edge of the pit. Sura’s face was filled with horror. Then a fist that felt like a jagged rock hammered into Pavo’s cheekbone. His helmet flew from his head and his vision filled with white light once more and he flailed backwards, until he slammed into the pit wall. A roar of delight poured from the crowd at this.

Shocked back to his senses, Pavo twisted round to behold the giant who had almost shattered his cheekbone. It was only now that he noticed the corpses of Adalwolf’s previous opponents — Fritigern’s Goths by the look of it — lying in bloody streaks around the arena, entrails dangling from gaping sword wounds. He glanced back up at the big warrior and the bloodied blades in his hands and felt his gut turn over.

The giant lunged for him, swinging one of his swords. Pavo ducked, the blow swiping through the air, skimming his scalp. A chorus of frustrated groans rang out at this.

Pavo rolled away from the lumbering giant, who followed him, cackling, spinning each of his swords as if they were kindling.

‘Gut him!’ One young Gothic warrior screamed, pointing a finger at Pavo, his face contorted in anger. Pavo glanced to him and then back to his opponent, his mind reeling. If he was to fight, there was a good chance he would be killed by this monster. If he was to fight and win, the Goths would kill him anyway. If he was to refuse to fight, he would be killed. This fine array of choices did little to still his thundering heart.

He ducked under another sword swipe and crashed back against the timber cage by the side of the arena. Hands shot out through the slats, grasping at him. Caught, panic welled in his heart as the giant rushed for him, then a voice hissed from the cage. ‘They are coming, Roman, they are coming!’

Pavo shrugged free just as the giant’s sword swing smashed into the cage, and he scrambled back to see hundreds of faces in the gloom within the barred enclosure; warriors, women, children and elderly alike — the populace of the village, he concluded. One man pressed his face against the cage from inside, his eyes wide with fear and his shattered nose oozing blood. ‘They are coming,’ he repeated.

Pavo frowned. Then a hiss of iron cut through the air and he snapped to his senses, leaping back as the giant’s blade scythed down on the spot where he had stood. Then he pulled his shield before him. As the giant closed in, Pavo snarled at the man seated on the elevated chair. ‘You’re a fool if you think this will go unpunished.’

‘And who would punish us, Roman?’ The man roared. ‘The fools still loyal to Fritigern?’ He pointed to the cage. ‘Or perhaps the fifty Romans cowering down the track in the thicket? I don’t think so. If they move a step closer to my walls, then my archers will puncture their hearts! And if they stay outside, then they will not see the morning. . ’

Pavo roared in frustration, then he braced as Adalwolf swung both of the longswords round to smash them into either side of his shield. Pavo’s arms shuddered from the impact and the shield splintered on both sides. One more smash like that and the shield would be gone. Then, as the giant heaved his weapons up and round to repeat the move, Pavo saw the opportunity; Adalwolf’s chest was exposed. To slide his spatha up under one of the scales would be a death blow, but it would be the death of the three Romans as well. He had to keep the fight going, to gain time to think, so instead he lunged forward, punching his shield boss into the man’s breast. The giant’s swing was checked by the strike and he staggered backwards, retching, spitting bile into the gravel.

But Adalwolf was stilled for only a moment. Pavo lifted his spatha to parry a downward slash, then the follow-up slash with the second sword, both strikes by the heavy weapons jarring his shoulders, numbing his arms. He staggered round to the man’s flank and threw a jab at the binding in his scale vest, just above the kidneys. The strike was weak and Pavo fell back with a yelp, clutching the torn skin on his knuckles.

‘No more running, Roman,’ Adalwolf purred, ‘stand and fight. I will tear out your throat, then those of your friends.’

The giant’s words were gleeful, and Pavo’s blood ran cold. He braced himself, trying his best to shut out the hundreds of snarling faces all around them. His yell of pain had honed their thirst for blood. Then, for an instant, he froze, realising that even the wall guard had turned to look in on the village, absorbed by the spectacle. He thought of Habitus and the others outside, and prayed they would spot this, prayed they would disobey his orders. Then the giant came at him, roaring.

The warrior’s arms and blades were a blur such was the speed and power of the attack, and Pavo could only parry instinctively. With every strike, he realised he was being driven back. First at a stalk, then at a stagger, now he was practically running backwards. The shrill roar of the crowd grew deafening, then he heard skin tear and felt a searing pain across his neck, numbly realising he had suffered a cut across the throat. A cold terror gripped him; if it was arterial then he had moments at most.

Better to go out fighting, he resolved with a grimace. He let his fear swirl into anger, then lunged forward, punching through the sword-swipes of the giant, spatha tip aimed for the man’s heart.

But all he heard was the scream of iron as his sword spun from his hand and up into the night sky. Silence fell on the arena. Then, as one, the crowd erupted in a cacophony of laughter. Pavo’s vision began to spot over — he was spent and weaponless. The throat wound was superficial, but it mattered little now. Adalwolf stepped forward, placing the edge of each of his swords by either side of Pavo’s neck, lining them up carefully, readying to swing them together. Through a grin, he hissed; ‘I will keep your head, Roman, to remind me of this day.’

Pavo stared through the giant, numbly, and his eyes started to close. Then something flashed in the night sky, catching the moonlight, silently streaking towards them. Pavo and Adalwolf started, turning to it. Pavo recognised the missile at the last moment, and ducked back. With a meaty punch and a dry cracking of bones, the plumbata burst through the giant’s throat, severing his spine and twisting his head to an unnatural angle.

Pavo stepped back, his face spattered in blood and gristle. Adalwolf’s body toppled away, the double longswords still clutched in his hands. There was a hiatus of barely a heartbeat as the crowd looked on, stunned, while their mightiest warrior’s corpse spasmed in a pool of its own blood. Pavo looked to the timber watchtowers: where the Gothic sentries had dropped their guard for only moments, slumped corpses now lay, impaled by Roman spears and plumbatae. Dark shapes were dropping over the wall and into the village. The fifty had heard his prayers and pounced on the Goths’ moment of lapsed concentration.

Then the rebel leader stood, eyes wide, scanning the timber walls. ‘To arms, we are under attack! The wall guard have been. . ’ his words were cut off as Sura and Crito, still bound, clambered up onto the arena benches and then rushed at the foot of the chair to barge it back until it rocked and toppled into the crowd. Then there was a hissing and the sky glinted once more, this time with an organised volley of some fifty plumbatae. Chaos erupted as the missiles hit home, striking down the Gothic warriors.

‘The legions are coming!’ One warrior cried out.

The rebel leader scrambled from the toppled chair and slapped him, then barked and yelled in a vain attempt to rally his men. ‘Stay your fear, for the Viper has risen!’ He roared. ‘And by dawn tomorrow, this plain will be alive with his northern allies!’

Pavo frowned momentarily, blood pounding in his ears. Then, two Gothic spearmen rushed for him and he was jolted from his thoughts. He wrenched the pair of longswords from Adalwolf’s corpse, and hacked the tip from one assailant’s spear, then punched a sword through the chest of the other. He spun to parry the dagger that the first man thrust at his back, then sliced the man’s hand off at the wrist. He twisted round looking for his next opponent, but already, the Goths were outnumbered, the legionaries slicing through the remainder who fought on.

At this, the rebel leader cried out to the last few around him. ‘Fight on, you fools, the Viper will come for us. . ’

His words ended with a cry as Crito barged forward and punched his spatha into his shoulder, pushing down until the artery was severed and black blood leapt high from the wound. The rebel leader toppled to the ground, gurgling his last. Crito cackled, eyeing the draining corpse, then sidling over to Pavo. ‘Well whoever the Viper is, he won’t be coming for this one!’

And with that, the battle was over. Amongst the scattered bodies, Pavo spotted those in legionary armour, entrails strewn on the ground, white bone showing. But he remained calm. Upon first joining the legion, the veterans had described it as ‘the soldier’s skin’, the ability to detach from all emotion in the face of such brutality. All men in the ranks developed this after a few bloody encounters. He looked at the scars that lined his forearm; now he would have to explain it to some of the recruits.

‘What now?’ Sura panted, wiping his sword on the tunic of a Gothic corpse.

Pavo’s eyes darted around the arena, then he strode over to the timber cage and slashed at the rope that held its door shut. The huddle of villagers, starved and dirty, tumbled out, thanking the legionaries. The wide-eyed man from the cage clasped his forearm, introducing himself as the village chieftain, loyal to Fritigern.

But Pavo heard only a voice rasping in his head, repeating the words of the dead rebel leader over and over. The Viper has risen! And by dawn tomorrow, this plain will be alive with his northern allies!

He pushed the chieftain away and strode for the northern village wall, but the chieftain followed him.

‘Roman, I cannot thank you enough,’ he started, following Pavo up the watchtower stairs, ‘but you must listen. It may be too late even now!’

Pavo did not reply as he slapped each of his hands onto the timber stakes that formed a balcony atop the watchtower. The forest to the north was still. Then he spun to the man, his face stony. ‘Tell me what is happening here!’

The chieftain’s expression was grave. ‘He has lured you here, just as he has manipulated Athanaric, just as he has brought this darkness from the north!’

Pavo frowned. ‘Who has lured us here?’

The man’s eyes widened. ‘The Viper! The hooded shade in the green cloak, the one who plots the end for all Rome.’ He gestured to the snake banner flying above the village. ‘That is his mark!’

Pavo grimaced at this. ‘Then that banner will burn tonight!’

‘No!’ The Chieftain shook his head. ‘We must leave it in place — for when they come!’

‘For when who comes?’ Pavo frowned harder, then something in his peripheral vision sent a chill to his soul. He spun to the northern forest. It seemed to be writhing.

The chieftain backed away, eyes bulging, lips trembling. ‘It is as I feared. Our lives are already lost, this is a trap, Roman, a death trap. First Fritigern will fall, then your empire will tumble!’

Pavo saw the edge of the forest darken, then glimmer, as a wave of something flooded forward. Then a sea of torches sparked to life, illuminating it all.

A vast horde of warriors spilled from the trees, converging on the village.

There were many thousands of them, moving in clusters, each group distinctly armed and dressed. First there was a wave of mounted men. They resembled the Goths with their flowing blonde hair and pale features, but the majority wore scale vests, pointed conical helms and flew banners with emblems that were not of the Thervingi or any other neighbouring Gothic people. And they were fine riders, powerful in the gallop, holding a lengthy iron lance in a two-handed grip, carrying neither a shield nor holding the reins of their mounts, such was their grace. Alani, Pavo realised, the horsemen of southern Scythia.

Behind them marched a series of smaller groups of warriors, some mounted, some on foot, and each pocket of men was distinct in its appearance. The men of one group wore blue paint on their faces and bare shoulders and had their scalps scraped clean of hair around the sides and back. Another group wore furs and carried bows as tall as a man. Then another group wore a curious leather — Pavo’s eyes strained to see what it was, then his gut lurched as he noticed two red-rimmed holes in the fabric; human eyeholes. More and more groups rumbled towards the village and Pavo could only gaze through them, looking for an answer.

What terrible thing drives these people south?

Sura and Crito ran up to stand alongside him and the three gawped at the approaching mass.

‘Mithras, save us!’ Sura croaked.

‘Alani, Agathyrsi, Geloni, Neuri,’ Crito frowned, scanning the horde, pointing out each distinct group. Then he jabbed a finger at the edge of the northern forest, ‘but who or what are they?

Pavo and Sura craned over the watchtower edge, peering in the direction of Crito’s outstretched finger. From the forest, an even larger sea of shapes spilled forth, cupping and dwarfing the many tribes that already filled the plain. Riders. More than they could hope to count. Pavo’s eyes danced over the scene, a frown wrinkling his brow.

Then, a horribly familiar war horn moaned and brought with it the jagged cries of thousands of men and the drumming hooves of thousands of beasts. A set of invisible, icy claws walked up Pavo’s spine. He glanced to Sura and Sura glanced back.

Hunnoi!’ They spoke in unison.

Pavo’s stomach fell away. Every night since the torturous mission to the Kingdom of Bosporus, he had prayed that he would never set eyes on them again. But here they were, their fearsome appearance betrayed by the torchlight; stocky and powerful, with flat, yellow-tinged faces etched with three scar welts on each cheek. Their hair was shaved at the temples and forehead and pulled taut on top. They were armed with long cutting swords, composite bows, lassos, nets and daggers and were clad in goatskin and leathers.

‘The Huns?’ Crito’s face paled. ‘I thought they prowled far to the north, on the steppes beyond the edge of the world?’

Pavo pinned him with a wide-eyed look. ‘So did I. Indeed, I prayed they would remain there.’

‘If we’d stayed out there overnight. . ’ Crito started, jabbing a thumb to the plain and thicket south of the village. Then he swallowed the rest of his words, shooting a furtive and defiant glance at Pavo.

But Pavo didn’t care about the troublesome veteran or for his own pride; an invasion was coming like a tide, and they were to face it, alone. ‘Honestly, Crito, I don’t think it would have made any difference. They’re coming for us.’ He glared at the approaching mass, then eyed Sura and Crito. ‘If we are to die, then we die as legionaries,’ he spoke solemnly. ‘Have the men form up by the village gates.’

He drew his spatha. Sura and Crito did likewise. Then he filled his lungs to roar in defiance at the approaching horde. But the roar stuck in his throat when a hand was cupped over his mouth and another grappled roughly at his shoulders, pulling him down behind the lip of the palisade.

The village chieftain and a group of villagers had wrestled him, Sura and Crito to the timber platform and out of sight of the oncoming horde. He snarled at them, then stopped, seeing the consternation twisting their faces. The Goths jabbered in their own tongue, their tone urgent, pointing to the dark-green banner that fluttered above the village. Then the chieftain himself hushed his kinsmen and then turned to the Romans, pushing a finger to their lips for silence.

Pavo frowned. The marching horde was almost at the walls and the watchtower platform trembled like a leaf. He braced for what was to come.

Then a jagged cry called out from the blackness.

At this, the chieftain stood and waved, calling out, his tone warm. But, behind the palisade, he was waving his other hand at the Romans to stay down.

‘Whoresons! They’re in league with the rebel Goths and that lot out there!’ Crito spat, wriggling free of the Goth who restrained him then clutching at his sword hilt.

‘No!’ Pavo held up a hand, peering through the sliver of gap between the palisade stakes: the horde was spilling past the village like a river round a lonely rock. And then they continued to the southeast, towards Fritigern’s heartland. The Hun rider who had hailed the village was marshalling them in that direction and now stood, watching as the village gates were opened to allow the villagers to scuttle out and heap fresh animal carcasses onto the Hun wagons.

‘I might have been wrong about staying outside, but I’ll be damned if. . ’ Crito snarled, sliding his spatha from his scabbard.

‘No!’ Pavo repeated. ‘These villagers are on our side and loyal to Fritigern,’ his eyes darted across the timbers by his feet as it all fell into place, ‘but the horde think this village is sided with the Gothic rebellion,’ he glanced to Sura, nodding, ‘because of that.’ He stabbed a finger up at the dark-green snake banner. ‘That’s the only reason we’re not rent with a thousand arrows right now.’

Sura’s eyes widened. ‘But they’re headed for the river. We’ve got to get word back to Durostorum and the fort.’

The village chieftain crouched beside them, face whiter than snow, eyes wide. ‘Roman, there is no going back to your empire now,’ he whispered, ‘the Huns will fall upon Fritigern’s men and it will be a battlefield all along the great river. To travel through that land would be to run onto myriad sword blades and spears. I must implore you to stay here, for outside, the Viper is at large!’

Pavo frowned. ‘This Viper, he is a Hun?’

The chieftain frowned at this. ‘No, he is Thervingi.’

‘Then tell me, for Mithras’ sake, where is this man?’

The Chieftain shook his head, his face falling grave. ‘The Viper is no man; he once tried to unite all the tribes of Gutthiuda and rise against Rome, but he was slain before his ambitions were realised. Slain by Romans. Yet now, many years after his death, some say that his shade still rides on these plains, cloaked and hooded in green, seeking vengeance.’ The chieftain stabbed a finger out in the direction of the departing horde. ‘This is his doing!’

Pavo frowned, searching for the words to reply. He looked to Sura and Crito, who wore puzzled frowns. A shiver of doubt danced across his skin. ‘His shade rides on these plains. . ’ he began, then sighed and pinched his nose between his thumb and forefinger, screwing up his eyes as his head thundered with exhaustion and a thousand thoughts. ‘We don’t have time for this. We will be moving on as soon as we’ve had a moment to take on food and water.’

‘But you must stay, at least for tonight. Tend to your wounded, fill your bellies and rest properly.’

Pavo shook his head. ‘We are already behind that horde. Every heartbeat that passes will see them edge closer to the imperial borders. We leave. Tonight.’

Then he turned to Sura and Crito. ‘Thoughts?’

‘If Fritigern fights,’ Sura spoke first, ‘he’ll lose, surely. His armies are numerous and well-trained, but they are unprepared for. . that,’ he nodded in the direction of the departed horde, then shivered, pulling his cloak tighter.

Pavo nodded solemnly. ‘So what if he chooses not to fight? He is no fool — Gallus has always said that Fritigern won’t fight unless he knows he can win,’ he looked to Sura, his expression grave. ‘What if he chooses to run?’

Sura frowned. ‘Run, run where?’ Then his face fell.

‘The only place left for them to go. Across the Danubius. Into the empire.’

The first thick flakes of snowfall danced around Pavo, Sura and Crito as they gazed southeast, eyes wide.

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