Salamis (31 page)

Read Salamis Online

Authors: Christian Cameron

So having formed, we broke apart, like a pack of wolves breaks when they see the deer.

I ran back to Leukas. ‘Pick one by Xanthippus and put me where I can board
Horse Tamer
,’ I said.

Then I ran forward to the marines. ‘Let me past,’ I grunted. Hipponax was there – wherever he’d been off to, he was back. He wouldn’t meet my eye – the young man personified. He was up to something, and it did not matter in that moment.

Brasidas grinned at me – very un-Laconian. ‘Good to have you here.’

‘We’ll make you a Plataean yet, with all these displays of wild emotion,’ I said, but I clapped him on his armoured shoulder and smiled at the men around us.

‘We winning, boss?’ Achilles, my cousin, asked. As if we were friends.

So we were. ‘When we clear the centre,’ I began. Then I realised they had no notion what was happening. ‘We’re going aboard Xanthippus’s ship,’ I said. ‘Clear the Medes off
Horse Tamer
and I promise you we will win. This is it. All or nothing.’

I stood up and an arrow slammed into my aspis. We were close. But the gesture is everything. Men had to know.

I pointed to the golden throne, less than a stade away.

‘Want to show the Great King what you think?’ I roared. ‘He’s right there, watching us.’

Arrows came past me. Ka and his pair were using us as cover, shooting carefully. They had their own orders – to kill archers. Every marine with an aspis was a shield, and we practised this.

My marines began to sing the paean – just ten men. But by the gods … by the gods, my eyes fill with tears to say it, the sailors and the oarsmen took it up. Oh, that moment, and that day.

The paean of Apollo came off my benches and spread to other ships. I have met men from
Horse Tamer
who said that the sound of the paean coming towards them was the sound of salvation, that they joined in who could.

Leukas put our bow into the bow of a Phoenician ship that was grappled alongside. It was a daring, precision strike, and the result was spectacular. We smashed into his bow, our own oars safely in, and we were just a few finger widths to the inside of his bow, so that after the shattering first blow, our ships went between
Horse Tamer
and the enemy ship, popping the grapnels and breaking the ropes, smashing the enemy ship’s cathead and heaving it away, oars smashed, rowers injured, and cutting all its marines off from their ship. It wasn’t as instantly satisfying as the strikes that sank ships immediately, but it was one of the two or three finest ship-strikes I’ve ever witnessed.

We boarded
Horse Tamer
. We were long side to long side, stern to stern, and Seckla led the sailors in grappling close and then boarding. Seckla did not wait for me to tell him to go. My big deck gave me the power of carrying more marines and more sailors than most, and as I’ve said, most of my sailors were better armoured than more people’s marines.

We went from our bow into his bow, right into the teeth of an Ionian contingent coming from another ship directly opposite us. The press of ships was amazing – like nothing I’ve ever seen.

No time to think about it. No time to worry that my own ship was going to be boarded – unavoidable.

I leapt first. I went aspis to aspis with a man as big as me or bigger. He lost his footing in the blood, and down he went.

That one to Ares, and no doing of mine.

Brasidas, despite the terrible footing and the three-sided fight in a densely packed foredeck, got his shield lapped with mine like the veteran he was.

It took the Ionians too long to realise we were not on their side. They were Samians – oh, the delicious revenge on that nest of traitors! I killed three before they fully understood and Brasidas heaved them off the forward gangway, back onto their own ship, and I lost him there. He chose to board into the Ionian ship. You must imagine that Xanthippus’s ship had three enemies bow to bow, like limpets stuck to a fish, and the Ionian was one, we were one, and the third was a sleek ship with a red hull.

Again, there was no time to think. Brasidas went forward into the Ionian and Hipponax went with him, and Alexandros and Sitalkes.

Idomeneus was in his old accustomed place at my shoulder. Achilles came with me, and the others.

There was no quarter asked or given. They were under the eyes of their emperor, and we knew we were fighting for everything.

Nor can I pretend to remember every blow. I know my spear broke and instead of going for my sword I hammered away at my opponent, a smaller man, with my butt spike, hitting him again and again, stunning him with my blows until his strong left arm sank. I hit him with the sauroter to his helmet and he staggered, limbs loosed, but I hit him again and his helmet collapsed into his skull, and it too gave way.

I took a wound there – he may have been the one who got me, as he was a canny fighter. It was in my sword arm, and the bronze saved most of it. But not all.

I didn’t know. I powered forward down the narrow catwalk. Behind me my people were still singing the paean, which was wonderful, because by the blessing of Poseidon the Athenian rowers by my feet knew I was on their side, and they began to foul the enemy and stabbed up into the catwalk with daggers and javelins, and suddenly the Phoenicians in front of me collapsed. Few survived to run – they were literally pulled down, as if by the tentacles of a monster called oarsmen, except one or two brave men, who stabbed down with their spears and leapt back to gain space to make a stand.

But another ship disgorged its marines into us from
behind
me.

The first I knew was that I could not feel Idomeneus pressing into my back. Long practice taught me to turn if he was gone, and there were plumes, towering plumes, the kind that our forefathers wore, the kind I wore in our first contests, a dozen or more of them, and lots of armour, and red cloth, red paint, red enamel. Very showy.

Idomeneus was adding to their red display. His face was lit by a beautiful, godlike smile, very like the one that Harpagos had worn. His right arm was poised high when I glanced at him, his smile like that of a man who has seen a god or found true joy, as he batted a thrown spear out of the air with his spear shaft, in just a twitch of his hand. His aspis licked out, caught his opponent’s, rim to rim, and pulled it aside, and his high right hand shot forward – his spear point went in under his opponent’s chin, buried to the base, so that when Idomeneus pulled, his wretched adversary tried to grab the point and was dragged forward; the spear shaft shattered, and Idomeneus used it like a club, as I had earlier, and then threw it overhand at the man behind his current opponent – all this in the time a runner would take two breaths. I couldn’t look longer.

I still had men in front of me. I had to be sure of them, and the man who’d backed away now dropped his spear and fell to his knees. His eyes pleaded for life. Behind him, another Phoenician was cut down from behind by a Greek, while a third was almost buried in my sailors.

I
hate
killing prisoners. It is against the will of the gods, against the justice men demand from men, and against the code by which warriors should act.

But I had a shipload of marines coming behind me and I could not leave this man to pick up his spear and attack me. And past me, my friends.

I killed him. I hate that I did, but there were other lives dependent on my actions. Probably he would have stayed in submission – or perhaps the sailors or the oarsman would have finished him. Or perhaps he’d have killed me, then Idomeneus, and then the rest, turning the tide of battle.

It does not matter. It was my choice, between one beat of my heart and the next, the way a man must choose inside the battle haze.

This is why we all despise the war god and his rage. But I did it, and then I turned, leaving remorse for other times, and put my shoulder behind Idomeneus’s back, and began to stab underhand with my victim’s spear, attacking his opponents in their thighs and feet.

And then he was down. He was standing, fighting like a statue of Poseidon come to life, and then a well-thrown javelin from his open side caught him in the side, under his sword arm. He finished his cut, sending one more foe ahead of him to Hades, and then he fell, with blood spurting far into the rowers’ benches – heart’s blood.

I got my left foot over him as he fell and squirmed, face down, the spear shaft still in him, and I went shield to shield with his killer. That blow broke mine, the laths of wood that supported the bronze face all cracking in against the layers of rawhide and linen. But his rim cracked and I stepped as far as I dared off to my right with my right foot, the ruin of my shield flapping like a sail in an adverse wind, but his spear stroke, overhand, couldn’t penetrate the bronze and rawhide wreckage as I tabled my shield, gathered my left leg to my right and reached over our locked shields and pounded my point down into the place where the shoulder and neck meet. My spear went in so effortlessly and so far that I lost hold of it, and Idomeneus’s killer fell, blood gushing from his mouth, and by the gods, he was in Hades before my friend.

But the marines in red were big, well armed, confident and capable, and the next man came forward undaunted. I was overextended, still amazed at the power of my overhand blow and its success, and he pushed his shoulder into me and knocked me over, and then only Ka saved me, as my adversary grew a black feathered arrow in his chest and fell over Idomeneus and his killer.

There were so many men on Xanthippus’s ship by then that it tipped back and forth like a living thing, and I began to wonder if a trireme could capsize from too many men on her fighting deck.

Like some of the newest Athenian ships, the heavy ones, Xanthippus’s
Horse Tamer
had a full top deck, so that the rowers sat in their boxes protected from arrows – and so that Xanthippus could carry twenty marines. But all this weight was high, which was bad for stability, and had to be countered with more ballast, which in turn made the ship harder to row and slower.
Storm Cutter
had been a similar ship, in her earliest form, and I confess that the full deck gave an element of protection to the rowers that was lacking when all they had was a canvas screen – and that deck also allowed a series of beams that helped stiffen the hull much better in heavy weather. But against that, the more difficult diekplous tactics of the Phoenicians required a lighter ship with a faster turn. Both fleets had every kind of trireme. Big and small, high and low, every shipwright had to try his hand at the perfect arrangement of rowers and oars, fighting deck and mast space.

When the Athenians built their new navy they made the rational decision to build heavy ships with big decks so that they could dominate boarding actions against the lighter, better-rowed ships of their traditional nautical enemy, Aegina. Of course, the sea wolves preferred the lighter, faster ships – and those of us who had fought in the west, off Magna Graecia, had come to prefer the hemiolas, which seemed to me then, and still seem to me, the best compromise of rowing, sailing, heavy hull and fighting platform.

I mention all of this because it is otherwise difficult for you youngsters to imagine that we were twenty feet above the water on a slightly convex deck that shed water and blood to the sides, and the sides had no real bulwarks, but just a narrow ‘catch-all’ the width of a man’s hand. In other words, a man who fell had a tendency to go overboard. My backplate was pressed against the ‘catch-all’ and my right arm dangled – empty-handed – over the sea.

The red marine towered over me, or so it seemed to me. And there, in utmost vulnerability, I knew him. It was Diomedes.

He recognised me, and just for a moment hesitated – savouring the moment of triumph? Wanting to take me prisoner to torment me? Who knows. His arm was poised for the kill – I was flat on my back in the blood at the deck edge and had no weapon and my aspis was broken and mostly off my arm.

I rolled over the side. It is hard to say exactly why. I think my last thought was to deny my boyhood foe his triumph. Or perhaps I had the sense to take my chance on Poseidon, who had saved me before.

I hit the water before I had time for another thought.

What’s that? Yes, sweet, I drowned – went to the Elysian Fields, met Achilles, and was then brought back by beautiful naiads, a dozen of them, who led me to an underwater cave, armed me in fresh armour, and then swam me to the surface.

No.

Impact with the water finished my aspis and wrenched my left shoulder, but I didn’t notice it. I was barefoot, and my armour weighted me down, but I had time to catch a breath and I had the wreck of my aspis off my arm in a heartbeat – and then I was swimming. Just for a moment I was deep, under the hull of
Horse Tamer
and looking up at the surface. There were dozens of men in the water, and blood – and sharks. And the hulls of ships as far as the eye could see, projecting down into the water with sunbeams slanting away into the depths.

Poseidon, it was terrifying down there, and the more so as I was afraid I was sinking, and I panicked, thrusting my arms out like a fool. But before I breathed water and gave myself to Poseidon, I made myself take a stroke, and I shot up – I could match my progress against the wreckage – and then I was close enough to the surface to raise my heart, and then I was breathing, the plumes of my helmet a sodden, hairy mess in my face, and I didn’t care.

I couldn’t rest. I had to keep swimming.

But Pericles and his friend Anaxagoras saved me.
Naiad
, the Lesbian ship, had come in to Xanthippus’s stern to put marines into the back of the fight and save the men still fighting around the helm. Anaxagoras had been the first man aboard
Horse Tamer
over the stern, and Pericles saw me go over the side. And saw – still waiting for his turn to go aboard the
Horse Tamer
– that I came to the surface. He grabbed a boarding pike and held it over the side from the marines’ box of
Naiad.
I grabbed it, and young Pericles hauled me aboard.

Other books

Children of Paradise by Laura Secor
Catch a Shadow by Potter, Patricia;
Forbidden Music by Michael Haas
Jenna & Jonah's Fauxmance by Emily Franklin, Brendan Halpin
The Engines of Dawn by Paul Cook