Read The Redemption of Pontius Pilate Online

Authors: Lewis Ben Smith

Tags: #historical fiction, biblical fiction

The Redemption of Pontius Pilate (12 page)

Not that the games were unimpressive, however. Tiberius had hired some of the best gladiators from the legendary training facilities at Capua. Almost a hundred years before, Capua's gladiators, led by the legendary Spartacus, had revolted and led thousands of slaves to slaughter their masters and challenge the armies of Rome. Nothing so terrified a slaveholding society as the prospect of a widespread slave revolt, so Rome had dispatched four legions under the command of the wealthy Senator, Marcus Linnaeus Crassus, to defeat the
Spartacanii
. He had done so in impressive fashion, leaving thirty thousand of them dead on the battlefield and crucifying the twenty thousand survivors. All of Rome's slaves—over a hundred thousand of them—had been forced to walk down the Via Appia past the screaming, moaning rebels to see the price of raising a hand against one's master. Since then, Rome had never seen another slave revolt.

Over the next hundred years, Capua had rebuilt its training facilities and its reputation as a home of the best gladiators in all of Italy—although the owner of Rome's
Ludus Magnus
might argue that distinction. This day the group from Capua lived up to that reputation, wielding weapons with the utmost skill and with such raw courage that, even when one of them finally lost his match, the crowd howled for his life to be spared. The next losing contestant was not so lucky, however. He suffered a nasty gash to the ribs early in the contest that weakened his right arm, and was unable to wield his trident effectively. His opponent, from a rival
ludus
, slowly backed him across the arena, dodging the jabs of the trident and inflicting more minor cuts on him. The unfortunate
retarius,
steadily weakening, resorted to wild jabs with the trident in a vain effort to catch the sword of the
secutor
and tear it from his grasp. The wily blademaster refused to be drawn into a foolish thrust, however, and let his opponent slowly wear himself out. Finally the
retarius
lunged too far and stumbled, and the swordsman spun past him and cut his hamstring with one quick slash. The anguished opponent grasped the back of his leg with one hand, trying to hold his weapon steady with the other. It was the moment the
secutor
had been waiting for. He thrust his blade forward and jerked it upwards, catching the trident and tearing it out of his opponent's hands. He tossed it away and grabbed the man by the hair, raising his blade to the Imperial box and waiting to see what the Emperor's command was.

Little Caligula had been watching the match with great excitement, shouting encouragement throughout. Tiberius watched him with an approving eye, enjoying the child's excitement and enthusiasm. As the crowd grew silent, waiting for the Emperor's decision, Tiberius looked down at his adoptive grandson.

“What do you think, young Gaius?” he asked.

“That
retarius
did not fight well at all, did he?” the young Caesar asked.

“Not particularly,” said the Emperor. “His wound prevented him from using his weapon very effectively.”

“Then he should not have let himself be wounded so early in the match,” said Caligula gravely. “Perhaps he might serve as a lesson to others.”

The Emperor nodded sagely and then looked at the victorious
secutor.
He gave the man a curt nod, and the blade descended in a blinding arc, shearing through the throat of the defeated
retarius
and spilling his lifeblood onto the sand. The winner of the match bowed deeply at the Imperial box, then shook his blade at the roaring crowd. Slaves came out and removed the body, then raked the sand clean for the next match. Caligula drank in every detail with a look in his eyes that Pilate knew all too well. Here was a lad, he thought, whose instinct for cruelty might someday surpass his own. He wondered how well Caligula would control that fierce appetite.

By the end of the day, dozens more gladiators had faced one another on the sands, although only three more lost their lives. The matches were played out with such skill and cunning that the crowd, for the most part, cheered winner and loser alike. But the true star of the show was young Gaius. He yelled himself hoarse, prancing around the Imperial box and waving at the crowd until he finally tired out around midafternoon and crawled into his mother's lap. When the games officially ended at sunset, the Emperor's party left the box and its members were borne home by their respective litters. Pilate was tired but strangely energized, his face throbbing slightly, but the events of the day still shining in his mind. The Senate and People of Rome had seen the Imperial family standing together, and their Emperor paying proper honors to the memory of his slain adoptive son. Pilate wondered if it would be enough to allay their suspicions about Germanicus' death.

For the moment, it was. Whatever doubts Agrippina might have still harbored about the Emperor's role in her husband's death, she kept them to herself for the time being. Tiberius remained in Rome for another month, busying himself with affairs of state, and then returned once more to Capri, where he was spending more and more time of late. He left his loyal Prefect, Sejanus, in Rome to keep his finger on the pulse of the city, to monitor the Emperor's enemies, and to reward his friends. Sejanus excelled at both tasks, as Pilate found out that fall when he put his name before the Senate as a candidate for the office of Consul. While the elections were pretty well rigged and decided in advance by the Emperor and his allies in the Senate, they still were an exciting time for the Tribes and Assemblies of the People, who cast their votes eagerly. Pilate returned second in the polling, with the Emperor's son Drusus as his consular colleague. Drusus, however, was still the Proconsular Governor of Illyricum, and once the elections were done, he returned to his province, leaving Pilate alone to hold the highest office in the Roman
cursus honorum.
It was a proud moment, he thought, restoring honor to his ancient family and holding an office no Pilatti had held for over a century. The powers of the office had declined, to be sure, since the days of Gaius Marius and Lucius Cornelius Sulla, but the title was the same, and the
arctoritas
it carried still impressive.

Pilate's term as consul was uneventful, and when it was concluded, he was assigned by the Emperor as the Governor of Further Spain, a fairly quiescent province. Pilate was allowed to take his wife and daughter with him on this assignment, since Spain was not a war front. He was pleased with this prospect, since Porcia Minor was already nearly six, and he did not know how long his proconsulship would last. Pilate left Rome at the head of his legion, with his slaves instructed to bring the family by ship to Gades, where the governor's residence was built, at the earliest fair season.

Governorships were generally reserved for consulars—Senators who had held the office of consul at least once. They were granted
Proconsular imperium
the minute they crossed the
pomerium
, the sacred boundary of Rome, and held it until their authority was revoked by the Senate or until their successor took office and they returned to Rome. Governors had ample opportunities to do quite well for themselves—they controlled tax policy, issued all permits for merchants, miners, slave traders, and bankers within their province. Those permits cost money, and by longstanding tradition, governors were allowed to set their own prices—although a governor who charged too much and generated complaints to the Senate might well find himself hauled before the extortion courts upon his return. Governors who tried to squeeze the people of the province too hard could spark revolts, which never boded well for their future employment. All that being said, however, a clever governor could still accumulate a tidy fortune without ever generating a complaint. Rome wanted efficiency and order above all, and governors who maintained those things tended to do well for themselves while doing good for the Senate and People of Rome.

Pilate's tenure as governor of Spain ran for three years, and he enjoyed his time there. While the province was mostly pacified, he did have to lead his legions out twice—once to clean out a nest of pirates who had established themselves near Iria Flavia, and a second time to repel an invasion of Celtic warriors from the distant, legend-shrouded island of Britannia. Other than that, Pilate issued decrees, heard local cases, and generally made sure that the province stayed on an even keel. He received regular letters from his clients in Rome, and particularly from his favorite scoundrel, Quintus Sullemia, who had, upon his suggestion (and on Pilate's payroll), taken up residence in the Suburba and was now a regular Forum frequenter, following political events quite closely.

In the spring of Pilate's second year as governor, he received this missive from Sullemia:

To His Excellency Proconsul Pontius Pilate of Spain,

Well, things have been lively here in the city of Romulus of late. Your master, our beloved Emperor, becomes increasingly short-tempered and irascible, and those closest to him pay the price. It's mostly Agrippina's fault, of course—she has never forgiven Tiberius for the death of her husband, and still thinks he had a hand in it (you and I know, of course, how ridiculous such an accusation must be!). Matters between them are steadily eroding, and I look for a proper dust-up in the near future. Foolish woman! How can any female defy the will of an Emperor of Rome? I hear that she is longing to re-marry, but I doubt Tiberius will allow it.

But the juiciest gossip of the moment is not about her at all. Rather, it concerns our beloved Emperor's natural son, the esteemed proconsul and sot Drusus Caesar. You know, I trust, what a drunken brute Drusus is, and how little love is lost between him and his spouse Livilla, even if she did bear him twins a few years back. Of course Tiberius adores his son, the only issue of his much-loved first wife Vipsania, whom he still moons over even though their divorce is twenty years in the past. Now that Germanicus is gone, all Rome knows that Drusus will one day ascend to the purple—if he lives that long!

Now why would I say such a thing, you may wonder? After all, Drusus is a relatively young man, in good health despite his choleric temperament and penchant for too much wine. The answer is simple—Drusus has made himself a very deadly enemy. I refer to none other than your friend and mine, the erstwhile commander of the Praetorians, Lucius Sejanus. He and Livilla have been carrying on a torrid affair for several years now, and Drusus knows it. Last month he openly mocked Sejanus in the Forum, and actually punched him in the face in the presence of half the Senate! Sejanus may smile and scrape and bow before his imperial master, but when Tiberius is out of the room he is as vicious as a hyena. I personally think that Drusus signed his death warrant that day—although I could be wrong. And if he is man enough to survive the wrath of Sejanus, maybe he will be a better emperor than any of us suspect.

Your family is well—although Cornelius is up to his eyeballs in debt at the moment, trying to run for Urban Praetor in a crowded field. Do not be surprised if you get a letter requesting financial assistance in the very near future! Your sister Pontia seems to be making a career of fertility, bearing her husband yet another son two months ago. That is a total of six children for her, and four of them surviving the early years—something not many Roman matrons can boast.

I hope this finds you and yours safe and well. Please find me some interesting work in the future—I miss the sea and the feel of a pitching deck beneath my feet! But I remain your loyal client until we meet again.

Kill some pirates for me! Quintus Sullemius

Pilate read the letter with interest. It sounded as if Drusus was indeed living on borrowed time—Sejanus was not a man to cross! He wondered how Tiberius was faring. He had come to have, if not affection, a certain respect for the gloomy, aging Emperor. Tiberius cared not a fig for the affections of the mob, but he did seemingly care a great deal that the machinery of the Roman state should continue to run smoothly and efficiently under his watch. His cultivation of men like Sejanus and Pilate was all for one common purpose—to eliminate potential sources of strife and dissent. Yet, for all his detached nature, Tiberius seemed unable to see that his own son might be the source of all those things. Drusus was ill-tempered, often drunk, and notoriously short-sighted. He had inherited most of his father's vices, but none of his redeeming virtues.

Sure enough, not long after that, Pilate received word from official channels that the Emperor's only son Drusus had died, apparently of natural causes, after a heavy bout of drinking. Tiberius, it was said, was heartbroken at the loss of his beloved son, and was so overcome with grief he could not officiate at the funeral games. Apparently, if Drusus had been murdered, it was done with such skill and finesse that not even the suspicious old Emperor imagined that his son's death was not an accident. Sullemius himself could not find direct proof of poisoning, although he was convinced that Livilla was responsible.

Pilate found himself wondering who on earth would succeed Tiberius now. Germanicus had three sons, but his widow had become such a thorn in the Emperor's side that Pilate could not imagine him choosing one of them to be his successor. Still, Tiberius was awfully fond of young Gaius Little Boots. He remembered the boy's disturbing enthusiasm for the bloody games, unusual even for a Roman, and wondered what kind of Emperor he might make.

The next message he received from the Senate informed him that his term as Governor would not be prorogued a third time, and that he would be free to return to Rome and take up his seat in the Senate again as soon as his successor, Lintus Antoninus, arrived in Gades. It was with some regret that he informed his family about the upcoming move; Spain had been good to him, as his bulging bank accounts could attest. But still, he thought, Rome was where the action was. If he was going to continue to be the Emperor's man, and rise even higher in Tiberius' service, then that was where he needed to be. He also found himself interested in seeing his family again—he missed his brother Cornelius and his sister Pontia. His two younger brothers, Gaius and Marcus, had been away from Rome so long on military and political assignments that he rarely thought of them anymore, although the occasional letter from Cornelius informed him of where they were and what they were doing.

Other books

Loving, Faithful Animal by Josephine Rowe
The Fourth Deadly Sin by Sanders, Lawrence
Alpine Icon by Mary Daheim
Semi-Detached Marriage by Sally Wentworth
The Bad Boy by Evan Kelsey
Juliana Garnett by The Quest
Mr Destiny by Candy Halliday
Avoiding Mr. Right by C.J. Ellisson