CHAPTER ELEVEN

THE PAST
79 A.D.

“We must stop by Thera,” Kaia announced as the ship slipped its moors in the port of Brundisium.

“Why?” General Cassius asked.

This was their first chance to really talk since leaving Rome. They had traveled the Via Brusdisii by horse, switching at every stage to new horses, escorted by a troop of Praetorian Guard. The smoothly set stones that made up the way were flanked by a deeply rutted dirt track on which the horses ran. The road, an example of spectacular engineering, was designed for marching troops and carts, not speedy horses.

The road passed thirty miles to the east of Pompeii, and they had ridden at night, the way lit by the red glow on the top of Vesuvius. They’d encountered columns of dazed refugees, and what they heard confirmed what Falco and Kaia had seen: Pompeii had been completely destroyed. The tales of horror were so bad that Falco had forced himself to stop listening. The only solace he had was that he knew his children had died quickly; at least that was the sense he had had in the arena. He had been quiet the entire ride, his mind turned inward, dwelling on the fact that his special talent always seemed linked to death and mourning.

“There is someone at Thera I must talk to,” Kaia replied.

Captain Fabatus was the commander of the ship, a forty-foot-long galley, part of the imperial fleet. It was designed for speed rather than cargo, with sleek lines and two rows of oars poking out of the side, manned by sixty slaves. There was a small contingent of soldiers, one contuberium of eight men. They were there more to keep control over the slaves than for defense, as the Mediterranean and Aegean were Roman seas.

Fabatus was as short, fat man, with a face weathered by the sea. He had outlined the route the ship would take. Southeast around the tip of Greece, passing between there and Crete, then through the Hellespont and into the Pontus Euxinus to make landfall and link up with the XXV Legion.

“My orders are to take you where you wish,” Fabatus said, “but Thera is a little off our route.”

“Who is it you must see?” Falco asked.

“The oracle of Akrotiri.”

Cassius nodded as if that made perfect sense. “How far out of the way is Thera?” he asked Fabatus.

“A half a day, but it is a bad place.”

“A bad place?” Falco repeated. He was wearing the uniform of a centurion, and the armor felt strange, not the same as that which he had worn in the arena. He had brought his gladiator armor with him, but it was tucked away in his campaign bag.

“There is a harbor inside the island,” Fabatus said. “Two ways in with high land all around. It would be an excellent anchorage, superb indeed. But no one uses it.”

“Why?” Falco pressed.

“Bad spirits,” Fabatus said. “Neptune does not favor it. A man would be a fool to go there unless it was absolutely necessary.”

Falco knew that seamen were an extremely superstitious lot, almost as bad as gladiators, but both groups had reason to be. Their lives and livelihood were very dependent on forces beyond their control.

“Is there a harbor on the outside of the island?” Cassius asked.

“A small dock at the base of the cliff,” Fabatus said.

“You will make for that,” Cassius ordered.

Fabatus waddled off into the dark, muttering under his breath about landlubbers and whims of the gods.

“I am tired,” Cassius said. “I must get some rest.”

“I will take watch,” Falco said.

“We are in the bosom of the empire,” Cassius said. “Do you think a watch is needed?”

“Even more so because we are in the bosom of the empire,” Falco said.

Cassius’s teeth flashed in the dark as he smiled. “Very good, Centurion. The right answer as always. I will relieve you in four hours.”

Cassius headed toward the rear of the galley. Falco and Kaia could hear the slap of oars in the water and the low steady beat of the drum as the mater below decks kept the rhythm for the slaves who handled the rowing. Falco felt the cool breeze of the Mediterranean on his skin and knew that here was no such comfort below decks.

“Who are you?” Falco asked, a question that had bothered him since the arena and her assistance in his fight.

“You know my name.”

Falco waited.

Finally she turned to him. “Why don’t you tell me who you are first?”

Falco shrugged. “I was a slave. A gladiator. Then a soldier. Then a gladiator again. And now it appears I am a soldier once more.”

“Where did you come from?”

Falco nodded toward the center of the boat and down. “You might as well go there and ask those chained to the oars where they come from. Most don’t know. My earliest memories are of chains and the fields and the darkness of the mines. I even rowed on a ship like this for six months, chained to my seat, fearing and yet praying at the same time that we would go down in a storm or pirates would take the ship, Sicily was the first clear place I remember, but I don’t think I was born there.”

“And you’ve always been different from those around you?”

“Yes.”

“But you loved someone,” she noted.

“How do you know that?”

“I felt your pain when your children died, and I saw a woman through that pain. An even greater pain.”

“Drusilla.”

“A pretty name,” Kaia said.

“She was the only nice person I’ve ever met,” Falco said simply. “I could always feel what others felt. Slaves.” — he indicated the inside of the ship once more—“are either dulled into nothingness or seething with rage. The latter don’t last long. Drusilla, even though she was a slave also, was different. She saw beauty in the smallest things. I don’t know why. But I could sense that in her.”

“And because you appreciated the best part of her, she loved you,” Kaia said.

Falco had never examined the why of his love for Drusilla or hers from him, so he didn’t reply. This was not something he felt comfortable talking about.

“You were lucky,” Kaia said.

Falco was surprised. “Lucky? She’s dead. My children are dead.”

“But you had her for the time you had her,” Kaia said simply. “It is more than most have. To experience joy you have to risk pain.”

“Easily said.”

“No so easily,” she said without elaborating. “Why did you choose killing?” Kaia asked.

“It is what I am good at.”

“No, it’s something you became good at,” she said. “You used your gift to kill.”

“My gift?”

“Your sense of others.”

“And what did you use it for?”

“Nothing yet,” she said with a slight smile. “I was isolated throughout my childhood, meeting only with those the oracle sent to me. Various teachers and instructors. I am beginning to see why she kept me so alone. I might have ended up like you.”

Falco shifted, and she hurriedly continued.

“I do not mean to be disrespectful. Just realistic.”

Falco felt uncomfortable both with the conversation and wearing the armor of a centurion. The deference paid to him by the crew of the ship and the slaves was also disconcerting. He had become so used to the arena and the strange life one led there, he had forgotten about this world he had once been a part of. In the arena, the blade and sharp point ruled. Outside the arena, there was the lanista, the nobles, the servants, and the other gladiators. In the arena, all were equal, at least for the moment. Even outside the arena, a gladiator was judged by what he had done inside it. But here, one was treated differently by rank, whether earned or not. In the arena, rank was earned.

“Why have you chosen me?” Falco demanded, tired of her questions. He noted that she had never answered his question that started the conversation.

“I saw you in a vision.”

“You believe your visions?”

“Yes. Some have come true. Others will come true.”

Falco reluctantly nodded. “Some things I have seen in dreams, they came true.”

“What about things you have dreamed that haven’t happened yet?” she asked.

Falco spat over the railing at the water going by. “Many I can’t remember. Some are very strange.”

“I recommend that for the rest of this journey, you focus on your dreams,” Kaia said. “And tell me what you see. I need you for more than your sword arm.”

* * *

The Oracle of Delphi was standing in the entrance to the Corycian Cave, peering into the darkness, her hands pulling her heaviest cloak tight around her bony shoulders. Still she shivered. She had sent all the priestesses away to the town. They had protested, but in the end, their discipline had held. A fog was seeping through the sacred grove, swirling about the trunks and branches of the trees.

They were out there in the darkness. Searching. Coming closer with each passing moment. She could sense their coldness, but no thoughts, no emotions. The closest thing she had ever sensed like this was when a group of travelers from the east had passed through, bringing with them a large black cat they called a panther to present to the emperor in Rome for the games. The creature had given off the same coldness. But the panther had been driven by hunger and rage. She had no clue of the driving force behind what was coming.

Her eyes shifted back and forth, but her sight had been failing for years, and she saw nothing. She knew they were very close. Looking over her shoulder, she could see the omphalos was glowing, giving off a blue light that illuminated the walls of the cave.

Since being moved here to Delphi, the stone had never glowed. Hours earlier, the faint glow had been the first sign to alert her that danger was coming. Where the omphalos came from, she didn’t know. What it warned of, she wasn’t exactly sure, but from what she was sensing, she knew her time was coming to a close.

Something flitted in the dark. She peered. A white figure moved through the trees. Then another. Valkyries. They were coming toward her. As they got closer, she could see the smooth white skin, the lack of nose or mouth, just red eyes glaring at her. They floated, not touching the ground, a half foot of darkness separating them from the grass below.

The oracle stepped forward, raising her wooden staff. “You can not come here!” She cried out, her voice sounding old and weak even to her, she who had advised kings and emperors and had thousands wait upon her slightest utterance.

The strange beings took no notice. One came right up to her, halting four feet in front. The other headed past her into the cave. She stuck her staff out, but it didn’t’ even notice the obstruction, pushing through. After searching the cave, it was back with its partner. The two Valkyries hovered in front of her.

The oracle stood tall, staring at the red eyes.

Something flickered out from under the cloak of the creature on the left, a very thin spear moving faster than the oracle could follow. It hit her right above and between her eyes, piercing through skin, bone, and into her brain. She staggered backward from the impact.

She would have fallen, but one of the Valkyries was behind her, claws on her shoulders, holding her up. There was a line from the spear to a small box held by the first Valkyrie.

The oracle, through the pain, could feel the invasion of her mind, the search, and she knew what they were looking for. And she knew they would find the knowledge soon.

She surprised the Valkyries by jerking forward, slamming her head toward the hard chest of the one in front, shoving the probe through her skull and out the back. She slumped dead in the second Valkyrie’s claws. The first reeled in the probe, pulling it back through her head, blood and brain matter spilling out as it popped loose.

It turned and floated away. The second leaned over and swiped at the body with a long, razor-thin claw at the end of a finger. It sliced through the oracle’s neck, severing her head from her body. It reached down and picked up the head, cradling it in both clawed hands. Exerting tremendous pressure, it crushed the skull, brains and blood bursting out between fingers.

It followed the other Valkyrie and disappeared into the dark.

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