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Testi Bal sagoth - Blood Slakes The Sand At The Circus Maximus
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[Thoughts of an Iceni gladiator, awaiting the
opening of the arena portcullis:]
[Memories of rebellion (Carnage at Camulodunum):]
[Iceni Messenger:] Hearken! The Ninth Legion has
been put to the sword! The
war-Chief of Queen Boudicca: Onwards to
Camulodunum... wet your swords!
Redden the earth with Roman blood!
I remember the carnage at Camulodunum...
The glorious clash of Celtic sword against Roman
gladius,
The pride in the eyes of our war-queen
As we hacked down the Imperial Eagle,
And the severed heads of centurions gaping atop
our spears.
[Bloodshed and Battle: 61 AD (C.E.)]
They had gone too far, these invaders from the
east, with their imperial eagle
which they dared to drive into our sacred soil...
pompously claiming our
island as their own. They who marched across the
world expanding their empire
all for the greater glory of their succession of
debauched emperors, reclining
upon their ivory thrones in the heart of
sweltering Rome. Aye, they had gone
too far... After their brutal annexation of our
sovereign Iceni lands and the
vile rape of our Queen Boudicca's royal
daughters, the Romans had the sown the
fields of carnage and they would reap a grim
harvest of slaughter, without
doubt! They had enraged the Red Queen, and by the
gods, they would pay!
We certainly taught the arrogant invading dogs a
lesson, at any rate. The
omens and portents spoke of vast bloodshed and
great carnage, and after our
slaughterous victories at Camulodunum (the Temple
of Claudius burned
wonderfully!), Londinium and Verulanium, the
cursed Romans finally dared to
meet us honourably upon the field of war at
Mandeussedum. They sent fifteen
thousand legionaires, their armour gleaming like
gold in the sun... but it
would still yield to our swords and spears, no
matter how it sparkled.
The Roman scoundrel, Governor Suetonius
Paullinus, battle-scarred from his
campaigns against the Druids, was able to choose
the ground upon which to make
his stand, and so it was that he selected as the
battlefield a narrow valley,
fronted by a flat plain, with dense woodland at
its rear. Aye... Mandeussedum,
the place of the chariots... I remember it
vividly.
The Governor's army looked unnerved as wee took
the field. I'll never forget
that, iron Roman fortitude or not! We were one
hundred thousand strong,
infantry and cavalry, both men and women
warriors, as is our Celtic custom, in
the ranks together, all annointed with woad, all
roaring oaths and vows to our
ancient gods, who were surely grimly watching the
epic confrontation from
their great thrones and vast halls. Our
war-chariots thundered up and down the
Roman front, the charioteers screaming abuse at
the grim legionaires,
decurions and centurions, and hurling spears and
other missiles which
clattered against the Imperial shield wall. And
not one Roman javelin or pilum
was hurled in response, not one arrow was loosed
in retaliation. They were
disciplined, I'll give them that. We were swelled
by our victories, empowered
by our noble cause, enraged with the battle
frenzy; thirsting to take as many
Roman heads as our bright blades could sever!
And yet we were perhaps somewhat overconfident
that day...
[Abducted from the Iceni:]
In the aftermath of our defeat at Mandeussedum, I
was captured by Romans with
a veiled intent... (though three of them died at
my hands in the attempt!)
Nero was growing bored with the gladiators,
slaves and lion-fodder at his
great Circus, and so had requested Suetonius
Paullinus to provide the citizens
of Rome with new entertainment... The Emperor had
heard much of the wildness
and fighting spirit of these barbaric Britons who
had brought such woe to his
far-famed legions; these painted, pagan tribesmen
who had resisted the
Empire's iron fist where the glorious phalanxes
of the East had not.
Agents of the Imperium... hearken to my words,
Nero had demanded. Bring to
Rome some of these tribesman for the Games. Let
us pit them against our most
ravenous beasts and our greatest gladitorial
champions.
And so I was taken in fetters aboard a Roman
trireme, the blood of slain
legionaires still crusted upon my thews, I was
taken far from the fens of my
beloved homeland, to tread the sun baked sand of
the Circus Maximus... to
fight for my life in the Imperial Arena.
[Arrival at the Circus Maximus:]
The Circus Maximus was certainly a splendid
sight, I'll admit. A vast
colosseum with great stone columns and tiers,
huge ornate arches and mighty
statues of grey marble. Countless people filled
the seats surrounding the
sandy floor of the Arena... and in his opulent
royal enclosure, flanked by
gleaming guards and grovelling lackeys, sat the
great Emperor himself...
[Emperor Nero:] Fight, barbarian outlander!
Please us, and mayhap Mars will
smile on thee this day!
[Iceni warrior:] Bah! I do not hail to your Roman
gods, and you are not my
emperor! By Cernunnos, the blood of my enemies
shall stain the sand of this
cursed arena red this day!
[The Combat Commences:]
They unleashed the lions first. Hunger maddened
beasts, goaded into a frenzy
by the cruel point of many a pilum... And yet my
own hunger, the hunger for
revenge, was greater, and my honed steel was
sharper than bestial fang and
claw. And so they ranged their finest warriors
against me. Three more iron
gates around the arena yawned open, and they
strode from the colosseum tunnels
amidst a cacophony of cheering from the assembled
Roman spectators, urged on
and showered with martial adulation from the
massed arena crowd, who howled
their bloodlust without cessation.
I studied my opponents... there were two trained
gladiators, champions I was
told, who had never met defeat in the Games...
and then there was another like
me, a captured warrior forced to fight for his
life. This one was a towering
reaver from the Northlands with a bright yellow
beard, hefting a crude axe
with a single iron head. I lifted my iron bladed
Celtic shortsword with its
bronze hilt (the same sword which, mere days
before, had been slaked with
Roman blood... and its blade would soon be red
once more with the blood of my
captors, by all the gods!) and nodded to the
reaver. An understanding passed
between us... we knew we were here simply as
sword-fodder, and we knew we
would both fight these Roman dogs to the death!
The first gladiator moved towards me; he was a
giant of a man, standing nearly
seven feet tall and clad in dark leather and
bronze armour from head to toe.
His full-face visored helmet was set with ornate
metal fittings and encrusted
with jewels of various hues, and a vast black
horse hair plume rose from the
metal crown. Strapped on to his forearms were two
black vambraces, to each of
which had been secured twelwe inch serrated
blades, and they gleamed brightly
in the hot afternoon sunlight. He began to circle
me slowly, his eyes hidden
beneath his great helmet. To his left, I saw the
second gladiator begin to
close on the Northman. The yellow-bearded
axeman's opponent was a huge
steel-helmeted Nubian, wielding a wickedly
pointed trident and carrying an
embossed iron buckler with a great spike jutting
from its polished centre.
Far above, upon his great dias, the Emperor gave
the signal for the combat to
begin, and with the battle-lust engulfing me,
with the red mist swirling
before my eyes, I vowed to my northern gods that
I would show these leering
Romans the fighting spirit and battle prowess of
my people... I would leave
the arena littered with the bloody corpses of my
opponents...
I would cast off the imperial fetters and return
to the fens! Aye, I would
escape, and make all Romans fear my name, and
compel Nero to rue the day
Julius Caesar had first ordered his legions
across the grim grey sea to my
ancient island... BLOOD FOR BOUDICCA... CARNAGE
FOR CERNUNNOS!!
To be continued...
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