To Crown a Caesar (The Praetorian Series: Book II) (65 page)

BOOK: To Crown a Caesar (The Praetorian Series: Book II)
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I swore under my breath.  I didn’t need to offer any orders to my people.  They were too used to this kind of situation.  The two sets of Tweetledees and Tweetledums moved to help the new arrivals with the cargo containers.  Each were a little smaller than our original containers, but something told me they wouldn’t even stop a spear, let alone grenades.  Finally, Vincent helped Titus on his crushed leg, while Bordeaux picked up Madrina, who was still out cold.

Meanwhile, Helena and Artie stuck close to me as we gathered up whatever gear we could find.  Luckily, our camp was south of this shithole of a building, so we’d be able to recover the rest of our gear, whatever little we had left.

I tentatively strapped
Penelope
around my shoulder, while I tossed my bag to Helena.  I couldn’t hang on to the heavy rucksack with my arm in a sling, or with the pain in my side.  She helpfully accepted it, along with her own, checking her last P90 magazine for ammo.  I could see through the clear plastic magazine she only had a dozen or so rounds left.

I found my rig and slipped it on, keeping it unattached on my bad side.  I clippe
d my pistol holster to my thigh and felt like a complete man once again.  I pulled out my Sig, checked that it was loaded, and felt exponentially better knowing I at least had my sidearm to fall back on.

I caught Archer’s men already blazing a path through the blown out corner of the room, immediately turning south to avoid the approaching horde.  Our best bet was to get back to Vespasian, even though we were coming back empty handed.  I rushed to catch up to Archer on the way out.

“I need to know something, Archer.  Something that doesn’t make much sense on your end.”

“And what’s that, Hunter?”  He asked pretentiously.

I almost stumbled at his tone.  It suggested dismissal on my part, almost as if I were in his way, or that we were on a need to know basis, and I didn’t need to know.

I let it pass.  “What exactly are you doing here?”

He looked at me as we ran, his expression all of a sudden very angry.  “We’re here because your journal’s final entry had a lot to say.  The President was very interested.  We’re here because somewhere along the way, something goes seriously wrong.”

“So?”  I replied.  “You were in your own timeline before you left, and you seem exactly as I remember.  It can’t be that bad.”

“That’s the problem, Hunter.  It is that bad.  We’re here because you fucked up beyond measure, and you need to fix it.”  He threw me a cocky grin.  “And we’re here to help.”

 

 

 

 

To be Continued

 

 

 

 

A Note from the Author

 

Throughout the past four years of my life, as I’ve labored to both write and publish the book you have just read and the one that preceded it, I never considered myself a writer.  How could I?  Writers are something special.  The Great Ones.  The Wayne Gretskys of their craft.  Guys like Steinbeck and Salinger, or my personal favorites like Herbert and Heinlein.  Ladies too.  Wonderful writers like Woolf and Austin.  Hell, J.K. Rowling.

And yeah, maybe even
guys like Crichton.

Just not this
Crichton.

Writers make it look effortless, and it shows in their product.  Writers may struggle to get where they are, but
once they’ve reached the mountaintop, they rarely disappoint those mere mortals beneath them.  Sure, many of them have an army of alpha readers, agents, editors and publishers, all of whom have the simple job of ensuring the product is as good as it can be, but it doesn’t matter.  Even without all that, Writers are amazing and do what few can even dream of doing.

But I’ve dreamt of it for years, and the end result is what has been laid out on these pages before you, and other pages you may have already read or are soon to read.  It’s not much.  Just my humble attempt at doing what the greats do so effortlessly: entertain others
with original stories.

And despite it all, I’m proud of my efforts.  I know you must have slopped through some distracting grammatical errors
, dumbly placed commas…, , inane character quirks, and questioningly dumb decision making capabilities, but the story is what it is.  Nobody’s perfect, like Helena likes to say, least of all the author, me, who is in fact only human.  Perhaps if my wife had more time to read my work or if my friends would actually turn in
edited
drafts of the stuff I give them or if I’d taken more writing courses instead of history classes back in college, this story may have been something more.

But despite all that, I’m completely happy
with my work.  Proud of it.  Ecstatic to share it with the world in fact.  Because every story I write is like a new baby entering my life.  No matter how it turns out, I’ll always love it and will always be there to support it.  No matter what quirks it accumulates over the years and trials it has to endure, I’ll always be there for it.  And with some luck, I’ll have made some good friends along the way who share in my love for it, willing to support it as much as I do.

That’s all I c
an really ask for, and I hope you’ll be there for the ride.

 

 

 

 

Coming Soon

 

Keep Reading
for a look at the third book in the ongoing
Praetorian
Series:
A Hunter and His Legion
, due out in the Winter of 2013:

 

 

Not quite as far in the future as last time…

 

 

“Quick to the point, I see,” Vespasian remarked.  “Why don’t you introduce your friends first?”

I started with Artie and Archer.  I made no mention of the fact that they had just arrived, or that Artie was my sister.  Vespasian gave her a curious look as he made his way to grasp her hand, maybe noticing she wasn’t the military type, maybe thinking she was attractive, I didn’t know.  He already knew Gaius and Marcus, who simply saluted smartly as he passed by.  He kissed Helena’s hand, just as he did last time we’d met, my frustration at the gesture the same then as it was now.

“Can I marry him yet?”  Helena whispered to me in English.

I ignored her and finished by introducing Santino, who looked as uninterested as usual, but Vespasian perked up at the name.

“Ah,” he remarked, “so you are the ‘funny one’ then.”

Santino turned to me and smiled, “I’ve always liked that Galba.”

I rolled my eyes.  Of all of us, Santino was the only one our old Roman comrade, Galba, had liked. 

None of us
had any idea why.

“I have something for you actually,” Vespasian remarked causally, making his way towards his chest.

Only taking a few seconds to rummage through his gear, he brought out a long, thin object wrapped in a heavy cloth.  He brought it to Santino, who looked at it stupidly before accepting the gift, only to continue looking at it stupidly.  Noticing his hesitancy, Vespasian beckoned for him to open it.  As opposed to a kid on Christmas morning, Santino gingerly gripped the cloth and peeled it away slowly, carefully.

I leaned in for a better look but all I could see was something metallic and sharp.  Santino squinted at it curiously, as though trying to piece together the puzzle of what the object could be before revealing it completely.  The process was agonizingly slow, and I couldn’t even care less what it was.  Either Santino was acting particularly stupid, which wasn’t hard to imagine, or whatever he was holding was familiar to him.

Finally, unable to contain his curiosity any longer, Santino ripped open the cloth to reveal a long fixed blade knife.  But not just any knife. 
His
knife.  The one he had lost all those years ago the day we tried to recover Agrippina’s baby, Nero.  He’d thrown it at the then villain of this story, Claudius, but it had been intercepted by one of the Caesar’s Praetorians.

It was an incident that
had oddly bothered him ever since.

I’d never understood his attachment to the thing until only a year ago after Helena had bought him a replacement blade, a twelve inch curved blade, reminiscent of an Arabian scimitar.  I had caught him one day daftly balancing the knife by the blade on the tip of his fingernail.  A clever party trick, to be sure, but it was also something he did when something was bothering him.  I’d about had enough of his annoying sorrow over his lost knife, so I’d confronted him on it.  For someone who treated women like disposable paper cups, his attachment to the thing was disconcerting, and my curiosity had been driving me insane.

His story had been surprisingly heartfelt.

I never knew much about his family, something he’d always been reluctant to talk about, but I knew he had a younger half-brother still in high school, but other than that, his family story was a void.  As it turned out, Santino had been very close with his father, a bond formed living on the mean streets of one of New York’s seedier areas.  His father had been a welder, a salt of the earth blue collar man who worked hard just to put food on his family’s table every night.

As a hobby, his father collected knives.  Everything from kitchen tools, to ornate decorative ones, to military grade ware.  His collection was immense, but he never squandered his money at the expense of his family.  It was his only hobby.

But the hobby ended when Santino was thirteen and had discovered his father dead in his bedroom, paramedics later diagnosing it as a heart attack.  The very next day, a package came in the mail addressed to Santino’s father.  Young Santino had opened it to discover the same knife he had carried with him ever since.  It was the last in his father’s collection, and the only one Santino had decided to keep.  His mother had sold the rest in preparation for their move away from New York after she had remarried and gave birth to his half-brother.

I glanced at Santino, who stood dumbstruck by what he saw balancing in his palm.  I’ve seen him speechless before, embarrassed to the point of sulking, sad, happy, but never what I was seeing right now.  He looked as though his life was complete or that he had somehow reclaimed a piece of his lost soul.

“How?”  He stuttered.  “Where?”

Vespasian smiled.  “It was sent to me during my time in Germany.  It had a note on it saying to deliver it to, ‘the funny one.’  At the time, I had no idea what that meant as Galba had yet to inform me of you people.”

“Who sent it?”  Santino asked

“The note was simply signed: Varus.”

Now Santino looked almost heartbroken.  He dropped his hands to his lap, and his jaw hung open slightly.  Every second Santino had spent around Varus, he had spent it pestering, annoying and bullying him.  But now he’s learned that the man who had once probably hated him had in fact risked his life to send him his knife back, a man who was now dead, a man Santino had pestered even upon their last meeting.

I wondered if the reality of Varus’ death had truly hit him until just now.

Slowly, he looked back up at Vespasian.

“Thank you.”  He said, about as speechless as it came for him.

“You’re welcome,” Vespasian said.  “We’ve sharpened it for you.”

In response, Santino tossed the knife in the air and caught it on the palm of his hand, balancing it upright by the handle.  He flipped it again and caught it before spinning it around his finger like a Wild West cowboy would do his gun, managing to sheath it in his belt in one fluid process.

W
inking at Vespasian, he said, “thanks.”

Vespasian nodded, amused, and turned back to me.

“So, now that formalities have been taken care of, let us get down to business.”

“I hope you mean the business of crucifying this man,” Herod remarked from the corner.

Vespasian turned.  “Herod, I am sorry about your shoulder, but please, leave it be.  There are bigger forces at work here beyond Judea.”

“Is that so?”  Herod asked.  “Please enlighten me.”

“Sorry,” I interrupted, “but you don’t need to know.”

“Do not speak to me, traitor.”

I rolled my eyes and bluntly said, “We need to go to Alexandria.”

“Then go,” Vespasian said.  “You do not need my help to get there.  If you leave now you could be there in a matter of
days.”

“Well...” I said
, dragging it out like children would do with their parents.  “Alexandria isn’t our final destination, and where we’re going may require a little help.

“What kind of help.”

“The military kind.”

Vespasian waited patiently for me to continue.

“I need a few cohorts of legionnaires, an equal amount of auxilia, enough equipment for three times that size of a force, and enough naval vessels to transport it all from here to...” I hesitated, wondering if maybe I’d overplayed my hand, “to Britain.”

Vespasian scoffed.  “Is that all?”  He asked nonchalantly.

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