Vespasian 4-6 by Robert Fabbri

Vespasian 4-6 by Robert Fabbri

Author:Robert Fabbri
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Atlantic Books


PART III

ROME, JUNE AD 47

CHAPTER XI

THE SEA, CALM and azure, reflected a myriad of tiny, transient suns off its gentle undulations. Vespasian squinted and pulled his face into an expression even more strained than had become the norm during his last six years under the Eagle of the II Augusta. Above, the cause of each fleeting flash of golden light burnt down from its midday high onto his uncovered, thinning hair with an intensity that had been just a memory to him after so long in northern climes far away from Rome. Feeling the strength of the sun warming his body warmed his heart in equal measure as he watched the warehouses, cranes and tenements surrounding the ship-lined harbour of Ostia, just a mile away on the southern bank of the Tiber mouth, come closer with every shrill-piped pull of the trireme’s one hundred and twenty oars.

The flitting shadows of gulls played on the wooden deck, bleached by sun and salt and worn smooth by sailors’ calloused feet; swooping and soaring above, they serenaded the ship with their mournful cries as they escorted it on its final leg of the sixday voyage from Massalia via Corsica. Vespasian turned his head left, shading his eyes, and tried to focus on the huge construction site a couple of miles north of the Tiber and Ostia; two great curving moles extended into the sea enclosing what would be a spacious harbour at whose centre, on a rectangular man-made island, stood the beginnings of a lighthouse.

The trierarchus, standing next to him, saw the direction of his gaze. ‘Claudius had one of the great ships that Caligula built to transport obelisks from Egypt filled with rocks and concrete and then sunk to provide the foundations for the lighthouse.’

Vespasian whistled softly as he surveyed the thousands of tiny figures slaving away – literally – on the new port and the buildings surrounding it. ‘That is a massive undertaking.’

‘It’s even bigger than what you can see; Claudius has ordered that a canal be cut to the southeast to link the port to the Tiber. That way the river transports won’t have to brave the open sea with the prevailing wind blowing straight up the river mouth as they have to when coming to and from Ostia.’

‘It’ll put Ostia out of business.’

‘I doubt it; Rome is becoming so big that she needs two mouths to feed her.’ Laughing at his wit, the trierarchus began to issue incomprehensible orders of a nautical nature, sending bare-footed sailors scurrying around the deck in preparation for docking.

Vespasian adjusted his toga and walked over to join Magnus, leaning on the larboard rail and admiring the scale of the project. ‘Do you remember when we sailed into Alexandria and saw the Pharos, and I said that’s the way to be remembered: build something that benefits the people?’

‘What of it?’ Magnus asked, not bothering to turn his blind eye to Vespasian.

‘You asked who built the Circus Maximus and when I didn’t know you said, “See, it doesn’t always work.



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