Epilogue
The army of Aegypt gathered its heroic
dead for return to Aegypt. Ptolemy collected his looters and his
army and thrust north, scattering Demetrios but failing to catch
him, and came back to Gaza rich in loot and plunder and leaving
Palestine a flaming disaster behind him.
Satyrus and Melitta, like most of the survivors
of the battle, spent a day unable to move, and then were pressed
into duties - burying the dead. Hauling food.
There were never enough slaves, after a battle.
And the danger of renewed conflict was, at first, very real.
Demetrios saved most of his cavalry. His patrols began to prowl the
shore north of Gaza.
Weeks passed. Ptolemy took his cavalry on a deep
raid into Palestine, and cities opened their gates to him. Diodorus
rode at his side, and the loot was legendary. But finally, Ptolemy
turned for home, and the Phalanx of Aegypt led the march, fourteen
hundred veterans. When they entered Alexandria, they sang the
Paean, and the crowds cheered them as they cheered no other troops,
and Namastis embraced Diokles and Amyntas and Satyrus and Abraham
when they were dismissed as if they were all brothers.
And fathers and mothers wept for the dead.
But the war, and the world, marched on.
Alexander’s funeral games had cost a few thousand
more lives. But there was still no shortage of contestants.
A week after they returned to Alexandria, Leon
sent Satyrus to the slave market with twenty talents of pure gold
and Diokles and Abraham as his lieutenants. ‘Buy the best of the
Macedonian prisoners,’ Leon said.
‘What for?’ Melitta asked. Everything made her
grumpy now - Sappho’s displeasure and Coenus’s too-careful
attention.
‘They’ll be the core of our infantry,’ Leon said.
‘Next summer. When we sail for the Euxine.’
That made even Melitta smile, and she waved at
Satyrus as he left for the slave pens, accompanied by his friends
and some hired guards because of the money.
The captive phalangites looked terrible -
underfed, hopeless. They didn’t look like soldiers. Most didn’t
even raise their eyes as Satyrus walked among them, and they
stank.
‘We want these?’ Satyrus asked Diokles, who still
favoured his right shoulder and rubbed it a great deal.
‘There’s a sight for sore eyes,’ said a familiar
voice.
Satyrus turned his head, and there was Draco, and
Philip his partner.
Satyrus grabbed the slave factor. ‘I’ll take that
pair,’ he said.
‘That’s our boy,’ Draco said. He managed a smile.
‘Zeus Soter, lad. I thought we were dead men, and no
mistake.’
‘Dead and dead,’ Philip managed. He looked as if
he was dead.
Despite their filth, Satyrus hugged them.
‘What’s the game, then?’ Philip asked, eyeing the
gold.
‘I want two thousand of the best,’ Satyrus said.
‘Help me choose them.’
‘What for?’ Draco asked. ‘Ares’ dick, lad, that’s
more gold than I’ve ever seen except Persepolis.’
‘I’m raising an army.’ Satyrus grinned. ‘With my
sister.’
‘Well, lad, the best are mostly dead,’ Draco
said. ‘At Arbela and Jaxartes and Gabiene and a dozen other fields
across the world.’ He took a deep breath. ‘Free men? You’ll buy us
free?’
‘Of course,’ Satyrus said.
‘All right then,’ Draco said, and the fire
returned to his voice. Just like that. He straightened up, and
began to point at men who were lying in their own filth. ‘Party is
over, boys,’ he shouted. ‘We’re going to be free. This here is
Satyrus, and he’s our strategos.’
The Macedonians shuffled to their feet.
Satyrus watched, and was afraid. ‘Philokles used
to call war the ultimate tyrant,’ he said.
Abraham nodded. ‘Tyrant indeed.’