Part 2
Euergetes stepped from his command tent into the snow. He was a cranky and foul-mouthed man, Euergetes the Profane some called him, and the bitter cold had brought out the worst in him, but he was of royal blood, so the men would followed him anyway. Of the entire family line, only seven men bearing the name Ptolemy had reached Britannia alive, Heruben the pharaoh-of-no-land included."Colder than a spartan's date..." he muttered. How the rest of the army was able to sleep in this cold was mind-boggling to him. His guess was that they couldn't. He and the rest of the men from egypt had seen many strange things in the weeks since their landing, such as the ice. Back in Alexandria, it was a luxury one only got with a lot of money and a good chemist. Here, it was everywhere. It blackened his soldiers' toes, clogged every well they dug in the camp, collapsed tents, and froze body armor into rigid paralysis. The Ptolemaics had never known what it was like to have their eyes frost shut, their boats trapped in harbors, and the snot freeze in their noses.
There were half a dozen hastily-constructed forts like his, scattered across the valley. He wondered how many of his family members in the other camps were also out in the snow, restless and uneasy, drumming their heads over their situation. Was that drumming he heard?
Euergetes ran over to the palisade barrier that had been erected to keep wild animals out of the camp, and climbed the nearest watch tower. The watchman inside had frozen to death, and Euergetes again cursed the british winter. Then he looked out over the plain beyond him.
The wooden gate flew open, showering the men with splinters. As soon as the Britons had removed the battering ram, their slingers began pelting the phalanx with stones and ice.
Turning back to the gate, he beheld the bodies of the dead, and then his own grinning soldiers. "Clean this shit up and start a pyre. It's already beginning to smell like a horse gave birth over here."
With spring came the melting of the ice, and the gray haze that smothered Britannia lifted. For the first time since their landing, the Ptolemaics saw the sun they had taken for granted back home. With the melting of the ice, however, came more ill news. Two fleets of the Britons had entered the frozen bay and destroyed the remnants of the egyptian fleet. The Ptolemaics were now stranded on Britannia.
On the way to Calleva, Heruben met the first organized enemy resistance.
The royal army deployed with a huge convex phalanx, a quarter mile long and eleven men deep the ends of which had been tucked in to protect the flanks. Behind this sat one and a quarter thousand archers and the two Ptolemaic commanders: Heruben and his brother Acestes Ptolemy.
Though a restless disquiet fluttered through his men, Heruben was confident. When he divided up the armies amongst his family members, he had taken the very best troops, who were now deployed in a position that was perfect for engaging any other hellenic army. Ever since he was a boy, he had benefitted from a classical greek education, including military tactics.
"Of course they are." Heruben responded, making no effort to keep his voice down. "More than ever. They have spent so long enduring hunger and seasickness, disease and the bitter cold of this land. They finally have a chance to endure a foe they can now fight back against."
The barbarian army was pouring over the hills, bolting through the dry, crackly grass with almost animal speed. "It's a pity we burned all our oil for heat," Acestes confessed, "I've never seen such a wasted opportunity for flaming arrows."
"Indeed." Heruben concurred. He raised his voice and began shouting orders "Archers! Fire at will! Fire as fast as you can when in range!" He saw the Britons moving with such speed that he knew the window of time between them entering firing range and close combat was slim.
A thousand bows twanged about him as their payloads took to the breeze.
The phalanx was quickly beginning to buckle.
"Straight from the scroll." Acestes chuckled. "The inhabitants of these islands are not easily intimidated. Some of them are almost suicidal in their bravery. Instead, we must frighten them with a show of force."
"I see." Heruben considered. "Once broken, these people are easily crushed."
"The phalanx is being pushed apart." Acestes warned, the urgent tone once again in his voice. "If you don't do something, our archers will be serious trouble."
"Right." The confidence was now back in Heruben's voice. "Thorakismenoi!" He shouted the order, "Charge!"
It was his turn to alarm the barbarians with something they had never seen before.
Despite it's advantageous deployment, the right flank of the Ptolemaic phalanx was in a state of collapse as the Britons threw themselves into their opponents' lines, howling in tongues and froth. The hoplites had dropped their spears for their swords and were fighting for their lives when the ground behind them began to rumble.
The barbarians paused, staring in horror at the approaching monstrosity. Legs like tree trunks, with bronze and gold for skin. It stood as tall as a house, with a mouth full of horns and a nose like a snake. Dozens of them, bellowing and stamping, the archers sat atop their shoulders sinking arrows into the victims below.
The royal elephants charged the panicked Britons.
"VICTORY!" Heruben thrust his sword into the air triumphantly, to the cheers of his men. He turned to his brother, "Would you say we were ready for this kind of victory?" He asked Acestes jovially.
It was Acestes' turn to be awed. The enemy army had been obliterated. "Yeah, that wasn't bad..." he mumbled absentmindedly, his gaze transfixed on the sea of the corpses of the enemy. The troops were wild with joy, where dread had been before, almost as if the harsh winter had never happened. The elephants were milling around, still excited from the combat, ripping up dirt and blades of grass with their trunks and throwing them at the bodies of the Britons before them, while their trainers attempted to soothe the beasts with wine and hay. "Not bad at all."
The annihilation of the Brittonic army at Brittania Superior sent shockwaves through the islands. In Brittonic and Gaelic cities all across the islands, whispers of the emerging threat of the Ptolemaics turned to shouts. A hastily-assembled confederation of clans calling themselves the Picts had begun to form, and it was even rumored that to the north the highlanders were preparing for war.
And while Heruben and his army celebrated their victory that night, a far more terrible battle was being fought in the north.