The empire is on its knees, but a last hope lies
beyond the eastern frontier . . . 377 AD: Emperor Valens
has stripped the Persian frontier of its legions,
sending every available man to Thracia in an effort to
contain the rampaging Gothic hordes. Now, covetous eyes
have fallen upon Rome’s trade-rich but sparsely defended
desert provinces. Shapur II, Shahanshah of the Sassanid
Empire and his many client kings have long believed
Rome’s eastern holdings to be theirs by ancestral right,
and those lands have never been more vulnerable. Thus,
Valens must grasp at the slimmest of hopes that a
Persian invasion can be staved off, not by the brute
force of absent legions, but by the tenacity of a hardy
few. For in the heart of enemy lands, something thought
long lost might just offer salvation. When Optio
Numerius Vitellius Pavo and a select group of the XI
Claudia are summoned to the Persian front, they leave
Thracia behind, knowing little of what awaits them. They
know only that they are to march into a burning land of
strange gods. They whisper tales of the mighty Persian
Savaran cavalry and pray to Mithras they will see their
homes and families again. All too soon it becomes clear
to them that this is no ordinary mission – indeed, the
very fate of the empire might rest upon their efforts.
But for Pavo the burden is weightier still, for he knows
that the east also holds something even more precious to
him . . . the truth about his father.
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