<SPAN name="chap0106"></SPAN>
<h3> VI. </h3>
<h3> DISOBEDIENCE. </h3>
<p>That the chase was doomed to be a vain one seemed apparent. Once mounted
and urging on their steeds with the shrill, barbaric cries of the desert,
Hannibal's light horsemen were safe from all ordinary pursuit. One after
another of the Romans drew up his panting animal, and scarce half of
their turmae pounded on.</p>
<p>Suddenly they saw the flying Numidians throw their horses upon their
haunches. A moment of indecision followed, and then, while several
darted off obliquely, the remainder, seven or eight in all, swung around
and charged straight at the legionaries. At their head rode a giant,
black as ebony save where gouts of red had splashed him with the hue of
terror. His frizzly hair was caught up high and ornamented with a
cluster of ostrich feathers, while with his right hand he drew javelin
after javelin from the sheaf he carried in his left, and launched them
with unerring aim at his former pursuers. Three had flown on their
errands, two had brought down a soldier each, and the third quivered in
the throat of Sergius' horse. Then, as the animal reared and went over,
carrying his rider with him, the assailant burst through the line, and in
a moment had gained the open plain beyond. Once more he was safe, safe
but for one short, thick-set rider,—Marcus Decius, first decurion of the
first turma, hastening to overtake his troop.</p>
<p>Escape from such a pursuer was child's play for the Numidian; but the
fury of fight was on him, and, gnashing his white teeth, from which the
thick, black lips seemed to writhe away, he bent low amid his horse's
mane and, with an inarticulate cry, urged him straight at the veteran.
His javelins had all been expended in breaking through the Roman line,
and a short, heavy dagger was his only weapon. Nothing daunted, he came
on, evaded like a flash the thrust of Decius' spear, and hurled himself
upon him. It was the small buckler of the Roman that saved his life; the
dagger passed through the ox-hide, slightly gashing his arm, and, before
the barbarian could withdraw it, the impact of the horses in full career
had sent both men and animals to the plain in a floundering heap. Again
the Numidian was quicker, and, gaining his feet, he sprang, weaponless as
he was, upon the decurion still struggling to untangle himself from his
fallen horse. The buckler, with the African's knife thrust through it,
had rolled away, and the possession of Decius' sword, which hung in its
sheath upon his right thigh, became the object of the struggle. Perhaps
the strength of the men was not very unequal; but the Roman, hardly free
from his mount, was undermost and wounded, so that the result seemed
hardly doubtful. The Numidian's charger had risen to its feet, and
stood, with out-stretched neck, whinnying softly, as if sharing in the
excitement of the contest. Then the trampling of hoofs sounded in the
ears of the straining combatants. Decius felt his adversary make a
convulsive effort as if to free himself, and then a gush of something
warm came into the Roman's face, and his foe sank down upon him, limp and
helpless. With a last effort of his spent strength, he pushed the
twitching body aside, and, staggering to his feet, saw Sergius standing
beside him, with a dripping sword in his hand, and the bridle of Titus
Icilius', the flag-bearer's, horse thrown over his left arm.</p>
<p>Remounting, they rode slowly back to their troop, and then the cause of
the strange boldness of the fugitives was disclosed. Advancing across
the plain directly in the path of their flight came four hundred of the
allied cavalry, whom the dictator had sent out to reconnoitre, and,
caught thus between two lines, the Numidians had, for the most part,
chosen to take their chances against the weaker force. Not one of the
marauders was alive, but they had sold their lives dearly; for a dozen of
the Romans also were dead, and a score more showed wounds that marked
this last spasm of barbarian frenzy.</p>
<p>While the men talked together, Sergius sought the praefect of the new
detachment, a Hostilian of the family of Mancinus, whom he recalled among
the young hot-heads that formed the party of the master-of-the-horse, and
declaimed against the policy of Fabius as cowardly and base. He found
him in the best possible humour, laughing and making coarse jests amid a
circle of decurions and optios—as rude a Roman as marched with the
standards, yet able, when occasion demanded, to play the man of fashion
who had spent a year at Athens. The latter mood fell upon him when he
descried Sergius. He came forward to meet him.</p>
<p>"Health to you, my Lucius!" he cried, "Surely the gods have held you in
especial favour this day. I am told you have cut up a few squadrons of
this African offal."</p>
<p>"With your timely aid," replied Sergius, bowing.</p>
<p>"I but made the hares double to your coursing," said Hostilius,
carelessly; "and they tell me you have won both the spolia opima and a
civic crown. That is a great deal for one day—and under a peaceful
dictator."</p>
<p>Sergius flushed.</p>
<p>"I shall not claim them," he said. "Doubtless, Decius would have both
slain the fellow and saved himself had I not come up—"</p>
<p>"No modesty! no modesty!" cried Hostilius, gayly. "I assure you it is
even less Greek than Roman in these days. Lo! now, I myself will claim
both for you at Rome, if only to show that I do not grudge you your share
of the carrion. Perhaps such honours will not prejudice you in a certain
house on the Palatine," he added, slyly. "But come! you and I shall join
our forces and raid together. We have sent two hundred to Acheron since
we left the camp, and birds have been singing on our left all the
morning."</p>
<p>"Where is the dictator now?" asked Sergius.</p>
<p>"In his tent, of course," replied the other, scornfully. "And no one
cares where that may be."</p>
<p>"And you?"</p>
<p>"Oh! he was persuaded at last to risk a scouting party, and, at the
request of the brave Minucius, he gave the command to me with strict
injunctions to use only my eyes. Well, I have used them so sharply that
my hands, too, have been full," and Hostilius laughed. "There are some
five hundred of the cross-food that have evaded me thus far. We shall
catch them now, though, and, together, it will be easy for us to prevail."</p>
<p>Sergius was silent. To make a dash from the heights in defence of allies
dying in his sight, was one thing; to deliberately join this
insubordinate in turning a reconnaissance into a raid, was another and
much more serious matter.</p>
<p>The praefect noted his hesitation, and a slight frown chased the smile
from his lips.</p>
<p>"Or perhaps you prefer to obey the old woman's orders," he added, "and
keep your couch warm. Well, our men and horses are fed by this time, and
I am off. If you are a Roman, I greet you to ride with me; if you fear
robbers or the axe that smote Titus Manlius, why, I will bid you farewell
and ride alone."</p>
<p>"Where do you set your course?" queried Sergius, with a vague hope of at
least seeming to combine inclination with duty.</p>
<p>"Toward the enemy," replied the other, shortly. "Does not the direction
please you?" and he turned to his horse.</p>
<p>Sergius' brow clouded. His blood was hot with the conflict just
finished. Youth, courage—all combined to turn him from obedience; but
obedience bade fair to conquer, when Marcia's laugh rang in his ears, and
he could hear her gravely complimenting his prudence and discoursing on
the rare value of docility in a husband. Besides, what did it all
matter? Had he not said that he sought death? and, surely, the way it
came soonest was the best.</p>
<p>Placing his hand upon his horse's withers, he vaulted upon its back,
before the animal had time to kneel, and a moment later was beside
Hostilius.</p>
<p>"By Hercules!" exclaimed the latter; "I am glad you are here. Even in
these days of strange things, I would have found it difficult to imagine
that a Sergian could be a coward."</p>
<p>"And now," cried Sergius, "you will only have to imagine him a fool. So
be it, and let the cost of his life pay for his folly."</p>
<p>"Jupiter avert the omen!" exclaimed Hostilius, shuddering, and then,
turning to his trumpeter, he bade him give the signal for the march.</p>
<p>It was a desolate country—the fair plains of Campania through which they
rode. Here and there a cluster of blackened ruins, here and there things
that were once men, fruit trees cut down, vines uprooted, corn-fields
reaped with the sword; while far away upon the horizon smoky columns
curled up to show that the work of devastation still went on.</p>
<p>"May Mavers curse him—curse him forever!" cried Hostilius, grinding his
teeth in rage at each new manifestation of the enemy's handiwork. "Could
the most disastrous battle be worse than this?"</p>
<p>Sergius was silent. In a way his feelings went out to meet those of his
companion; but the dictator had trusted him, and he had disobeyed, and,
for all his disobedience, his soldier's instinct told him that the
dictator was right.</p>
<p>Hostilius eyed him sharply and suspiciously, as if trying to divine his
thoughts.</p>
<p>"If you regret—" he began.</p>
<p>Suddenly a decurion of the allies dashed up beside them.</p>
<p>"Look!" he cried, pointing toward the east. "There is carrion for the
wolves."</p>
<p>Both leaders turned at the words.</p>
<p>Far out across the plain was what seemed at first sight like a clump of
dark foliage, save that it moved and changed shape too much.</p>
<p>"Numidians!" exclaimed the decurion, following his finger with his
speech, while the veins in Hostilius' forehead began to swell and grow
dark.</p>
<p>"The signal! Let it be given," he cried to his officer, and, turning, he
dug his knees into his horse's sides and galloped toward the distant
quarry. A moment later the cavalry wheeled at the trumpet call, and, in
some disorder but full of eagerness, began the pursuit of their leader.</p>
<p>As for Sergius, he, too, gave order and rein, though more deliberately,
and his troop followed the cavalry of the allies in somewhat better
array. By his side galloped Decius with an expression hard to analyze
upon his weather-beaten face.</p>
<p>Sergius glanced at the old soldier from time to time with a look of
inquiry and concern. At last he ventured to question his grim mentor.</p>
<p>"Is it well or ill, Marcus?"</p>
<p>"Ill for you that command, well for me who obey," growled the other, and
Sergius flushed and was silent.</p>
<p>"Shall we catch them?" he asked, a few moments later, for the clump of
Numidians, who had sat motionless upon their horses until the Romans
covered half the intervening distance, had now wheeled for flight.</p>
<p>"If they be too strong for us, we shall catch them," replied Decius. "It
is as they will."</p>
<p>And now it became apparent that the marauders were far inferior in
numbers to the assailants, and that they recognized the fact; for flight
and pursuit began in earnest. Horses were urged to higher speed. At one
moment the Numidians seemed to be holding their distance; at another, the
Romans gained slightly but unmistakably. All order of detachments and
turmae was soon lost; Romans and allies, officers and men, were mingled
together in a straggling mass, with naught but the eagerness of the
riders and the speed of their animals to marshal them. Only Decius
continued to pound along, with his horse's nose at his tribune's elbow.
The thunder of many hundred hoofs rolled across the plain.</p>
<p>"By Hercules! we shall do it!" cried Sergius, in whom ardour of the chase
had put to flight all sentiments of regret or doubt. "Do you not see we
are gaining?"</p>
<p>"They ride silently yet," said Decius. "It is but knee-speed with them.
Wait till they cry out to their horses, and we shall see."</p>
<p>Suddenly, as if to supplement the words, a single shrill cry, half
whistle, half scream, rose up ahead. Had they been closer, they might
have noted the pricking ears of the desert steeds; but this much they
saw:—one horse and rider darting out of the press, like arrow from bow,
and scurrying away over the plain as if their former gait had been but a
hand-gallop.</p>
<p>An instant of misgiving came to some few of the Romans, who were not
blind to everything but the excitement of the moment, but they, like the
rest, only plied knee and thong the harder, and the episode of the single
rider was forgotten by all save Marcus Decius and Sergius.</p>
<p>"It is a trap, master," said the former, with an inquiring glance at his
leader.</p>
<p>Sergius bowed his head, and his face was troubled, as he replied:—</p>
<p>"I know it, my Marcus, but we cannot turn back now. I have accepted the
feast: therefore I must recline until my host gives the signal to rise.
I pray you pardon me."</p>
<p>By a quick movement Decius urged his horse a stride ahead of the
tribune's, that he might the better hide his emotion; at the same time
growling:—</p>
<p>"I pardon you?—and for the chance of a blow at the scum? I thank you
many times."</p>
<p>And now, from the plain ahead rose a low range of rolling hills over
which a light cloud seemed to hover. Was it the ascent that wearied the
horses of the Numidians? Surely the space between pursuers and pursued
was lessening rapidly, and Hostilius leaned far forward, shaking his
spear and calling upon his men for a renewed effort.</p>
<p>"Now! now!" he cried. "See! they are spent! Up with them ere they top
the hill!"</p>
<p>But the Numidians gained the sought-for ridge, if only by a few
spear-lengths' lead, and the cloud, now close ahead, hung so dense that
there were those who thought it the smoke of another farm. Decius' eyes
seemed set in a dazed stare. There was too much red in that cloud, and
yet it was not the red of fire, and it was too light and too thin for
smoke. He knew it; he had known it all along, but what did it matter?
The last Numidian had disappeared down the opposite slope—no! surely
they had turned again, and in a longer line—a thicker one; and the light
javelins and naked black bodies had become long, stout spears and
glittering corselets, while at their head rode a slender man with forked
beard, and his black eyes seemed to burn in his head like coals. So,
with one barbaric roar, the whole array poured down over the allied
cavalry, and these were like the dust of the trampled field.</p>
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