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<h2> CHAPTER X: BESET </h2>
<p>During the winter Hannibal made every preparation to ensure the
tranquillity of Spain while he was absent. In order to lessen the number
of possible enemies there he raised a body of twelve hundred horse and
fourteen thousand infantry from among the most turbulent tribes, and sent
them across to Africa to serve as garrisons in Carthage and other points,
while an equal number of African troops were brought over to garrison
Spain, of which Hasdrubal, Hannibal's brother, was to have the government
during his absence.</p>
<p>Hanno, an able general, was to command the force which was to be left in
southern Gaul to keep open the communications between the Pyrenees and the
Alps, while the youngest brother, Mago, a youth of about the same age as
Malchus, was to accompany him to Italy. Hannibal's wife and a child which
had been born in the preceding spring, were sent by ship to Carthage.</p>
<p>In the early spring the march commenced, the army following the coast line
until it reached the mouth of the Ebro. The mountainous and broken country
lying between this river and the Pyrenees, and now known as Catalonia, was
inhabited by fierce tribes unconquered as yet by Roman or Carthaginian.
Its conquest presented enormous difficulties. There was no coherence
between its people; but each valley and mountain was a stronghold to be
defended desperately until the last. The inhabitants, accustomed to the
mountains, were hardy, active, and, vigourous, ready to oppose a desperate
resistance so long as resistance was possible, and then to flee across
their hills at a speed which defied the fleetest of their pursuers.</p>
<p>Every man was a soldier, and at the first alarm the inhabitants of the
villages abandoned their houses, buried their grain, and having driven
away their cattle into almost inaccessible recesses among the hills,
returned to oppose the invaders. The conquest of such a people was one of
the most difficult of undertakings, as the French generals of Napoleon
afterwards discovered, to their cost. The cruelty of the mountaineers was
equal to their courage, and the lapse of two thousand years changed them
but little, for in their long struggle against the French they massacred
every detachment whom they could surprise among the hills, murdered the
wounded who fell into their hands, and poisoned wells and grain.</p>
<p>The army which Hannibal had brought to the foot of this country through
which he had to pass, amounted to 102,000 men, of which 12,000 were
cavalry and 90,000 infantry. This force passed the Ebro in three bodies of
equal strength. The natives opposed a desperate resistance, but the three
columns pressed forward on parallel lines. The towns were besieged and
captured, and after two months of desperate fighting Catalonia was
subdued, but its conquest cost Hannibal twenty-one thousand men, a fifth
of his whole army. Hanno was for the time left here with ten thousand
infantry and a thousand cavalry. He was to suppress any fresh rising, to
hold the large towns, to form magazines for the army, and to keep open the
passes of the Pyrenees. He fixed his headquarters at Burgos. His
operations were facilitated by the fact that along the line of the sea
coast were a number of Phoenician colonies who were natural allies of the
Carthaginians, and aided them in every way in their power. Before
advancing through the passes of the Pyrenees Hannibal still further
reduced the strength of his force by weeding out all those who had in the
conflict among the mountains shown themselves wanting in personal strength
or in military qualities. Giving these leave to return home he advanced at
the head of fifty thousand picked infantry and nine thousand cavalry.</p>
<p>The company under Malchus had rendered good service during the campaign of
Catalonia. It had accompanied the column marching by the seashore; with
this were the elephants, the treasure, and the heavy baggage of the army.
It had throughout been in advance of the column, feeling the way,
protecting it from ambushes, and dispersing any small bodies of tribesmen
who might have placed themselves on heights, whence with arrows and slings
they could harass the column on its march. The company had lost
comparatively few men in the campaign, for it had taken no part in the
various sieges. Its duties, however, were severe in the extreme. The men
were ever on the watch, scouting the country round, while the army was
engaged in siege operations, sometimes ascending mountains whence they
could command views over the interior or pursuing bands of tribesmen to
their refuges among the hills.</p>
<p>Severely as Malchus had trained himself in every exercise, he found it at
first difficult to support the fatigues of such a life; but every day his
muscles hardened, and by the end of the campaign he was able to keep on
foot as long as the hardest of his men.</p>
<p>One day he had followed a party of the tribesmen far up among the
mountains. The enemy had scattered, and the Arabs in their hot pursuit had
also broken up into small parties. Malchus kept his eye upon the man who
appeared to be the chief of the enemy's party, and pressing hotly upon him
brought him to bay on the face of a steep and rugged gorge. Only one of
the Numidians was at hand, a man named Nessus, who was greatly attached to
his young leader, and always kept close to him in his expeditions. The
savage, a bulky and heavy man, finding he could no longer keep ahead of
his fleet footed pursuers, took his post at a narrow point in the path
where but one could oppose him; and there, with his heavy sword drawn, he
awaited the attack. Malchus advanced to meet him, sword in hand, when an
arrow from Nessus whizzed past him and struck the chief in the throat, and
his body fell heavily down the rocks.</p>
<p>“That is not fair,” Malchus said angrily. “I would fain have fought him
hand to hand.”</p>
<p>The Arab bowed his head.</p>
<p>“My lord,” he said, “the combat would not have been even; the man had the
upper ground, and you would have fought at a grievous disadvantage. Why
should you risk your life in a fight with the swords, when my arrow has
answered all purposes? What should I have said if I had gone back without
you? What satisfaction would it have been to me to avenge your fall? What
would they have said to me when I told them that I looked on idly while
you engaged in such a struggle? Valour is valour, and we all know that my
lord is the bravest among us; but the life of the cousin of our general is
too valuable to be risked for nought when we are embarked upon a great
enterprise.”</p>
<p>“Look, Nessus! what is there?” Malchus exclaimed, his attention attracted
by a dark object which was crossing the narrow path some distance ahead
and ascending the steep side of the gorge. “It is a bear, let us follow
him; his flesh will form a welcome change for the company tonight.”</p>
<p>The bear, who had been prowling in the bottom of the ravine, had been
disturbed by the fall of the body of the savage near him, and started
hastily to return to its abode, which lay high up on the face of the
cliff. Malchus and his companion hurried forward to the spot where it had
crossed the path. The way was plain enough; there were scratches on the
rock, and the bushes growing in the crevices were beaten down. The path
had evidently been frequently used by the animal.</p>
<p>“Look out, my lord!” Nessus exclaimed as Malchus hurried along. “These
bears of the Pyrenees are savage brutes. See that he does not take you
unawares.”</p>
<p>The rocks were exceedingly steep; and Malchus, with his bow in his hand
and the arrow fitted and ready to draw, climbed on, keeping his eyes on
every clump of bush lest the bear should be lurking there. At last he
paused. They had reached a spot now but a short distance from the top. The
cliff here fell almost perpendicularly down, and along its face was a
narrow ledge scarcely a foot wide. Along this it was evident the bear had
passed.</p>
<p>“I should think we must be near his den now, Nessus. I trust this ledge
widens out before it gets there. It would be an awkward place for a
conflict, for a stroke of his paw would send one over the edge.”</p>
<p>“I shall be close behind you, my lord,” said Nessus, whose blood was now
up with the chase. “Should you fail to stop him, drop on one knee that I
may shoot over you.”</p>
<p>For some fifty yards the ledge continued unbroken. Malchus moved along
cautiously, with his arrow in the string and his shield shifted round his
shoulder, in readiness for instant action. Suddenly, upon turning a sharp
corner of the cliff, he saw it widened ten feet ahead into a sort of
platform lying in the angle of the cliff, which beyond it again jutted
out. On this platform was a bear, which with an angry growl at once
advanced towards him. Malchus discharged his arrow; it struck the bear
full on the chest, and penetrated deeply. With a stroke of his paw the
animal broke the shaft asunder and rushed forward. Malchus threw forward
the point of his spear, and with his shield on his arm awaited the onset.
He struck the bear fairly on the chest, but, as before, it snapped the
shaft with its paw, and rising to its feet advanced.</p>
<p>“Kneel, my lord!” Nessus exclaimed.</p>
<p>Malchus dropped on one knee, bracing himself as firmly as he could against
the rock, and, with his shield above his head and his sword in his hand,
awaited the attack of the enraged animal. He heard the twang of the bow
behind him; then he felt a mighty blow, which beat down his shield and
descended with terrible force upon his helmet, throwing him forward on to
his face. Then there was a heavy blow on his back; and it was well for him
that he had on backpiece as well as breastplate, or the flesh would have
been torn from his shoulder to his loins. As the blow fell there was an
angry roar. For a moment he felt crushed by a weight which fell upon him.
This was suddenly removed, and he heard a crash far below as the bear,
pierced to the heart by the Arab's spear, fell over the precipice. Nessus
hastened to raise him.</p>
<p>“My lord is not hurt, I hope?”</p>
<p>“In no way, Nessus, thanks to you; but my head swims and my arm is well
nigh broken with that blow. Who would have thought a beast like that could
have struck so hard? See, he has dented in my helmet and has bent my
shield! Now, before we go back and search for the body, let us see what
its den is like.”</p>
<p>“Do you take my spear, my lord; your own is broken, and your bow has gone
over the precipice. It may be that there is another bear here. Where one
is, the other is seldom far off.”</p>
<p>They advanced on to the platform, and saw in the corner of the angle a
cave entering some distance into the hill. As they approached the entrance
a deep growl was heard within.</p>
<p>“We had best leave it alone, my lord,” Nessus said as they both recoiled a
step at the entrance. “This is doubtless the female, and these are larger
and fiercer than the males.”</p>
<p>“I agree with you, Nessus,” Malchus said. “Were we on other ground I
should say let us attack it, but I have had enough of fighting bears on
the edge of a precipice. There is as much meat as we can carry ready for
us below. Besides, the hour is late and the men will be getting uneasy.
Moreover, we are but half armed; and we cannot get at her without crawling
through that hole, which is scarce three feet high. Altogether, we had
best leave her alone.”</p>
<p>While they were speaking the bear began to roar angrily, the deeper notes
being mingled with a chorus of snarls and whinings which showed that there
was a young family with her.</p>
<p>“Do you go first, Nessus,” Malchus said. “The rear is the post of honour
here, though I fancy the beast does not mean to come out.”</p>
<p>Nessus without a word took the lead, and advanced across the platform
towards the corner.</p>
<p>As he was in the act of turning it he sprang suddenly back, while an arrow
flew past, grazing the corner of the rock.</p>
<p>“There are a score of natives on the path!” he exclaimed. “We are in a
trap.”</p>
<p>Malchus looked round in dismay. It was evident that some of the natives
must have seen the fall of their leader and watched them pursue the bear,
and had now closed in behind them to cut off their retreat. The situation
was a most unpleasant one. The ledge extended no further than the
platform; below, the precipice fell away sheer down a hundred feet; above,
it rose as high. The narrow path was occupied with numerous foes. In the
den behind them was the angry bear.</p>
<p>For a moment the two men looked at each other in consternation.</p>
<p>“We are fairly caught, Nessus,” Malchus said. “There is one thing, they
can no more attack us than we can attack them. Only one can come round
this corner at a time, and we can shoot or spear them as they do so. We
are tolerably safe from attack, but they can starve us out.”</p>
<p>“They can shoot over from the other side of the ravine,” Nessus said;
“their arrows will carry from the opposite brow easily enough.”</p>
<p>“Then,” Malchus said firmly, “we must dispose of the bear; we must have
the cave. We shall be safe there from their arrows, while, lying at the
entrance, we could shoot any that should venture past the corner. First,
though, I will blow my horn. Some of our men may be within hearing.”</p>
<p>Malchus pulled forth the horn which he carried. It was useless, being
completely flattened with the blow that the bear had struck him.</p>
<p>“That hope is gone, Nessus,” he said. “Now let us get the bear to come out
as soon as possible, and finish with her. Do you stand at the corner with
your arrow ready, in case the natives should try to surprise us, and be
ready to aid me when she rushes out.”</p>
<p>Malchus went to the mouth of the den, struck his spear against the side,
and threw in some pieces of stone; but, although the growling was deep and
continuous, the bear showed no signs of an intention of coming out.</p>
<p>The Arab was an old hunter, and he now asked Malchus to take his place
with the bow while he drove the bear out. He first took off his bernous,
cut off several strips from the bottom, knotted them together, and then
twisted the strip into a rope. Growing out from a crevice in the rock,
some three feet above the top of the cave, was a young tree; and round
this, close to the root, Nessus fastened one end of his rope, the other he
formed into a slip-knot and let the noose fall in front of the cave,
keeping it open with two twigs placed across it. Then he gathered some
brushwood and placed it at the entrance, put a bunch of dried twigs and
dead leaves among it, and, striking a light with his flint and steel on
some dried fungus, placed this in the middle of the sticks and blew upon
it. In a minute a flame leaped up. “Now, my lord,” he said, “be ready with
your sword and spear. The beast will be out in a minute; she cannot stand
the smoke.”</p>
<p>Malchus ran to the corner and looked round. The natives were at a distance
along the ledge, evidently with no intention of attacking a foe of whom
they felt sure. A taunting shout was raised and an arrow flew towards him,
but he instantly withdrew his head and ran back to the platform.</p>
<p>A minute later there was a fierce growl and the bear rushed out. The
brushwood was scattered as, checked suddenly in its rush by the noose, the
animal rose on its hind legs. In an instant the spear of Nessus was
plunged deeply into it on one side, while Malchus buried his sword to the
hilt in its body under the fore shoulder of the other. Stabbed to the
heart, the beast fell prostrate. Nessus repeated his blow, but the animal
was dead. Five young bears rushed out after their mother, growling and
snapping; but as these were only about a quarter grown they were easily
despatched.</p>
<p>“There is a supply of food for a long time,” Malchus said cheerfully; “and
as there is a drip of water coming down in this angle we shall be able to
quench our thirst. Ah! we are just in time.”</p>
<p>As he spoke an arrow struck the rock close to them and dropped at their
feet. Others came in rapid succession; and, looking at the brow of the
opposite side of the ravine, they saw a number of natives.</p>
<p>“Pull the bear's body across the mouth of the cave,” Malchus said, “it
will prevent the arrows which strike the rock in front from glancing in.
The little bears will do for food at present.”</p>
<p>They were soon in the cave, which opened beyond the entrance and extended
some distance into the mountain; it was seven or eight feet wide and lofty
enough to stand upright in. Nessus lay down behind the bear, with his bow
and arrow so as to command the angle of the rock. Malchus seated himself
further in the cave, sheltered by the entrance from the arrows which from
time to time glanced in at the mouth. Only once did Nessus have to shoot.
The natives on the ledge, informed by their comrades on the opposite side
of the gorge that their foes had sought refuge in the cave, ventured to
advance; but the moment the first turned the corner he fell over the
precipice, transfixed by an arrow from the bow of Nessus, and the rest
hastily retreated.</p>
<p>“Hand me your flint and steel, Nessus, and a piece of fungus. I may as
well have a look round the cave.”</p>
<p>A light was soon procured, and Malchus found that the cave extended some
fifty feet back, narrowing gradually to the end. It had evidently been
used for a long time by wild animals. The floor was completely covered
with dry bones of various sizes.</p>
<p>As soon as he saw that this was the case Malchus tore off a strip of his
linen shirt, and rolling it into a ball set it on fire. On this he piled
up small bones, which caught readily, and he soon had a bright and almost
smokeless fire. He now took the place of Nessus. The latter skinned and
cut up one of the small bears, and soon had some steaks broiling over the
fire. By this time it was getting dusk without.</p>
<p>When the meat was cooked Nessus satisfied his hunger and then sallied out
from the cave and took his post as sentry with his spear close to the
angle of the rock, as by this time the natives on the opposite side, being
no longer able to see in the gathering darkness, had ceased to shoot.
Malchus ate his food at his leisure, and then joined his companion.</p>
<p>“We must get out of here somehow, Nessus. Our company will search for us
tomorrow; but they might search for a week without finding us here; and,
as the army is advancing, they could not spare more than a day; so, if we
are to get away, it must be by our own exertions.”</p>
<p>“I am ready to fight my way along this ledge, my lord, if such is your
wish. They cannot see us to fire at, and as only one man can stand
abreast, their numbers would be of no avail to them.”</p>
<p>“Not on the ledge, Nessus; but they would hardly defend that. No doubt
they are grouped at the further end, and we should have to fight against
overwhelming numbers. No, that is not to be thought of. The only way of
escape I can think of would be to let ourselves down the precipice; but
our bernouses would not make a rope long enough.”</p>
<p>“They would not reach a third of the distance,” Nessus replied, shaking
his head. “They have been worn some time, and the cloth is no longer
strong. It would need a broad strip to support us.”</p>
<p>“That is so, Nessus, but we have materials for making the rope long
enough, nevertheless.”</p>
<p>“I do not understand you, my lord. Our other garments would be of but
little use.”</p>
<p>“Of no use at all, Nessus, and I was not thinking of them; but we have the
skins of the bears—the hide of the old bear at least is thick and
tough—and a narrow strip would bear our weight.”</p>
<p>“Of course,” Nessus said. “How stupid of me not to think of it, for in the
desert we make all our rope of twisted slips of hide. If you will stand
sentry here, my lord, I will set about it at once.”</p>
<p>Malchus took the spear, and Nessus at once set to work to skin the bear,
and when that was done he cut long strips from the hide, and having
fastened them together, twisted them into a rope.</p>
<p>The bernouses—which when on the march were rolled up and worn over
one shoulder like a scarf, as the German and Italian soldiers carry their
blankets in modern times—were also cut up and twisted, and in three
hours Nessus had a rope which he assured Malchus was long enough to reach
to the bottom of the precipice and sufficiently strong to bear their
weight.</p>
<p>One end was fastened to the trunk of the young tree, and the rope was then
thrown over the edge of the platform. One of the young bear's skins was
fastened round and round it at the point where it crossed the edge of the
rocky platform, to prevent it from being cut when the weight was put upon
it, and they then prepared for their descent.</p>
<p>“Do you go first,” Malchus said. “As soon as I feel that the rope is
loose, I will follow you.”</p>
<p>The Arab swung himself off the edge, and in a very short time Malchus felt
the rope slacken. He followed at once. The first twenty feet the descent
was absolutely perpendicular, but after that the rock inclined outward in
a steep but pretty regular slope. Malchus was no longer hanging by the
rope; but throwing the principal portion of his weight still upon it, and
placing his feet on the inequalities of the rock, he made his way down
without difficulty. Presently he stood by Nessus at the foot of the slope.</p>
<p>“We had better make up the ravine. There will be numbers of them at its
mouth. We can see the glow of their fires from here.”</p>
<p>“But we may not be able to find a way up,” Nessus said; “the sides seem to
get steeper and steeper, and we may find ourselves caught in a trap at the
end of this gorge. At any rate we will try that way first. I wish the moon
was up; it is as black as a wolf's mouth here, and the bottom of the gorge
is all covered with boulders. If we stumble, and our arms strike a stone,
it will be heard by the natives on the opposite heights.”</p>
<p>They now set forward, feeling their way with the greatest care; but in the
dense darkness the task of making their way among the boulders was
difficult in the extreme. They had proceeded but a short distance when a
loud yell rose from the height above them. It was repeated again and
again, and was answered by shouts from the opposite side and from the
mouth of the ravine.</p>
<p>“By Astarte!” Malchus exclaimed, “they have found out that we have escaped
already.”</p>
<p>It was so. One of the natives had crept forward along the path, hoping to
find the sentry asleep, or to steal up noiselessly and stab him. When he
got to the angle of the rock he could see no form before him, nor hear the
slightest sound. Creeping forward he found the platform deserted. He
listened attentively at the entrance to the cave, and the keen ear of the
savage would have detected had any been slumbering there; but all was
still.</p>
<p>He rose to his feet with the intention of creeping into the cave, when his
head struck against something. He put up his hand and felt the rope, and
saw how the fugitives had escaped. He at once gave the alarm to his
comrades. In a minute or two a score of men with blazing brands came
running along the path. On seeing the rope, they entered the cave, and
found that their prey had really escaped.</p>
<p>Malchus and his companion had not moved after the alarm was given.</p>
<p>“We had better be going, my lord,” the Arab said as he saw the men with
torches retracing their steps along the brow. “They will soon be after
us.”</p>
<p>“I think not, Nessus. Their chance of finding us among these boulders in
the dark would be small, and they would offer such good marks to our
arrows that they would hardly enter upon it. No, I think they will wait
till daybreak, planting a strong force at the mouth of the ravine, and
along both sides of the end, wherever an ascent could be made. Hark, the
men on the heights there are calling to others along the brow.”</p>
<p>“Very well, my lord,” Nessus said, seating himself on a rock, “then we
will sell our lives as dearly as possible.”</p>
<p>“I hope it has not come to that, Nessus. There is a chance of safety for
us yet. The only place they are not likely to look for us is the cave, and
as we have climbed down from above with the rope, there will be no
difficulty in ascending.”</p>
<p>Nessus gave an exclamation, which expressed at once admiration of his
leader's idea and gratification at the thought of escape. They began
without delay to retrace their steps, and after some trouble again found
the rope.</p>
<p>Nessus mounted first; his bare feet enabled him to grip any inequality of
the surface of the rock. Whenever he came to a ledge which afforded him
standing room he shook the rope, and waited until Malchus joined him.</p>
<p>At last they stood together at the foot of the perpendicular rock at the
top. The lightly armed Arab found no difficulty whatever in climbing the
rope; but it was harder work for Malchus, encumbered with the weight of
his armour. The numerous knots, however, helped him, and when he was
within a few feet of the top, Nessus seized the rope and hauled it up by
sheer strength until Malchus was level with the top. Then he gave him his
hand, and assisted him to gain his feet. They entered the cave and made
their way to the further end, and there threw themselves down. They had
not long been there when they saw a flash of light at the mouth of the
cave and heard voices.</p>
<p>Malchus seized his spear and would have leaped to his feet, but Nessus
pressed his hand on his shoulder.</p>
<p>“They are come for the she bear,” he said. “It is not likely they will
enter.”</p>
<p>Lying hidden in the darkness the fugitives watched the natives roll the
bear over, tie its legs together, and put a stout pole through them. Then
four men lifted the pole on their shoulders and started.</p>
<p>Another holding a brand entered the cave. The two fugitives held their
breath, and Nessus sat with an arrow in the string ready to shoot. The
brand, however, gave but a feeble light, and the native, picking up the
bodies of three of the young bears, which lay close to the entrance, threw
them over his shoulder, and crawled back out of the cave again. As they
heard his departing footsteps the fugitives drew a long breath of relief.</p>
<p>Nessus rose and made his way cautiously out of the cave. He returned in a
minute.</p>
<p>“They have taken the rope with them,” he said, “and it is well, for when
they have searched the valley tomorrow, were it hanging there, it might
occur to them that we have made our way up. Now that it is gone they can
never suspect that we have returned here.”</p>
<p>“There is no chance of our being disturbed again tonight, Nessus. We can
sleep as securely as if were in our camp.”</p>
<p>So saying, Malchus chose a comfortable place, and was soon asleep.</p>
<p>Nessus, however, did not lie down, but sat watching with unwearied eyes
the entrance to the cave. As soon as day had fairly broken, a chorus of
loud shouts and yells far down the ravine told that the search had begun.
For hours it continued. Every bush and boulder in the bottom was searched
by the natives.</p>
<p>Again and again they went up and down the gorge, convinced that the
fugitives must be hidden somewhere; for, as Nessus had anticipated, the
cliffs at the upper end were so precipitous that an escape there was
impossible, and the natives had kept so close a watch all night along the
slopes at the lower end, and at the mouth, that they felt sure that their
prey could not have escaped them unseen. And yet at last they were forced
to come to the conclusion that in some inexplicable way this must have
been the case, for how else could they have escaped? The thought that they
had reascended by the rope before it was removed, and that they were
hidden in the cave at the time the bodies of the bear and its cubs were
carried away, never occurred to them.</p>
<p>All day they wandered about in the bottom of the ravine, searching every
possible place, and sometimes removing boulders with great labour, where
these were piled together in such a manner that any one could be hidden
beneath them.</p>
<p>At nightfall they feasted upon the body of the bear first killed, which
had been found where it had fallen in the ravine. The body of one of the
young bears which lay far up the cave, had escaped their search, and a
portion of this furnished a meal to the two prisoners, who were, however,
obliged to eat it raw, being afraid to light a fire, lest the smoke,
however slight, should be observed coming out at the entrance.</p>
<p>The next morning, so far as they could see, the place was deserted by the
natives. Lying far back in the cave they could see that the men on the
opposite side of the ravine had retired; but as it was quite possible that
the natives, feeling still convinced that the fugitives must be hidden
somewhere, had set a watch at some spot commanding a view of the whole
ravine, they did not venture to show themselves at the entrance.</p>
<p>After making another meal of the bear, they sallied out, when it again
became dark, and made their way along the path. When they neared the end
they saw a party of the enemy sitting round a great fire at the mouth of
the ravine below them. They retired a short distance, and sat down
patiently until at last the fire burned low, and the natives, leaving two
of the party on watch, lay down to sleep. Then Malchus and his companion
rose to their feet, and made their way along the path. When they were
nearly abreast of the fire, Malchus happened to tread upon a loose stone,
which went bouncing down the side of the hill.</p>
<p>The scouts gave a shout, which called their companions to their feet, and
started up the hillside towards the spot where the stone had fallen.</p>
<p>Nessus discharged an arrow, which struck full on the chest of the leader
of the party, and then followed Malchus along the hillside.</p>
<p>A shout of rage broke from the natives as their comrade fell; but without
pausing they pushed on. Malchus did not hurry. Silence now was of more
importance than speed. He strode along, then, with a rapid but careful
step, Nessus following closely behind him. The shouts of the savages soon
showed that they were at fault. Malchus listened attentively as he went.
Whenever the babel of tongues ceased for a moment he stopped perfectly
still, and only ventured on when they were renewed.</p>
<p>At last they had placed a long gap between them and their pursuers, and
came out on a level shoulder of the hill. They continued their way until
they found themselves at the edge of the forest. It was so dark under the
trees that they could no longer advance, and Malchus therefore determined
to wait till the dawn should enable them to continue their journey.
Whether they were in a clump of trees or in the forest, which covered a
large portion of the mountain side, they were unable to tell; nor, as not
a single star could be seen, had they any indication of the direction
which they should take. Retiring then for some little distance among the
trees, they lay down and were soon asleep.</p>
<p>When the first dawn of day appeared they were on their way again, and soon
found that the trees under which they had slept formed part of the forest.
Through occasional openings, formed by trees which had fallen from age or
tempest, they obtained a view of the surrounding country, and were enabled
to form an idea where lay the camp which they had left two days before.</p>
<p>They had not proceeded far when they heard in the distance behind them the
shouting of men and the barking of dogs, and knew that the enemy were upon
their track. They ran now at the top of their speed, convinced, however,
that the natives, who would have to follow the track, could not travel as
fast as they did. Suddenly Malchus stopped.</p>
<p>“Listen!” he said. They paused, and far down the hillside heard the
distant sound of a horn. “Those must be our men,” Malchus exclaimed, “they
are searching for us still; Hannibal must have allowed them to stay behind
when the army proceeded on its way.”</p>
<p>In another half hour the horn sounded close at hand and they were speedily
among a body of Malchus' own followers, who received them with shouts of
delight. The men were utterly worn out, for they had searched continuously
day and night from the time they had missed their leader, sometimes high
up among the hills, sometimes among the lower valleys. The party which he
met comprised but a fourth of the band, for they had divided into four
parties, the better to range the country.</p>
<p>They were now ascending the hills again at a distance of two miles apart,
and messengers were at once sent off to the other bodies to inform them
that Malchus had returned. Malchus quickly recounted to his men the story
of what had befallen them, and then bade them lie down to rest while he
and Nessus kept watch.</p>
<p>The natives who had been in pursuit did not make their appearance, having
doubtless heard the horn which told of the approach of a body of the
Carthaginians. In two hours the whole of the band were collected, and
after a few hours' halt, to enable the men to recover from their long
fatigue and sleeplessness, Malchus put himself at their head and they
marched away to join the main body of their army, which they overtook two
days later.</p>
<p>Malchus was received with great delight by his father and Hannibal, who
had given him up for lost. Nessus had over and over again recounted all
the details of their adventure to his comrades, and the quickness of
Malchus at hitting upon the stratagem of returning to the cave, and so
escaping from a position where escape seemed well nigh impossible, won for
him an even higher place than before in the admiration of his followers.</p>
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