<SPAN name="chap0213"></SPAN>
<h3> XIII. </h3>
<h3> WINTER QUARTERS. </h3>
<p>The beat of hoofs upon the great blocks of basalt rang through the
morning air in measured cadence, and soon an answering echo came up
from the south. Open flight had at last dispelled all doubt and given
the signal for pursuit.</p>
<p>First came the two Africans of the original escort, released and bidden
to ride for life or death; a short distance behind was the Carthaginian
captain on his own horse which had probably been haltered behind the
guard-house; and, last of all, three of the Spanish guard, who had
thrown the servants and baggage from the animals that bore them, and
appropriated such speed as these afforded for the business in hand.</p>
<p>That the officer was pretty well sobered seemed apparent. A fugitive
bearing the ring of the schalischim—the seal of the Great
Council—must be a man of importance, or else the possession of such a
talisman augured the commission of some terrible crime. Already he saw
himself stretched writhing upon the cross; the crowd, reviling or
gibing, seemed surging about his feet; and his howls of anguish found
voice in a storm of guttural objurgations to men and horses, mingled
with prayers and vows to the gods of Carthage.</p>
<p>He had overtaken the two Africans now, for his animal was better than
theirs, but the three others laboured hopelessly behind: the
Cappadocians flew rather than galloped far in advance. Already nearly
three hundred yards separated them from their pursuers, and the gap was
widening slowly but surely. Only the officer held his own, for he was
now forging ahead of the Africans.</p>
<p>"Ah, cowards! slime! filth!" he shouted to his struggling men. "The
cross! the cross! that for you unless we catch them! that for me!—for
all! Ah, Eschmoun! Ah, Khamon!—Melkarth!—gifts!—gold, gems, robes,
spices!—my first-born to the Baals! to the Baals! Help! speed!"</p>
<p>The man was mad—mad indeed with terror and newly dispelled
drunkenness; and his horse, a great African, coal-black save for one
white hoof, seemed to partake of his master's frenzy. With ears lying
flat along his head, and eyes that burned into those of Sergius, when
he ventured to glance behind him,—glaring sheer through distance and
dust like the very eyes of those demons his rider invoked,—the beast
thundered on, equalling the speed of the light Asiatic chargers by the
force of strength alone.</p>
<p>From time to time the fugitives turned their heads to measure the
distance, and the sight of this unwearied pursuer appeared to fascinate
them as by some weird power. The rest were beaten out,—the Spaniards
lost to sight, the Africans visible only by the dust that hung over
them far behind.</p>
<p>The mountains to the eastward seemed to be dancing away in a mad chase
toward the south, a chase which Tifata itself was urging on. The
glimmer of white in the north told of the morning sun striking upon
houses. Still they rode on, pursuers and pursued.</p>
<p>Suddenly a sound, half-trumpet note, half bellow, swelled up ahead.
Then another answered it, and another and another took up the refrain.</p>
<p>Sergius' face blanched, and, with a sudden effort, he threw his animal
almost upon its haunches. Marcia was carried several spear-lengths
farther before she could check her speed. Wonder and the dread of some
accident drove the blood to her heart. A hoarse shout of triumph came
from their pursuer, as she turned to ride back.</p>
<p>She asked no questions. Surely Sergius knew what was best. She saw
Iddilcar's long dagger in his hand, and that he was about to fight.</p>
<p>"Back!—back! and to one side," he called, as she rode up. "Did you
not hear the elephants? That is Casilinum, and they are besieging it.
We should have remembered."</p>
<p>He darted forward to meet the Carthaginian, fearful that he, too, would
draw rein and await the coming of his followers. Then indeed all would
be lost. Six soldiers on the one side and a camp full on the other
were hopeless odds against a wounded man armed only with a Numidian
dagger.</p>
<p>But it was Bacchus that fought for Rome that day—Bacchus, to whom no
altar had been vowed. A night of debauchery and the sudden terror of
its awakening had effectually blurred whatever judgment the officer may
have had, and his one thought was to kill or capture his quarry.</p>
<p>So they came together, Sergius swerving his Cappadocian as they met.
The officer struck blindly, but the good lord Bacchus put out his hand
and turned the blow aside. Then, as they parted, a strange thing
happened. Marcia had wondered dimly why Sergius struggled with the
long, girdleless garment of Iddilcar, tearing it off as he rode. Now,
when the two horses sprang apart, she saw that he had thrown it
dexterously over the Carthaginian, blinding his blow and tangling him
in its heavy folds.</p>
<p>Prompt to respond to knee and rein, the Cappadocian wheeled, almost as
soon as he ran clear, but the African thundered on, while its rider
cursed in blind terror and tried to check his horse and to free his
face and sword-arm. A moment, and he had succeeded, but he succeeded
too late. The Roman was at his back, and Marcia saw the long dagger
rise and fall in a swift thrust. She could not see how the point took
its victim just at the nape; but she saw him pitch forward like an ox
under the axe.</p>
<p>Almost before she could grasp what had happened, Sergius was beside the
fallen man, had resumed the priest's tunic, red with new blood stains,
and was on his horse again. His brow lay in deep lines as he rode
toward her.</p>
<p>"Come," he said. "The gods favouring us, we must pass their camp
before the rest come up. Grant that those may linger by the corpse,
and that we meet no check."</p>
<p>Again they were galloping toward the lines that lay about Casilinum.
All had happened so quickly that even now they could scarcely see the
plume in the distant dust cloud that told where the pursuers straggled
on. They had turned into the new side-road without meeting a man.
Then a small foraging party halted them, and Sergius showed the seal
and spoke in Gallic to its Numidian leader. A little farther on was
stationed another band, and here the delay was longer ere his halting
Punic convinced the Spanish piquet, and they again rode forward
unsuspected. All had bowed low to the horse and the palm tree, and no
one dared question what weighty mission urged on the man in the torn
and blood-stained tunic and the slender youth, his companion.</p>
<p>Now they were back again upon the pavement of the Appian; the last line
was passed, and the beleaguered town with its stout-hearted garrison
lay well behind. Perhaps that sudden uproar told of the arrival of
their pursuers; perhaps those glittering points amid distant dust
clouds meant a new pursuit. Surely none but Mercury had winged the
feet of the Cappadocians! Unwearied, like springs of steel, the stout
muscles drove them on—on over the marshland with the glint of the sea
before them—on, up the rising ground.</p>
<p>Again and again Sergius turned in his saddle scanning the road behind,
feeling the presence of pursuers whom he could not see. The good
horses were weakening fast. No flesh and blood could stand that
strain, and naught but the spirit of the breed kept them afoot.
Marcia's was limping painfully; the one Sergius rode was wavering in
its stride, like the Carthaginian captain when he came out of the
guard-house by the gate.</p>
<p>"Gods! What were those shrill sounds—half whistle, half scream?"</p>
<p>Too well he remembered how the Numidians urged on their bridleless
chargers. Yes, there they were now—scarce half a milestone behind and
coming up like the wind that blew through their dishevelled
manes—fifty at least. Death, then, was decreed, after all, and he
glanced toward Marcia, measuring the time when he might kiss her and
kill her ere he sold his own life to the javelins.</p>
<p>Suddenly he heard her cry out.</p>
<p>"Look!" she called, and, following her finger, he gazed eagerly ahead.</p>
<p>A clump of horsemen, heavy armed with helmet and corselet, crowned the
knoll of rising ground over which the road led, and, above them,
fluttering in the breeze, he saw the square vexillum of the cavalry of
the legion.</p>
<p>He was among them now, lifting Marcia from her horse and dimly
conscious of many words being spoken around.</p>
<p>"See, lord, they have halted," said a voice. "Is it your will that we
pursue?"</p>
<p>Then, as an answering voice replied in the negative, he kissed Marcia
and made her drink wine that some one brought. Barbarous cries that
she must not hear or understand came to his ears, and he knew that
their pursuers were wheeling in discomfited flight. The circle of
soldiers stood back. Something cold and feathery fell upon his
upturned face and turned to moisture. He saw a tall man with features
of wonderful beauty regarding them kindly and in silence; his white
paludamentum was heavily fringed with purple, and Sergius recognized
him now,—Marcus Marcellus, the new dictator. Another drop, feathery,
cold, and moist, fell upon Marcia's hand, and she roused herself at the
touch, peering up into her lover's face and then quickly at the heavens.</p>
<p>"Look!" she cried. "Up! not into my eyes."</p>
<p>He turned, for an instant, to see the blue vault of a few moments since
overcast with gray and filled with a swirl of snowy flakes.</p>
<p>"See, now, Lucius, lord of my life; here are the messengers of winter.
Winter quarters! he is in winter quarters! See! have we not prevailed?"</p>
<p>It was the voice of the dictator that answered:—</p>
<p>"Yes, truly; and there shall soon be prepared for him eternal summer
quarters in Phlegethon—if the Greek tales be true."</p>
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