David Gibbins - Total War Rome - Destroy Carthage

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Fabius had guessed that as soon as they reached that point the remaining defenders would flee the ramparts and retreat into the old quarter ahead of them, to take refuge among the civilians cowering there and make a last stand. They had seen nothing of Hasdrubal since the grisly mutilation of the Roman prisoners on the walls, but Fabius could guess where he had gone. He squinted up at the temple on the Byrsa, its smoke-wreathed roof visible high above the houses, then looked back down at Brutus as he scythed his way to left and right to clear the last of the Carthaginians from the alley. Scipio held up his arm, halting the legionaries. Polybius made his way through from the rear and came alongside, his sword dripping with blood.

‘Ennius has exhausted his ammunition,’ he panted. ‘The last fireball contained green dye as a signal, and I saw it. That means the way ahead is open for you.’

Scipio wiped the sweat and blood from his face on his tunic sleeve. ‘There can be no more than a few hundred of them left.’

‘The Sacred Band?’

Scipio nodded. ‘The mercenaries are all dead or hiding. There’s no escape for those who are left. They’ll burn to death or die in the smoke.’

‘Hasdrubal?’

Scipio pointed his sword at the temple. ‘I’m sure he’s gone up there, waiting for me. For now, I’m more concerned about my legionaries. They’ve seen Brutus kill dozens, seen Hippolyta’s archers take down more, seen me kill in that alleyway. But so far most of them have spent this battle huddled under their shields.’ He took the cloth that Polybius offered, wiped his face again and jerked his head at the testudo. ‘This lot are the first legion. Some of them fought with me in Spain. They’ll be baying for blood. If I don’t give it to them, they might just take it out on us.’ He grinned at Polybius, tossing the cloth back. ‘And then you really would be writing your history book in the afterlife, wouldn’t you?’

‘Could you offer Hasdrubal terms of surrender?’ Polybius said. ‘There are hundreds, maybe thousands of civilians in that quarter. It’s where most of the surviving inhabitants of the city have sought refuge from the fires. If you unleash the legionaries, they won’t easily distinguish soldiers from civilians. It will be a massacre.’

Scipio shook his head. ‘Surrender? Hasdrubal? Not likely. And wasn’t it you who read Homer to me last night, about the fall of Troy? I don’t recall Achilles hesitating because of women and children. Rome showed Carthage mercy once before, half a century ago. This time there will be none.’

He turned round, facing his centurions and legionaries, and raised his bloody sword. ‘Men,’ he bellowed. ‘It seems that I have had all the fun. Now that’s not fair, is it?’

They bellowed back, a great roar, and Scipio grinned at them. ‘Men of the first maniple,’ he continued, ‘some of you have been with me since Spain. Some of you centurions even taught me how to fight. Old Quintus Pesco over there was once so dismayed with my pilum throwing that he promised to give me five of the best on my backside and send me to clean out the latrines. And I was his commanding officer.’

There was a roar of approval, and Scipio slapped the nearest centurion on the back, then put his hand on the man’s shoulder, looking back at the legionaries. ‘You are all my brothers. And like brothers everywhere, we love a good fight.’

There was another roar, and Scipio pointed his sword up the alleyway. ‘Over there, in those houses, are the last remaining Carthaginians, the so-called Sacred Band. Kill them all, and you will have won the greatest victory Rome has ever known. You will go home heroes, and your families will be honoured for all time. But do your job well here, and I won’t let you stay at home for long. Where we’re going after this, I promise you war and plunder like you’ve never seen before.’

Another deafening chorus rose from the men. The centurion Quintus Pesco turned to him, his voice hoarse. ‘Scipio Africanus, the men of the first legion would follow you to Hades and back. As they would have done for your grandfather.’

Scipio raised his sword and moved back against the wall of the alley, pulling Polybius with him. ‘Men, are you ready?’ he shouted. There was a huge cry, and he nodded at the centurions, who angled their shields forward from the testudo formation and raised their swords, followed by the legionaries. Scipio pointed his sword forward and bellowed. ‘Do your worst!’

Ten minutes later, Fabius and Scipio walked into the cloud of dust that had been left by the advancing legionaries, entering a storm of death like nothing Fabius had seen before. The narrow alleys of the old quarter were strewn with flickering patches of fire, some of it consuming the timbers of houses where the fireballs had impacted half an hour before. In the dust the glowing naphtha made a nightmarish sight, as if they were walking again into the burning fumeroles of the Phlegraean Fields, only this time the fire was man-made. The air was filled with the an acrid smell of burning, and with the stench from a place where people had lived confined together for months with little food and hardly any water for sanitation; each narrow house had its own rainwater cistern, and they had seen lower down in the city that they were nearly all empty.

For a few minutes after the legionaries had gone on ahead there had been a terrible din of shrieking and yelling, a noise that had come from further away as the soldiers had moved forward; now the place was eerily quiet, punctuated only by the sound of soldiers kicking around inside the houses looking for loot, and the occasional grunt as a wounded Carthaginian was finished off. Corpses lay everywhere: soldiers of the Sacred Band with their polished armour, most of them mere boys; mercenaries who had stripped off theirs in a futile attempt to escape recognition, but been hacked down anyway; old men and women, even children, all caught up in the slaughter. To clear the streets the legionaries were hauling bodies off to either side and dumping them in the cisterns, filling them to the brim so that limbs and torsos were visible poking out, some still twitching. The legionaries had been incensed by the terrible scenes of their comrades being mutilated, and they had spared nobody. Fabius knew the inevitable reckoning of war, but this was beyond any rampage he had seen before.

He followed Scipio as he picked his way through the bodies and headed to the foot of the Byrsa. Silently, the legionaries they passed joined them, their swords dripping with blood, until most of the maniple had rallied again under their centurions. Polybius came up and stood beside him, wiping the blood off his face. ‘We’re at the temple steps. The city is nearly taken.’

Fabius passed Scipio a skin of water that a legionary had brought up to them. He gulped it down gratefully, then raised the skin above his head to let the water pour over his face. He passed it back, and wiped his forehead against his tunic sleeve. Fabius was conscious for the first time of his own rasping breathing, coming short and fast, and he tried to calm himself. The noise of battle had abated all round the city; he heard only the occasional shriek and cry, the sounds of falling masonry as the fires took hold, the stomping and whinnying of horses, the heavy breathing and marching of a thousand legionaries crammed into the streets behind. Even Brutus had stopped, a few paces away to the right, panting like a bear, the bloody point of his scimitar resting on the lower step that led up to the temple. The whole army was waiting, watching to see what Scipio would do next.

Fabius peered through the smoke towards the top of the steps. The Carthaginian army had been annihilated, but he knew there were still people up there, cowering in the temple precinct. He remembered the little boy he had watched mounting the steps in the Tophet less than an hour before, Hasdrubal’s own son. He knew the man himself would be up there now, waiting for them. It was as if the temple were another altar and Hasdrubal was orchestrating the ceremony, forcing Scipio to mount the steps as if he himself were a participant in some final, apocalyptic scene of sacrifice.

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