24.12
The
extraordinary scale on which these preparations were made threw the
Campanians into a state of consternation; they were in dread lest the Romans
should begin their campaigns for the year by besieging Capua. So they sent
to Hannibal imploring him to move his army to Capua; fresh armies, they
informed him, had been raised in Rome with a view to attacking them, and
there was no city whose defection the Romans more bitterly resented than
theirs. Owing to the urgency of the message, Hannibal felt he ought to lose
no time in case the Romans anticipated him, and leaving Arpi he took up his
position in his old camp at Tifata, overlooking Capua. Leaving his
Numidians and Spaniards to protect the camp and Capua at the same time,
he descended with the rest of his army to Lake Avernus, ostensibly for the
purpose of offering sacrifice, but really to make an attempt on Puteoli and
the garrison there. As soon as the news of Hannibal's departure from Arpi
and his return to Campania reached Maximus, he returned to his army,
travelling night and day, and sent orders to Ti. Gracchus to move his forces
from Luceria to Beneventum, whilst Q. Fabius, the praetor, the consul's son,
was instructed to take Gracchus' place at Luceria. Two praetors started at
the same time for Sicily, P. Cornelius to the army and T. Otacilius to take
charge of the coast and direct the naval affairs. The others all left for their
respective provinces, and those whose command had been extended kept the
districts they had held the year before.