25.9
When he
had made up his mind to march to Tarentum, he picked out a force of
10,000 infantry and cavalry, who, from their agility and the lightness of their
armour, would be most suitable for a dash upon the city. At the fourth watch
of the night he made his advance and sent forward about eighty Numidian
troopers with orders to patrol the roads in the neighbourhood and keep a
sharp look out so that none of the rustics might espy his movements from a
distance. Those in front of them they were to bring back, any whom they met
they were to kill in order that the inhabitants of the district might take them
for a marauding force rather than an army. Marching his men rapidly forward
he encamped about fifteen miles from Tarentum, and without saving a word
as to where they were going he called his men together and warned them all
to keep in the line of march and not to allow any one to fall out or leave the
ranks. They were above all things to listen to orders with attention and not
to do anything that they were not told to do. He would tell them, when the
time came, what he wanted them to do. Almost at the same hour a rumour
reached Tarentum that a small body of Numidian horse were ravaging their
fields and creating a panic far and wide amongst the peasantry. This news
did not disturb the Roman commandant farther than that he ordered a
portion of his cavalry to ride out the next morning early to drive off the
enemy. As to guarding against any other contingency, so little care was
shown that this movement on the part of the Numidians was actually taken
as a proof that Hannibal and his army had not stirred from their camp.
Hannibal resumed his advance soon after dark; Philemenus leading
the way with the usual load of game on his shoulders, the rest of the
conspirators waiting inside the town to carry out their part in the plot. The
arrangement was that Philemenus should carry his prey through the wicket
gate which he always used and at the same time admit some armed men;
Hannibal was to approach the Temenide gate from another direction. This
gate was on the landward part of the city and looked eastwards near the
public cemetery inside the walls. As he approached the gate Hannibal gave
the signal by showing a light, the signal was answered in the same way by
Nico; then both lights were extinguished. Hannibal marched up to the gate in
silence; Nico made a sudden attack upon the sentinels who were sleeping
soundly in their beds and killed them, then he opened the gate. Hannibal
entered with his infantry, but the cavalry were ordered to remain outside,
ready to meet any attack in the open plain. In the other direction Philemenus
also reached the wicket gate which he had been in the habit of using, and
whilst he was calling out that they could hardly stand the weight of the huge
beast they were carrying, his voice and well-known signal roused the sentry
and the gate was opened. Two young men carrying a wild boar entered,
Philemenus and a lightly equipped huntsman followed close after, and whilst
the sentinel, astonished at its size, turned unsuspectingly towards those who
were carrying it, Philemenus ran him through with a hunting spear. Then
about thirty armed men ran in and massacred the rest of the sentinels and
broke open the large gate adjoining and the army at once entered in fighting
order and marched in perfect silence to the forum where they joined
Hannibal. The Carthaginian general formed 2000 of his Gauls into three
divisions, furnishing each with Tarentines to guide them, and sent them into
different parts of the city with orders to occupy the main streets, and if a
tumult arose they were to cut down the Romans and spare the townsfolk. To
secure this latter object he gave instructions to the conspirators to tell any of
their people whom they saw at a distance to keep quiet and silent and fear
nothing.