Volume Ii Part 31 (1/2)
Procopius read: ”To Lucius and Marcus, the Licinii, Cethegus the Prefect. I have fallen a victim to the tyranny of the Byzantines.
Revenge me! Recall the Goths at once. I demand it of you by your oath.
Better the barbarians than the police of Justinian. Hold out to the last man! Rather give the city to the flames than to the army of the tyrant!'”
”So you see,” continued Cethegus, ”that my death will not open to you the gates of Rome, but shut them upon you for ever. You must besiege the city, or agree with me.”
Belisarius cast a look of anger, not unmixed with admiration, at the bold man who put conditions to him in the midst of his thousands.
Then he sheathed his sword, threw himself impatiently upon his stool, and asked:
”What are your conditions for the surrender?”
”Only two. First, you will give me the command of a small part of your army. I must be no stranger to your Byzantines.”
”Granted. You will have under your command two thousand Illyrian footmen and one thousand Saracen and Moorish hors.e.m.e.n. Is that sufficient?”
”Perfectly. Secondly, my independence rests entirely upon my dominion of Rome. This must not cease during your presence. Therefore, the whole right sh.o.r.e of the Tiber, with the Mausoleum of Hadrian; and on the left the Capitol, including the walls on the south as far as the Gate of St. Peter, must remain, until the end of the war, in the hands of my Romans and Isaurians. The rest of the city on the left sh.o.r.e of the Tiber, from the Flavian Amphitheatre in the north to the Appian Gate in the south, will be occupied by you.”
Belisarius cast a glance at the plan.
”Not badly arranged! From those points you can at any moment drive me out of the city or blockade the river. That will not do!”
”Then prepare for a fight with the Goths and Cethegus together before the walls of Rome!”
Belisarius sprang from his seat.
”Go! leave me alone with Procopius, Cethegus. Wait for my decision.”
”Till to-morrow!” cried Cethegus. ”At sunrise I return to Rome, either with your army or--alone.”
A few days later Belisarius, with his army, entered the Eternal City through the Asinarian Gate.
Endless acclamation greeted the liberator; a rain of flowers covered him and his wife, who rode at his left hand on a beautiful palfrey.
All the houses were decorated with gay draperies and wreaths. Bat the object of these rejoicings did not appear happy; he gloomily bent his head, and cast dark looks at the walls and the Capitol, from which floated, not the dragon flags of Byzantium, but the banners and ensigns of the munic.i.p.al legions, formed after the model of the Roman eagles and standards.
At the Asinarian Gate young Lucius Licinius had sent back the vanguard of the imperial army, and the heavy portcullis did not rise until, at the side of Belisarius on his bay horse, appeared Cethegus the Prefect, mounted on his splendid charger.
Lucius was astonished at the change which had taken place in his admired friend.
The Prefect's cold and severe reserve seemed to have disappeared; he looked taller, younger; the glory of victory illumined his features. He wore a richly-gilded helmet, from which the crimson mane flowed down to his mail-coat. This last was a costly work of art from Athens, and showed upon every one of its round plates a finely-worked relief in chased silver, each representing a victory of the Romans. The victorious expression of his beaming face, his proud carriage, and scintillating armour, outshone Belisarius, the imperial magister militum himself, and all his glittering staff, which, led by Johannes and Procopius, followed close behind.
And this superiority was so striking, that by the time the procession had pa.s.sed through several streets, the impression was shared by the mob, and the cry, ”Cethegus!” was soon heard more loudly and frequently than the name of ”Belisarius!”
Antonina's fine ear soon began to remark this circ.u.mstance; she listened uneasily at every pause of the procession to the cries and remarks of the by-standers.
When they had left the Thermae of t.i.tus behind them, and had reached the Via Sacra, near the Flavian Amphitheatre, they were obliged to stop on account of the crowd. A narrow triumphal arch had been erected here, which could only be pa.s.sed at a slow pace. ”Victory, to the Emperor Justinian and his general, Belisarius,” was inscribed thereon.
As Antonina was reading this inscription, she heard an old man, who appeared to be but scantily initiated into the course of events, questioning his son, one of the legionaries of Cethegus.