<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LXXXVI">CHAPTER LXXXVI<br/> <span class="subhead">ICETES TRIES TO SLAY TIMOLEON</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> small band of Corinthians who now held the citadel of
Syracuse was closely besieged by Icetes. But soon he grew
tired of waiting for it to surrender and hit, as he thought, on
a quicker way of driving the enemy out of the island.</p>
<p>Without Timoleon he would not fear the Corinthians, so
he resolved to get rid of him without delay. He hired two
foreign soldiers and sent them to Adranum with orders to
kill the general.</p>
<p>Timoleon went about without a bodyguard, as Icetes
knew. When the assassins reached the city, he was in
the temple, sacrificing to the gods, for it was a festival.</p>
<p>With their daggers hidden beneath their cloaks, the
men slipped in among the crowd of worshippers and were
soon standing together, close to the altar.</p>
<p>As they hesitated to strike the fatal blow, a sword
flashed out behind, and one of them fell slain to the ground.</p>
<p>His companion, in his terror, forgot to kill Timoleon,
and laid hold of the altar lest he too should be slain by an
unseen foe.</p>
<p>When his terror grew a little less he did not try to obey
Icetes’ orders, but begged Timoleon to spare his life and he
would tell him everything.</p>
<p>Timoleon promised that his life should be safe, and then
the miserable man confessed that he and his friend had been
hired by Icetes to kill the Corinthian general.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the stranger who had killed one of the
assassins had fled to the top of a great precipice that overlooked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
the city. Here he was captured, and as he was
hurried before Timoleon he told the guards that the man
he had slain was one who years before had killed his father.
He pleaded that he had done right to punish the evil-doer.</p>
<p>It may be that the Corinthians and the citizens of
Adranum agreed with their prisoner; in any case they were
so grateful that he had saved the life of Timoleon that they
gave him a gift of money and set him free.</p>
<p>As the attack on Timoleon had failed, the Carthaginians
thought they would try to frighten the citadel of Syracuse
into surrendering. So they decked the masts of their ships
with wreaths, and hung Grecian shields over the sides of
their vessels. Then with shouts of victory they sailed
toward the harbour.</p>
<p>From the citadel, the garrison saw the ships and heard
the shouts, but it was not so easily deceived as Mago, the
general of the Carthaginians, had expected. The Corinthians
were sure that Timoleon would have managed to let
them know had he been defeated, so they laughed at the
enemy’s trick and stayed safe within their walls.</p>
<p>Soon after this the reinforcements sent from Corinth
joined Timoleon, and he then marched to Syracuse.</p>
<p>Mago had already begun to doubt the loyalty of Icetes.
He feared that he was trying to make terms with Timoleon.
When, a little later, he saw the soldiers of both generals
talking together in a friendly way as they fished for eels in
the marshes near to the city, he grew more suspicious.
Day by day his fears grew, until at length in a panic, he
ordered his troops to embark and set sail for Africa.</p>
<p>The very day after Mago had deserted his post, Timoleon
himself reached Syracuse. He looked at the empty harbour.
Where was the enemy? Not a single Carthaginian vessel
was to be seen.</p>
<p>When Timoleon learned how Mago had fled, he laughed at
his cowardice, and still laughing he offered a reward to anyone
who would tell him where the Carthaginians had hidden.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span></p>
<p>But although Mago had fled, Icetes and his men still
held the city. But the wisdom of Timoleon and the valour
of his troops soon put them to flight, and without the loss
of one Corinthian soldier the city was taken.</p>
<p>This wonderful success was said by everyone to be due to
the good fortune that followed all that Timoleon undertook.</p>
<p>The citizens of Syracuse thought that Timoleon would
now make himself tyrant. To their surprise as well as to
their joy, he proclaimed that they themselves were to
govern the city. He ordered the public crier to go through
the streets, bidding all those who were willing, to come
with pickaxe and hammer to pull down the citadel which
Dionysius had built.</p>
<p>The people did not need to be asked twice. With right
goodwill they destroyed not only the citadel, but the palaces
in which the tyrants of Syracuse had dwelt. And while
they pulled down the walls, flutes sounded and women
danced and sang. On the places where the palaces had
stood, Timoleon ordered courts of justice to be built.</p>
<p>So neglected and forsaken had the city been during the
rule of the tyrants, as well as during the siege, that grass
was growing in the market-place, grass enough to feed the
soldiers’ horses.</p>
<p>All over Sicily, cities had been deserted, and in some
of them deer and wild boars wandered up and down the streets.</p>
<p>Timoleon saw that if the island was to grow prosperous
again, those who had fled must be brought back, and new
citizens must come and settle in the different cities.</p>
<p>So he sent to Corinth to ask her to send out colonists
to the island. This she did, and she also sent vessels to Asia
to bring back to their island home those who had taken
refuge there. Soon sixty thousand citizens were added to
the inhabitants of Sicily.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span></p>
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