Narr' Havas had in fact wished to aggrandise himself by encroachments upon the Punic provinces, and had alternately assisted and forsaken the Mercenaries according to the chances of victory.But seeing that Hamilcar would ultimately prove the stronger, he had gone over to him;and in his desertion there was perhaps something of a grudge against Matho, whether on account of the command or of his former love.
The Suffet listened without interrupting him.The man who thus presented himself with an army where vengeance was his due was not an auxiliary to be despised; Hamilcar at once divined the utility of such an alliance in his great projects.With the Numidians he would get rid of the Libyans.Then he would draw off the West to the conquest of Iberia; and, without asking Narr' Havas why he had not come sooner, or noticing any of his lies, he kissed him, striking his breast thrice against his own.
It was to bring matters to an end and in despair that he had fired the camp of the Libyans.This army came to him like a relief from the gods; dissembling his joy he replied:
"May the Baals favour you! I do not know what the Republic will do for you, but Hamilcar is not ungrateful."The tumult increased; some captains entered.He was arming himself as he spoke.
"Come, return! You will use your horsemen to beat down their infantry between your elephants and mine.Courage! exterminate them!"And Narr' Havas was rushing away when Salammbo appeared.
She leaped down quickly from her horse.She opened her ample cloak and spreading out her arms displayed the zaimph.
The leathern tent, which was raised at the corners, left visible the entire circuit of the mountain with its thronging soldiers, and as it was in the centre Salammbo could be seen on all sides.An immense shouting burst forth, a long cry of triumph and hope.Those who were marching stopped; the dying leaned on their elbows and turned round to bless her.All the Barbarians knew now that she had recovered the zaimph; they saw her or believed that they saw her from a distance;and other cries, but those of rage and vengeance, resounded in spite of the plaudits of the Carthaginians.Thus did the five armies in tiers upon the mountain stamp and shriek around Salammbo.