Chapter 52
Hellenistic Pseudo-Caesar LatinIt was now nearly dusk, and Caesar was withdrawing his troops from this work to camp, when Juba, Scipio and Labienus launched a violent attack upon his legionaries, employing all their cavalry and light-armed forces. Caesar’s cavalry reeled and gave ground momentarily under the sudden and violent impact of the massed swarms of the enemy. But the latter found that this manoeuvre did not go according to plan: for Caesar halted in his tracks and led his forces back to the assistance of his cavalry. The arrival of the legions put fresh heart into the cavalry, who wheeled round, charged the Numidians in the middle of their eager, but scattered pursuit, and drove them right back into the royal camp, with heavy casualties and many of their number killed. And had not nightfall speedily overtaken this action, and a cloud of dust raised up by the wind hampered everyone’s vision, Juba and Labienus would have been captured and have fallen into Caesar’s hands, and their cavalry and light-armed troops would have been utterly and entirely annihilated. Whereupon an incredible number of Scipio’s troops deserted from the Fourth and Sixth legion—some to Caesar’s camp, others to various places wherever each individual managed to find refuge. The cavalry who were once under Curio’s command likewise lost confidence in Scipio and his forces, and many of them took refuge with the others.