Chapter 182 \nâCan foreigners become citizens of your Union?â Exclaimed Xanticles.\nAgasias didnât know the situation. So, he could only give a vague answer, ââŠ.there are, of course, some special reasons for this, because our Union is more open than other Greek city-states and so, we are more tolerant. And it is also common for foreigners to become citizens of the Union, just like the Persian merchant that you all know and was used to be with Davos, and now, not only is he a citizen of the Union, he is also a member of the Senate and he is also the senior commercial officer of the Union.â
âWhoa!âŠâ They were all amazed, and some people even jokingly said, âSince a Persian can become a statesman, then shouldnât be us, who are your comrades and have been with you for a long time and have shared hardships, be more fitting?!â
âAgree! Agree!âŠ.â Some people echoed.
In order to attract Timasion to Magna Graecia, Agasias said some unrealistic things, but now, he couldnât take it back. And it was Solikos, the coachman, who could no longer listen to them, interjected, âYou foreigners, stop talking nonsense. Itâs not easy to become a statesman of our Union! According to ăTheonia Unionâs Civil Service Actă a citizen must first serve as a low-rank civil servant for at least six years and perform well before he can be promoted to a middle-rank civil servant. Only after five years of excellent performance as a middle-rank civil servant can he enter the Senate. However, the first thing is to pay taxes on time every year, and to actively join the army and fight wars and have no record of violating the laws and be disciplinedâŠ.Do you think itâs so easy to be a statesman?! As for the current statesmen, they have made contributions to the establishment of the Union, and the one you were talking about, the Persian, Marigi, the reason for why the port and market of Thurii can be as prosperous as it is today, is all his credit! While the Lucanians, Vespa and Bagul, who have recently joined the Senate, I heard that it was because of them that Nerulum was able to stabilize so quickly! Foreigners, just because you have opened your mouth, so you will become a statesman? May I ask what have you done for the Union?!â
The mercenaries were unable to speak for a moment.
âSo, if you want to stay in the Union and develop, you should be more practical by first becoming a citizen of the Union.â Solikos became complacent and admonished them seriously.
âOld fogey, itâs tiring listening to your nonsense!â Toras and some of the young mercenary officers yelled in exasperation. Timasion and the others stopped them, but they had already angered the coachmen. The coachmen then immediately yelled for the mercenaries to get out of the carriages, and some of the mercenaries after getting out, couldnât stop themselves from talking back and the two sides began to argue. Agasias tried to persuade them, and Solikos also persuaded his companions. With the help of Timasion and Xanticles, the two sides reached an agreement. Their argument had almost attracted the intervention of the patrols that were maintaining the order outside the city.\nThen Solikos and the coachmen took their fare and drove the carriages away from the mercenaries.
Solikos looked at the sturdy backs of these mercenaries, then said to the others, âIf these people were to stay in Thurii, I am afraid that they will become a headache for the patrol.â
Timasion then asked Agasias in a low voice, âIs it so difficult to become a statesman of Theonia Union?â
Agasias nodded in silence.
âIf we had known that you would have this status today, we wouldâve followed you in Byzantium!â Xanticles sighed with regret then added, âThis is the arrangement of the goddess of destiny, there is nothing we could do about it. We donât have to be a statesman of the Senate, itâs already good to become a citizen and have a land!â
âThen we might as well be a freeman in Asia Minor, and we would not have needed to run to such a remote place, and be bound by this and that. Agasias, you are right!â Cleanor said indignantly.
Agasias was embarrassed and didnât know how to respond. The group then continued to watch the parade with their own thoughts.
The ranks and march of the soldiers of the fourth brigade were not very neat, but they are tall, sturdy and are very stunning. For the first time, these Lucanians from the mountainous areas received the cheers and praise from the public, they then discard their inferiority complex and restraint as foreign race. They were all excited and even waved back to the crowds.\nAfter the fourth brigade passed by, they were followed by more than a dozen of loaded carts filled with dazzling and glittering gold and silver kitchen wares, statues, jewelries and coins seized by the army from Nerulum and the wealth that Laos presented to the UnionâŠ.and so on.
It made the crowd even more amazed. If it werenât for the powerful soldiers around the carts, Iâm afraid that some people would not be able to stop themselves from grabbing some.
War brings not only death, but also wealth! Davos used the most direct way to present it to the Senate and people of the Union.
âWill all the spoils that you get be handed over to the Union?â Timasion asked curiously.
Agasias answered, âA small part of it will be allocated to the soldiers that participated in the war, and most part will be handed over to the treasury and private possession is not allowed.â
âIf there are no spoils, then there is no passion to fight. Who would be willing to fight to the death then!â Cleanor said with discontent.
Agasias thought for a moment and said with seriousness, âThey are citizens of the Union. It is their responsibility to join the army to fight and defend our territory. Moreover, after the spoils are turned over, it will still be used for them, such as pensions for the soldiers that died, and to care for the disabled soldiers, and the maintenance and replacements of weapons and equipment. Do we have these benefits when we were mercenaries before?! Think of our brothers who have died on the battlefield and couldnât even return home!!â Said Agasias with some anger. He obviously has some dissatisfaction with these people who used to be his comrades.
Cleanor snorted and stopped talking.
\nThe man in the third carriage made the mercenaries exclaim again, âHieronymus!!â
Hieronymus, who was squeezed out of the leader position by Xenophon, had been ridiculed by many people in secret. Some have even looked down on his behavior of following Davos back in Byzantium, believing that he was abandoning himself and giving up his dignity to follow a young man with less experience and qualifications than him. Now, the man that they looked down now stands tall in the carriage. Although his expression is as serious as a wood carving, the cheers of the crowds did not decrease at all, which shows that he has become a pivotal figure in the Union.Â
On the carriage that followed, they also donât know him, but he looks like a Lucanian. He was Bagul, the senior centurion of the fourth brigade. As the only Lucanian who rode in a carriage, he was both proud and afraid that the people of the Union would ignore him because he was a foreign race. However, the scene of jubilation made him feel relieved. This is the case outside the city, so he no longer needs to worry once he is inside the city, because there are his father, Vespa, and a large number of Lucanian preparatory citizens from Nerulum, such as Hemon, Kesima and Ulasa, who had come to Thurii to watch the triumphant return. At this moment, he was thinking that his image in the carriage will certainly inspire the Lucanians of the Union to play more actively for the Union!
The man in the last carriage had once again made the mercenaries exclaim, âThatâs Epiphanes!!â
Because of his easy-going character, Epiphanes got along well with the leaders of other camps during the expedition to Persia, and they all knew him very well. At this moment, he was smiling and waving to everyone around him. His movements were natural and free, and some women of the freemen were shouting his name in an attempt to attract his attention. What they did not know was that the captain of the seventh brigade was more interested in men than women.
Looking at the high spirited appearance of their former comrades, one can only imagine the loss in the hearts of Timasion and the others. One must know that, in Persia, Philesius was only an adjutant, Epiphanes was only a squad leader, and Hieronymus was an ousted strategos, and were not like Timasion, Xanticles and Cleanor, who have commanded thousands of soldiers and discussed the fate of the whole mercenaryâŠ.but today, the former little soldiers are now prominent figure in such a large Union, and the former leaders who held powers and have fought in Asia Minor for a year, had ended up being a mercenary hated by any city-state. After this contrast, Timasion and Cleanor felt very uncomfortable.
When the legion flag entered the north gade, colorful petals were scattered from the sky, which fell on the soldiers, adding a bit of romance to the valiant soldiersâŠ.
There was even more cheering inside the city.Â
After they enter the city of Thurii from the north gate, they then walk a few blocks ahead and then turn to the west, they were then able to reach the square.