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There was another matter, quite distinct, which helped to bring about
the expedition. One of the mercenaries of Amasis, a
Halicarnassian, Phanes by name, a man of good judgment, and a brave
warrior, dissatisfied for some reason or other with his master,
deserted the service, and taking ship, fled to Cambyses, wishing to
get speech with him. As he was a person of no small account among the
mercenaries, and one who could give very exact intelligence about
Egypt, Amasis, anxious to recover him, ordered that he should be
pursued. He gave the matter in charge to one of the most trusty of the
eunuchs, who went in quest of the Halicarnassian in a vessel of war.
The eunuch caught him in Lycia, but did not contrive to bring him
back to Egypt, for Phanes outwitted him by making his guards drunk,
and then escaping into Persia. Now it happened that Cambyses was
meditating his attack on Egypt, and doubting how he might best pass
the desert, when Phanes arrived, and not only told him all the
secrets of Amasis, but advised him also how the desert might be
crossed. He counselled him to send an ambassador to the king of the
Arabs, and ask him for safe-conduct through the region.
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