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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The City of Delight, by Elizabeth Miller
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The City of Delight
+ A Love Drama of the Siege and Fall of Jerusalem
+
+Author: Elizabeth Miller
+
+Illustrator: F. X. Leyendecker
+
+Release Date: May 31, 2005 [EBook #15953]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF DELIGHT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Stefan Cramme and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CITY OF DELIGHT
+
+A Love Drama of the Siege and Fall of Jerusalem
+
+by
+
+Elizabeth Miller
+
+Author of
+_The Yoke_ and _Saul of Tarsus_
+
+With Illustrations by
+F.X. Leyendecker
+
+Indianapolis
+The Bobbs-Merrill Company
+Publishers
+1908
+March
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+To
+My Elder Brother
+Otto Miller
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Chapter Page
+
+ I A Prince's Bride 1
+
+ II On the Road to Jerusalem 31
+
+ III The Shepherd of Pella 56
+
+ IV The Travelers 85
+
+ V By the Wayside 108
+
+ VI Dawn in the Hills 124
+
+ VII Imperial Cęsar 148
+
+ VIII Greek and Jew 169
+
+ IX The Young Titus 189
+
+ X The Story of a Divine Tragedy 212
+
+ XI The House of Offense 233
+
+ XII The Prince Returns 253
+
+ XIII A New Pretender 274
+
+ XIV The Pride of Amaryllis 284
+
+ XV The Image of Jealousy 300
+
+ XVI The Spread Net 322
+
+ XVII The Tangled Web 337
+
+ XVIII In the Sunless Crypt 358
+
+ XIX The False Prophet 374
+
+ XX As the Foam upon Water 390
+
+ XXI The Faithful Servant 408
+
+ XXII Vanished Hopes 417
+
+ XXIII The Fulfilment 427
+
+ XXIV The Road to Pella 441
+
+
+
+
+THE CITY OF DELIGHT
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I
+
+A PRINCE'S BRIDE
+
+
+The chief merchant of Ascalon stood in the guest-chamber of his house.
+
+Although it was a late winter day the old man was clad in the free
+white garments of a midsummer afternoon, for to the sorrow of
+Philistia the cold season of the year sixty-nine had been warm, wet
+and miasmic. An old woman entering presently glanced at the closed
+windows of the apartment when she noted the flushed face of the
+merchant but she made no movement to have them opened. More than the
+warmth of the day was engaging the attention of the grave old man, and
+the woman, by dress and manner of equal rank with him, stood aside
+until he could give her a moment.
+
+His porter bowed at his side.
+
+"The servants of Philip of Tyre are without," he said. "Shall they
+enter?"
+
+"They have come for the furnishings," Costobarus answered. "Take thou
+all the household but Momus and Hiram, and dismantle the rooms for
+them. Begin in the library; then the sleeping-rooms; this chamber
+next; the kitchen last of all. Send Hiram to the stables to except
+three good camels from the herd for our use. Let Momus look to the
+baggage. Where is Keturah?"
+
+A woman servant hastening after a line of men bearing a great divan,
+picking up the draperies and pillows that had dropped, stopped and
+salaamed to her master.
+
+"Is our apparel ready?" he asked.
+
+"Prepared, master," was the response.
+
+"Then send hither--" But at that moment a man-servant dressed in the
+garb of a physician hastened into the chamber. Without awaiting the
+notice of his master he hurried up and whispered in his ear.
+Costobarus' face grew instantly grave.
+
+"How near?" he asked anxiously.
+
+"In the next house--but a moment since. The household hath fled," was
+the low answer.
+
+"Haste, haste!" Costobarus cried to the rush of servants about him.
+"Lose no time. We must be gone from this place before mid-afternoon.
+Laodice! Where is Laodice?" he inquired.
+
+Then his wife who had stood aside spoke.
+
+"She is not yet prepared," she explained unreadily. "She needs a
+frieze cloak--"
+
+Costobarus broke in by beckoning his wife to one side, where the
+servants could not hear him say compassionately,
+
+"Let there be no delay for small things, Hannah. Let us haste, for
+Laodice is going on the Lord's business."
+
+"A matter of a day only," Hannah urged. "A delay that is further
+necessary, for Aquila's horse is lame."
+
+The old man shook his head and looked away to see a man-servant
+stagger out under a load of splendid carpets. The old woman came
+close.
+
+"The wayside is ambushed and the wilderness is patrolled with danger,
+Costobarus," she said. "Of a certainty you will not take Laodice out
+into a country perilous for caravans and armies!"
+
+"These very perils are the signs of the call of the hour," he
+maintained. "She dare not fail to respond. The Deliverer cometh; every
+prophecy is fulfilled. Rather rejoice that you have prepared your
+daughter for this great use. Be glad that you have borne her."
+
+But in Hannah's face wavered signs of another interpretation of these
+things. She broke in on him without the patience to wait until he had
+completed his sentence.
+
+"Are they prophecies of hope which are fulfilled, or the words of the
+prophet of despair?" she insisted. "What saith Daniel of this hour?
+Did he not name it the abomination of desolation? Said he not that the
+city and the sanctuary should be destroyed, that there should be a
+flood and that unto the end of the war desolations shall be
+determined? Desolations, Costobarus! And Laodice is but a child and
+delicately reared!"
+
+"All these things may come to pass and not a hair of the heads of the
+chosen people be harmed," he assured her.
+
+"But Laodice is too young to have part in the conflict of nations, the
+business of Heaven and earth and the end of all things!"
+
+A courier strode into the hall and approached Costobarus, saw that he
+was engaged in conversation and stopped. The merchant noted him and
+withdrew to read the message which the man carried.
+
+"A letter from Philadelphus," he said over his shoulder, as he moved
+away from Hannah. "He hath landed in Cęsarea with his cousin Julian of
+Ephesus. He will proceed at once to Jerusalem. We have no time to
+lose. Ah, Momus?"
+
+He spoke to a servant who had limped into the hall and stood waiting
+for his notice. He was the ruin of a man, physically powerful but as a
+tree wrecked by storm and grown strong again in spite of its
+mutilation. Pestilence in years long past had attacked him and had
+left him dumb, distorted of feature, wry-necked and stiffened in the
+right leg and arm. His left arm, forced to double duty, had become
+tremendously muscular, his left hand unusually dexterous. Much of his
+facial distortion was the result of his efforts to convey his ideas by
+expression and by his attempts to overcome the interference of his wry
+neck with the sweep of his vision.
+
+"Whom have we in our party, Momus?" Costobarus asked. As the man made
+rapid, uncouth signs, the master interpreted.
+
+"Keturah, Hiram and Aquila--and thou and I, Momus. Three camels, one
+of which is the beast of burden. Good! Aquila will ride a horse; ha! a
+horse in a party of camels--well, perhaps--if he were bought in
+Ascalon. How? What? St--t! The physician told me even now. Let none of
+the household know it--above all things not thy mistress!" The last
+sentence was delivered in a whisper in response to certain uneasy
+gestures the mute had made. The man bowed and withdrew.
+
+A second servitor now approached with papers which the merchant
+inspected and signed hastily with ink and stylus which the clerk bore.
+When this last item was disposed of, Hannah was again at her husband's
+side.
+
+"Costobarus," she whispered, "it is known that the East Gate of the
+Temple, which twenty Levites can close only with effort, opened of
+itself in the sixth hour of the night!"
+
+"A sign that God reėntereth His house," the merchant explained.
+
+"A sign, O my husband, that the security of the Holy House is
+dissolved of its own accord for the advantage of its enemies!"
+
+Costobarus observed two huge Ethiopians who appeared bewildered at the
+threshold of the unfamiliar interior, looking for the master of the
+house to tell them what to do. The merchant motioned toward a tall
+ebony case that stood against one of the walls and showed them that
+they were to carry it out. Hannah continued:
+
+"And thou hast not forgotten that night when the priests at the
+Pentecost, entering the inner court, were thrown down by the trembling
+of the Temple and that a vast multitude, which they could not see,
+cried: 'Let us go hence!' And that dreadful sunset which we watched
+and which all Israel saw when armies were seen fighting in the skies
+and cities with toppling towers and rocking walls fell into red clouds
+and vanished!"
+
+"What of thyself, Hannah?" he broke in. "Art thou ready to depart for
+Tyre? Philip will leave to-morrow. Do not delay him. Go and prepare."
+
+But the woman rushed on to indiscretion, in her desperate intent to
+stop the journey to Jerusalem at any cost.
+
+"But there are those of good repute here in Ascalon, sober men and
+excellent women, who say that our hope for the Branch of David is too
+late--that Israel is come to judgment, this hour--for He is come and
+gone and we received Him not!"
+
+Costobarus turned upon her sharply.
+
+"What is this?" he demanded.
+
+"O my husband," she insisted hopefully, "it measures up with prophecy!
+And they who speak thus confidently say that He prophesied the end of
+the Holy City, and that this is not the Advent, but doom!"
+
+"It is the Nazarene apostasy," he exclaimed in alarm, "alive though
+the power of Rome and the diligence of the Sanhedrim have striven to
+destroy it these forty years! Now the poison hath entered mine own
+house!"
+
+A servant bowed within earshot. Costobarus turned to him hastily.
+
+"Philip of Tyre," the attendant announced.
+
+"Let him enter," Costobarus said. "Go, Hannah; make Laodice
+ready--preparations are almost complete; be not her obstacle."
+
+"But--but," she insisted with whitening lips, "I have not said that I
+believe all this. I only urge that, in view of this time of war, of
+contending prophecies and of all known peril, that we should keep her,
+who is our one ewe lamb, our tender flower, our Rose of Sharon, yet
+within shelter until the signs are manifest and the purpose of the
+Lord God is made clear."
+
+He turned to her slowly. There was pain on his face, suffering that
+she knew her words had evoked and, more than that, a yearning to
+relent. She was ashamed and not hopeful, but her mother-love was
+stronger than her wifely pity.
+
+"Must I command you, Hannah?" he asked.
+
+Her figure, drawn up with the intensity of her wishfulness, relaxed.
+Her head drooped and slowly she turned away. Costobarus looked after
+her and struggled with rising emotion. But the curtain dropped behind
+her and left him alone.
+
+A moment later the curtains over the arch parted and a middle-aged
+Jew, richly habited, stood there. He raised his hand for the blessing
+of the threshold, then embraced Costobarus with more warmth than
+ceremony.
+
+"What is this I hear?" he demanded with affectionate concern. "Thou
+leavest Ascalon for the peril of Jerusalem?"
+
+"Can Jerusalem be more perilous than Ascalon this hour?" Costobarus
+asked.
+
+"Yes, by our fathers!" Philip declared. "Nothing can be so bad as the
+condition of the Holy City. But what has happened? Three days ago thou
+wast as securely settled here as a barnacle on a shore-rock! To-day
+thou sendest me word: 'Lo! the time long expected hath come; I go
+hence to Jerusalem.' What is it, my brother?"
+
+"Sit and listen."
+
+Philip looked about him. The divan was there, stripped of its covering
+of fine rugs, but the room otherwise was without furniture. Prepared
+for surprise, the Tyrian let no sign of his curiosity escape him, and,
+sitting, leaned on his knees and waited.
+
+"Philadelphus Maccabaeus hath sent to me, bidding me send Laodice to
+him--in Jerusalem," Costobarus said in a low voice.
+
+Philip's eyes widened with sudden comprehension.
+
+"He hath returned!" he exclaimed in a whisper.
+
+For a time there was silence between the two old men, while they gazed
+at each other. Then Philip's manner became intensely confident.
+
+"I see!" he exclaimed again, in the same whisper. "The throne is
+empty! He means to possess it, now that Agrippa hath abandoned it!"
+
+Costobarus pressed his lips together and bowed his head emphatically.
+Again there was silence.
+
+"Think of it!" Philip exclaimed presently.
+
+"I have done nothing else since his messenger arrived at daybreak.
+Little, little, did I think when I married Laodice to him, fourteen
+years ago, that the lad of ten and the little child of four might one
+day be king and queen over Judea!"
+
+Philip shook his head slowly and his gaze settled to the pavement.
+Presently he drew in a long breath.
+
+"He is twenty-four," he began thoughtfully. "He has all the learning
+of the pagans, both of letters and of war; he--Ah! But is he capable?"
+
+"He is the great-grandson of Judas Maccabaeus! That is enough! I have
+not seen him since the day he wedded Laodice and left her to go to
+Ephesus, but no man can change the blood of his fathers in him. And
+Philip--he shall have no excuse to fail. He shall be moneyed; he shall
+be moneyed!"
+
+Costobarus leaned toward his friend and with a sweep of his hand
+indicated the stripped room. It was a noble chamber. The stamp of the
+elegant simplicity of Cyrus, the Persian, was upon it. The ancient
+blue and white mosaics that had been laid by the Parsee builder and
+the fretwork and twisted pillars were there, but the silky carpets,
+the censers and the chairs of fine woods were gone. Costobarus looked
+steadily at the perplexed countenance of Philip.
+
+"Seest thou how much I believe in this youth?" he asked.
+
+A shade of uneasiness crossed Philip's forehead.
+
+"Thou art no longer young, Costobarus," he said, "and disappointments
+go hard with us, at our age--especially, especially."
+
+"I shall not be disappointed," Costobarus declared.
+
+The friendly Jew looked doubtful.
+
+"The nation is in a sad state," he observed. "We have cause. The
+procurators have been of a nature with their patrons, the emperors. It
+is enough but to say that! But Vespasian Cęsar is another kind of man.
+He is tractable. Young Titus, who will succeed him, is well-named the
+Darling of Mankind. We could get much redress from these if we would
+be content with redress. But no! We must revert to the days of Saul!"
+
+"Yes; but they declare they will have no king but God; no commander
+but the Messiah to come; no order but primitive impulse! But the
+Maccabee will change all that! It is but the far swing of the first
+revolt. Jerusalem is ready for reason at this hour, it is said."
+
+"Yes," Philip assented with a little more spirit. "It hath reached us,
+who have dealings with the East, that there is a better feeling in the
+city. Such slaughter has been done there among the Sadducees, such
+hordes of rebels from outlying subjugated towns have poured their
+license and violence in upon the safe City of Delight, that the
+citizens of Jerusalem actually look forward to the coming of Titus as
+a deliverance from the afflictions which their own people have visited
+upon them."
+
+"The hour for the Maccabee, indeed," Costobarus ruminated.
+
+"And the hour for Him whom we all expect," Philip added in a low tone.
+Costobarus bowed his head. Presently he drew a scroll from the folds
+of his ample robe.
+
+"Hear what Philadelphus writes me:
+
+ Cęsarea, II Kal. Jul. XX.
+
+ To Costobarus, greetings and these by messenger;
+
+ I learn on arriving in this city that Judea is in truth no man's
+ country. Wherefore it can be mine by cession or conquest. It is
+ mine, however, by right. I shall possess it.
+
+ I go hence to Jerusalem.
+
+ Fail not to send my wife thither and her dowry. Aquila, my
+ emissary, will safely conduct her. Trust him.
+
+ Proceed with despatch and husband the dowry of your daughter,
+ since it is to be the corner-stone of a new Israel.
+
+ Peace to you and yours. To my wife my affection and my loyalty.
+
+ PHILADELPHUS MACCABAEUS.
+
+ Nota Bene. Julian of Ephesus accompanies me. He is my cousin. He
+ will in all probability meet your daughter at the Gate.
+
+ MACCABAEUS."
+
+Slowly the old man rolled the writing.
+
+"He wastes no words," Philip mused. "He writes as a siege-engine
+talks--without quarter."
+
+Costobarus nodded.
+
+"So I am giving him two hundred talents," he said deliberately.
+
+"Two hundred talents!" Philip echoed.
+
+"And I summoned thee, Philip, to say that in addition to my house and
+its goods, thou canst have my shipping, my trade, my caravans, which
+thou hast coveted so long at a price--at that price. I shall give
+Laodice two hundred talents."
+
+"Two hundred talents!" Philip echoed again, somewhat taken aback.
+
+Costobarus went to a cabinet on the wall and drew forth a shittim-wood
+case which he unlocked. Therefrom he took a small casket and opened
+it. He then held it so that the sun, falling into it, set fire to a
+bed of loose gems mingled without care for kind or value--a heap of
+glowing color emitting sparks.
+
+"Here are one hundred of the talents," Costobarus said.
+
+A flash of understanding lighted Philip's face not unmingled with the
+satisfaction of a shrewd Jew who has pleased himself at business. One
+hundred talents, then, for the best establishment in five cities, in
+all the Philistine country. But why? Costobarus supplied the answer at
+that instant.
+
+"I would depart with my daughter by mid-afternoon," he said.
+
+"I doubt the counting houses; if I had known sooner--" Philip began.
+
+"Aquila arrived only this morning. I sent a messenger to you at once."
+
+Philip rose.
+
+"We waste time in talk. I shall inform thee by messenger presently.
+God speed thee! My blessings on thy son-in-law and on thy daughter!"
+
+Costobarus rose and took his friend's hand.
+
+"Thou shalt have the portion of the wise-hearted man in this kingdom.
+And this yet further, my friend. If perchance the uncertainties of
+travel in this distressed land should prove disastrous and I should
+not return, I shall leave a widow here--"
+
+"And in that instance, be at peace. I am thy brother."
+
+Costobarus pressed Philip's hand.
+
+"Farewell," he said; and Philip embraced him and went forth.
+
+Costobarus turned to one of his closed windows and thrust it open, for
+the influence of the spring sun had made itself felt in the past
+important hour for Costobarus.
+
+Noon stood beautiful and golden over the city. The sky was
+clean-washed and blue, and the surface of the Mediterranean, glimpsed
+over white house-tops that dropped away toward the sea-front, was a
+wandering sheet of flashing silver. Here and there were the ruins of
+the last year's warfare, but over the fallen walls of gray earth the
+charity of running vines and the new growth of the spring spread a
+beauty, both tender and compassionate.
+
+In such open spaces inner gardens were exposed and almond trees tossed
+their crowns of white bloom over pleached arbors of old grape-vines.
+Here the Mediterranean birds sang with poignant sweetness while the
+new-budded limbs of the oleanders tilted suddenly under their weight
+as they circled from covert to covert.
+
+But the energy of the young spring was alive only in the birds and the
+blossoming orchards. Wherever the solid houses fronted in unbroken
+rows the passages between, there were no open windows, no carpets
+swung from latticed balconies; no buyers moved up the roofed-over
+Street of Bazaars. Not in all the range of the old man's vision was to
+be seen a living human being. For the chief city of the Philistine
+country Ascalon was nerveless and still. At times immense and
+ponderous creaking sounded in the distance, as if a great rusted crane
+swung in the wind. Again there were distant, voluminous flutterings,
+as if neglected and loosened sails flapped. Idle roaming donkeys
+brayed and a dog shut up and forgotten in a compound barked
+incessantly. Presently there came faint, far-off, failing cries that
+faded into silence. The Jew's brow contracted but he did not move.
+
+From his position, he could see the port to the east packed with
+lifeless vessels. The stretches of stone wharf and the mole were
+vacant and littered with rubbish. The yard-arms of abandoned
+freighters were peculiarly beaded with tiny black shapes that moved
+from time to time. Far out at sea, so far that a blue mist embraced
+its base and set its sails mysteriously afloat in air, a great galley,
+with all canvas crowded on, sped like a frightened bird past the port
+that had once been its haven.
+
+A strange compelling odor stole up from the city. Costobarus glanced
+down into his garden below him. It was a terraced court, with
+vine-covered earthen retaining walls supporting each successive tier
+and terminating against a domed gate flanked on either side by a tall
+conical cypress.
+
+He noted, on the flagging of the walk leading by flights of steps down
+to the gate, a heap of garments with broad brown and yellow stripes.
+Wondering at the untidiness of his gardener in leaving his tunic here
+while he worked, Costobarus looked away toward the large stones that
+lay here and there in gutters and on grass-plots, remnants of the work
+of the Roman catapults the previous summer. In the walls of houses
+were unrepaired breaches, where the wounds of the missiles showed. On
+a slight eminence overlooking the city from the west center-poles of
+native cedar which had supported Roman tents were still standing. But
+no garrison was there now, though the signs of the savage Roman
+obsession still lay on the remnants of the prostrate western wall. So
+as Costobarus' gaze wandered he did not see far above that heap of
+striped garments in his garden walk, fixed like an enchanted thing,
+moveless, dead-calm, a great desert vulture poised in air. Presently
+another and yet another materialized out of the blue, growing larger
+as they fell down to the level of their fellow. Slowly the three
+swooped down over the heap on the garden walk. The tiny black shapes
+that beaded the yard-arms in port spread great wings and soared
+solemnly into Ascalon. The three vultures dropped noiselessly on the
+pavement.
+
+Cries began suddenly somewhere nearer and instantly the tremendous
+booming of a great oriental gong from the heathen quarters swept heavy
+floods of sound over the outcry and drowned it. The vultures flew up
+hastily and Costobarus saw them for the first time. A chill rushed
+over him; revulsion of feeling showed vividly on his face. He shut the
+window.
+
+Noon was high over Ascalon and Pestilence was Cęsar within its walls.
+
+It was the penalty of warfare, the long black shadow that the passage
+of a great army casts upon a battling nation. Physicians could not
+give it a name. It seized upon healthy victims, rent them, blasted
+them and cast them dead and distorted in their tracks, before help
+could reach them. It passed like fire on a high wind through whole
+countries and left behind it silence and feeding vultures.
+
+As Costobarus turned from his window to pace up and down his chamber,
+Hannah's argument came back to him with new energy. He felt with a
+kind of panic that his confident answer to her might have been wrong.
+When a girl appeared in the archway, he moved impulsively toward her,
+as if to retract the command that would send her out into this land
+that the Lord had spoken against, but the strength and repose in her
+face communicated itself to him.
+
+Above all other suggestions in her presence was that overpowering
+richness of oriental beauty which no other kind in the world may
+surpass in its appeal to the loves of men. Enough of the Roman stock
+in her line had given structural firmness and stature to a type which
+at her age would have developed weight and duskiness, but she was
+taller and more slender than the women of her race, and supple and
+alive and splendid. About her hips was knotted a silken scarf of red
+and white and green with long undulant fringes that added to the lithe
+grace in her movements. Under it was a glistening garment of silver
+tissue that reached to the small ankles laced about by the ribbons of
+white sandals. For sleeves there were netted fringes through which the
+fine luster of her arms was visible. About her wrists, her throat and
+in her hair, heavy and shining black, were golden coins that marked
+her steps with stealthy tinkling.
+
+Costobarus, in spite of the shock of doubt and fear in his brain,
+looked at her as if with the happy eyes of the astonished Maccabee. In
+those full tender lips, in the slope of those black, silken brows, in
+the sparkling behind the dusky slumbrous eyes, there was all the fire
+and generosity and limitless charm that should make her lover's world
+a place of delight and perfume and music.
+
+"How is it with you, Laodice?" he asked, faltering a little.
+
+"I am prepared, my father," she answered.
+
+"I commend your despatch. I would be gone within an hour."
+
+She bowed and Costobarus regarded her with growing wistfulness. At
+this last moment his love was to become his obstacle, his fear for his
+child his one cowardice.
+
+"Dost thou remember him?" he asked without preliminary.
+
+Laodice answered as if the thought were first in her mind.
+
+"Not at all; and yet, if I could remember him, I may not discover in
+the man of four-and-twenty anything of the lad of ten."
+
+"He may not have changed. There are such natures, and, as I recall
+him, his may well be one of these. His disposition from childhood to
+boyhood did not change. When I knew him in Jerusalem, he was worthy
+the notice of a man. The manner he had there he bore with him to this,
+a smaller city, and hence to Ephesus, a city of another kind. It was
+good to see him examine the world, reject this and that and look upon
+his choice proudly. He made the schools observe him, consider him. He
+did not enter them for alteration, nor was he shut up in a shell of
+self-satisfaction. He entered them as a citizen of the world and as an
+examiner of all philosophy. Yet the world taught him nothing. It gave
+him merely the open school where regulation and atmosphere helped him
+to teach himself. O wife of a child, thou shalt not be ashamed of thy
+husband, man-grown!"
+
+"How is he favored?" she asked with the first maiden hesitation
+showing in the question.
+
+"He was slender and dark and promised to be tall. He was quick in
+movement, quick in temper, resourceful, aye, even shifty, I should
+say; stubborn, cold in heart, hard to please."
+
+"Fit attributes for a king," she said, half to herself, "yet he will
+be no soft husband."
+
+Costobarus looked away from her and was silent for a time.
+
+"Daughter," he said finally, "thou hast learned indeed that thine is
+to be no luxurious life. In thy restrained heart there are no dreams.
+Let not thy youth, when thou seest him, put obstacle in the way of thy
+duty. Whether thou lovest him or lovest him not, he is thy husband,
+thy fellow in a great labor for God and for Israel. Remember the times
+and the portents and shut thine ears against selfish desire. Thou
+seest Judea. That which the Lord hath uttered against it through the
+prophets has come to pass. Abandon thy hopes in all save the Son of
+God; forget thyself; prepare to give all and expect nothing but the
+coming of the King! For verily thou lookest over the edge of the world
+past the very end of time!"
+
+The solemn announcement of the Advent by this white-bearded prophet
+should have discovered in her a very human and terrified girl. But it
+was no new tidings to her. Since her earliest recollection she had
+heard it, expected it, contemplated it, till the magnitude and terror
+of it had been lost in its familiarity. She clasped her hands and
+dropped her eyes and her lips moved in a silent prayer.
+
+Costobarus remained for a space sunk in glorified meditation. But
+presently he raised himself, with signs of his recent feeling showing
+on his face.
+
+"Send hither thy mother; bid Aquila and our servants stand here before
+me a little later."
+
+She bowed and withdrew. As she passed out a servant stepped aside to
+give her room and at a sign from his master approached.
+
+"A messenger from Philip of Tyre," he said.
+
+A moment later an old courier carrying a sheepskin wallet came into
+the chamber. He salaamed and produced a tablet which he handed to
+Costobarus.
+
+ Herewith, O my brother, I send thee one hundred talents. May it
+ prove part of the corner-stone of a new Israel. Peace to thee and
+ thine!
+
+ PHILIP OF TYRE.
+
+Costobarus looked up at the old courier.
+
+"Take my blessings to thy master. May he come to a high seat in that
+new Israel which he hath helped to build! Farewell."
+
+The courier withdrew. When his footsteps died away the old merchant
+reached under the divan and drew forth the shittim-wood box. Producing
+a key he unlocked and opened it. From his bosom he drew forth the
+letter from Philadelphus and laid it within.
+
+"Let her take it with her," he said, speaking aloud. "Here," lifting a
+cylinder of old silver exquisitely chased, "are her marriage papers;
+this," lifting delicately embroidered squares of linen, "her marriage
+tokens, and here, her dowry."
+
+He opened the inner box and laid the sheepskin wallet in upon the
+gems. He closed the lid, and, locking the case, lifted it and set it
+beside him on the divan.
+
+When he looked up, he saw a man standing within a few paces of him and
+perfunctorily gazing at anything but the display of Laodice's fortune.
+
+He was lean, muscular, somewhat younger than forty but already gray at
+the temples, of nervous temperament, direct of gaze and of attractive
+presence. He wore a tunic of gray wool bordered with red, and a gray
+mantle hung negligently from his shoulders. Limbs and arms were bare
+and his head-covering of red wool hung from his arm.
+
+Costobarus, a little discomfited that he had been surprised with
+Laodice's dowry exposed, spoke briskly.
+
+"Well, Aquila? Prepared?"
+
+"Everything is in order. I am ready to proceed at once."
+
+"How many in your party?"
+
+"But myself."
+
+"Have you ever been to Jerusalem?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"How, then," Costobarus asked, with a keen look, "came Philadelphus to
+appoint you to conduct Laodice to the city?"
+
+"His retinue is small; he could not come himself, and he chose me as
+safer than the other member of his party," was the direct reply.
+
+Costobarus studied this reply before he questioned his son-in-law's
+courier further.
+
+"Jerusalem, they say, is in disorder. How will you get my daughter to
+shelter when you have reached the city?"
+
+"Philadelphus hath instructed me that there will be a Greek at the Sun
+Gate daily, awaiting us. He will wear a purple turban embroidered with
+a golden star. He will conduct us to the house of Amaryllis the
+Seleucid, who is pledged to the Maccabee's cause. Philadelphus will be
+in her house."
+
+"Why hers?" Costobarus persisted.
+
+"Because it is the only secure house in Jerusalem. She stands in the
+good graces of John of Gischala and she is safe."
+
+Costobarus ruminated.
+
+"There is too much detail; too many people to depend upon and
+therefore too many who may fail you. Aquila!"
+
+"Sir?"
+
+"I am going to Jerusalem with you."
+
+He turned without waiting to see the effect of this speech upon the
+Maccabee's courier and clapped his hands for an attendant. To the
+servitor who responded he said:
+
+"Send hither our party. It is time. Bring me my cloak."
+
+He looked then suddenly at Aquila. The Roman's face had cleared of its
+astonishment and discomfiture.
+
+"Well enough," the courier said bluntly and closed his lips. The
+servitor reappeared with his master's cloak and kerchief. After him
+came Keturah, the handmaiden, and Hiram, a camel-driver, prepared for
+a journey. The mute Momus presently appeared. Costobarus got into his
+cloak without help, made inquiry for this detail and that of his
+business and of his journey, gave instruction to his attendants, and
+then asked for Laodice.
+
+There was a moment of silence more distressed than embarrassed. Momus
+dropped his eyes; Keturah looked at her master with moving lips and
+sudden flushing of color, as if she were on the point of tears. Aquila
+stared absently out of the arch beyond.
+
+Costobarus glanced from one to the other of his company and then went
+toward the corridor to call his daughter. As he lifted the curtain, he
+started and stopped.
+
+[Illustration: At her feet Hannah knelt.]
+
+The lifted curtain had revealed Laodice. At her feet Hannah knelt, as
+if she had flung herself in her daughter's path, her arms clasping the
+young figure close to her and an agony of appeal stamped on her
+upraised face. The last of the rich color had died out of the girl's
+face and with pitiful eyes and quivering lips she was stroking the
+desperate hands that meant to keep her for ever.
+
+Except for the sudden sobbing of the woman servant, tense and
+anguished silence prevailed. The old merchant was confronted with a
+perplexity that found him without fortitude to solve. He felt his
+strength slip from him. He, too, covered his face with his hands.
+
+At the opposite arch another house servant appeared, lifted a
+distorted, blackening face and, doubling like a wounded snake, fell
+upon the floor.
+
+A moment of stupefied silence in which Hannah, with her mother
+instincts never so acutely alive, turned her strained vision upon the
+writhing figure. Then shrieks broke from the lips of the
+serving-woman; the hall filled with panic. Hannah leaped to her feet
+and thrust Laodice toward her father.
+
+"Away!" she cried. "The pestilence! The pestilence is upon us!"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+ON THE ROAD TO JERUSALEM
+
+
+News of the appearance of the plague in the house of Costobarus
+traveled fast after the death of the gardener, who had fallen in the
+open and in sight of the watchful inhabitants of Ascalon. So by the
+time the house servants of the merchant were made aware of their peril
+by the death of one of their own number, Philip of Tyre with the
+courage of affection and loyalty stood on the threshold of the
+guest-chamber informed of the situation and prepared to help. Hannah,
+supported by the Tyrian's assurance of her rescue and protection,
+succeeded in urging Costobarus and Laodice not to delay for her to the
+peril of the thrice precious daughter.
+
+So with his house yet ringing with the first convulsion of terror
+Costobarus ordered his party with all haste to the camels.
+
+Keturah, Laodice's handmaiden, had fainted with terror and was carried
+parcel-wise over the great arm of Momus, the mute, out into the street
+and deposited summarily on the floor of Laodice's bamboo howdah. The
+camel-driver, Hiram, seemed only a little less stupefied than she. The
+mute, with a face as determined and threatening as an uplifted gad,
+drove him from the shelter of a dark corner out to his place on the
+neck of his master's camel. Aquila, the emissary, showed the
+immemorial composure in the face of disaster that was the badge of the
+Roman in the days of the degenerate Cęsars, and, mounting his horse
+when the rest of the party were in their places, headed the procession
+toward the northeast.
+
+From an upper window behind a lattice, Hannah cried her farewells and
+fluttered her scarf. She was smiling the drawn, white smile of a
+mother who is forcing herself to be cheerful in the face of danger,
+for the peace of those she loves. Laodice understood the tender
+deception and when a sharp turn of the street cut off the sight of the
+plumy trees of the garden, she covered her face and wept inconsolably.
+
+On either side of the passage there came muffled sounds from houses;
+out of open alleys leading into interior courts stole the fetor of
+death that even the spice of burning unguents could not smother. The
+whole air shuddered with the drumming of heathen physicians in the
+pagan quarters, through which the silence of long stretches of
+ominously quiet houses shouted its meaning. At times frantic barefoot
+flights could be glimpsed as households deserted stricken houses, but
+whatever outcry arose came from bedsides. Ascalon fled as a frightened
+animal flees, silently and under cover.
+
+They rode now through a shrieking wind, burdened with sallow smoke and
+dreadful odors. Denser and denser the cloud grew till the streets
+ahead were hidden in yellow vapor and near-by houses loomed with dim
+outlines as if far off, and even the sounds of death and disaster
+became choked in the immense prevalence of smell. Blinded, with scarf
+and kerchief wrapped over mouth and nostril, the fleeing party swept
+down upon the very heart of that stifling mystery. Through it
+presently, as the houses thinned out, they saw cores of great heat
+surmounted by black-tipped flames that crackled savagely. Momus, now
+in the lead, turned sharply to his right and the next instant had the
+wind behind him. Almost involuntarily each member of the party looked
+back. Outside the breach of the broken wall, standing clear to view
+with the wind from the hills sweeping townward from them, were
+diabolical figures, naked and black, feeding immense pyres with
+hideous fuel.
+
+Past this grisly line, a camel with a single rider swept in from
+seaward. The traveler lifted an arm and signaled to the party. Aquila
+seemed not to see this hail, and rode on; but Costobarus, after the
+traveler motioned to them once more, spoke:
+
+"Does not this person make signs to us, Aquila?"
+
+The pagan looked back.
+
+"Why should he?" he asked.
+
+"He can tell us," the master observed and spoke to Momus and Hiram,
+who drew up their camels. The traveler raced alongside.
+
+It was a woman, veiled and wrapped with all the jealous care of the
+East against the curious eyes of strangers. Aquila took in her
+featureless presence with a single irritated look and apparently lost
+interest.
+
+"Greeting, lady," Costobarus said.
+
+"Peace, sir, and greeting," she replied respectfully. Her tones were
+marked with the deference of the serving-class and Costobarus gave her
+permission to speak.
+
+"Art thou a Jew and master of this train?" she asked.
+
+Costobarus assented.
+
+"I was journeying to Jerusalem with a caravan of which my master was
+owner, but the Romans came upon us and took every one prisoner, except
+myself. I escaped, but I am without protection and without friends. In
+Jerusalem, I have relatives who will care for me, yet I fear to make
+the journey alone. I pray thee, with the generosity of a Jew and the
+authority of a master, permit me to go in the protection of thy
+company!"
+
+Costobarus reflected and while he hesitated he became aware that Momus
+was looking at him with warning in his eyes. But Laodice, so filled
+with loneliness and apprehension, was moved to sympathy for the
+solitary and friendless woman. She leaned toward her father and said
+in a low voice:
+
+"Let her come with us, father; she is a woman and afraid."
+
+Aquila heard that low petition and he flashed a look at the stranger
+that seemed reproachful. But Costobarus was speaking.
+
+"Ride with us, then, and be welcome," he said.
+
+The woman bowed her shawled head and murmured with emotion after a
+silence:
+
+"The blessings of a servant be upon you and yours; may the God of
+Israel be with you for evermore."
+
+She dropped back to the rear of the party and the train moved on.
+
+Meanwhile, Keturah, who sat huddled on the floor of Laodice's howdah,
+had not moved since they had left the doorway of Costobarus' house.
+Momus, on the neck of Laodice's camel, had observed her once or twice,
+and now he reached back and touched her. He jerked his hand away and
+brought up his camel with a wrench. Hiram, following close behind, by
+dint of main strength managed to avoid a collision with Momus' beast
+so suddenly halted. The mute leaped down from his place and in an
+instant Costobarus joined him. Alarmed without understanding, Laodice
+had risen and was drawn as far as she might from the serving-woman.
+Momus, lifting himself by the stirrup, seized the stiff figure and
+laid it down upon the sands. Aquila dismounted and the three men bent
+over the woman. Then Costobarus glanced up quickly at Laodice, made a
+sign to Momus, who, with a face devoid of expression, climbed back
+into his place on the neck of the camel.
+
+The strange woman who had stood her ground was heard to say in a low
+voice, half lost in the muffling of her wrappings:
+
+"One!"
+
+Momus drove on leisurely and Laodice, knowing that she must not look,
+slipped down in her place and wrapped her vitta over her face.
+
+Pestilence was riding with them.
+
+After a long time, Costobarus' camel ambled up beside hers, and she
+ventured to uncover her eyes. Her father smiled at her with that same
+heart-breaking smile which her mother had for her in face of trouble.
+
+"The frosts! The frosts!" he whispered to Momus, and the mute laid
+goad about his camel.
+
+Aquila, seeing this haste, checked his horse's gait and fell back
+beside the strange woman. Together they permitted the rest of the
+party to ride ahead, while they talked in voices too restrained to be
+heard.
+
+"There is pestilence in this company," Aquila said angrily; "will that
+not persuade you to abandon this plan?"
+
+"No. When all of you are like to die and leave this great treasure
+sitting out in the wilderness without a guardian?" she said lightly.
+There was no trace of a servant's humility in her tone.
+
+"Hast had the plague that thou seem'st to feel secure from it?" he
+demanded.
+
+"O no; then there would be no risk in this game. There is no sport in
+an unfair advantage over conditions. No! But how comes this Costobarus
+with you?"
+
+"He would not trust his daughter and a dowry to me, alone."
+
+"How shall we get to Emmaus, then?" she asked.
+
+"We shall not get to Emmaus; so you must inform Julian, who will
+expect us there," he declared.
+
+The woman played with the silken reins of her camel. Behind her veil a
+sarcastic smile played about the corners of her mouth. Aquila watched
+her resentfully, waiting with an immense reserve of caustic words for
+her refusal to accept the charge.
+
+"So, my Mars of the gray temples, thou meanest in all faith to deliver
+up this lady and her treasure to Julian?"
+
+"By those same gray temples, I do! And hold thy peace about my white
+hairs. Nothing made them so but thyself--and this evil plot in which I
+am tangled. What does Julian mean to do with this poor creature?"
+
+"He has not got her yet and by the complication thou seest now,
+wearing its turban over one ear in yonder howdah, it may come to pass
+that he will never have her--and her dowry."
+
+"Pfui! How little you know this Julian! Besides, I am pledged to
+deliver him--at least the treasure."
+
+"And thou meanest to line his purse with this great treasure because
+he paid thee to do it?"
+
+"I shall; and be rid of it!"
+
+The woman smiled sarcastically.
+
+"And scorn it for thyself?"
+
+Aquila made no answer, but rode on in sulky silence.
+
+"Perpol, it must be pleasant to be a queen," the woman observed with
+an assumption of childishness in her voice.
+
+"Peril's own habit!" Aquila declared.
+
+"Peril! Fie! That is half the pleasure of this game of life. It is
+tiresome to live any other way than hazardously."
+
+"Thou shalt have pleasure enough in this journey thou art to take,"
+Aquila declared a little threateningly.
+
+The woman laughed. When Aquila spoke again, his voice was full of
+concern.
+
+"I was a fool for not forcing you to stay in Ascalon. You are
+reckless--reckless!"
+
+"It was that which made me attractive," the woman broke in, "to Nero,
+to Vitellius and to you."
+
+"Reckless and useless!" Aquila went on decisively. "Hear me, now; I
+trifle no longer. Sometime to-night thou'lt leave us and journey to
+Emmaus and inform Julian what has wrecked his plans, and send him with
+despatch to Zorah. This thou wilt do, by all the Furies, or when I do
+catch thee as I shall, since there is no other fool in Judea who will
+undertake to feed thee, I shall leave the print of my displeasure on
+thee from thy head to thy heel! Mark me!"
+
+The woman laughed aloud, with such peculiar insolence and amusement
+that one of the servants heard her and turned his head that way.
+
+"Pah! What a timid villain thou art," the woman said, when the servant
+looked away again. "How much better it would have been had Julian
+fixed upon _me_ as his confederate!"
+
+"Not for Julian! You plot against him even now. But say what you will,
+you go to Emmaus to-night, without fail. I have spoken!"
+
+Aquila touched his horse and riding away from the woman came up beside
+Costobarus who was gazing over the country through which they were
+passing.
+
+It was a great plain, advancing by benches and slopes to the edge of a
+rocky shore. Without forests, spotted only with verdure, vast, barren,
+exhausted with the constant production of fourteen centuries, it was a
+cheerless sea-front at its best. To the west the wash of the tideless
+Mediterranean tumbled along an unindented coast; to the east the
+sallow stony earth went up and up, toward an ever receding sallow
+horizon. Between lay humbled towns, wholly abandoned to the bats and
+to the ignoble wild life of the Judean wilderness. There were no sheep
+or cattle. Vespasian had passed that way and required the flocks of
+the nation for the subsistence of his four legions. There were no
+olive or fig groves. They had been the first to fall under the Roman
+ax, for the policy of Roman warfare was that the first step in
+subduing a rebellious province was to starve it. The vineyards had
+suffered the same end. The enriched soil of these inclosures, made one
+now with the wild at the leveling of their hedges, produced acres of
+profitless weeds, green against the rising brown bosom of the
+hill-fronts. Here and there were the fallen walls of isolated
+homes--wastes of masonry already losing all domestic signs. There were
+no gardens; it had been two seasons since the wheat and the barley had
+been reaped last, and the seaboard of southern Judea, in the path of
+Rome the destroyer, was a wilderness.
+
+Over all this immense slope the eyes of Costobarus wandered. However
+he had felt in the preceding days when he looked upon this ruin of the
+land of milk and honey, he realized now suddenly and in all its
+fearful actuality the predicament of Judea, its despair and the
+gigantic travail before those who would save it from the united
+sentence passed upon it by God and the powers. Immense dejection
+seized him. He looked from the face of the country, upon which not a
+single thing of profit showed, toward the bowed head and oppressed
+figure of his young and inexperienced daughter who was to put her
+tender self between Ruin and its victim. Chills, succeeded by flashes
+of fever, swept over him. He raised himself as if to give command to
+Aquila but settled back under the canopy, grown immeasurably older and
+feebler in that moment of helpless surrender to conditions of which he
+had been part an artificer. It was not as if he had made an incautious
+move in a political game; it was, as it seemed to him undeniably then,
+that he had advanced against the Lord God of Hosts, and there was no
+turning back!
+
+He settled slowly into a stunned anguish that seemed to rise
+gradually, like a filling tide, shutting out the sunset and the
+seaboard, the bald earth and the streaming wind, and engulfing him in
+roaring darkness and intense cold.
+
+They were in sight of a cluster of Syrian huts, the first inhabited
+village they had come upon since leaving Ascalon, but he was not aware
+of it. The sudden halting of his camel and a hoarse strained cry at
+hand seemed to bear some relation to his condition, but he did not
+care. He felt his howdah lurch to one side as some one leaped up
+beside him; he felt remotely the great grasp of hands on him, which
+must have been Momus'; the quick military voice of Aquila he heard and
+then, keen and distinct as a call upon him, the sound of Laodice's
+tones made sharp with terror.
+
+He opened his eyes and saw her, holding him in her arms. Somewhere in
+the background were the faces of Momus and Aquila. Between the pagan
+and the old servant passed a look that the old man caught. Then he
+heard Aquila say:
+
+"The village--his sole chance, if there is a physician there."
+
+Laodice held him fast only for a moment, when it seemed that she was
+wrenched away. The dying man was glad. If this were pestilence, she
+should not come near. The hiss of the lash and the bound of the stung
+camel disturbed him but he lapsed into the immense cold again as they
+raced down the slight declivity toward the Syrian village. But
+Pestilence was riding with them and the odds were with it.
+
+But the dwellers of that little huddle of huts had nothing to do but
+to sit in their doorways and suspect. Whatever came their way from the
+sea for many months had brought them disaster and long since they had
+learned to defend themselves. So now, when a party riding at breakneck
+speed, bearing with them an old man on whom the inertia of death was
+plain, came across the frontiers of their little town, they met them
+with the convenient stones of their rocky streets, with their savage,
+stark-ribbed dogs, with offal from kitchen heap and donkey stall and
+with insults and curses.
+
+"Away, ye bringers of plague! Out, lepers; be gone, ye unclean!"
+
+Laodice and Aquila who rode in the open were fair targets for half the
+hail that fell about them. The girl groaned as the missiles fell into
+the howdah upon the helpless shape of Costobarus, who did not lift a
+hand to fend off the stones. The pagan, bruised and raging, drew his
+weapon and spurred his horse to ride down his assailants, but they
+scattered before him and from safe refuge continued their assault with
+redoubled determination.
+
+Momus, seeing only injury in attempting to enforce hospitality, turned
+his camel and, swinging around the outermost limits of the settlement,
+fled. Aquila followed him, and a moment later the rest of the party
+joined them.
+
+Without the range of the village, the party halted. Momus and Aquila
+lifted Costobarus down and laid him on a rug that Laodice had spread
+for him. But when she would have knelt by him, he motioned to Aquila
+not to permit her to approach. The mute stood by his master. In that
+countenance fast passing under shade was written charge and injunction
+as solemn as the darkness that approached him.
+
+"Here, O faithful servant, is the wife of a prince, the daughter of
+thy master, the joy of thine own declining days. Shield her against
+wrong and misfortune by all the strength that in thee lies, as thou
+hopest in the King to come and the reward of the steadfast. Promise!"
+
+They were silent lips that once knew the art and the sound of speech.
+The old habit never entirely fell away from them. Under this anguish
+they moved--fruitlessly; over the deformed face flitted the keen
+agony of regret; then he lifted his great left arm and bent it upward
+at the elbow; the huge, even monstrous muscles, knotted and kinked
+from shoulder to elbow, sank down under the broad barbarian bracelet
+of bronze and rippled under and rose again from elbow to wrist,
+ferocious, superhuman! In that movement the dying man read the mute's
+consecration of his one great strength to the protection of the
+tenderly loved Laodice. Costobarus motioned to the shittim-wood casket
+and Momus undid it and strapped it on his own belt.
+
+"The frosts! The frosts!" the dying man whispered. The mute
+understood. Then the father's eyes wandered toward the figure of his
+daughter fended away from him by the pagan. The agony of her suffering
+and the agony of his distress for her bridged the space between them.
+And while they yearned toward each other in a silence that quivered
+with pain, the light darkened in Costobarus' eyes.
+
+When Laodice came to herself, she was laid upon a spot of rough grass,
+in the shelter of an overhanging bluff. It was not the scene upon
+which her sorrow-stunned eyes had closed a while before. The village
+was nowhere in sight; the plain had been left behind; any further view
+was shut off by Aquila's horse, and the two camels whose bridles were
+in the hands of Hiram. Beside the stricken girl knelt Momus and
+Aquila; standing at her feet was a new-comer, on whom her wandering and
+half-conscious gaze rested.
+
+He was an old man, clad in a short tunic, ragged of hem and girt about
+him with a rope. Barefoot, bareheaded and provided only with a staff
+and a small wallet, he was to outward appearances little more than one
+of the legion of mendicants that infested the poverty-stricken land of
+Judea. But his large eyes, under the tangle of wind-blown white hair
+and white shelving brows, were infinitely intelligent and refined.
+Now, they beamed with pity and concern on the bereaved girl.
+
+But she forgot him the next instant, for returning consciousness
+brought back like a blow the memory of the death of her father.
+
+From time to time she caught snatches of conversation between the old
+wayfarer and Aquila. They were spoken in low tones and only from time
+to time did they reach her.
+
+"He was Costobarus, principal merchant of this coast," she heard
+Aquila explain shortly.
+
+"I shall go on to Ascalon; I do not fear," the old man said next. "I
+shall bring his people to fetch his body. I marked the spot. Comfort
+her with that, when she can bear to talk of it."
+
+"We go to Jerusalem," Aquila went on, some time later, "else we should
+turn back with him ourselves. But we dare not risk the pestilence on
+her account, for it seems that she is very necessary to the Jews at
+this hour--very necessary."
+
+"I follow to the Holy City," the old wayfarer added at last. "The
+Passover is celebrated there within two weeks. But I shall not fail;
+nothing will harm me."
+
+"What talisman do you carry to protect you?" the pagan asked a little
+irritably.
+
+"No talisman, but the love of Jesus Christ, the Saviour!"
+
+"A Christian!" Aquila exclaimed.
+
+Even through her stupor of grief and hopelessness, Laodice heard this
+exclamation. Here, then, was one of the Nazarenes, that mysterious
+sect whose tenets she had never been permitted to hear; But also, she
+knew that the old apostate had braved the plague and had buried her
+father. She turned to look at him in time to see him extend his hands
+in blessing over her.
+
+"_The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and his comfort be with you, for
+ever; amen_. Farewell."
+
+He was gone. Momus raised her in his arms and, lifting her into her
+howdah, laid her tenderly on the improvised reclining seat that had
+been made of the chair therein. In a twinkling the whole party had
+mounted, and passed swiftly on toward Jerusalem. As they moved
+forward, the strange woman murmured softly:
+
+"Two!"
+
+Laodice's camel mounted the slope toward the east and stretched away
+on a comparative level toward an immense white moon. Aquila's horse
+kept up with the matchless speed of the tall camel only at times, and
+Laodice, dully sensing that they were going at hot haste, realized
+that a race was on between them and the pestilence. Momus was wielding
+the goad for a run to the frosts.
+
+A camel raced up beside Aquila.
+
+"Look!" the woman said to him in a lowered tone, showing back over the
+road by which they had come. Aquila turned in his saddle and looked.
+Momus rose in his seat and looked. Behind them only one camel rocked
+along in their wake. The other and its driver had disappeared.
+
+"Deserted!" Aquila exclaimed under his breath.
+
+"Three!" the woman said.
+
+"A pest on your counting for a Charon's toll-taker!" Aquila whispered
+savagely. "We will have no more of it!"
+
+"No?" the woman said with a meaning that made the pagan shiver.
+
+Momus laid goad about his camel.
+
+The way continually ascended toward the east; the soil was no longer
+sandy, but rocky; no longer given up to desolate gardens, but black
+with groves of cedars and highland shrubs. They swung off a plateau
+that would have ended in a cliff, down a shaly sheep-path into a wady.
+Under the moonlight, the bottom was seen to be scarred with marks of
+hoof and wheel. It debouched suddenly into a Roman road, straight,
+level, magnificently built and running as a bird flies on to
+Jerusalem.
+
+The camel's gait increased. Momus settled himself in a securer
+position and Laodice, careless of the outcome of this breathless
+hurry, yielded herself to the careen of her howdah. At times, her
+indifferent vision caught, through moonlit notches and gaps, glimpses
+of great blue vapors, crowned with pale fire and piled in glorious
+disorder low on the eastern horizon. They were the hills encompassing
+Jerusalem. The stream of wind on her face cooled and drove stronger.
+
+Aquila rode closer to her, his horse panting under the effort. His
+face looked strange and distressed.
+
+"Lady," he said in low tones, "necessity forces me to speak to you in
+your grief; do not blame me for indifference to your desire to be
+alone. But we must care for you, though in your heart this moment you
+may resent a wish to live. But your father commanded me!"
+
+She gave him attention.
+
+"Let us not carry peril with us," he added in a half-whisper. "Let us
+not carry food for pestilence with us."
+
+"I do not understand," she answered, adopting his low tone.
+
+"The more we are, the more of us to die. You must live; I must live,"
+he explained, nodding toward Momus.
+
+After a little silence, she asked:
+
+"Do we not ride toward the frosts?"
+
+"Yes; but even now pestilence may ride on beside us--your servant and
+this woman. Let us save ourselves."
+
+"Abandon them?" she questioned.
+
+"Lest they go on without us," he added.
+
+Momus turned suddenly and gazed at Aquila. Then he imperiously signed
+the pagan to fall back.
+
+They rode on.
+
+The pagan slackened his horse's gallop and reined in beside the woman.
+They talked together, argumentatively, for a single tense minute and
+then Aquila, with a bitter word, put spurs to his animal and dashed up
+beside Laodice's camel. In his one uplifted hand a knife gleamed. The
+other reached toward the casket bound to Momus' hip. Laodice, raised
+to an upright attitude in her fresh fright, saw that his face was
+black and twisted and that he wavered stiffly in his saddle.
+
+But the mute did not await the attack. He seized the pagan's
+outstretched hands with that monstrous left and flung him backward.
+Without an effort to save himself, falling rigidly and with a strange
+cry, Aquila dropped back over his horse's crupper into the dust of the
+road.
+
+"Momus!" Laodice screamed.
+
+Back of her the woman cried out:
+
+"On! On! It is the pestilence!"
+
+Momus wielded his goad. Laodice, shaking and crying aloud, looked back
+to see the strange woman swerve her camel past the dark shape lying
+with out-flung arms in the road and sweep quickly on after them.
+
+The scourge had overtaken Aquila.
+
+All night the camels fled east, all night the soft footfall of the
+woman's beast pursued them; all night the wind freshened until
+Laodice's bared face stiffened with the cold and the breath of the
+mute that sat upon her camel's neck steamed in the moonlight. Up and
+up, by steep and winding wadies they mounted; under overhanging cliffs
+and past bald towers of hill-rock staring white in the moon, along
+black passes between brooding eminences of solid night, crowned with
+ghost-light; over high plateaus darkened with groves, down dales with
+singing, invisible streams running seaward and up again and on until
+the hills engulfed them wholly and those before were higher than any
+they had seen. Then their flying beasts, leaving the Roman road over
+which they had sped for some distance, followed a sheep-path and burst
+into an open immersed in moonlight. Below in the distance was a
+cluster of huts, white and lifeless. But abroad, over the crisp grass
+and misty white on all the exposed slopes, sparkled the deep hoar
+frost!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+THE SHEPHERD OF PELLA
+
+
+Momus drew up his camel. The woman who had followed halted. Except for
+the hurried breathing of their beasts, a critical silence brooded over
+the moon-silvered wilderness. The moment was tense with the agony of
+human bitterness against the immitigable despatch of death. There
+could be no thanksgiving for their own safety from those who were not
+glad to be given life. Laodice resented her preservation; old Momus,
+aside from the wound of personal loss sore in his heart, was stricken
+with the realization of the grief of his young mistress, which he
+could not help. He did not raise his eyes to her face when he turned
+toward her; there was no speech. In the young woman's heart the pain
+was too great for her to venture expression safely. The silence was
+poignant with unnatural restraint.
+
+Presently Momus inquired of her by signs if she wished to go on to the
+lifeless village below the camp. She did not observe his gestures, and
+Momus decided for her. He drove on and the woman, who had wrapped her
+cloak about her as the biting wind of the hills heightened through the
+narrow defiles to the north, followed.
+
+But almost the next instant Momus drew up his mount so suddenly that
+Laodice was roused. He turned and began to make rapid signs. Laodice
+half rose as she read them and pressed her hands together.
+
+"Seven days!" she exclaimed in dismay. There was silence.
+
+Momus made the camel kneel. He dismounted slowly, and began to undo
+the tent-cloth in a roll beside the howdah. The woman rode up and
+instantly the mute stepped between her and his young mistress and went
+on with his work.
+
+Laodice understood the question in the woman's attitude although, with
+true sense of an inferior's place, the stranger did not speak.
+
+"We are unclean," Laodice said with effort. "We have come from a
+pestilential city and we have touched the dead. We can not enter a
+town with these defilements upon us, except to present ourselves to a
+priest for examination and separation. Furthermore, we must burn our
+unessential belongings. If you are a Jewess all these things are known
+to you."
+
+The woman extended her hands, palms upward, with a grace that was
+almost dainty.
+
+"Lady," she said behind her unlifted veil, "I am an unlettered woman
+and have been accustomed to the instruction of my masters. I am
+obedient to the laws of our people."
+
+"You would have been in less peril to have ridden alone," Laodice
+sighed. "Our company has been no help to you."
+
+"We can not say that confidently. There are worse things than
+pestilence in the wilderness," the woman replied.
+
+Momus seemed to observe more confidence than was natural in the ready
+answers of this professed servant, and before he would leave Laodice
+to pitch camp, he helped her to alight and drew her with him. The
+woman remained on her mount.
+
+Gathering up sticks, dead needles of cedar and last year's leaves, he
+made a fire upon which he heaped fuel till it lighted up the near-by
+slopes of the hills and roared jovially in the broad wind.
+
+It was a pocket in the heart of high hills into which they had fled.
+The bold, sure line of a Roman road divided it, cutting tyrannically
+through the cowed hovels of the town as an arrow drives through a
+flock of pigeons. On either side were the dim shapes of great rocks
+and semi-recumbent cedars. Retiring into shadow were the darker
+outlines of the surrounding circle of hills, rived by intervals of
+black night where wadies entered. From their summits the flying arch
+of the heavens sprang, printed with a few faint stars, but all
+silvered with the flood-light of a moon cold and pure as the frost
+itself. It was unsympathetic, aloof and wild--a cold place into which
+to bring broken hearts to assume banishment from the comfort and
+companionship of mankind.
+
+Laodice slowly and with effort began to separate those belongings
+which were to be laid upon the fire from those which were too
+necessary to be burned. The woman alighted but, on offering to assist,
+was warned away from the girl with a menacing gesture of Momus' great
+arm. The stranger drew herself up suddenly with a wrath that she
+hardly controlled but came no nearer Laodice. When the girl finally
+finished her selection, the woman begged permission to attend to the
+camels and getting the beasts on their feet led them together to be
+tethered.
+
+Laodice, assisted by Momus, took up the condemned supplies and flung
+them one at a time upon the roaring fire. Little by little, with
+growing reluctance, the heap of spare belongings was examined and
+condemned, until finally only the garments they wore, the tents that
+were to shelter them and the essential harness of the camels were
+left. Then Momus drew from his wallet a fragment of aromatic gum and
+cast it on the blaze. While it ignited and burned with great vapors of
+penetrating incense, he unstrapped the precious casket, set it down
+between his feet, stripped off his comfortable woolen tunic and passed
+it through the volumes of white smoke piling up from the fire.
+
+And while he stood thus a deft hand seized the casket from behind.
+There was a sharp, warning cry from Laodice. The old man staggered
+only a moment from the tripping that the wrench gave him, but in that
+instant of hesitation the pillager vanished.
+
+The old mute shouted the infuriated, half-animal yell of the dumb and
+started in pursuit, but at his second step he saw the fleeter camel
+swing down the declivity, at top-speed, with the other trailing with
+difficulty at full length of its bridle behind. The next instant the
+muffled beat of the padded hooves drummed the solid bed of the Roman
+road, and the shapes of camels and fugitive were lost in blue darkness
+beyond the town.
+
+There was no need for the pair left behind to await a realization of
+all that the loss meant to them. One running swiftly as a fine young
+creature can run when spurred by desperation, and the other, lamely
+but doggedly, as an old determined man, rushed down the rough side of
+the slope, leaped into the roadway and ran irrationally after the
+fugitive mounted upon a camel, fleeter than the fastest horse.
+
+Momus saw with fear that Laodice on this straight inviting road would
+out-distance him to her peril. He shouted inarticulately after her,
+but her reply came back, high with desperation and terror.
+
+"The corner-stone of Israel! All his treasure! God's portion, lost,
+lost!"
+
+She was out of his sight. The sudden barking of dogs told him that she
+had crossed the outskirts of the village, and groaning with alarm for
+her the old man stumbled on after her. He saw lights flash out; heard
+shouts, and out of the confusion distinguished Laodice's, vehement and
+urging. The yapping of the town curs became less threatening and, by
+the time Momus reached the settlement, half-dressed Jews were hurrying
+east out of the village after the flying feet of the girl, in pursuit
+of the robber.
+
+For unmeasured time, while the moon crossed its meridian and sloped
+down the west, the search continued. Momus did not overtake the
+fleet-footed party that preceded him. Stragglers that lost interest
+dropped back with him from time to time; but finding him dumb and
+immensely distressed, they disappeared eventually and returned to the
+town. One by one, at times by twos and threes the party dropped off.
+The three or four who remained helpful continued against hope, for
+simple pity for the girl. But when she dropped suddenly by the
+wayside, exhausted with the strain of many troubles, they stopped to
+tell her that the chase was fruitless and to offer their rough
+condolences.
+
+Then Momus hobbled up to them. Laodice refused to raise her head to
+listen to them and they turned to the old man. But by signs, he showed
+them that his tongue was dead, and finally, with suppressed remarks
+upon the exceeding misfortune of the pair, they, too, disappeared. A
+thoughtful one invited them to return to the village. Laodice,
+careless now of what he should think of his exposure to pestilence,
+told him bluntly that they were unclean. Hastily he exclaimed at the
+sum of their troubles, hastily blessed them, and hastily departed.
+
+There was a pallor along the under-rim of the east; the wind freshened
+with the sweet vigor of early morning.
+
+Over the stunned silence came the sound of the infinite trotting of
+tiny hooves and a high, wild, youthful yell. Laodice, too worn to
+observe, sat still; but Momus, with a rush of old fairy-tales in mind,
+sprang to her side and seized her arm. His alarmed eyes searched the
+dark landscape for whatever visitation it had to reveal.
+
+There was the rush of countless hoof-beats and a low cloud of dust
+obscured the crest of the hill just above them. The soft tremolo of
+multitudinous bleating came out of it. The quick excited bark of a
+fresh Natolian sheep-dog wakened an echo in one of the ravines through
+a hill on the opposite side of the road, while strong and insistent
+and happy the young cry preceded this sudden animation in the
+wilderness.
+
+There was a fall of gravel on the slope over their heads and the next
+instant a fourteen-year-old boy descended upon the pair in a fall of
+earth, his sandaled feet planted one ahead of the other, his bare arms
+thrown above his head as he balanced himself, his long, stiff,
+crinkled black locks blowing backward, his face bright with the eager
+enjoyment of his simple feat.
+
+After him came a veritable avalanche of Syrian sheep, scrambling to
+right and left as they parted behind Momus and Laodice and eddying
+around the young shepherd who stopped at seeing the pair. His yell
+died away at once, though the effort of sliding down a frozen, rocky
+slope had not interfered with a single note.
+
+He might well have been a young satyr, fresh from the groves of
+Achaia, with his big, serious mouth and its range of glittering teeth,
+his shining deer-like eyes, wide apart, his faun curls low on his
+forehead, his big head set on a short neck, his shoulders yet
+childish, his slim brown body half smothered in skins, half bare as he
+was born, his large hard hand gripping a crook of horn and wood. His
+gaze at Momus was frank with boyish curiosity. His bright eyes plainly
+remarked on the oddity of the old servant's appearance. Having
+catalogued old Momus as worthy of further inspection, he looked then
+at Laodice. Under the lowering moon and the listless effort of coming
+day, her unmantled dress of silver tissue made of her a moon-spirit,
+banished out of her world of pallor and solitude. Before her splendid
+young beauty, pale with distress and weariness, he was not abashed.
+His simple eyes studied her with equal frankness, but with an
+admiration beyond words.
+
+Feeling somehow that his sudden appearance might have distressed her,
+he said finally:
+
+"Go on, lady, or stay as it pleases you. I will not hurt you."
+
+Momus' shoulders submerged his ears in an indignant shrug. That this
+young calf of the pastures should insure him safe passage!
+
+But Laodice was still filled with the calamity of her loss.
+
+"Hast seen a robber, here, along this road?" she asked.
+
+"Many of them," was the prompt answer.
+
+"With a chest of jewels?"
+
+The boy shook his head.
+
+"I never examined their booty," he said with perfect respect.
+
+"Or then a woman riding one camel and leading another?"
+
+"Never anything like that."
+
+Laodice, with this hope gone, let her face fall into her hands.
+
+"His fortune given freely to Israel," she groaned. "His whole life's
+ambition reduced to material form for the help of his brethren--gone,
+gone!"
+
+The shepherd grew instantly distressed. He looked at Momus and asked
+in a whisper what had happened. But the old servant signed to his lips
+irritably, and stroked his young mistress' hair in a dumb effort to
+comfort her. The silence grew painful. In his anxiety to relieve them,
+he bethought him of their uncovered heads and houseless state.
+
+"Do you live in the village; or do you camp near by?"
+
+Momus shook his head. Laodice appreciated the boy's concern for them
+but could not make an attempt to explain.
+
+"Then," he offered promptly, "come have my fire and my rock. It is the
+best rock in all these hills; and my tent," he added, showing the
+skins that wrapped him. "I wear my tent; it saves my carrying it.
+Indeed I do not need it; you may have it. Come!"
+
+He spoke hurriedly, as if he would thrust his desire to comfort
+between her and the wave of disconsolation that he felt was about to
+cover her.
+
+Old Momus, sensibly accepting the boy's suggestion as the wisest
+course, raised Laodice and motioning the shepherd to lead on, led his
+young mistress up the hill as the boy retraced his steps. The flood of
+Syrian sheep turned back with him and followed bleating between the
+urging of the sheep-dog, as the boy climbed.
+
+On a slope to the west as a wady bent upon itself abruptly before it
+debouched upon the hillside, there was a deep glow illuminating a
+space in the depression. The shepherd dropped down out of sight. His
+voice came over the shuffle and bleat of the sheep.
+
+"Follow me; this is my house."
+
+Momus led his mistress over to the wady. There the shepherd with
+uplifted hands helped her down with the superior courtesy of a
+householder offering hospitality. There was a red circle of fire in
+the sandy bottom of the dry wady, and beside it was a flat boulder at
+the foot of which were prints of the shepherd's sandals and, on the
+bank behind it, the mark where his shoulders had comfortably rested.
+He made no apology for the poverty of his entertainment; he had never
+known anything better.
+
+"Now, brother," he said busily to Momus, "if thou'lt lend me of thy
+height, thou shalt have of my agility and we will set up a douar for
+the lady."
+
+With frank composure he stripped off the burden of skins that covered
+him until he stood forth in a single hide of wool, with a tumble of
+sheep pelts at his feet. In each one was a thorn preserved for use and
+with these he pinned them all together, scrambled out on the bank,
+emitting his startling cry at the sheep that obstructed his path. From
+above he shouted down to Momus.
+
+"Stretch it, brother, over thy head. I shall pin it down with stones
+on either side. Now, unless some jackal dislodges these weights before
+morning, ye will be safe covered from the cold. There! God never made
+a man till He prepared him a cave to sleep under! I've never slept in
+the open, yet. How is it with thee now, lady?"
+
+He was down again before her with the red light of the great bed of
+coals illuminating him with a glow that was almost an expression of
+his charity.
+
+She saw that he had the straight serious features of the Ishmaelite,
+but lacked the fierce yet wondering gaze of the Arab. Aside from these
+superior indications in his face there was nothing to separate him
+from any other shepherd that ranged the mountainous pastures of
+Palestine.
+
+She, who all her life had never known anything but to expect the
+tenderest of ministrations, was humbly surprised and grateful at the
+free-handed generosity of the young stranger. Momus looked at him with
+grudging approval.
+
+"It is kindly shelter," she said finally with effort, "and it is warm.
+You are very good to us!"
+
+"But you have not eaten of my salt," he declared.
+
+Momus showed interest. It had been long since the last meal in the
+luxurious house of Costobarus. The boy in the meantime produced
+unleavened loaves from the carry-all of sheepskin that hung over his
+shoulders, and without explanation disappeared among his flock.
+Presently he returned with a small skin of milk.
+
+"We have goats in the flock," he said. "A shepherd can not live
+without a goat. You do not know about shepherds," he added.
+
+Laodice thought that she detected tactful inquiry in his last remark
+and roused herself painfully to make due explanations to her host. But
+he waved his hands at her, with the desert-man's courtesy which covers
+fine points better than the greater ones.
+
+"Eat my fare; I do not purchase thy history with salt and shelter," he
+said, with a certain sublimity of honor.
+
+Momus ate, and looked with growing grace at his young host. But
+Laodice succeeded only in drinking the goat's milk and lapsed into
+benumbed gazing at the red glow of fire that cast its warmth about
+her. The shepherd talked on, attempting to interest her in something
+other than her consuming sorrow.
+
+"These be Christian sheep about you, friends," he said, "and I am a
+Christian shepherd."
+
+Momus sat up suddenly with a bit of the boy's bread arrested on its
+way to his lips. He was eating the fare of an apostate, of a despised
+Nazarene. The boy went on composedly.
+
+"We are from Pella, the Christian city. We are, my sheep, my city and
+I, the only secure people in all Judea. We, I and the sheep, have been
+in the hills since the first new grass in February. We are many
+leagues from home."
+
+"So am I," Laodice said wearily.
+
+"Jerusalem?" the shepherd asked, glad he had brought out a response.
+"No? Yet all Judea is going to Jerusalem at this time. Are you
+fugitives?"
+
+Momus nodded.
+
+"Come then to Pella," the shepherd urged. "You will be fed there;
+Titus will not come there. We are poor but we are happy--and we are
+safe."
+
+Laodice thanked him so inertly that he sensed her disinterest, and
+while he sat looking at her, searching his heart for something kind to
+say, she put out her hand impulsively and took his.
+
+"God keep thee and forget thy heresy," she said. "If thou livest in
+Pella, Pella is indeed happy."
+
+He laughed with a flush stealing up under the brown of his cheeks. A
+faint light came into Laodice's eyes as she looked at him; he returned
+her gaze with a gradual softening that was intensely complimentary.
+Between the two was effected instant and lasting fellowship. Before
+Momus' indignant eyes the shepherd was blushing happily.
+
+"Who art thou?" Laodice asked.
+
+"They call me Joseph, son of Thomas."
+
+After a silence she said softly,
+
+"I am not at liberty to tell my name." She remembered the secrecy of
+Philadelphus' mission. "Yet perchance if the God of my fathers prosper
+me and my husband, I may come to Pella--as thy queen."
+
+The boy's eyes brightened and he drew in a sharp breath, but almost
+instantly the animation died and he looked at her sorrowfully. It
+seemed that she read dissent and sympathy commingled in his gaze. But
+he was a Christian; he could not believe and hope as she hoped.
+
+"Can I do aught for you?" he asked disjointedly.
+
+"Our duty is rather toward you, child," she answered, suddenly
+arousing to the peril they might bring their free-handed host. "We
+have newly come from a country where there is pestilence."
+
+But he smiled down on her uplifted face, with immense confidence.
+
+"I am not afraid. Besides, if I perish giving you comfort, I have done
+only as Jesus would have me do."
+
+"Who is Jesus?" Laodice asked.
+
+The shepherd made a little sign and bent his knee.
+
+"The Christ!" he responded.
+
+Momus plucked quickly at Laodice's sleeve and shook his head at her in
+an admonitory manner. He had laid down his bread unfinished. But the
+shepherd looked at him sympathetically.
+
+"Never fear," he said. "It will not hurt her to hear about Him. He
+makes Pella safe from armies. Let her come there and see for herself."
+
+Laodice pressed his hand.
+
+"I shall come," she said.
+
+He heaved a contented sigh--contented with himself, contented with her
+promise to come. Then he drew his hands away.
+
+"The sheep are noisy; they will not let you sleep. We shall go." Then
+as if afraid of her thanks he drew away, and halted at the threshold
+of the shelter. Then the boy extended his hands with a gesture so
+solemn that both of his guests bowed their heads instinctively.
+
+"_The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you for evermore_.
+Farewell," he said in a half-whisper.
+
+He was gone.
+
+Presently the rush of little feet swept after him and his high, wild,
+youthful yell rang faintly in the distance. The delicate crackling
+from the heated bed of coals was all that was heard in the sheltered
+wady roofed with skins.
+
+For the second time within the past few hours, Laodice had met a
+Christian. Both had helped her; both had blessed her. And one was an
+old man and one was a child.
+
+The interest of the recent interview and the excitement of the night
+slowly died away, leaving Laodice in the dead hopelessness of weary
+despair. She lay down suddenly with her face against the warmed sand
+and wept. Momus sat down beside her, covered her with a leopard skin
+taken from his own swarthy shoulders, and soothed her with awkward
+touches on cheek and hair, till her tears exhausted her and she slept.
+
+Stealthily then the old man rolled up her own mantle and put it under
+her head and prepared to watch. And then as he sat with his knee drawn
+up, his head bowed upon it, the weakness of slumber gradually stole
+away his watchfulness and his concern.
+
+Some time later, before the deliberate dawn of a March day had put out
+the last of the greater stars, two men on horses descended the
+declivity just above the shelter of sheepskins and attracted by the
+dull glow of the fire drew up cautiously.
+
+At a word from one of the men, the other alighted and, peering from
+the shelter of a prostrate cedar, inspected the pair. After assuring
+himself that there were but two about the camp, one a woman and both
+asleep, he tiptoed back to his fellow.
+
+"Only a man and a woman," he said. "Jews on their way to the Passover.
+Their fire is almost out. Let us ride on."
+
+"What haste!" the one who had kept his saddle said. "One would think
+it were you going forward to meet a bride and her dowry! I am hungry.
+Let us borrow of this fire and get breakfast."
+
+"Emmaus is only a little farther on," the first man protested. "I am
+tired of wayside meals, Philadelphus. I would eat at a khan again
+before I forget the custom."
+
+"How is the pair favored?" the other said provokingly.
+
+"I did not approach near enough," the other retorted. "It seemed to be
+an old man and a girl."
+
+"Pretty?" the one called Philadelphus asked.
+
+"I did not see."
+
+"Married, Julian?"
+
+"How could I tell?" Julian flared.
+
+Philadelphus laughed, and dismounted.
+
+"I shall see for myself," he declared, walking over to the sheltering
+cedar to look.
+
+Julian followed him nervously, saying under his breath:
+
+"You waste time deliberately!"
+
+"Tut! You merely wish to keep me from seeing this girl," Philadelphus
+retorted.
+
+He, too, stopped at the prostrate cedar and gazed under the sagging
+shelter of skins.
+
+"Shade of Helen!" he exclaimed under his breath as the firelight gave
+him perfect view of the sleeping girl. "What have we here?"
+
+Julian made no response. He drew nearer and looked in silence.
+
+"Now what are they to each other?" Philadelphus continued. "Father and
+daughter; lady and servant or--a courtezan and her manager?"
+
+At the continued silence of his companion, he argued his question
+himself.
+
+"No such ill-fashioned peasant loins as his ever begat such sweet
+patrician perfection as that!" he declared. "And a lady rich enough to
+have one servant would travel with more than one or not at all--"
+
+Julian broke in with sudden avid interest.
+
+"Look at that deal of feminine flummery--that dress of silver tissue,
+the ends of that silken scarf you see below the covering--all those
+jewels and trinkets! Odd garb for travel afoot, is it not? It is a
+badge not to be put off even in as barren a market as this. She is
+going to Jerusalem for the Passover. He will carry the purse, however,
+mark me."
+
+"How well you know the marks of delinquency!" Philadelphus said with a
+glimmer of resentment in his eyes.
+
+"Who does not? What do the Jewish psalmists and proverbialists and
+purists depict so minutely as that migrating iniquity, the strange
+woman?"
+
+"But look at her!" Philadelphus insisted. "I have not seen anything so
+bewitching since I left Ephesus!"
+
+"No; nor a long time before!" Julian declared. "I must have a nearer
+look."
+
+"Careful! You will wake her!"
+
+Julian's face showed a sneer at his companion's concern.
+
+"I'll have a care not to wake the old Boeotian," he said.
+
+He stepped between Laodice and her sleeping servant. The mute with the
+stupor of slumber further to disable his dulled hearing, did not move.
+
+"Young!" Philadelphus exclaimed in a whisper. "And new to the life!"
+
+"Pfui!" Julian scoffed. "Sleep makes even Venus look innocent!"
+
+"Then this is the most innocent wickedness I have seen in months!"
+
+"So you catalogue innocence as a charm! It's not here. But if she had
+no beauty but that eyelash I'd be speared upon it!"
+
+Philadelphus turned toward the old servant plunged in the exhausted
+sleep of weary age.
+
+"Thou grizzled nightmare!" he exclaimed vindictively.
+
+He glanced again at the girl. Julian had knelt beside her. Between the
+two men passed a look that was mutually understood.
+
+"Remember," Julian whispered, "you are a married man."
+
+Philadelphus paled suddenly with anger as the intent of his companion
+dawned upon him, but he put off his temper shrewdly.
+
+"And so approaching a time when wayside beauties will no longer be
+free to me," he said, cutting off his fellow in the beginning of his
+preėmption. "And you have a long freedom before you."
+
+There was so much challenge in his manner that Julian accepted it. He
+reached into his tunic and drew forth a pair of dice.
+
+"We will play for her," he said.
+
+The Maccabee put the tesserae aside.
+
+"We will not use them," he said. "I know them to be cogged. Let us
+have the judgment of a coin."
+
+A bronze coin of Agrippa was produced. Julian in getting at his purse
+brushed against the sleeping girl and as the pair glanced at her
+before they tossed, her large eyes opened full in Julian's face. A
+moment, almost breathless for the two, and terror flared up in her
+eyes. She started up, but Julian's hand dropped on her.
+
+"Peace, Phryne!" he said.
+
+She shrank from his touch, literally into the arms upon which
+Philadelphus rested his weight. She looked up into his eyes, and saw
+them soften with a smile, and moved no farther. Philadelphus took the
+coin.
+
+"Let Vespasian decide for me," he said.
+
+"For me Fortunatus," said Julian.
+
+Philadelphus filliped the coin and flung out a strong and fending hand
+against his fellow covering it. Under the brightening day, the
+lowering profile of the old plebeian emperor Vespasian showed
+distinctly on the newly minted bronze.
+
+Julian made a sharp menacing sound, and with clenched hands rose on
+his knees. But Philadelphus looked at him steadily, half-amused at the
+implied threat, half-inviting its fulfilment, and under his gaze,
+Julian rose slowly and drew away. Philadelphus tossed the coin after
+him. His cousin picked it up and put it in his purse.
+
+[Illustration: Philadelphus looked down upon his prize.]
+
+Philadelphus looked down at his prize.
+
+She had not flinched from him when she had found him beside her, with
+Julian threatening her. But now her wide open eyes fixed upon his
+brimmed with an agony of appeal. Innocent of the world's wickedness,
+she could only sense supreme peril in this mysterious game without
+understanding the stake. Momus was not in sight--dead for all she
+knew--and the desert was an ally against her. Over her, now, bent a
+face characteristic of a great spirit, yet one which was coeval with
+the times--times of violence and the supremacy of force. His lips were
+thin, the contour of his face angular at the jaw, the nose straight
+and long, his brows black and low over dark blue eyes of a fathomless
+depth, the forehead strongly molded, and marked with deep
+perpendicular lines between the eyes. He was dark, heavy-haired,
+young, lean, broad and of fine height even as he knelt beside her.
+Laodice did not note any of these things. She was only conscious of
+the immense power her terror and her helplessness had to combat. Back
+of all this iron selfishness, she hoped that somewhere was a
+gentleness, even if inert and useless. All her strength was
+concentrated in the effort to bring it to life.
+
+He gazed at her, apparently unconscious of the desperation in the face
+lifted to him. The slow smile that presently grew again in his eyes
+was none the less unthoughted. He slipped his hand under a strand of
+her rich hair that had fallen and drew it out, slowly, at full length.
+Slowly his eyes followed it as inch by inch it slipped through his
+fingers. Old memories seemed to struggle to the surface; old
+tendernesses; recollection of pure hours and holy things; paganism
+dropped from him like a husk and the spiritual hauteur of a Jew
+brought the expression of the unhumbled house of Judah into his face.
+Through a notch in the hills a golden beam shot from the sun and
+penetrating this inwalled valley lay like an illuminating fire on the
+man's face and glorified it. Laodice's breath stopped.
+
+Slowly his fingers slipped along the fine silken length of that
+shining strand until his arm extended to the full; and the end of the
+lock yet rested on her breast. Thus might have been the hair of that
+Rahab, who was no less a patriot because she was frail; thus, the hair
+of Bathsheba, who was the mother of the wisest Israelite though she
+sinned; thus the hair of that mother of Samson, who slew armies
+single-handed! Badge of Judah, mark of the haughty strength of the
+oldest enlightenment in the world! He would not initiate his succor of
+Israel with violence against its purest type.
+
+He smiled slowly; slowly let the strand fall through his fingers. He
+looked into her eyes and she saw a sudden light immeasurably
+compassionate and tender grow there. A weakness swept over her; she
+felt that she had been longing for that light. Then he rose quickly
+and moved away.
+
+Old Momus, the mute, with his head on his knees slept on.
+
+Julian, who had been halted involuntarily by the attitude of his
+companion and had been an amazed witness of this extraordinary end of
+the incident, looked at Philadelphus' face in frank stupefaction. But
+Philadelphus laid a hand so forceful and compelling on his companion's
+shoulder that it left the pink print of his fingers on the flesh,
+turned him toward the horses and led him away.
+
+"We will breakfast farther on," he said.
+
+A moment and they were swinging down the stony side of the hill toward
+the east, and Laodice, with her hand clutching her excited heart, had
+not thought of flinging herself upon Momus. She raised herself
+gradually to watch them as far as she could see, and her fixed and
+stunned gaze rested with immense homesickness and longing on the
+taller man radiant against the background of a risen sun.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+THE TRAVELERS
+
+
+The Maccabee rode on, unconscious of Julian's critical gaze. The smile
+on his lips flickered now brightly, now very faint. The incident in
+the hills had not made him entirely happy, but it had awakened in him
+something which was latent in him, something which he had never felt
+before, but which held a sweet familiarity that the blood of his
+fathers in him had recognized.
+
+Julian was intensely disgusted and disappointed. But there was still a
+sensation of shock on his shoulder where the Maccabee's iron hand had
+rested and his famous caution stood him in stead at this moment when a
+quarrel with such intense and executive earnestness in his companion's
+manner might prove disastrous. If quarrel they must before they
+reached Emmaus, now but a few leagues east of them, he must insure
+himself against defeat much less likely to be suffered from a man
+reluctant to quarrel. He had been hunting for a pretext ever since
+they had left Cęsarea, but this one, suddenly opened to him, startled
+him. He admitted now that it would not be wise to force a fight.
+Whatever must be done should be done with least danger to himself. It
+were better, he believed, to allay suspicion.
+
+He spoke.
+
+"How far is it to Jerusalem?"
+
+"About eighty furlongs."
+
+"Then if we continue, we shall approach the gates after nightfall."
+
+"We shall not continue," Philadelphus remarked. "We shall halt at
+Emmaus."
+
+"Do you think it would be better for us to camp here in the hills
+rather than to stop without the walls of Jerusalem between the city
+forces and the winter garrison of Titus and await the opening of the
+Gates?" Julian asked after thought.
+
+"We shall wait in Emmaus," the Maccabee repeated, his soul too filled
+with dream to note the change in his companion's manner.
+
+"You have already lost three days," Julian charged him irritably.
+
+"Jerusalem may be besieged; it may be long before I can ride in the
+wilderness again," the Maccabee answered.
+
+"Right; your next journey through this place may be afoot--at the end
+of a chain," Julian averred.
+
+The Maccabee raised his brows.
+
+"Losing courage at the last end of the journey?" he inquired.
+
+"No! I never have believed in this project," Julian declared.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Who believes in the prospects of a man determined to leap into
+Hades?"
+
+But the Maccabee was already riding on with his head lifted, his eyes
+set upon the blue shadows on the western slopes of hills, lifted
+against the early morning sun. Julian went on.
+
+"You go, cousin, on a mission mad enough to measure up with the antics
+of the frantic citizens of Jerusalem. It will not be even a glorious
+defeat. You will be swallowed up in an immense calamity too tremendous
+to offer publicity to so infinitesimal a detail as the death of one
+Philadelphus Maccabaeus. Agrippa has deserted the city and when a
+Herod lets go of his own, his own is not worth the holding. The city
+is torn between factions as implacable as the sea and the land. The
+conservatives are either dead or fled; pillage and disorder are the
+main motives of all that are left. And Titus advances with four
+legions. What can you hope for this mob of crazed Jews?"
+
+Julian's words had been more lively than the Maccabee had expected. He
+was obliged to give attention before his kinsman made an end.
+
+"You are fond of summaries, Julian," he said, "dealt in your own coin.
+Look you, now, at my hope. You confess that these Jews lack a leader.
+They have lacked him so long that they hunger and thirst for one. Also
+they have suffered the distresses of disorder so intensely that peace
+in any form is most welcome to them. Titus approacheth reluctantly. He
+had rather deliver Jerusalem than besiege it. I am of the loved and
+dethroned Maccabaean line--acceptable to every faction of Jewry, from
+the Essenes to the Sicarii. Titus is my friend, unless he suspects me
+as coming to undermine his better friend, the pretty Herod. I shall
+help Jerusalem help herself; I shall make peace with Rome; I shall be
+King of the Jews!--Behold, is not my summary as practical as yours?"
+
+Julian laughed with an amusement that had a ring of contempt in it.
+
+"There is naught to keep an astronomer from planning a rearrangement
+of the stars," he said.
+
+But the Maccabee rode on calmly. Julian sighed. After a while he
+spoke.
+
+"Well, how do you proceed? You tell me that these very visionaries
+whom you would succor have never laid eyes on you. What marks you as
+royal--as a sprig of the great, just and dead Maccabee?"
+
+"I bear proofs, Roman documents of my family and of my birth. Certain
+of my party are already organized in Jerusalem and are expecting me,
+and I wear the Maccabaean signet. Is not that enough?"
+
+"Nothing of it worth the security of private citizenship and a whole
+head!"
+
+"No? Not when there is a dowry of two hundred talents awaiting my
+courage to come and get it?"
+
+"Ha! That wife! But will you enter that sure death for a woman you do
+not know?"
+
+"And for a fortune I have not possessed and for a kingdom that I never
+owned."
+
+"She will not be there! Old Costobarus is not so mired in folly as to
+send his daughter into the Pit to provide you with money to--pay
+Charon."
+
+"Aquila sent me a messenger at Cęsarea," Philadelphus continued
+calmly, "saying that Costobarus was transfigured when he had my
+summons. He feels that his God has been good to him to choose his
+daughter to share the throne of Judea. Hence, by this time my lady
+awaits me in Jerusalem."
+
+Again Julian sighed.
+
+"And there is none in Jerusalem who knows your face?" he asked after a
+silence.
+
+"None, except Amaryllis, and she has not seen me since I was sixteen
+years old."
+
+"And there also is an obstacle which I had forgotten to enumerate,"
+Julian said argumentatively. "You have put your trust in a frail
+woman."
+
+"Amaryllis may be frail," the Maccabee admitted, "but she is
+sufficiently manly to have all that you and I demand of a man to put
+faith in him. She is a good companion and she will not lie."
+
+"Impossible! She is a woman!" Julian exclaimed.
+
+"Even then," the Maccabee returned patiently, "her own ambition
+safeguards me. She can not succeed except as I am successful, and her
+purposes are of another kind than mine. She helps herself when she
+helps me. Therefore I am depending on her selfishness. It is usually a
+dependable thing."
+
+"What does she want?"
+
+"The old classic times of the _heterae_ in Greece. She wants to be the
+pioneer of art in Jerusalem. It is a fertile and a neglected field.
+She had rather be known as the mother of refinement in Judea than as
+the queen of kings over the world."
+
+"A modest ambition!"
+
+"A great one. How many monarchs are forgotten while Aspasia is
+remembered! Who were the reigning kings during Sappho's time?"
+
+"But go on. You repose much on her influence. Perhaps she has the will
+but not the power to help you."
+
+"Power! She is the mistress of John of Gischala and actual potentate
+over Jerusalem at this hour."
+
+"Unless Simon bar Gioras hath taken the upper hand within the last few
+days. Remember the fortunes of factionists are ephemeral."
+
+Philadelphus jingled his harness. He was sorry that he had permitted
+this discussion. Now its continuance was particularly irritating, when
+he had rather think of something else. He was near Jerusalem; but he
+was not going forward, now, with the same eagerness, nor with the same
+enthusiasm for his cause. The incident in the hills had marked the
+change in him. It was not, then, with a patient tongue that he
+defended his intentions, which had grown less inviting in the last
+hour.
+
+"How little your wife will enjoy her," Julian's smooth voice broke in
+once more, "seeing that the frail one is lovely."
+
+"I do not know that she is lovely."
+
+"What!" Julian exclaimed in genuine amazement. "You do not know that
+she is lovely! Years of correspondence with a woman whom you do not
+know to be lovely! Reposing kingdoms on a woman's influence whom you
+do not know to be beautiful!"
+
+"Beauty is no tie," the Maccabee retorted. "Have you forgotten Salome,
+the Jewish actress who could play Aphrodite in the theaters of
+Ephesus, to the confusion of the goddess herself? They said she snared
+three procurators and an emperor at one performance and lost them in a
+day!"
+
+"Have you seen her?" Julian asked with a sidelong glance. "Till your
+own eyes prove it, you should not accept that she is so bewitching."
+
+"There is no need that I should see her; Aquila swears it! And I would
+take his word against the testimony of even mine own eyes."
+
+Julian looked up in a startled manner and hurriedly looked away again.
+A half-frightened, half-amused smile played about his lips.
+
+"Aquila is no judge of woman," he said finally. "And furthermore, they
+say she got to trifling with magic and prowling about the temples to
+see if the gods came true. They were afraid she would get them blasted
+along with her sometime for her sacrilege. I know all this because
+Aquila declared she attached herself to him in sheer poverty in
+Ephesus and swore to follow him to the ends of the earth."
+
+The Maccabee smiled.
+
+"Nevertheless, he told me that he was afraid of her, but that she was
+a woman and in need and he could not reject her."
+
+Julian's eyes grew insinuating.
+
+"How much then your behavior this morning would have shocked him!" he
+murmured.
+
+The smile died on the Maccabee's face. Reference to the girl in the
+hills seemed blasphemy on this man's lips.
+
+"And you do not recall your wife's face?" Julian persisted.
+
+The Maccabee's face hardened more. But he shook his head.
+
+"Fourteen years can change a woman from a beauty to--a--a Christian,
+ugly and old and cold," Julian augured.
+
+The Maccabee turned his head away from his tormentor and Julian's
+laughter trailed off into a half-jocular groan.
+
+"How much you harp on beauty!" the Maccabee said deliberately. "Are
+you then going to regret the actresses you left behind when I tore you
+from your exalted calling as the forelegs of the elephant in the
+theaters at Ephesus?"
+
+Julian's face blackened. A foolhardy daring born of rage resolved him
+at that instant. He flung himself out from his saddle and raised his
+hand with a knife clenched in it. But the Maccabee with a composed
+laugh caught the hand and wrenching it about, dropped it, red and
+contracting with pain, at his companion's side.
+
+"Tut! Julian, you are a bad combatant. If you must make way with a
+man," the Maccabee advised, "stab him in the back. It is sure--for
+you. Ha! Is this Emmaus we see?"
+
+They had ridden up a slight eminence and below them was a disorder of
+fallen or decrepit Syrian huts in the hollow place in the hills.
+
+It had been the history of Emmaus for centuries to be known. The feet
+of the Crucified One had pressed its ruined streets and His devoted
+chroniclers had not failed to set it down in their illuminated
+gospels. Army after army in endless procession had thundered through
+it since the first invader humbled the glory of Canaan, and few of the
+historians had forgotten to record the unimportant incident. Warfare
+had hurtled about it for centuries; the Roman army had come upon it
+and would continue to come. It had not the spirit to resist; it was
+not worthy of conquest. It simply stood in the path of events.
+
+A single citizen appeared at the doorway of the most habitable house
+and looked absently over the heads of the new-comers. As they
+approached, the villager did not observe them. Instead, he looked at
+the near horizon lifted on the shoulder of the hills and meditated on
+the signs of the weather. It was Emmaus' habit to find strangers at
+its door.
+
+Julian, with natural desire to be first on this perilous ground and
+away from the side of the man who had defeated him and laughed at him,
+rode up to the door. The villager, seeing the traveler stop, gazed at
+him.
+
+Julian had about him an air of blood and breeding first to be remarked
+even before his features. The grace of his bearing and the excellence
+of his bodily condition were highly aristocratic. His height was good,
+his figure modestly athletic as an observance of fine form rather than
+a preparation for the arena. He was simply dressed in a light blue
+woolen tunic. A handkerchief was bound about his head. His forehead
+was very white and half hidden by loose, curling black locks that
+escaped with boyish negligence from his head-dress. His eyes were
+black, his cheeks tanned but colorless, his mouth mirthful and red but
+hard in its outlines. Clean-shaven, lithe, supple, he did not appear
+to be more than twenty-two. But there was an even-tempered cynicism
+and sophistication in the half-droop of his level lids, indifference,
+hauteur and self-reliance in the uplift of his chin. His soul was
+therefore older, more seasoned and set than the frame that housed it.
+Now there was considerable agitation in his manner, enough to make him
+sharp in his speech to the villager.
+
+"Is there a khan in Emmaus?" he demanded.
+
+"There is," the villager responded calmly.
+
+"Where?"
+
+The citizen motioned toward a low-roofed rambling structure of stone
+picked up on the native hills.
+
+"Ask there," he said and passing out of his door went his way.
+
+Julian touched his horse and rode through the worn passage and into
+the court of the decrepit khan of Emmaus. The Maccabee followed.
+
+The Syrian host who was both waiter and hostler met Julian entering
+first.
+
+"Quick!" Julian said, leaning from his horse. "Is there a young man
+here with gray temples? A pagan?"
+
+The Syrian, attracted by the anxiety in the demand, followed a train
+of surmise before his answer.
+
+"No pagans, here. Naught but Jews," he observed finally.
+
+"Or a young woman of wealth? Quick!"
+
+"No wealth at all; but plenty of women. The Passover pilgrims."
+
+Julian heaved a sigh of relief and dismounted. The Maccabee rode into
+the court of the khan at that instant.
+
+The khan-keeper took their horses and a little later the two men were
+led into the single cobwebby chamber, low-ceiled, gloomy, cold and
+cheerless as a cave. There they were given food and afterward a corner
+of the hall where a straw pallet had been laid and a stone trough
+filled with water for a bath. After refreshing himself the Maccabee
+lay down and slept with supreme indifference to the rancor of the man
+who had attempted to kill him.
+
+But Julian had another idea than pressing his vengeful advantage at
+that time. He went out into Emmaus and engaging the unemployed of the
+thriftless town sent them broadcast into the hills in search of a
+pagan who was young, yet gray at the temples.
+
+Some of them went--and they were chiefly boys who were not old enough
+to know that these strangers who come in pagan guise to Emmaus are
+full of guile. But none returned to him. They had neither seen nor
+heard of a pagan who was young though the white hair of an old man
+snowed on his temples.
+
+So Julian storming within went out into the hills himself, to search.
+
+Meanwhile the Maccabee, a light sleeper and readily restored, awoke
+and found himself alone. The khan-keeper informed him on inquiry that
+Julian had ridden away.
+
+"Too fair a hope to think that he has deserted me," the Maccabee
+observed. "I shall await him a decent time. He will return."
+
+He tramped about the chamber waiting for something that was not
+Julian, intending to do something but unable to define that thing.
+There was a vague admission that this last pause before his entry into
+Jerusalem where he must accomplish so much was an opportunity for some
+sort of preparation, but he lacked direction and resource. He was
+irritable and purposeless.
+
+Out of the low door that opened into the lewen of the khan he caught
+glimpses of the town spread over the tilt of the hill before him. It
+had become active since he had looked upon it in the very early hours
+of the day. Over the gate he could see the toss of canopies and the
+heads of camels passing; he could hear the ring of mule-hooves on the
+stones and the tramp of wayfarers. There were shoutings and debate;
+the cries of servants and the gossip of parties. All this moved on
+always in the direction of Jerusalem. Few paused. The single shop in
+Emmaus became active; the khan caught a little of the drift, but the
+great body of what seemed to be an unending stream of pilgrims passed
+on. The Maccabee spoke to his host.
+
+"What is this?" he asked.
+
+The publican raised his brows.
+
+"Hast never heard of the Passover?" he asked.
+
+The Maccabee started. How far he had drifted from the customs of his
+people, to fail to remember its vital feast--he who meant to be king
+over the Jews!
+
+He turned away a little abashed. The train of thought awakened by the
+khan-keeper's answer led him back to the hieratic customs of his race.
+What was his status as a Jew after all these years of delinquency?
+What atonement did he owe, what offering should he make?
+
+He went out over the cobbled pavement of the lewen to the gate. Here
+he should see part of his people and learn from simple observation
+what material he would have in his work for Israel.
+
+From his memories of the old Passovers of his boyhood, he saw
+instantly that there had come a change over Judea and the worshiping
+sons of Abraham.
+
+They went in bodies, in numbers from a handful from some remote but
+pious hamlet to great armies from the leveled cities of Joppa,
+Ptolemais and Anthedon, from Cęsarea and Tyre and Sidon, from the
+enthusiastic towns in Galilee, and even from far-off Antioch and
+Ephesus. They were not fewer in number, because of a year of warfare
+and the menace of an approaching army upon the city in which they were
+to take refuge. But there were more--double, even triple the number
+that usually went up to Jerusalem at this time. For of the millions of
+inhabitants in Judea in the unhappy year of 70 A.D., a third of them
+were plundered and homeless refugees from ruined cities. Therefore,
+instead of the armies of men, happy, hopeful and enthusiastic, who had
+journeyed in former years to Jerusalem, there passed before the
+Maccabee a mixed multitude of men and women and children. Thousands
+carried with them all that warfare had left to them--pitiful parcels
+of treasure or household goods, or extra clothing; other thousands
+bore nothing in their hands, and by the wear in their garments and the
+hunger in their faces, it seemed that they owned nothing to carry.
+
+The Maccabee noted finally the entire absence of the travelers who
+fared in state. Not in all that long procession that wound up the
+stony passage from the west, did he see a single Sadducee. There went
+mobs of laborers and farmers, tradesmen, servants and small merchants,
+but the Jewish friends of Rome that had once made part of the Passover
+pilgrimage a royal progress were nowhere to be seen. Under the vast,
+vivid blue of the mountain skies they moved, indifferent to the
+splendid benevolence of the untroubled day. The pure wind swept in
+from the radiance in the east, flinging out multi-colored garments and
+scarves, rushing with its bracing chill without obstruction through
+even the compactest mass of wayfarers. The cedars on the hills about
+the little town whistled continuously and at times some extremely
+narrow defile with an uninterrupted draft would take voice and cry
+humanly. But there was no responsive exhilaration to the vigor of
+morning on a mountain-top. The great ever-growing migration was dark,
+dangerous and moody.
+
+Somewhere beyond the highest of the blue hills to the east, the white
+walls of the city of David were receiving all this. Somewhere to the
+west the four brassy legions of Titus were marching down upon all
+this. About the Maccabee were assembling all the circumstances that
+govern a tremendous struggle. Eagerness, earnestness, all the strength
+and resolution of his strong and resolute nature surged into his soul.
+It was his hour. It should find him prepared.
+
+He turned out of the gate and crowding along by the stone wall to pass
+in the opposite direction from the flood of pilgrims pouring through
+Emmaus, he searched for the synagogue of the little town.
+
+He came upon it, a solid square building of stone with an Egyptic
+faēade and an architrave carved with a great stone flower set in an
+olive wreath. Without was the proseuchae, paved with boulders now worn
+smooth by the summer sittings of the congregation who gathered around
+the reader's stone. The Maccabee stopped at the gate and unlacing his
+pagan sandals set them outside the threshold.
+
+Once over the stone sill with the imminent gloom covering him, he felt
+the old sanctity envelop him with a reproach in its forgotten
+familiarity. Old incense, old litanies, old rites rushed back to him
+with the smell of the stagnant fragrance. He heard again from the
+farther depths of the dark interior the musical monotone of a rabbi
+reciting a ritual. The voice was young and low. Presently he heard the
+responses spoken in a woman's voice, so tender, so soft and so sad
+that he sensed instantly the meaning of the sympathy in the young
+priest's voice. Out of the incense-laden dusk he found old custom
+stealing back upon him. His lips anticipated words unreadily; gladly
+he realized that he could say these formulas, also; he had not
+forgotten; he had not forgotten!
+
+In this little synagogue in a poor town there were no privacies;
+communicants had to depend on the courtesy of their fellows for
+uninterrupted devotion. The wanderer had not forgotten this. So he
+effaced himself in the darkness and awaited his own turn.
+
+He hardly knew why he had come. For what should he ask--forgiveness or
+for the hope of the King who was to come? What should he do--make
+atonement or promises; give an offering or ask encouragement? He did
+not doubt for an instant that he had done wisely in seeking the
+synagogue, but what had he for it, or what had it for him?
+
+Meanwhile the voice of the priest, disembodied in the gloom, had put
+off its ritualistic tone and was delivering a charge:
+
+"Since you are in haste to reach Jerusalem, you may depart, so that
+you will give me your word that you will in all faith abide upon the
+road seven days; and that at the end of the separation you will
+present yourselves for examination and cleansing at Jerusalem, and
+that you will in nowise transgress the law of separation on the
+journey hence."
+
+The Maccabee heard the woman give her word. After a little further
+communication, he heard them move toward the entrance.
+
+The white light from the day without revealed to him in a few steps, a
+veiled woman, a deformed old man and a young rabbi. He did not need to
+take the evidence of her dress or of her companion to recognize under
+this veil the girl whom he had won from Julian of Ephesus, in the
+hills, that very morning.
+
+As if in response to his inner hope that she would see him, she raised
+her eyes at the moment she passed, and started quickly. Even under the
+shelter of her veil he saw her flush.
+
+The next instant she was out of the synagogue and gone.
+
+The Maccabee hesitated restlessly, forgot his mission to the synagogue
+and then, with no definite purpose, followed.
+
+At the edge of town, where the huddle of huts left off and the gravel
+and rock and cedar began, he saw the priest dismiss the pair with his
+blessing and turn back.
+
+Undecided, restless and regretful, the Maccabee lingered, looking
+after her as she went into the hills, unattended, except for an
+anomalous old man. The sun of noon shone on her silver dress that the
+dust of the wayside had not tarnished. He was gloomy and wistful
+without understanding his discomfort, and afraid for the beautiful
+unknown going out for seven days into the unfriendly wilderness.
+
+There was the click of a horse's hoof beside him. He glanced up with a
+nervous start to see Julian of Ephesus, scowling, at hand.
+
+"It is time," he said, "for us to be off."
+
+The Maccabee instantly determined that Julian of Ephesus should not
+come up with this defenseless girl again.
+
+"I am not ready," he returned promptly.
+
+"It was three days, this morning, that you have lost. To-morrow it
+will be four."
+
+"And Sabbath, it will be seven. A long time, a long time!"
+
+The Maccabee turned and went back to the khan. A gap in the hills had
+hidden the girl in the silver tissue, and the blitheness of the
+Maccabee's spirit had gone with her.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V
+
+BY THE WAYSIDE
+
+
+By sunset, the Maccabee and Julian of Ephesus had taken the road to
+Jerusalem again.
+
+As they reached the crest of a series of ridges there lay before them
+a long gentle slope smooth and dun-colored as some soft pelt, dropping
+down into a tender vale with levels of purple vapor hanging over it.
+At the end of this declivity, leagues in length, was a faint blue
+shape, cloudlike and almost merged with the cold color of the eastern
+horizon, but suddenly developing at its summit a delicate white peak.
+The sunset reaching it as they rode changed the point to a pinnacle of
+ruby before their eyes. Their shadows that had ridden before them
+merged with the shade over the world. Then with a soft, whispery,
+ghost-like intaking of the breath, a quantity of sand on the straight
+road before them got up under their horses' feet and moved away to
+another spot and dropped again with a peppering sound and was dead
+moveless earth again. The little breath of wind from under the edge of
+the sky had fallen.
+
+In the silence between the muffled beat of hooves the Maccabee heard
+at his ears the quick lively throb of a busy pump. With it went the
+firm rush of a subdued stream. He was hearing his own heart-beat, his
+own life flowing through his veins. Since nature in him had hurried
+him out of the synagogue after its own desire, he seemed to have
+become primitive, conscious of the human creature in him. Now, though
+he rode through a bewitching air through an enchanted land, he did not
+ride in a dream. All his being was alert and sagacious. Though the
+confusion of footprints in the dust showed plainly where men had
+passed by thousands, he did not follow their lead. Over the tangle of
+marks lay a slim paw-printed, confident, careless trail of a jackal,
+following the scent to a well. The Maccabee was obedient to the
+instinct of the animal instead of the reason of man. At the end of
+that trail, surer than Ariadne's scarlet thread in the labyrinth, he
+knew that thirst had taken the girl in the dress of silver tissue. So
+as he rode along this faultless highway that fared level and
+undeviating by arches, causeways and bridges across mountains, over
+black marshes and profound valleys, he kept his eyes on the jackal's
+trail.
+
+Long after moonrise they came to a spot in the road where the human
+marks passed on, by hundreds, by other hundreds deserted the road and
+clambered up the side of the hill. Over this deviation the jackal had
+trotted. The Maccabee, tall on his horse, raised his fine head and
+searched all the brooding shapes of the hills about.
+
+The road at this point ran through a defile. On either side the slopes
+crowded upon the pass. Above them were bold summits with groves of
+cedars, and in one of these the Maccabee made out a thin curl of smoke
+dimly illuminated by a moon-drowned fire. Up there in the covert of
+the trees the girl in the silver tissue was resting from her perilous
+and outlawed journey.
+
+"We will eat here," the Maccabee said abruptly to Julian.
+
+"Eat!" Julian exclaimed. "What?"
+
+The Maccabee signed to the pack on Julian's horse. Julian dismounted,
+shaking his head.
+
+"What a savage appetite this travel in the untaught wilds of Judea
+hath bred in you, my cousin! You, whom once a crust of bread and a cup
+of wine would satisfy!"
+
+But the Maccabee climbed out of the roadway and, finding a sheltered
+spot behind a boulder, kicked together some of the dead weeds and
+twigs and set fire to the heap with flint and steel. Then he lost
+interest in the preparation of his comforts. He turned to look up at
+the faint column of illumination in the little copse of cedars and
+presently, stealthily, went that way.
+
+It was a poor encampment that he came upon.
+
+From the low-growing limbs of a couple of gnarly cedars, old Momus had
+stretched the sheepskins which Joseph, the shepherd, had given them.
+Three sides of the shelter were protected thus, and the fourth side
+opened down-hill, with a low fire screening them from the mountain
+wind. Within this inclosure, wrapped in the coarse mantle of her
+servant, sat Laodice. She had raised her veil and its misty texture
+flowed like a web of frost over her brilliant hair and framed her face
+in cold vapor. In spite of the marks of grief that had exhausted her
+tears, the fatigue and discomfort, she seemed, to the Maccabee's eyes,
+more than ever lovely. He was angry with the hieratic banishment that
+sent her out to subsist by the roadside for seven days in early
+spring; angry with the harsh inhospitality of the hills; and angrier
+that he could not change it all. He looked at the old mute to see that
+he was carefully putting away the remnants of a meal of durra bread
+and curds. The primitive gallantry of the original man stirred in the
+Maccabee. He had come unseen; with silent step he departed.
+
+A little later he stepped boldly into the circle of light from their
+camp-fire. To Laodice, in her lowly position, he seemed superhumanly
+big and splendid. Without mantle or any of the accessories that would
+show preparation against the cold, his bare arms and limbs and dark
+face, tanned, hardy and resolute, seemed to be those of a strong
+aborigine, sturdy friend of all of nature's rougher moods.
+
+He did not look at Momus, who got up as quickly as he might at the
+intrusion of the big stranger. His dark eyes rested on Laodice, who
+sat transfixed with her sudden recognition of the visitor.
+
+He held in one hand a brace of fowls, in the other a skin of wine.
+
+When he spoke the polish of the Ephesian andronitis in his voice and
+manner destroyed the primitive illusion.
+
+"Lady, I heard in the synagogue at Emmaus to-day the exclusion that is
+laid upon you for seven days. This is a hungry country and no man
+should waste food. I shall enter Jerusalem to-morrow by daybreak; we,
+my companion and I, have no further use for these. They are Milesian
+ducks, fattened on nuts. And this is Falernian--Roman. I pray you,
+allow me to leave them with your servant with my obeisances."
+
+Without waiting for her reply the Maccabee passed fowls and skin into
+the hands of Momus who stood near.
+
+"Sir," she answered unreadily, with her small hands gripping each
+other before her and her eyes veiled, "I thank you. It was not the
+least of my anxieties how we should provide ourselves with food under
+prohibition and in a country perilous with war. You have made
+to-morrow easy for us. I thank you."
+
+"To-morrow; yes," he argued, seizing upon a discussion for an excuse
+to remain, "but the next day, and the next five days, what shall you
+do?"
+
+"Perchance," she said gravely, "God will send us another stranger of a
+generous heart, with more than he needs for himself."
+
+Not likely, indeed, he thought, would such beauty as hers go hungry as
+long as there were hearts in the wilderness as impressionable as his.
+But the thought of another than himself providing for her did not make
+him happy.
+
+There was nothing more to be said, but he did not go. In his face
+gathered signs of his interest in her identity.
+
+"Is there more that I can do for you?" he asked. "Have you friends in
+Jerusalem? I will bear your messages gladly."
+
+But it was a grateful privilege which she had to refuse with
+reluctance. If her husband awaited her in Jerusalem, he must wait,
+rather than be informed of the cause of her delay at peril of exposing
+his presence in the city. She shook her head.
+
+"There is nothing more," she added. "I thank you."
+
+Dismissal was so evident in her voice that he prepared to depart.
+
+"Shall you move on, then, in the morning?" he asked.
+
+"We have seven days in the wilderness," she explained. "We can not
+hasten. It is only a little way to Jerusalem."
+
+"But it is a long road and a weary one for tender feet," he answered;
+"and it is a time of warfare and much uncertainty."
+
+She lifted her eyes now with trouble in them.
+
+"Is there any less dangerous way than this?" she asked.
+
+The Maccabee sat down and clasped his hands about his knees. This
+grasping at the slightest excuse to remain exasperated the perplexed
+Momus, who could not understand the stranger's assurance. But the
+Maccabee failed to see him.
+
+"There is," he said to Laodice. "One can journey with you. I am under
+no restriction, and the rabbis do not bind you against me. I can
+secure you comforts along the way, and give you protection. There in
+no such dire need that I enter Jerusalem under seven days."
+
+Laodice was confused by this sudden offer of help from a stranger in
+whom her confidence was not entirely settled. Nevertheless a warmth
+and pleasure crept into her heart benumbed with sorrow. She did not
+look at Momus, fearing instinctively that the command in her old
+servant's eyes would not be of a kind with the grateful response she
+meant to give this stranger.
+
+"I have no right to expect so much--from a stranger," she said.
+
+"Then I shall not be a stranger," he declared promptly. "Call
+me--Hesper--of Ephesus."
+
+"Ephesus!" she echoed, looking up quickly.
+
+"The maddest city in the world," he replied. "Dost know it?"
+
+She hesitated. Could she say with entire truth that she did not know
+Ephesus? Had she not read those letters that Philadelphus had written
+to her father, which were glowing with praise of the proud city of
+Diana? Was it not as if she had seen the Odeum and the great Theater,
+the Temple with its golden cows, the mount and the plain and the broad
+wandering of the Rivers Hermus, Ca’ster and Maenander? Had she not
+made maps of it from her young husband's accounts and then with
+enthusiasm traced his steps by its stony, hilly streets from forum to
+stadium and from school to museum? Had she not dreamed of its shallow
+port, its rugged highways and its skyey marshes? It had been her pride
+to know Ephesus, although she had never laid eyes upon it. Even she
+had come to believe that she would know an Ephesian by his aggressive
+joy in life! It went hard with her to deny that she knew that city
+which she had all but seen.
+
+The Maccabee observed her hesitation and when she looked up to answer,
+his eyes full of question were resting upon her.
+
+"I do not know Ephesus," she said quickly. "Are--are you a native?"
+
+"No."
+
+She wanted mightily to know if he had met the young Philadelphus in
+that city, but she feared to ask further lest she betray him.
+
+"A great city," he went on, "but there are greater pagan cities. It is
+not like Jerusalem, which has no counterpart in the world. Even the
+most intolerant pagan is curious about Jerusalem."
+
+She looked again at his face. It was not Greek or Roman, neither more
+indicative of her own blood.
+
+"Are you a Jew?" she asked.
+
+He remembered that she had seen him in a synagogue.
+
+"I was," he said after a silence.
+
+She looked at him a moment before she made comment.
+
+"I never heard a Jew say it that way before."
+
+He acknowledged the rebuke with the flash of a smile that appeared
+only in his eyes.
+
+"A Jew entirely Jewish wears the mark on him. You have had to ask if I
+were a Jew. Would I be consistent to claim to be that which in no wise
+shows to be in me?"
+
+"It is time to be a Jew or against the Jews," she said gravely. "There
+is no middle ground concerning Judea at this hour."
+
+Serious words from the lips of a woman in whom a man expects to find
+entertainment are obtrusive, a paradox. Still the new generosity in
+his heart for this girl made any manner she chose, engaging, so that
+it showed him the sight of her face and gave him the sound of her
+voice.
+
+"Seeing," he said, "that it is the hour of the Jewish hope, is it
+politic for us to declare ourselves for its benefits?"
+
+"The call at this hour," she exclaimed reproachfully, "is to be great
+in sacrifice--not for reward. It is the word of the prophets that we
+shall not attain glory until we have suffered for it. We have not yet
+made the beginning."
+
+She touched so familiarly on his own thoughts which had haunted him
+since ambition had awakened in him in his boyhood, that his interest
+in his own hope surged to the fore.
+
+"How goes it in Jerusalem?" he asked earnestly.
+
+"Evilly, they say," she answered, "but I have not been in the city.
+Yet you see Judea. That which has destroyed it threatens the city.
+Jews have no friends abroad over the world. We need then our own, our
+own!"
+
+"Trust me, lady, for a good Jew. I have said that I had been one,
+because I admit how far I have drifted from my people. But I am going
+back!"
+
+Somehow that strong avowal touched the deep springs of her grief. She
+knew the pleasure that her father would have felt in it. With the
+greatness of his sacrifice in mind, she filled with the determination
+that his work should not have been in vain.
+
+She rose and flung back the cumbrous striped mantle on her shoulders
+and put out her hands to the Maccabee.
+
+"Hast seen these pilgrims going to the Passover?" she exclaimed, with
+color rising as her emotion grew. "All day they have passed; army
+after army of Jews, not only strong, but filled with the spirit that
+makes men die for a cause! Hast seen Judea, which was once the land of
+milk and honey? Wasted! a sight to make Jews gnash their teeth and die
+of hate and rage! What hast thou said of Jerusalem? 'The perfection of
+beauty and the joy of the whole earth!' threatened with this same
+blight that hath made a wilderness of Canaan! If the hour and the
+circumstance and the cause will but unite us, this unweaponed host
+will stretch away at once in majestic orders of tens of
+thousands--legions upon legions that would shame Xerxes for numbers
+and that first Cęsar for strength. Then--oh, I can see that calm
+battle-line pass like the ocean tide over the stony Roman front, and
+forget as the sea forgets the pebbles that opposed it!"
+
+She halted suddenly on the edge of tears. The Maccabee, astonished and
+moved, looked at her in silence. This, then, was what even the women
+of the shut chambers of Palestine expected of him--if he freed Judea!
+If such spirit prevailed over the armies of men assembling in the Holy
+City, what might he not achieve with their help! The Maccabee felt
+confidence and enthusiasm fill his heart to the full. He rose.
+
+"Our blows will never weaken nor our hearts grow faint," he said, "if
+we have such eloquence and such beauty to inspire us."
+
+She drew back a little. His persistent happiness of mood fell cruelly
+on her flinching heart at that moment. He noted her sudden relapse
+into dejection, with disappointment.
+
+"Do not be sad," he said. "Discomforts do not last for ever."
+
+"It is not that," she said in a low voice. "I have buried beloved dead
+on this journey and I have surrendered all my substance to a
+pillager."
+
+There was the silence of arrested thought. The Maccabee was taken
+aback and embarrassed. He felt that he was an intruder. But even the
+flush on her face in restraining emotion made her loveliness more than
+ever winsome. He let his hand drop softly on hers. But in the
+genuineness of his sympathy he was not too moved to feel that her hand
+warmed under his clasp.
+
+"The difference between a fool and a blunderer," he said contritely,
+"is that the blunderer is always sorry for his mistakes. I will go.
+None has a right to refuse another his hour to weep."
+
+He hesitated a moment, as if he would have kissed her hand. She
+glanced up at him with eyes too filled with the darkness of grief for
+words.
+
+The slow unconscious smile that had worked such perfect transformation
+that first morning grew in his eyes. It was comfort, compliment and
+protection all in one. Then he went away into the moonlight.
+
+Within a few feet he came upon Julian of Ephesus with immense rancor
+written on his face. The Maccabee was disturbed. It was not well that
+this conscienceless man should have discovered that they were
+traveling near this girl and her old servant. Much as the young man
+wished to loiter along the road to Jerusalem to keep her in sight
+while he could, he saw plainly that to defend her from Julian he must
+ride on and leave her.
+
+"Your meal," said Julian, "is as cold as Jugurtha's bath."
+
+"I have lost my appetite," the Maccabee said carelessly. "Saddle and
+let us ride on."
+
+At his words, a picture of his own comfortable progress to Jerusalem
+compared to her long foot-weary tramp for days over the inhospitable
+hills appeared to him. The instant impulse did not permit himself to
+argue the immoderation of his care of her. Julian clung to his side
+until they were ready to depart. Then the Maccabee, using subterfuge
+to give him opportunity to escape the vigilant eyes of the Ephesian,
+suddenly clapped his hand to his hip, exclaiming that he had left his
+weapon at the camp.
+
+Before Julian's sneer reached him, he mounted quickly and rode up the
+hill, meaning to offer his horse to the girl.
+
+The bed of coals still glowed cheerily, but the shelter of sheepskins,
+the old servant and the girl in the tissue of woven moonbeams were
+gone.
+
+He stood still, vexed, disappointed and resentful.
+
+"The old incubus has made her go on, purposely, to get rid of me!" he
+decided finally. "Perpol! He won't!"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI
+
+DAWN IN THE HILLS
+
+
+It was a night that the Maccabee did not readily forget. Since the
+girl had moved on to avoid him, he had become alive to a delinquency
+that was more of a sensation than an admission. His thought of her,
+that had been a diversion before, now seemed to be a transgression. An
+incident of this nature during the fourteen years of his life in
+Ephesus would have engaged his conscience only a moment if at all, but
+at this last hour it amounted to a deflection from his newly resolved
+uprightness.
+
+Julian rode in a constant air of expectancy and increasing irritation.
+The slightest sound from the haunted hills elicited a start from him
+and his intense attention until the origin of the sound proved itself.
+Many Passover pilgrims who had proceeded by night passed under his
+close scrutiny and from time to time he stopped the Maccabee in a
+speech with a peremptory command to listen. All this engaged the
+Maccabee's interest, but he made no comment until, on occasion of his
+casual word in praise of the fidelity of Aquila, Julian flew into a
+rage and reviled the emissary until the Maccabee brought him up with a
+sharp word.
+
+"Enough of that!" he exclaimed. "What ails you, man?"
+
+Julian caught his breath and after a silence replied in a voice
+considerably sweetened that Aquila was a conscienceless pagan and not
+to be praised till he was dead. But the Maccabee, with the girl
+uppermost in his mind, believed that his cousin was inwardly resenting
+his preėmption of the pretty stranger. The fact that Julian had
+changed the pace of their advance confirmed him in this suspicion.
+From the smart trot that they had maintained from the time they had
+left Cęsarea, they had declined to a walk. Julian next showed
+inclination to loiter. He spent an unusual length of time at every
+spring at which they watered their horses; an unseen break in his
+harness engaged a prolonged halt on the road; he stopped at an
+unroofed hut to rouse sleeping Passover pilgrims who had taken refuge
+within to ask how far they were from Jerusalem, and wrangled with the
+sleepy Jew for many minutes over the hazy estimate the man had given
+him. With each of these pretenses the Maccabee's conviction grew that
+the girl had something to do with the altered behavior of his cousin.
+And with that growing conviction, he became the more convinced that he
+ought to maintain an espionage of Julian.
+
+At midnight they were both tired, exasperated, moody, and determined
+against each other. They had not journeyed thirty furlongs.
+
+In one of the high valleys in the hills a great well bubbled up from a
+hollow by the road, overflowed the stone basin that the ancients had
+built for it and wasted itself in the undrained soil about. Here,
+then, was one of the few marshes in Judea. The road by a series of
+arches crossed it and continued up the shoulder of the hills toward
+the east. All about it flourished the young growth of the rough sedge
+grass, green as emerald. The spot was treeless and marked with broad
+low hummocks of new sod.
+
+Julian halted.
+
+"Shall we camp here?" he asked.
+
+"It hath the recommendation of variety," the Maccabee said wearily.
+"Eheu! How I shall miss the greensward of Ephesus! Yes, we'll camp!"
+
+They dismounted and while Julian unpacked their blankets, the Maccabee
+collected dead reeds and cedar twigs and built a fire. Then he
+stretched himself by the sweet-smelling flame.
+
+"She can not have kept up with our horses; indeed it is unlikely that
+they moved far," he thought, and thus assured that there was no danger
+to the girl for whom he had become a self-constituted guardian, he ate
+a piece of bread, drank a cup of wine and fell asleep.
+
+His slumber was not entirely unconscious. So long as the movements of
+his cousin continued regular about him, he lay still, but once, when
+Julian approached too near, his eyes opened full in the face of the
+man about to lean over him. The Ephesian raised himself hastily and
+the Maccabee's eyes closed again.
+
+"A pest on an eye that only half sleeps!" Julian said to himself. "He
+hasn't lost count on the minutes since he left Cęsarea!"
+
+The morning broke, the sun mounted, the deserted road became populous
+with all the previous day's host of pilgrims, and the silence in the
+hills failed before the procession that should not cease till night
+fell again. Through all the shouting at camel and mule, the talk of
+parties and the dogged trudging of lonely and uncompanionable
+solitaries, the Maccabee slept. From time to time Julian, who had
+wakened early, gazed with smoldering eyes at the insolent composure of
+his enemy sleeping. But slumber with so little control over the senses
+of a man was not to be depended upon for any work that demanded
+stealth. At times the gaze he bent upon the long lazy shape half
+buried in the raw-edged grass was malevolent with uneasiness and hate.
+Again, some one of the passing travelers that bore a resemblance to
+the expected Aquila would bring the Ephesian to his feet, only to sink
+back again with a muttered imprecation at his disappointment.
+
+"A pest on the waxen-hearted satyr!" he said to himself finally. "Why
+should he have been more faithful to me than to his first employer! I
+am old enough to have learned by this time not to trust my success to
+any man but myself. Now where am I to look for him--Ephesus, Syene,
+Gaul, Medea? Jerusalem first! By Hecate, the fellow is handsome! And
+these Jewesses are impressionable!"
+
+The rumination was broken off suddenly by a glimpse of an old deformed
+man bearing a burden on his shoulders, followed by a slender figure,
+jealously wrapped in a plebeian mantle that left only a hem of silver
+tissue under its border. They were skirting along the brow of the hill
+opposite, away from the rest of the pilgrims on the road. Both were
+walking slowly and the old man seemed to be examining the farther
+slope, as if meditating a halt. Julian got upon his feet and watched.
+He saw the old man sign to the girl presently and they moved down the
+farther side of the hill and were lost to view.
+
+Julian cast a look at the sleeper and hesitated. Then he scanned the
+road; he might miss Aquila. He seemed to relinquish the intent that
+had risen in him, and sat down again.
+
+After a while as his constant gaze at the passers-by led him again
+toward the overflowing well, he saw there, standing in a long line,
+awaiting turn to dip a vessel in the water, the old bowed servant,
+with a skin in his hand. The girl was nowhere to be seen.
+
+Julian sprang to his feet and, hastening across the road, considerably
+below the well, climbed the hill in the direction in which he had seen
+the girl disappear.
+
+That watchful alarm in the brain which, at moments of demand, is
+instantly alive in certain sleepers, aroused the Maccabee almost as
+soon as the stealthy, receding footsteps of Julian died away. He
+stirred, sat up and looked about him. Julian was nowhere to be seen.
+Both horses were feeding a little distance away. The Maccabee sprang
+up and looked toward the well. There patiently but apprehensively
+waiting was old Momus. The girl was not with him. Suspicion grew vivid
+in the Maccabee's brain. The tender rank grass about him showed the
+print of his cousin's steps as they led away toward the road. He
+followed intently. The slim marks of the well-shod feet led him across
+the dust of the road up into gravel on the slope and finally eluded
+him on the escarpment that soared away above him.
+
+The Maccabee hurried to the top of the declivity to gain whatever aid
+that point of vantage might offer and from that height saw below him
+to the west a single nook shaped of rock and hummock and a tree out of
+which rose a blue thread of smoke. He dropped down the farther slope
+at a pace little short of a run.
+
+He mounted the slight ridge that overlooked the depression in time to
+see Julian of Ephesus appear over the opposite side. Within, with her
+mantle laid off, her veil thrown back, the girl knelt over a bed of
+coals, baking one of the Maccabee's Milesian ducks. Julian had made a
+sound; the Maccabee had come silently. She looked up and saw the less
+kindly man first, flashed white with terror, sprang to her feet with a
+cry, and whirled to flee up the other side. There she confronted the
+Maccabee with hands extended to ward off the encroachment of his
+cousin. Without an instant's hesitation she flew into the Maccabee's
+arms. His clasp closed around her and she shrank against him, clinging
+to the folds of his tunic over his breast with hands that were
+tremulous.
+
+Her flight to him for refuge achieved an instant change in the
+Maccabee. The fear of defeat, the primal hate of a rival, died in him.
+All that remained was big wrath at the presumption and effrontery of
+Julian of Ephesus. He had no definite memory of what followed, because
+of the rush of blood in his veins, the whirl of pleasurable sensation
+in his brain and the weight of a sweet frightened figure pressed to
+him. The Ephesian went, leaving an impression of a most vindictive
+threat in the glittering smile and the motion of his shapely hand
+clenched at the victorious Maccabee. The girl drew away hastily. The
+veil was over her face and through its silken meshes he saw the glow
+on her cheeks and the sweep of her lowered lashes down upon that
+bloom.
+
+She was faltering her thanks and her apologies.
+
+"It is mine to ask pardon," he exclaimed, still smoldering with wrath.
+"I had no part in this, except to interfere with this bad companion of
+mine. I did not follow you; believe me."
+
+It confused her to know that he had guessed why she had moved from
+their encampment the night before. As necessary as old Momus had made
+it seem to her then, it seemed now to have been ungrateful. She could
+make no reply to that portion of his speech.
+
+"My servant went to the well," she said. "He will return presently. I
+am not afraid now."
+
+"I am; you ought to be. I shall wait till your extraordinary servant
+returns."
+
+At this decided speech Laodice showed a little panic.
+
+"No, no! I am not afraid. He--"
+
+But the Maccabee ignored the implied dismissal.
+
+"I owe him both a reproof and thanks for leaving you here alone for
+any wayfarer to approach--and for me to discover. I wish," gazing
+abroad over the broken horizon, "there were no well between here and
+Jerusalem, and that he were as thirsty as Tantalus."
+
+She made no reply to this remark, but her whole presence expressed
+discomfort in his determination to remain.
+
+"Heathen Hecate ought to get him in these wilds for forcing that cruel
+journey on you last night, when you were so weary and sad! There was
+no good in it. He wanted simply to get you away from me! Let us hope
+that Titus has got him for his museum by this time, and be at ease!"
+
+She raised her head and reproach flashed through the meshes of her
+veil.
+
+"Momus is a good man," she said.
+
+"He can not be," he insisted. "Have I not set forth his iniquities
+even now?"
+
+"It was a short task," she maintained. "But time is not long enough to
+count his virtues."
+
+"I can spend time better," he declared.
+
+He saw her silken brows lower in a spirited frown and he was glad. She
+was showing some other feeling than that dead level of unhappiness
+that had possessed her from the first moment he had seen her. His was
+not the heart contented to go astray after a tear. Men fall in search
+of joy.
+
+"Momus is carrying a burden under which more brilliant men would
+falter," she averred. "I am beyond reckoning his debtor!"
+
+"Since he has shifted that sweet burden for a time on my shoulders, I
+will forgive him for his looks. If he will stay away, I'll be his
+debtor further. But enough of Momus! I came to ask after your health,
+when your long journey by night is done."
+
+"I am well; we did not journey all night."
+
+"Sit, I pray you. There is no need for you to stand with that air of
+finality. I am not going, yet. I went back to your camp last night
+within a short time after I left you and found the camp broken and
+your fire lonely. I wanted to offer you my horse."
+
+"We did not walk all night. We camped a little farther on, and moved
+at daybreak this morning," she explained.
+
+He cast a reflective look at the sun and considered how much time
+Julian of Ephesus had lost for him upon the road, or else how long he
+had slept, that this pair, who had camped all night and had journeyed
+afoot by day, had caught up with him.
+
+"Still it was a cruel journey--for those little feet," he said.
+
+She glanced involuntarily at her sandals, worn and dusty.
+
+"Yes," he said compassionately, following her eyes. "But let me see no
+more, else I meet this good and burdened Momus with the flat of my
+hand when he comes! What is he to you?"
+
+"My servant--now almost my father!" she insisted, trying to cover the
+tacit accusation that she had made in admitting by a glance that she
+was weary. "He orders all things for my good. Do you think that each
+of the stones over which I stumbled to-day did not hurt him worse
+because they hurt me? Do you think he would have me go on, unless the
+stake were worth the pain I had to endure? Say no more against him!"
+
+The Maccabee shrugged his shoulders; then noting that she still stood,
+he smoothed down a spot of the sand with his foot, tossed upon it one
+of the sheepskins that Momus had unrolled, and extending his hand
+politely pressed her down on the place he had made. Then he dropped
+down beside her, lounging on his elbow.
+
+"What is the stake?" he asked after he had composed himself.
+
+She hesitated, regretting that her defense of Momus had led her to
+hint her mission and touch upon her husband's ambition.
+
+"The welfare of hosts!" she replied finally.
+
+"Heavens! What a menace I was!" the Maccabee smiled.
+
+She colored quickly and he resented the veil that was shutting away so
+much that was fine and fleeting by way of expression under its folds.
+
+"But you are just as dangerous," he declared. "Now, we should be in
+Jerusalem this hour. Our welfare and the welfare of others depend upon
+us--I mean my companion and me. But there is no devoted prodigy to
+bear me away--thank fortune! I have come out of a great turmoil; I
+must plunge into a greater one before many days. Let me rest between
+them. It will be a long time before I shall possess anything so sweet
+as the smell of this cedar fire and the picture of you against this
+fair sky!"
+
+She looked down quickly.
+
+"Was Ephesus in turmoil?" she asked disconnectedly.
+
+"Ephesus was never in any other state! A fit preparation for the
+disorder in Jerusalem! I was met at Cęsarea with such tales as
+depressed me until it required such delight as you are to bring back
+my spirits again! What takes you to Jerusalem?" he asked earnestly.
+"The Passover? God will forgive you if you neglect it one year.
+Nothing but the sternest necessity should send any one there at this
+hour."
+
+"My necessity is stern--it is Judea's necessity," she answered.
+
+"More similarity!" he exclaimed. "That is why I go! Certainly Judea's
+fortunes have bettered with you and me both hastening to her rescue.
+Come, let us compare further. I am going to crown a king over Judea!"
+
+She raised her veil to look at him with startled eyes. The glimpse of
+her face, for ever a delight and an astonishment to him because of its
+extraordinary loveliness, swept him out of the half-serious air into
+which he had fallen. He stopped and looked at her with pleased,
+boyish, happy eyes.
+
+"Aurora!" he said softly. "I see now why day comes gradually. Mankind
+would die of excitement if the dawn were unveiled to them like this
+suddenly every morning!"
+
+She released the veil hurriedly, but before it fell he put out a hand,
+caught it and tossed it back over her head.
+
+"Be consistent with your part," he said, still smiling. "No man ever
+saw day cancel her dawn and live."
+
+It was pleasant, this sweet possession and command. How much like an
+overgrown boy he had become, since she had wakened to find herself in
+his power that morning in the hills! The harshness and inflexibility
+had left his atmosphere entirely. She was only afraid of him now
+because he had refused to be dismissed. But she drew down the veil.
+
+"I, too, expect a king," she said in a lowered tone. "A conqueror and
+a redeemer."
+
+"The Messiah?" he said, and she knew by the inflection that he had not
+meant that King when he had spoken.
+
+He noted that her hair was coiled upon her head when he threw back her
+veil and he turned to that at once.
+
+"You wear your hair in a fashion," he said, "that once meant that
+which men dislike to discover of a woman whom they greatly admire. I
+hope it is no longer significant."
+
+"I go," she said after a silence, "to join my husband in Jerusalem."
+
+The Maccabee's lips parted and an expression of disappointment with an
+admixture of surprise and vexation came over his face. But what did it
+matter? Were she as free as air, he was a married man. The humor of
+the situation appealed to him. He dropped his head into the bend of
+his elbow and laughed.
+
+"Welladay, this is a respite for us both, then," he said. But
+realizing that an admission that he was married might hopelessly
+reduce their hour to a formal basis, he took refuge in a falsehood.
+
+"My companion expects to meet a wife in Jerusalem," he continued. "A
+royal creature, daughter of an ancient and haughty family, with all
+her life purpose congealed in lofty and serious intent, her coffers
+lined with gold and her face as determined and unbending as Juno's
+with her jealousy stirred. He is not delighted, poor lad!"
+
+Laodice sat very still and listened. There was enough similarity in
+this story to interest her.
+
+The Maccabee, seeing that he had made an impression with this
+deception and feeling somehow a relief in making it, went on,
+delighted with his deceit.
+
+"He has not seen her since he married her in his childhood, but he
+knows full well how she will look when he meets her."
+
+Surprise paralyzed Laodice. Was the smiling and dangerous companion of
+this man, her husband?
+
+The Maccabee, meanwhile, deliberately remarked her charms and
+recounted their antithesis in making up a picture of the woman he
+expected to meet as his wife.
+
+"She will, according to his expectations, be meager and thin, not
+plump! Thoughtful women and women with a purpose are never plump! And
+she will be black and pale, all eyes, with a nose which is not the
+noble nose of our race. She will be religious and it will not make her
+happy. She will realize her value to her husband and he will not be
+permitted to forget it. She will be ambitious and full of schemes. She
+will be the larger part of his family, though by the balance she will
+weigh not so much as an omer of barley."
+
+Laodice got upon her feet in her agitation and raised her veil to
+stare at this slander. Was this a picture of herself she heard? The
+Maccabee was enjoying himself uncommonly.
+
+"She will wear the garments of a queen, but--how little a slip of
+silver tissue will become her!"
+
+Laodice looked down in alarm at her gleaming garment, and reached for
+her mantle. The Maccabee had no idea how much pleasure he was to
+derive in making his own story, Julian's. He continued, almost
+recklessly, now.
+
+"Small wonder that he is so delinquent in the wilderness, with such
+square-shouldered righteousness awaiting him in town! Forgive him,
+lady, for his iniquities now, for he will be a good man after he
+reaches Jerusalem; by my soul, you may be sure he will be good!"
+
+Laodice gasped under the pressure of astonishment and indignation. It
+was bad enough to be pictured thus unprepossessing, but to be suddenly
+made aware of her husband in a man whom she feared, was desperate. She
+stared with frank and horrified eyes at her tormentor.
+
+"But--but--" she stammered.
+
+"True," he sighed. "One can not know what calamity forces another into
+misdeeds. Now were I my unfortunate friend, perhaps I should afflict
+you with my hunger for sweetness also."
+
+And that smooth, insinuating, violent pagan was Philadelphus
+Maccabaeus! But what had her father said of him, as a child? "Quick in
+temper, resourceful, aye, even shifty, stubborn, cold in heart, hard
+to please!" And to this man she must present herself, late, penniless
+and unhelpful. Panic seized her! How could she go on to Jerusalem!
+
+That long graceful figure stretched on the sand was speaking. What was
+it in his voice that drew her so mightily from any terror that
+possessed her at any time?
+
+"Sit down, sit down! I have more to say," he was urging her.
+
+She obeyed him numbly.
+
+"He gets worse as he approaches the city. I think I ought to leave
+him. It will not be safe to be near him when his moneyed lady claims
+him for her own!"
+
+"She--she--" Laodice burst out, "is--may be such a woman!"
+
+"Such a woman as you! No; she will not be. That is what makes him bad.
+And now that I bethink me, perhaps it is just as well that you proceed
+to Jerusalem. He may comfort himself with a sight of you, now and
+then."
+
+"I? I comfort him?" she exclaimed.
+
+"By my soul I know it! What blunders Fortune makes in bestowing wives!
+Perchance your husband could have got on as well without so radiant a
+spouse, while my poor beauty-loving friend must needs be paired with
+a--Alas! there is too much marrying in this world!"
+
+There was a ring of genuine dejection in his voice and when she looked
+down at him, she saw that his eyes were larger and more sorrowful than
+she believed they could be. He was hurting himself with his own
+deceit. She looked away hastily, frightened at the sudden tenderness
+that his pathetic gaze had wakened in her.
+
+"Alas!" he went on. "The greatest sacrifice and the frequentest in
+this world of cross-purposes never gets into poetry. I--" he halted a
+moment and looked away, "I ought to be sorry for her, too. She is not
+getting the best of men."
+
+"Verily!" she exclaimed impulsively.
+
+He whirled his head toward her, stared; then with a flash of intense
+expression in his eyes burst into a ringing laugh that shook him from
+head to foot. He flung out his hand and catching hers passed it across
+his lips without kissing it, and let it go before he regained
+composure enough to speak.
+
+"No! Not a good man! Verily! But hath he no cause to be delinquent?"
+
+"No!" she said stubbornly. "He has judged her without seeing her,
+when, by your own words, he expects her to bring him fortune and
+position. What is he bringing her?"
+
+The Maccabee looked at her thoughtfully before he answered.
+
+"Nothing! Not even his heart!" he vowed.
+
+Laodice caught her breath in an agony of indignation and distress.
+
+"He does not in any way deserve--" she stopped precipitately. She was
+about to add "the great fortune he is to get," when she realized that
+she was taking this husband nothing--not even her own heart. She went
+on, for the first time a little glad that she was penniless.
+
+"He may find--neither fortune, nor position, nor heart awaiting him!"
+she finished pointedly.
+
+The Maccabee pulled one of his stubborn locks that had fallen over his
+eyes. The smile grew less vivid.
+
+He had no comment to make to this. Meanwhile Laodice looked at him.
+
+"Shall--you be with--your friend in Jerusalem?" she asked.
+
+"It depends on his wife," he retorted with a grimace.
+
+She would be glad if this tall, comely trifler, with a voice as
+musical as some grave-toned viol, were to be seen from time to time to
+relieve the tedium of life with the offensive Philadelphus. This
+admission instantly brought a shock to her. She had learned to study
+herself in these last few days since she had become aware of the ways
+of the world. Life was to be no longer a period of obedience to laws
+which the Torah had laid down; it was to be a long resistance against
+desirable things that she yearned for but which she dared not have.
+She learned at this moment that she could be her own chief
+stumbling-block, and that love, the most precious illumination in
+every life, might be a destruction and a consuming fire. She looked at
+this man, who lounged beside her, with a new sensation. He was
+winsome, and therefore the more perilous. That smooth insulting
+stranger whom this man had revealed as her husband with all his
+violence and license was a humble and harmless thing compared to this
+one, who had snared her by his care of her and by his charming self.
+
+She felt a desire to cry out for Momus to take her back to the inner
+chamber of the shut house in Ascalon, away from her danger to herself
+and from the sight of the man who had done her no harm--yet.
+
+She did not know how plainly all this wrote itself on her candid face.
+Wise pupil of that unbridled school, the city of Diana, he could read
+in that slight frown on her forehead and the pathetic curve of her
+lips, that she was contented with him--that she was not glad to go on
+to that husband in Jerusalem. He was near to her before she knew he
+had moved.
+
+"After all," he was saying in a low voice, "I am glad you are going to
+Jerusalem. You shall not be lost from me again. Whose house shall I
+ask for when I can not endure separation longer?"
+
+She moved away from him. There was a step behind her and Laodice,
+coloring shamedly, looked straight into the accusing eyes of Momus who
+stood there. The stranger rose.
+
+"I shall see you again," he said to her.
+
+He took her hand and lifted it to his lips. The next instant he was
+gone.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII
+
+IMPERIAL CĘSAR
+
+
+When the Maccabee had returned to the spot in the sedgy valley where
+he and Julian had halted, he found the Ephesian white to the lips and
+with ignited eyes awaiting him.
+
+"How much longer?" the Ephesian demanded.
+
+"What! Fast and slow!" the Maccabee said calmly. "Last night you
+wasted hours to spite me. To-day you begrudge me a moment's talk with
+a lovely wayfarer. Or is it because she prefers me? You have ordered
+our progress long enough. I shall move when it pleases me."
+
+He sat down by the fire, clasping his hands back of his head, and
+half-closed his eyes. The Ephesian rose and tramped restlessly about.
+As he glanced down at the reposeful attitude of the man whom he could
+not exasperate he saw the sun glitter on the Maccabaean signet on the
+hand clasped back of Philadelphus' head. The sight of it in a way
+collected Julian's purposes. He knew that by some misadventure he had
+missed Aquila whom he had hoped to meet in Emmaus, bearing treasure
+stolen from the daughter of Costobarus. By this time, then, the
+Maccabee's emissary had doubtless arrived in Jerusalem--the last
+possible point for the two conspirators to meet. To proceed to
+Jerusalem without the Maccabee, with whatever excuse he could invent,
+would not deliver the dowry of the bride into his hands, in the event
+that Aquila had not succeeded in his instructions to make way with
+Laodice before he reached Jerusalem. Nothing occurred to Julian at
+that moment but to impersonate the Maccabee until it was possible to
+get possession of the two hundred talents from those friends in
+Jerusalem who were interested in his cousin's welfare. No one in
+Jerusalem knew Philadelphus Maccabaeus. Aquila, as fellow-conspirator,
+would not dare to expose him if Julian appeared as his cousin.
+Perilous at best, it seemed the only plan by which he was to get
+possession of a fortune which even Cęsar would be glad to have.
+
+The resolution formed itself in a brain turbulent with passion and
+desperation. He halted silently back of his cousin and with a sudden
+flare of intent on his dead white face snatched a dagger from his
+girdle and drove it between the shoulders of the Maccabee. Without a
+word, Philadelphus turned upon his assailant and started to his feet.
+But Julian, catching a glimpse of the dire purpose in his cousin's
+darkened eyes, struck again. The knife, blindly wielded, glanced on
+the Maccabee's head with wild force. Under a veil of scarlet
+Philadelphus sank to the earth.
+
+Julian with a sob of terror sprang out of range of his victim's gaze.
+After a time he took courage and looked. The lids were fallen and the
+breast was still.
+
+Julian bent hastily and snatched the signet from the nerveless hand
+and fumbling in the bosom drew forth the wallet there. He opened it,
+finding within ancient parchments with heavy seals, new writings,
+rolls of notes and a packet of letters. He rose, trembling violently,
+and backed away. After a moment's fascinated gaze at the roadway to
+see if the pilgrims passing had seen what he had done, he whirled
+about, mounted his horse and galloped frantically toward Jerusalem.
+
+Meanwhile the midday activity on the Roman roadway swept by the
+smoldering fire and the motionless figure lying in the grass some
+distance back from the highway. Along the splendid causeway the
+Passover pilgrims fared, men afoot, men on camels, families and
+solitary travelers; the poor, the once rich, the humble and the
+haughty; figures in burnooses, gabardines, gowns and tunics; striped
+and checkered woolens, linens or rags; noisy or silent, angry or sad,
+hour in and hour out, until the hills were a-throb with the human
+atmosphere. Time and again the sweet invitation of the rare grass
+along the marsh invited the way-weary to halt to tie a sandal, to bind
+up a wound, to eat a crust spread with curds or simply to rest. No one
+approached the silent man who had fallen beside a dying fire. They
+were tired enough to refrain from disturbing a man who slept. So,
+though they looked at him from where they sat and two or three asked
+each other if he were asleep or merely weary, he was left alone. One
+by one they who halted took up their journey again and the figure in
+the grass lay still.
+
+Finally near the noon hour there came from the summit of a hill
+overhanging the road, a high, wild, youthful yell that cut with
+startling distinctness through the dead level of human communication
+on the highway. Each of the travelers below looked up to see a young
+shepherd in sheepskins with long-blowing stiff crinkled locks flying
+back from a dusky face, with eyes soft and shining as those of some
+wild thing. Around him eddied a mob of sheep as wild as he, and a
+Natolian dog raced hither and thither in a cloud of dust, rounding the
+edge of the flock and shaping it to the advance of the young faun that
+mastered it.
+
+"Sheep! by the prophets!" one of the sedate Jews exclaimed.
+
+"The only flock in existence in Judea, I venture!" his companion
+declared.
+
+"And so hopelessly doomed to Roman possession that it can not be
+called in existence."
+
+"Heigh! Hello! Young David!" one of the younger men called up to the
+shepherd. "Does Titus pay you for minding his mutton?"
+
+"Salute, neighbors!" another shouted. "Here is the Roman commissary!"
+
+"Ill-fathered son of an Ishmaelite!" a Tyrian said to this jester.
+"That you should make sport of Judea's humiliation!"
+
+The shepherd who had paused amid his whirlpool of sheep wisely held
+his peace. There was a division of sentiment here that were better not
+aggravated. He halted long enough for the road to clear below him and
+then descended into the valley and crossed to the low meadow on the
+opposite side.
+
+His scamper of sheep flocked into the sedge, parting around the
+prostrate figure by a circle of coals now dead, and plunged into the
+pasture. The boy inspected the earth and shook his head. It was too
+wet for a long stay, inviting as it seemed. But here his flock might
+pasture for a day without injury.
+
+He glanced at the sleeper as he passed and continued to the farther
+side where the opposite hill sloped down into the depression. Here he
+found for himself a comfortable spot and lay down, prepared to watch
+all day. From time to time he looked across at the motionless figure
+in the grass and commented to himself that it was a weary man who
+slept so soundly, and then lost interest in the maze of dreams that
+can entangle the wits of a shepherd who is a boy.
+
+The march of the Passover pilgrims continued to Jerusalem.
+
+In mid-afternoon there came interruption. Along the level highway came
+the rapid beat of hooves and the musical jingle of harness. Every soul
+within sound of that un-Jewish mode of travel turned apprehensively
+and looked back. Bearing down upon them from the west came a stampede
+of Roman cavalry scouting. The sunshine on their brass armor
+transformed them into shapes of gold, and the recklessness of their
+advance swept the pilgrims out of their path as far as could be seen.
+Right and left the Jews scattered; some ran into the hills and hid
+themselves; others merely stepped aside and with darkening faces
+waited defiantly for the approach of the oppressor. The young shepherd
+full of excitement sprang to his feet.
+
+Neither the fleeing Jews nor the Jews that had stood their ground
+attracted the attention of the approaching legionaries. It was the
+close-packed, avid-feeding sheep, deep in the grass, that won their
+instant and enthusiastic notice. The decurion in charge of the squad
+brought up his gray horse with such suddenness that the animal's feet
+slid in the gravel.
+
+"Sheep, by the wings of Mercury!" he shouted. "Dismount, fellows!
+Here's for a feast this night and an offering to Mars to-morrow!"
+
+The ten in brazen armor threw themselves from their horses with the
+enthusiasm of boys and spread a panic of whooping and of waving arms
+about the startled flock. The young shepherd, too long a fugitive from
+the encroachments of this same army to misunderstand the nature of the
+attack, ran into the thick of the shouting Romans. His valiant dog
+with exposed teeth flew straight at the nearest legionary.
+
+"Cerberus!" the soldier howled, dodging. "Your pike, Paulus! Quick! By
+Hector, it is a wolf!"
+
+But the quickest soldier would not have been quick enough to elude the
+enraged beast had not the shepherd with a spring and a warning cry
+seized his dog by the ears and stopped him mid-bound.
+
+"Down, Urge!" he cried. "Take away your men!" he shouted to the
+decurion. "I can not hold him long."
+
+"Only so long," Paulus growled, raising his pike over the snarling
+dog.
+
+"Drop it!" the decurion ordered him peremptorily. "We are ten to one
+and a dog. No blood-letting this day. It is Titus' order. Boy, get you
+gone; these sheep are confiscate."
+
+"I have been told they are only common stock," the boy remonstrated
+gravely, "but you may be right. Howbeit, they are not mine and I can
+not leave them."
+
+"You have been misinformed," the decurion said gravely, while his men,
+circling around the growling dog, went on with their work. "These are
+Roman sheep, with the Flavian coat of arms and the mark of the army in
+black on their hides--if you shear them. But if you make away as fast
+as you can I shall not tell Titus which way you went."
+
+The sheep had started pell-mell toward the Roman road. The decurion
+turned back to his horse. The shepherd released his dog, which ran
+after the flock, and stepped into the decurion's way.
+
+"However these sheep look when they are sheared," he said, "this seems
+to be robbery to me."
+
+"Robbery!" the good-natured decurion exclaimed. "This is but a
+religious rite that Mercury got out of the cradle at two days to
+establish. Only he took Apollo's cattle while we are contenting
+ourselves with the sheep of mortal ownership. Robbery! What an
+inelegant word!"
+
+Meanwhile the stampeded sheep were making in a cloud of dust back over
+the road toward the west from which the Romans had come.
+
+"What shall I say to the citizens of Pella?" the little shepherd
+shouted, pursuing the decurion who was making back to his horse as
+fast as he could go.
+
+"Salute them for me," the decurion shouted back, "and make them my
+obeisances, and say that I shall report on the flavor of the sheep by
+messenger from Jerusalem."
+
+In a moment the boy sprang into the decurion's way so suddenly that
+the soldier almost fell over him.
+
+"Be fair!" the boy exclaimed. "At least leave me half!"
+
+The decurion was losing patience and the shepherd had grown more than
+ever serious.
+
+"Fair!" the Roman echoed. "Why, I have been indulgent! This is war! It
+is almost a breach of discipline to argue with you. Out of the way!"
+
+"The Roman army has all the world to feed it; Pella has only its
+sheep. We, then, must face hunger and cold because your appetites
+crave mutton this day!" the boy returned resentfully.
+
+The decurion pointed down the road.
+
+"Why waste your breath! There go the sheep."
+
+The boy's dark eyes filled with tears. The decurion swung around him
+and went back to the horses that waited in the road. He knotted their
+bridles together and, leading one of the number, remounted and rode
+west after the receding cloud of dust which hid the flock.
+
+The shepherd's head sank on his heaving breast and he stood still.
+
+"Lord Jesus, I pray Thee, give me my sheep again!" he prayed.
+
+A deep prolonged thunder that had been filling the hills with sound
+began to multiply as the nearest slopes caught it and tossed it from
+echo to echo. It was not loud but immensely prevalent. Those wayfarers
+who had fled came back to the brink of the hill and those who had
+stood their ground walked out into the grass to look back. Around the
+curve of a buttress of rock that stood out at the line of the road,
+the head of a column of Roman cavalry appeared. The superb
+color-bearer bore on his hip the staff supporting the Imperial
+standard.
+
+At the forefront rode a young general; on either side a tribune.
+Behind came a detachment of six hundred horse.
+
+The sheep huddling in the way were swept like a scurry of leaves out
+into the meadow alongside the road, and one of the tribunes and the
+general turned in their saddles to look at the confiscated flock. The
+second tribune observed their interest in this trivial incident with
+disgust. The young general, whose military cloak flaunted a purple
+border, called the decurion boyishly:
+
+"Well done, Sergius! A samnos of wine for your company to-night for
+this."
+
+The decurion saluted.
+
+"Where did you get them?" the tribune demanded.
+
+The shepherd who had withdrawn to the side of the road on the approach
+of the column looked at the questioner with resentful eyes from which
+the moisture had not vanished.
+
+"From me!" he said.
+
+Both the purple-wearing young general and his tribune looked at him
+amusedly.
+
+"How many killed and wounded, Sergius?" the tribune asked.
+
+The silent and disapproving tribune, observing that the commanding
+officer had not given an order to halt, brought the six hundred to,
+lest they ride their general down.
+
+"You!" the general exclaimed with his eyes on the young shepherd.
+
+The boy looked up into the face of the Roman who sat above him on a
+snow-white horse.
+
+It was a young face, tanned by the sun of Alexandria, but bright with
+an emanation of light that somehow was made tangible by the flash of
+his teeth as he talked and the sparkle of his lively eyes. For a
+soldier exposed to the open air and the ruffian life of the camp and
+burdened with the grave task of subduing a desperate nation, he was
+free of disfigurements. His brows were knitted as if to give his full
+soft eyes protection and the frown, with the laughing cut of his
+youthful lips, gave his face a quizzical expression that was entirely
+winning. In countenance and figure he was handsome, refined and
+thoroughly Roman. The little shepherd was won to him instantly.
+Without knowing that the world from one border to the other had
+already named this charming young Roman the Darling of Mankind, the
+little shepherd, had his lips been shaped to poetry, would have called
+him that.
+
+So Joseph, the shepherd, son of Thomas, the Christian, and Titus, son
+of Vespasian, Emperor of the World, looked at each other with perfect
+fellowship.
+
+"Those are sheep from Pella," Joseph said soberly, "in my care. They
+were taken from me because," he paused till a more tactful statement
+should suggest itself, but, lacking it, drove ahead with spirit,
+"there was not more of me to stop your soldiers."
+
+"I believe you," Titus replied heartily. "But that is the fortune of
+war. Still, you Jews have a habit of refusing to accept defeat
+rationally."
+
+"I am not a Jew," Joseph explained. "I am born of Arab blood, and I am
+a Christian."
+
+"Worse and worse," said Titus.
+
+Joseph shifted his position argumentatively.
+
+"Is it?" he asked. "Are you making war on Pella or Jerusalem? Was it
+Pella or the hundred Jewish towns that cost Rome so much of late?
+Pella is not exactly your friend, though neither are most of your
+provinces; but are you going to pillage Egypt or Persia because Judea
+is in rebellion?"
+
+Titus threw his plump leg over the horn of his saddle and sat
+sidewise. One of his tribunes looked at the other with a flickering
+smile that was not entirely free of contempt. But his fellow returned
+a stare that for immobility would have done credit to the Memnon.
+
+"Now," Titus began, "I have heard of this fault in the Christians.
+They don't understand warfare."
+
+"We don't," Joseph declared bluntly. "We do not see why you should
+take my sheep to feed your army, when we have had nothing to do with
+bringing your army over here. We haven't cost you one drop of Roman
+blood or one denarius of Roman money, and yet you are taking at one
+act the whole of our substance and punishing us for the misdeeds of
+others--others whom you haven't succeeded in punishing yet."
+
+"That is bad judgment," Titus said, frowning at the last sentence.
+
+"Unpleasant truth always is," Joseph retorted.
+
+One of the tribunes laughed impulsively and Titus looked around at him
+reproachfully.
+
+"Come, come, Carus," he said.
+
+"Thy pardon, Cęsar," the tribune replied, "but we'll be whipped in
+this wordy battle. And even a small defeat were an unpropitious sign
+on this expedition."
+
+"To Hades with your signs! If I am whipped with six hundred back of
+me, I ought to be! Boy, we have your sheep by conquest; you will have
+to take them back the same way."
+
+Joseph's face fell.
+
+"I have had them since I was nine years old. I've tended them since
+they were lambs and their mothers before them. It is like surrendering
+so many children," he said dejectedly. "In truth I can fight for them
+even if it be but to lose, and I am bidden not to fight at that."
+
+"By Hector, that is not a Jewish tenet!" Titus exclaimed.
+
+Joseph said nothing. He stood still in the path of the Roman six
+hundred with his curly head sunk on his breast. There was silence.
+
+"Is it?" Titus demanded uncomfortably.
+
+"No; and for that reason you are still fighting them and will fight
+and lose and lose and lose, before you win. Still, it is no safeguard
+not to fight you; you take our substance anyhow. Be we peace-lovers or
+not, there is warfare; if we do not fight we are fought against."
+
+Titus thrust his helmet back from his full front of intensely black
+curls and wiped his forehead.
+
+"The sun is hot in these hills," he said disjointedly to the tribune
+he had called Carus, "and the wind is cold. Uncomfortable climate."
+
+Carus said nothing.
+
+"Is it not?" Titus demanded irritably.
+
+"Very," Carus observed hastily.
+
+The little shepherd stood in the road and the six hundred were silent.
+
+"Well," said Titus with a tone of finality, "you never remember the
+wrongs the strong man endured--wrongs that the weak man did him
+because of his weakness."
+
+"It never hurts the strong man," Joseph said softly, "to give the weak
+one another chance."
+
+Titus closed his lips at that, and the tribune who had smiled
+sarcastically looked with sudden intent at Carus. Carus silently moved
+his horse to the sarcastic tribune's side with such threatening
+expression on his face that the other discreetly held his peace.
+
+"Perhaps," Titus said thoughtfully, but the boy failed to see more in
+that word than the simple expression. In his search for some further
+plea that would give him his sheep again, the presence of the young
+Roman appealed to him with hope. Surely one so young and laughing, so
+ready to stop an army to argue with a child, could not be beyond reach
+of persuasion. With the simple frankness so innocent of guile as to
+make charming that which upon other lips would have been the broadest
+insincerity, he put that moment's thought into words.
+
+"I thought," he said slowly, "because your horse is so white and your
+dress so golden and your face so beautiful that I would have but to
+ask--and I would have my sheep again."
+
+Titus looked at him, not with the idea that his compliment was
+effective, but with the thought that the boy was yet too young to have
+lost faith in attractive things; that another than himself would have
+to teach the shepherd that lesson in disappointment.
+
+"Have you examined these sheep for disease, Sergius?" he demanded,
+with a show of severity. "I never saw a flock in this country that was
+not full of peril for the cavalry."
+
+Sergius, wisely catching excuse in this demand, saluted.
+
+"I did not," he replied.
+
+"So? Well, do it hereafter. Go stop those legionaries and turn loose
+that flock. We lost five hundred horse in Cęsarea for just such
+negligence."
+
+Joseph flung up his head, his eyes sparkling, his cheeks aglow, his
+whole figure alive with a gratitude so potent that it was painful.
+Titus, with the deep tide of a blush crawling over his forehead,
+scowled down at this joy.
+
+"Look well," he continued severely to Sergius, "and if they are
+healthy--"
+
+But Joseph laughed and stepped out of the young general's path.
+
+"And," said Titus, his face clearing before that laugh as he directed
+his words to the little shepherd, "Jerusalem shall have another
+chance."
+
+Transfiguration brightened the small dusky face. He put up his hands
+for that blessing that was a part of his farewell.
+
+"_May my God supply all thy need according to his riches in glory, by
+Jesus Christ. Amen!_"
+
+Titus, with a bowed head, touched his horse, and in response to a
+silent flash of an uplifted sword the picked six hundred of Cęsar's
+army rode on in the subdued thunder of hoof and the music of jingling
+harness toward Jerusalem.
+
+After a long time there came the quick patter of a running flock and
+the multitudinous complaint of lambs, and up from the east rushed the
+mob of sheep. Behind them trotting comfortably were the mounted
+scouts. The ten privates wore scornful countenances highly expressive
+of their contempt for the unwarlike restitution they had been forced
+to make, but as they rode past when the sheep swept out of the road to
+their tender, Sergius, the decurion, dropped back and with his tongue
+in his cheek made such jovial threatening signs that the little
+shepherd laughed again.
+
+The squad galloped after the main body and were lost to view. Many of
+the Jews called to the little shepherd, but after a time travel was
+resumed on the road and deep monotonous composure settled upon the
+valley again.
+
+But Joseph, the Christian, turned into the high grass of the meadow
+with bowed head and clasped hands.
+
+"Lord Jesus, what may I do for Thee?" he asked impulsively.
+
+He stopped suddenly. At his feet lay the silent sleeper in the grass.
+On the tall growth upstanding about the prostrate form were clear
+shining scarlet drops. The little shepherd turned white and threw
+himself down on his knees beside the still figure and put his hand
+over the heart. Then he lifted his face to the skies.
+
+"_I was sick and ye visited me_," he whispered radiantly.
+
+[Illustration: He threw himself down by the still figure.]
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII
+
+GREEK AND JEW
+
+
+Julian of Ephesus, now the presumptive Philadelphus Maccabaeus, rode
+up the broad brown bosom of a hill that had confronted him for miles
+to the south, and the sun had sloped until its early spring rays
+struck level from the west. At the summit, he drew up his horse
+suddenly with a quick intaking of the breath.
+
+Below him lay Jerusalem.
+
+South and east the barren summits of brown hills shaped a depression
+in which the city lay. North, clean-white and regular, the wall of
+Agrippa was printed against the cold blue of the sky. Below on three
+lesser mounts and overflowing the vales between was the goodliest city
+in all Asia.
+
+About it and through it climbed such walls, planted on such bold
+natural escarpment, that made it the most inaccessible fortification
+in the world. On its highest hill stood a vision of marble and gold--a
+fortress in gemstone--the Temple. Behind it towered Roman Antonia.
+Westward the Tyropean Bridge spanned a deep, populous ravine. The high
+broad street upon which the giant causeway terminated was marked by
+the solemn cenotaphs of Mariamne and Phaselis and ended against the
+Tower of Hippicus--a vast and unflinching citadel of stone. Under the
+shadow of this pile was the high place of the Herods; in sight was a
+second Herodian palace. South was the open space of the great markets;
+near the southernmost segment of the outer wall was the semicircular
+Hippodrome. Cut off from its neighbor by ancient walls were Ophlas,
+overlooking Tophet and under the shadow of the Temple; Mount Zion
+which the Lord had established, Akra of the valley, Moriah, the Holy
+Hill, and Coenopolis or Bezetha which Agrippa I had walled. About the
+immense outer fortifications crawled the shadowy valleys of Tophet, of
+Brook Kedron and of Hinnom. Thickly scattered like fallen patches of
+skies the pools of Siloam, Gihon, Shiloh, En-Rogel, the Great Pool,
+the Serpent's Pool and the Dragon's Well reflected the color of the
+mountain heavens. Between them wandered the blue threads of certain
+aqueducts that supplied them. Everywhere rose the shafts of monuments
+and memorials, old as the pride of Absalom, new as the folly of the
+Herods; everywhere the aggressive paganism of Rome and Greece, which
+would have paganized this monotheistic race out of very rancor against
+its uprightness, violated with insolent beauty the hieratic severity
+of the city's face. Rich, bold, strong, beautiful, Jerusalem was at
+that hour, as viewed from the hill to the north, the perfection of
+beauty and the joy of the whole earth.
+
+For a moment ambition struggled nobly in the breast of the man that
+overlooked it. Except for the obstacles he had placed in his own way
+by his misdeeds, Julian of Ephesus at that moment might have become
+great. But he had struck down his kinsman on the way, and such deeds
+were remembered even in war-ridden Judea; he had come to Jerusalem
+wearing his kinsman's name that he might despoil that kinsman's bride
+of her dowry; a hundred other crimes of his commission stood in the
+way to peace and success.
+
+But about him the Passover pilgrims, catching their first glimpse of
+the Holy City, gave way to the storm of emotion that had gradually
+gathered as they drew near to the threatened City of Delight.
+
+It had moved him to look upon this most majestic fortification,
+embattled and begirt for resistance against the most majestic nation
+in the world. But he who came as a stranger could not feel within him
+the tenderness of old love, the sanctity of old tradition, and the
+desperation of kin in his blood as he gazed upon Jerusalem. Yonder was
+a roof-garden; to him, no more than that. But the inspired Jews beside
+him knew that in that place the sun of noon had shone upon Bathsheba,
+the beautiful; and in that neighboring high place the heart of the
+Singing King had melted; to the north was a stretch of monotonous
+ground overgrown with a new suburb; but that was the camp of
+Sennacherib, the Assyrian whom the Angel of the Lord smote and his
+army of one hundred and four score and five thousand, before the
+morning. Yonder were squalid streets, older than any others. But the
+Kings had walked them; the Prophets had helped wear trenches in their
+stones; the heroes and the strong-hearted women of the ancient days
+had gone that way. No house but was holy with tradition; no street but
+was sanctified by event. Small wonder, then, that these who came to
+this Passover, the most momentous one since that calamity which had
+occurred forty years ago on Golgotha, wept, cried aloud to Heaven;
+became beatified and made prophecies; railed; anathematized
+Jerusalem's enemies; assumed vows and were threatening. Julian of
+Ephesus was shaken. He looked about him on the tempestuous host, then
+touched his horse and rode down to the city.
+
+On the Hill Scopus over which he approached an inferior number of
+Romans were camped, and these had maintained a semblance of siege only
+sufficiently effective to close all the gates on three sides. The Sun
+Gate to the south of the city was therefore the most accessible point
+of entry for the pilgrims. Following the people who had preceded him,
+Julian approached this portal, left his horse with the stable-keeper
+without and prepared to enter Jerusalem.
+
+Collecting at the causeway of the Sun Gate the pilgrims came with such
+impetus that the foremost were rushed struggling and protesting
+through the tunnel under the wall and forced well into Jerusalem
+before they could control their own motion. Once within, the host
+spread out so that one looking at the immense space they instantly
+covered wondered how so great a mass ever passed through the
+circumscribed limits of a fifty-foot gate. At times stopping was
+impossible. Again there were momentary lulls, as when the sea recoils
+upon itself and is stilled for an instant. They who stood to watch,
+wearied of days of such invasion, unconsciously wished that the
+interval might endure till they could rest their number-wearied
+brains. But, as if the stagnation were the result of congestion
+somewhere without the walls, when the wave returned it came with
+redoubled height and power and the Sun Gate would roar with the noise
+of their entry.
+
+After the Ephesian had been swept in with his own company of pilgrims,
+he saw that which even few of the new-comers had expected to see. The
+immediate vicinity of the gate was laid waste. Up Mount Zion opposite
+Hippicus and along the margin of the Tyropean Valley where the
+Herodian and Sadducean palaces had seemed so fair from the north were
+great blackened shells of walls and leaning pillars, partly buried in
+ruin and rubbish. Far and wide the streets were littered with debris
+and charred fragments of burned timbers. At another place on the
+breast of Zion was a chaos of rock where a mansion had been literally
+pulled down. Somewhere near Akra pale columns of pungent, wind-blown
+smoke still rose from a colossal heap of fused matter that the
+Ephesian could not identify. About it were neglected houses; not a
+sign of festivity was apparent; windows hung open carelessly; the
+hangings in colonnades were stripped away entirely or whipped loose
+from the fastenings and abandoned to the winds. Numbers of dwellings
+appeared to have been sacked; others were so closely barred and
+fortified that their exteriors appeared as inhospitable as jails.
+
+Confusion prevailed on the smoked and untidy marble Walk of the
+Purified leading down from the Temple. Here those who held fast to the
+Law met and contested for their old exclusiveness with wild heathen
+Idumean soldiers, starvelings, ruffians and strange women from
+out-lying towns. Far and wide were wandering crowds, surly, defiant,
+discourteous, exacting. Manifestly it was the visitors who were the
+aggressors. They had been overthrown and driven from their own into an
+unsubjugated city which was secure. They felt the rage of the defeated
+which are not subdued, and the resentment against another's unearned
+immunity. The citizens of Jerusalem had not welcomed them and they
+were enraged. Half a dozen fights of more or less seriousness were in
+sight at once. A column of black wiry men in some semblance of uniform
+pushed across the open space toward the Essene Gate. They took no heed
+for any in their path. Those who could not escape were overturned and
+trampled on. Meeting a rush at the gate they drew swords and coolly
+hacked their way through screams of fear and pain and amazement. After
+them went a wave of curses and complaint. Citizens against the
+visitors; visitors against the citizens; soldiers against them all!
+
+"And this cousin of mine meant to pacify all this!" the Ephesian
+exclaimed to himself.
+
+Jerusalem, that had for fifteen hundred years adorned herself at this
+time with tabrets and had gone forth in the dance of them that make
+merry, was drunken with wormwood and covered with ashes.
+
+All at once the Ephesian saw four soldiers standing together and with
+them, manifestly under their protection, was a Greek of striking
+beauty. He wore on his fine head a purple turban embroidered with a
+golden star.
+
+Without a moment's hesitation, the Ephesian approached. The spears of
+the four soldiers fell and formed a barrier around the Greek. The
+new-comer smiled confidently.
+
+"Greeting, servant of Amaryllis," he said. "I am your lady's expected
+guest."
+
+The Greek came forth from the square formed by his guard.
+
+"I am that servant of Amaryllis," he said courteously. "But show me
+yet another sign."
+
+The Ephesian drew from his bosom the Maccabaean signet and flashed its
+blue fires at the Greek. The servant stepped hastily between the
+soldiers and the new-comer.
+
+"Thy name?" he asked in a whisper.
+
+"I am Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+
+The servant bent and taking the hem of the woolen tunic pressed it to
+his lips.
+
+"Happy hour!" he exclaimed. "I pray you follow me."
+
+The pretender breathed a relieved sigh and joined his protector.
+
+They passed down into Akra and approached the straight column of
+pungent smoke towering up from a charred heap that the Ephesian in
+spite of his haste inspected curiously.
+
+"What is that?" he asked of the Greek.
+
+"That, master, is the city granaries."
+
+"The granaries!" the Ephesian cried, aghast.
+
+The Greek inclined his head.
+
+"What--what--fired them?" the Ephesian asked.
+
+"John and Simon differed on the point of its control and each fired it
+to keep the other from possessing it!"
+
+For a moment the Ephesian was thunderstruck. Then he quickened his
+pace.
+
+"By the horns of Capricornus!" he avowed. "The sooner one gets out of
+this, the wiser he must be counted!"
+
+The Greek looked at him with lifted brows and led on.
+
+They crossed the Tyropean Valley and approached a small new house of
+stone, abutting the vast retaining wall that was built against Moriah.
+A line of soldiers was thrown out from the entrance to the house and
+his conductor, after whispering a word to the captain, led the way up
+to a double-barred door. A long time after he had rapped, there was
+the sound of falling chains and the door swung open. A second Greek
+servant of no less beauty bowed the new-comer and his companion
+within. The noise of the streets was suddenly cut off. Soft dusk and
+quiet proved that the doors of Amaryllis had been shut upon unhappy
+Jerusalem.
+
+The second servant drew a cord and a roller of matting lifted and
+showed a skylight. Philadelphus the pretender was in the andronitis of
+a Greek house.
+
+It was typical. None but a Greek with the purest taste had planned it.
+Walls and pavement were of unpolished marble, lusterless white. A
+marble exedra built in a semicircle sat in the farther end, facing a
+chair wholly of ivory set beside a lectern of dull brass. At either
+end of the exedra on a pedestal formed by the arms, a brass staff
+upheld a flat lamp that cast its luster down on the seat by night.
+Against an opposite wall built at full length of the hall, was a
+pigeonholed case, which was stacked with brass cylinders. This was the
+library of the Greek. At a third side was a compound arch concealed by
+a heavy white curtain. There were low couches spread with costly white
+material which were used when Amaryllis set her table in her
+andronitis, and at the arches leading into the interior of the house
+there were draperies. But the chamber, with all its richness, had a
+splendid emptiness that made it imposing, not luxurious.
+
+After a single admiring survey of the hall in which he had been left
+alone, the pretended Philadelphus fortified himself against his most
+critical test.
+
+Without a sound, without even so much as the rustling of a garment to
+announce her, a woman emerged from a passage leading into the interior
+of the house. He confronted the only person in Jerusalem who might
+know him as an impostor.
+
+The woolen chiton of her countrywomen draped a figure almost too
+slender, yet perfect in its delicate modeling. Though her eyes were
+black, her hair was fair and brilliant with a wash of gold powder. Her
+features were Hellenic, cold, pure and classic, and for all her youth
+and beauty there was an atmosphere about her of middle-age, immense
+experience, and old sagacity.
+
+The pretender braced himself for the scrutiny the eyes made of him.
+
+"You are that Philadelphus, as my servant tells me?" she asked.
+
+"I am he."
+
+She inclined her head.
+
+"Welcome; in the name of all the need of you!"
+
+After a silence he came closer and lifted her hand to his lips. He
+added nothing, but presently raised his eyes softened with feeling and
+unexpressed appreciation.
+
+"Certainly you have suffered, lady," he said finally in a subdued
+tone. "But please God you will not suffer alone hereafter."
+
+Amaryllis' non-committal front changed.
+
+"You are gentler of speech than is common among the Maccabees," she
+said.
+
+"Nevertheless the Maccabees are the more touched by devotion," he
+maintained.
+
+He led her to the exedra, unslung his wallet and laid it on the
+lectern before them.
+
+"When thou hast leisure, perchance thou wilt find interest in these
+papers here."
+
+She thanked him and there was a moment's silence. Under his lashes the
+impostor saw that he had not filled her fancied picture of the
+Maccabee made from long years of correspondence. She was disappointed;
+her intuition was perplexed. He would complete his work and get away
+in time.
+
+"My wife is here?" he asked.
+
+"She came yesterday," Amaryllis responded, clapping her hands in
+summons. A female servant of such prepossessing appearance that
+Philadelphus looked at her again, bowed in the archway.
+
+"Send hither the princess," Amaryllis said.
+
+"The princess," Philadelphus repeated to himself. "Then, by Ate, I am
+the prince!"
+
+"While we wait," Amaryllis continued, "let us talk of details which
+you may not have patience to hear after she comes. Jerusalem, as you
+have learned, is in grave danger--"
+
+"Jerusalem should fear the Roman army less than herself. I have seen
+its disease."
+
+"The citizens will hail Titus as a deliverer. But this week's
+ceremonies are bringing us disaster. Should Titus be forced to lay
+siege about us, how shall we feed this multitude of a million on the
+supplies gathered for only a third of that number?"
+
+"Gathered and burned."
+
+"Even so. But of your creature comforts. My house is open to your
+chief enemy. It must be so. You must be hidden--not concealed, but
+disguised. You know my weakness for people of charm and people of
+ability. My house is full of them. The master of this place is
+indulgent; he permits me to add to my collection whatever pleases me
+in the way of society. Therefore, you are come as a student of this
+wonderful drama to be enacted in Jerusalem presently. You may live
+under part of your name. Substitute, however, your city for your
+surname. Be Philadelphus of Ephesus. No one then will question your
+presence here.
+
+"I have bound to me by oath and by fear one hundred Idumeans who will
+rise or fall with you. They are of John's own army and alienated to
+you without his knowledge. Hence they are in armor and ready at any
+propitious moment. This house is provisioned and equipped for siege;
+everything is prepared."
+
+"At what cost, my Amaryllis?" he asked tenderly.
+
+She drew away from him quickly, as if his tone had touched a place of
+deeper disappointment.
+
+"That I do not remember. I am your minister; you need no other. More
+than the one would be multiplying chances for betrayal."
+
+"And what wilt thou have out of all this for thyself?" he asked.
+
+Slowly she turned her face back to him.
+
+"I would have it said that I made a king," she said.
+
+There was a step in the corridor leading into the andronitis, and,
+smiling, Amaryllis rose. Philadelphus got upon his feet and looked to
+catch the first glimpse of the woman who was bringing him two hundred
+talents.
+
+A woman entered the hall. Behind her came a servant bearing a
+shittim-wood casket.
+
+Had Amaryllis been looking for suspicious signs, she would have
+observed in the intense silence that fell, in the arrested attitude of
+the pair, more than a natural embarrassment. Any one informed that
+these were a pair of impostors would have seen that there was no
+confusion here, but amazement, chagrin and no little fear.
+
+Instead, Amaryllis, nothing suspecting, glanced from one set face to
+the other and laughed.
+
+"Poor children! Married fourteen years and more than strangers to each
+other! I will take myself off until you recover."
+
+She signed to the servant to follow her and passed out of the hall.
+
+Philadelphus then put off his stony quiet and gazed wrathfully at the
+woman who had entered.
+
+Hers was a fine frame, broad and square of shoulder, tall and lank of
+hip as some great tiger-cat, and splendid in its sinuosity. She had
+walked with a long stride and as she dropped into the chair she
+crossed her limbs so that her well-turned ankles showed and the hands
+she clasped about her knees were long and strong, white and remarkably
+tapering. Her features were almost too perfect; her beauty was
+sensuous, insolent and dazzling. Withal her presence intimated
+tremendous primal charm and the mystery of undiscovered
+potentialities. And she was royal! No mere upstart of an impostor
+could have assumed that perfect hauteur, that patrician bearing.
+
+But the pretended Philadelphus was not impressed by this beauty.
+
+"How now, Salome?" he demanded. "What play is this?"
+
+The Ephesian actress motioned toward the shittim-wood casket.
+
+"For that," she said calmly.
+
+Her voice became, instantly, her foremost charm. It was a deep voice;
+the profoundest contralto with an illimitable strength in suggestion.
+
+"Where is--what is that?"
+
+"Two hundred talents."
+
+Philadelphus took a step toward her.
+
+"What!" he exclaimed evilly. "Whose two hundred talents?"
+
+"Mine."
+
+There was silence in which the man's fingers bent, as if he felt her
+throat between them. Then he recovered himself.
+
+"But--this woman--where is she?"
+
+The actress lifted her shapely shoulders.
+
+"Where is the Maccabee?" she asked in return.
+
+He made no answer.
+
+"Did you get that treasure here--since yesterday?" he asked at last
+querulously.
+
+"No, by Pluto! I got it in the hills near to Emmaus. You would have
+had it in another day." She laughed impudently, in spite of the
+murderous blackening in his face.
+
+"Then, since you are such a shrewd thief, why did you come here at
+all, since you had the gold?" he demanded, astonished in spite of his
+rage.
+
+She waved a pair of jeweled hands.
+
+"They said that the Maccabee was strong and ambitious and forceful,
+that he would be king over Judea. Knowing you, I believed he would
+still come to Jerusalem in spite of you. How did you do it? In his
+sleep? Now, I," she continued with an assumption of concern, "failed
+in that detail. She was guarded by a monster. I could not get near
+her. But I got the casket."
+
+"She will come here then!" Philadelphus exclaimed.
+
+"What of it! Amaryllis does not know her; no one else does. And I have
+her proofs--and her dowry!"
+
+After a silence in which she read the expression on his face, she rose
+and came near him with determination in her manner.
+
+"You will have the wisdom not to recognize her," she said, "lest I
+suddenly discover that you are not the Philadelphus I expected."
+
+He made rapid survey of her advantage over him, and submitted.
+
+"But there will be no need of waiting for such an issue," he fumed,
+after a silence. "I am here and not the Maccabee, whose crown you
+coveted. We shall get out of this perilous city."
+
+"So?" she said, lifting her finely penciled brows. "No, we shall not."
+
+"Why?" he stormed.
+
+"Because," she answered, "John of Gischala may yet be king of
+Judea--and John hath a queen's diadem for sale at two hundred
+talents--or a heart which I can have for nothing."
+
+There was malevolent and impotent silence in the andronitis of
+Amaryllis, the Greek.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX
+
+THE YOUNG TITUS
+
+
+They who stood on the wall by the Tower of Psephinos in Coenopolis of
+Jerusalem on a day in March, 70 A.D., saw prophecy fulfilled.
+
+Since the hour in which the Roman eagles had appeared above the
+horizon to the west in their circling over the rebellious province of
+Judea there had not been one day of peace. Then their coming had meant
+the approach of an enemy. But in a short time such implacable and
+fierce oppressors, with such genius for ferocity and bloodshed, had
+developed among the Jews' own factions that the miserable citizens had
+turned to the tyrant Rome for rescue. They who had risen against
+Florus and had driven him out would have willingly accepted him again
+in place of Simon bar Gioras and John of Gischala, before two years
+had elapsed. Now, their plight was so desperate that they clambered
+daily upon the walls of their unhappy city to look for the first
+glimpse of the approaching enemy, Titus, whom they had learned to call
+the Deliverer.
+
+Near noon of this day in March certain citizens on the wall beside
+Hippicus saw a flash down the road to the west beyond the Serpent's
+Pool near Herod's monuments. Again they saw it and again, until they
+observed that its appearance was rhythmic, striking through a soft
+colored cloud of Judean dust.
+
+Out of that yellow haze, rolling nearer, they saw now the glittering
+Roman standards emerge, one by one; saw the spiky level of shouldered
+spears; saw the shapes of horses, saw the shapes of men; heard the
+soft thunder of six hundred horse on the packed earth, heard the music
+of six hundred whetting harnesses; heard like a tender, far-off song
+the winding of a Roman bugle and heard then in their own hearts, the
+shout: "He has come! The Deliverer!"
+
+It was the hour of the City's last hope.
+
+On the near side of the Pool of the Serpent, they saw the body of
+horse break into a light trot and, wheeling in that fine concord in
+which even the dumb beasts were perfect, turn the broadside of the
+splendid column to Jerusalem as it swept up Hill Gareb to the north.
+
+The citizens clambered down from the wall by Hippicus and, speeding
+silently but with moving lips and shining eyes through alleys and
+byways, came finally to an angle in Agrippa's wall that stood out
+toward Gareb. Here was built the Tower of Psephinos. Dumb and callous
+as beasts to the blows and commands of the sentries there mounted, the
+citizens clambered up on the fortifications and, with their chins on
+the battlements that stood shoulder-high, gazed avidly at the sight
+they saw.
+
+Scattered confidently over the uneven country the six hundred had
+broken file and were in easy disarray all over Gareb. Spears were at
+rest, standards grounded, many were dismounted, whole companies
+slouched in their saddles. The Jews, long used to rigid military
+discipline among the Romans, looked in amazement. Then a light click
+of a hoof attracted their attention to the bridle-path immediately
+under the overhanging battlements.
+
+There a solitary horseman rode. Not a scale of armor was upon his
+horse; not a weapon, not even a shield depended from his harness. His
+head was uncovered and a sheeny purple fillet showed in the tumbled,
+dusty black hair. There was no guard on the hand that held the bridle;
+the cloak that floated from his shoulders was white wool; the tunic
+was the simple light garment that soldiers usually wear under armor;
+the shoes alone were mailed. It seemed that the young Roman had
+stripped off his helmet, breast-plate and greaves to ride less
+encumbered or to appear less warlike.
+
+But the Jews who looked at him understood. Here was Titus come in
+peace!
+
+The horse went with loosened rein, while the young Roman's eyes raised
+to the great wall towering over him had more of admiration and a
+generous foe's appreciation of his enemy's strength than of the
+note-making search of a spy in them.
+
+"Ha! By Hector, that penurious Herod was a builder!" they seemed to
+say. "There is enough stone insolence in these walls to trouble Rome
+for a while!"
+
+Rod after rod of the slowly rising ground he traversed; rod after rod
+of the tall fortification passed under his inspection, and now the
+twin Women's Towers rose upon the ashes and scarped rock to the north.
+
+Titus spoke to his horse and rode faster.
+
+Meanwhile silent dozens climbed panting and dumbly resisting the
+sentries up beside the first Jews. They were citizens who dared not
+rejoice aloud. They followed the young Roman with brightened eyes,
+saying each within his heart:
+
+"Thus David came up against Saul, unto Israel!"
+
+But there was an increase of uproar in the city below, as if news of
+the coming of Titus had spread abroad.
+
+Titus was now almost a mile from the nearest of his soldiers. He
+passed the Gate of the Women's Towers. Hedges, gardens, ditches and
+wind-breaks of cedars of Lebanon from time to time obscured him. When
+he came in sight again, he had placed obstruction between himself and
+retreat.
+
+The next instant the Gate of the Women's Towers swung in. Out of it
+rushed a sortie of motley soldiery, brandishing weapons and shouting
+the war-cries of Simon and John.
+
+The citizens on the walls pressed their hands to their temples and
+watched, transfixed with horror. Jerusalem's defenders had gone out
+against the Deliverer!
+
+The attack had been seen by the disorganized troops on Gareb and the
+rapid trumpet-calls showed formation. But between the time of their
+movement and the moment of their relief a company could have been
+unhorsed. Meanwhile Titus, with nothing less than Fate preserving him
+for its own work, dodged javelins and, enraging the white stallion
+that he rode, kept out of reach of hand-to-hand encounter with his
+assailants. Back and forward he rode, his horse carrying him at times
+out of range of missiles; again, all but surrounded by the unorganized
+enemy. About his head whizzed axes and spears, wild, and frequently
+slaying their own. Far up the slope of Gareb the six hundred gathered
+itself and swept in mass down upon the conflict.
+
+Between them and Titus lay two furlongs. To join his column with all
+honor to himself, he had to work back over the wadies he had crossed
+and circle the gardens that stood in his way. But a hedge pressed too
+close upon the space he must pass, between it and the enemy, before he
+could return to his men. An ax glanced beside his ear; he wavered in
+his saddle. Then, that happened which a Roman of that day could not be
+forced to do and forget.
+
+Titus wheeled his horse and, plunging his spurs into its sides, fled
+on into the open country to the north, with the jeers of the men of
+Simon and John following him.
+
+His troops rushed down upon his assailants. But the wary soldiers
+turned when the Roman had fled and the Gate of the Women's Towers
+closed upon them.
+
+Up from the visitors within the wall rose a shout:
+
+"A sign, a sign! An omen! Thus shall the children of God overthrow the
+heathen in battle!"
+
+But one of the Jews on the wall thrust his fingers under his turban
+and seized his hair.
+
+"Jerusalem is fallen! Woe! Woe to the wicked city!"
+
+He turned in his place and leaped a good twenty feet to the ground.
+When he raised himself the look of a maniac had settled on his face.
+Tearing his garments from him as he went, he entered a narrow street
+that made its ascent toward Zion by steps and cobbled slants. Here he
+came upon great crowds of terror-stricken citizens who had rushed
+together as the news spread abroad over Jerusalem that the men of
+Simon and John had gone out against the Deliverer. No definite news of
+the outcome of the sortie had reached them and they were moving in a
+dense pack down toward the walls to hear the worst. The whole hurrying
+mass seemed to vibrate with suspense and dread. The maniac met them.
+
+"Woe, woe to Jerusalem!" he cried.
+
+A lean, apish, half-naked, lash-scarred idiot in the street,
+instantly, as if in echo to that mad cry, shouted in a voice of the
+most prodigious volume:
+
+"A voice from the east, a voice from the west, a voice from the four
+winds, a voice against Jerusalem and the Holy house, a voice against
+the bridegrooms and the brides and a voice against this whole people!"
+
+The temper of the crowd had reached that point of tension that needed
+only a little more strain to become panic. Some one received the
+discordant cries of the maniacs with piercing rapid screams. Instantly
+the choked passage filled with frantic uproar. Scores attempting to
+flee blindly trampled over those transfixed with fear. They fought,
+men with women, youths with old age, children with one another.
+Hundreds attracted by the tumult rushed in on the panic and added
+fresh victims and new death. Out of the horror rose the fearful cries
+of the madmen:
+
+"Woe, woe to this wicked city!"
+
+Meanwhile, the soldiers of Simon and John came to prevent citizens
+from gathering in bodies, and with sword and spear drove into the
+struggle and added murder to it all. The spirit of terror then issued
+out of that bloody alley and seized upon street by street. Far and
+wide the tumult ran, growing in volume with every accession, until the
+raging and humiliated Titus, among his six hundred, heard Jerusalem
+howl like a beaten slave and hushed his pagan curses to listen.
+
+Late that same afternoon, the Esquiline Gate, inaccessible, despised
+and sealed, was broken open from within and under it and down its
+difficult and dangerous approach poured a silent multitude, numbering
+thousands. They were abandoning the Rock of David to its fate. Among
+them went the last remnants of that sect of Christians who had tarried
+long after their brethren had been warned away, hoping against hope.
+
+They were not missed among the numbers in Jerusalem, for the Passover
+hosts still poured through the gates to the south and took their
+places in the unhappy city. And with these that same afternoon Laodice
+and her old servant came into Jerusalem.
+
+It was the eighth day after they had applied to the priest at Emmaus
+whither they had fled in their search for the frosts, a good three
+leagues north of the direct road to Jerusalem. They had stopped at the
+Lavatory outside the walls, washed themselves and had purchased the
+white garments of the purified. Old Momus carried with him the price
+of the lambs, of the fine flour and the oil for their cleansing and
+the two were ready to present themselves for their purification at the
+Temple. But all the roar and disorder of the great city in its warfare
+and its discord confused them. Ascalon had not a thousandth part of
+this turmoil at its busiest season. Neither was there a servant in a
+purple turban with the gold star to meet them and they were bewildered
+and lost.
+
+The rest of the visitors to the Passover hurried into the heart of the
+city; wave after wave of new-comers replaced them; but the young woman
+and her dumb old servant stood aside just within reach of the shadow
+of the immemorial portal and waited.
+
+Time and again wolfish Idumean soldiers who were numerous about the
+place noted the pair and commented to one another or spoke insolently
+to the shrinking girl who hid ineffectually behind her veil. Hour
+after hour they stood with growing distress and no friendly face in
+all that army of hurrying, restless, quarreling Jews welcomed them.
+
+The afternoon waned. Laodice thought of the darkness and trembled.
+
+An old man fumbling a talisman of bone drew near them. Laodice took
+courage and approached him.
+
+"I pray thee, sir, I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid."
+
+The old man turned large, grave eyes upon her.
+
+"Daughter, what dost thou know of this woman?" he asked.
+
+"My husband knows her; I do not. I am to join him under her roof."
+
+The old man looked reassured.
+
+"Follow this street unto one intersecting it on the summit of Zion.
+That will be a broad street and a straight one, terminating on a
+bridge. Go thence to the hither side of that bridge, pass down the
+ravine and cross to the other side against Moriah. There thou shalt
+see a new Greek house. It is the residence of Amaryllis."
+
+Laodice thanked her informant and began the pursuit of the cloudy
+directions to her destination. Twice before she brought up at the
+sentry line before the house of the Seleucid, she asked further of
+other citizens. Many times she met affront, once or twice she
+perilously escaped disaster. At last, near sunset, she stood before
+the dwelling-place of the one secure citizen of the Holy City.
+
+A sentry dropped his spear across her path and she had not the
+countersign to give him. There she and her helpless old attendant
+stood and looked hopelessly at the refuge denied them.
+
+Presently a man appeared in the colonnade across the front of the
+house and descending to the sentry line called to him the officer in
+command. They stood within a few paces of Laodice and she heard the
+soldier address the man as John, and heard him deliver a report of the
+day.
+
+When the soldier withdrew to his place, Laodice stepped forward and
+called to the Gischalan. He stopped, noted that she was beautiful and
+waited.
+
+"I would speak with the Lady Amaryllis," she hesitated.
+
+"Have you the countersign?" he asked.
+
+"No; else I should have entered. But Amaryllis will know me."
+
+"Enter then," the Gischalan said.
+
+In a moment she was admitted at the solid doors and led into a
+vestibule. Here, a porter took charge of Momus and showed him into a
+side passage, while Laodice followed her conductor through a corridor
+into an interior hall of splendid simplicity. Lounging on an exedra
+was a young woman in a woolen chiton, barefoot and trifling with the
+Greek ampyx that bound her golden hair.
+
+Laodice put up her veil and looked with hurrying heart at her hostess.
+Before she could get a preliminary idea of the woman she was to meet,
+John spoke lightly:
+
+"Be wearied no longer. I have brought you a mystery--a stranger,
+without the countersign, asking audience with you."
+
+"Go back to the fortress," the young woman answered. "Sometime you
+will find strangers awaiting you there, also without the password. You
+will lose Jerusalem trifling with me. I have spoken!"
+
+John filliped her ear as he passed through into a corridor which must
+have led into the Temple precincts. Under the light, Laodice saw that
+he was a middle-aged Jew, not handsome, but luxuriant with virility.
+His face showed great ability with no conscience, and force and charm
+without balance or morals. Here, then, thought Laodice, is the first
+of Philadelphus' enemies.
+
+The idler in the exedra, meanwhile, was awaiting the speech of her
+visitor.
+
+"Art thou she whom I seek?" Laodice asked. "Amaryllis, the Seleucid?"
+
+"I am called by that name."
+
+"I was bidden," Laodice continued, "by one whom we both know, to seek
+asylum with thee."
+
+"So? Who may that be?"
+
+Laodice whispered the name.
+
+"Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+
+The Greek's eyes took on a puzzled look. Then she surveyed the girl
+and as a full conception of the beauty of the young creature before
+her formed in the Greek's mind, the perplexity left her expression.
+Her air changed; a subtle smile played about her lips.
+
+"He sent you to me for protection?"
+
+"Until he arrives in Jerusalem," Laodice assented.
+
+"But he is already here."
+
+It was the moment that Laodice had avoided fearfully ever since she
+had gathered from that winsome stranger by the roadside that his
+companion was her husband. Although, after that fact had been made
+known to her, she had felt that she ought to join Philadelphus and
+proceed with him to the Holy City, she had endured the exposure of the
+hills, the want and discomfort of insufficient supplies and the
+affronts of wayfarers, that she might spare herself as long as
+possible her union with the unsafe man who had become even more
+hateful by comparison with the one who had called himself Hesper.
+
+"Perchance thou wilt lead me to him," Laodice said finally.
+
+Amaryllis made no immediate answer. It would have been a natural
+impulse for her to wish to inquire for the girl's business with the
+man that the Greek as hostess was expected to conceal. But Amaryllis
+had her own explanation for this visit. It had been plain to less
+observant eyes than hers that the newly arrived Philadelphus was not
+delighted with the bride he had met.
+
+The Greek summoned a servant.
+
+"Go summon thy master, Prisca; and haste. I doubt not I have for him a
+sweet relief."
+
+The woman bowed.
+
+"If it please thee, madam, the master is without in the vestibule,
+returning from the city." Amaryllis signed to the ivory chair before
+her.
+
+"Sit, lady," she said to Laodice. "He will come at once."
+
+The young woman dropped into the seat and gazed wistfully at her
+hostess. Instinctively, she knew that in this woman was no relief from
+the darkened life she was to lead with her husband. The Greek's face,
+palely lighted by a thoughtful smile, vanished in sudden darkness.
+Laodice saw instead an image of a strong intent face, brightening
+under the sunrise, saw it relax, soften, grow inexpressibly kind, then
+pass, as a tender memory taking leave for ever.
+
+She was brought to herself by the Greek's rising suddenly. The
+Ephesian appeared at the arch, tossing mantle and kerchief to the
+porter as he entered. Laodice rose to her feet with difficulty. It was
+he, indeed!
+
+He was kissing Amaryllis' hand. The Greek was smiling an accusing,
+conscious smile. She indicated Laodice. The Ephesian's face showed
+startlement, suspicion and a quick recovery. He bowed low and waited
+for explanation.
+
+"Then I will go," Amaryllis said with amusement in her eyes, "if you
+are acting pretenses for my sake."
+
+[Illustration: Amaryllis the Greek.]
+
+She turned toward the arch which led into the interior of the house.
+The pretender glanced again at Laodice and again at the Greek.
+
+"What is the play, lady?" he asked.
+
+Amaryllis looked at Laodice standing stony white at her place, and
+lost her confident smile.
+
+"Is this not he?" she asked.
+
+"Is this Philadelphus Maccabaeus?" Laodice asked.
+
+The Ephesian's face changed quickly. Enlightenment mixed with
+discomfiture appeared there for an instant.
+
+"I am he," he said evenly.
+
+"Then," Laodice said, "I am she whom thou hast expected."
+
+Philadelphus smiled and dropped his head as if in thought.
+
+"One always expects the pleasurable," he essayed, "but at times one
+does not recognize it when it comes. Who art thou, lady?"
+
+"Pestilence, war and the evil devices of men have desolated me," she
+said coldly. "I have only a name. I am Laodice."
+
+"Laodice!" he repeated amiably. "A familiar name; eh, Amaryllis?"
+
+Laodice waited. Philadelphus looked again at her and appeared to wait.
+
+"I am Laodice," the girl repeated, a little disconcerted, "thy wife."
+
+"So!" Philadelphus exclaimed.
+
+There was such well-assumed astonishment in the exclamation that she
+raised her eyes quickly to his face. There was another expression
+there; one wholly incredulous.
+
+"Now did I in the profligacy of mine extreme youth marry two
+Laodices?" he said. "For another Laodice, wife to me, joined me some
+days since."
+
+Laodice gazed at him without comprehending.
+
+"I say," he repeated, "that my wife Laodice joined me some time ago."
+
+"Why, I--I am Laodice, daughter to Costobarus, and thy wife!" she
+exclaimed, while her eyes fixed upon him the full force of her
+astonishment.
+
+He turned to Amaryllis.
+
+"What labyrinth is this, O my friend," he asked, "in which thou hast
+set my feet?"
+
+"I do not know," Amaryllis laughed suddenly. "Call the princess."
+
+Philadelphus summoned a servant and instructed her to bring his wife.
+For a short space the three did not speak, though Laodice's lips
+parted and she stroked her forehead in a bewildered way.
+
+Then Salome, late actress in the theaters at Ephesus, came into the
+hall. Amaryllis bowed to her and the impostor gave her a chair. He
+turned to Laodice and with the faintest shadow of a grimace motioned
+toward the new-comer.
+
+"This," he said, "is Laodice, daughter of Costobarus."
+
+Laodice blazed at the insolent beauty who stared at her with curious
+eyes.
+
+"That!" she cried. "The daughter of Costobarus!"
+
+The fine brown eyes of the woman smoldered a little, but she
+continued to gaze without the least discomposure.
+
+"Who is this, sir?" she asked of Philadelphus.
+
+"That," said Philadelphus evenly, to the actress, "is Laodice,
+daughter of Costobarus."
+
+"I do not understand," the actress said disgustedly. "You are clumsy,
+Philadelphus, when you are playful. If this is all, I shall return to
+my chamber."
+
+She rose, but Laodice sprang into her path.
+
+"Hold!" she cried. "Philadelphus, hast thou accepted this woman
+without proofs?"
+
+Philadelphus smiled and shook his head.
+
+"And by the by," he asked, "what proof have you?"
+
+Up to that moment Laodice had burned with confident rage, feeling
+that, by force of the justice of her cause, she might overthrow this
+preposterous villainy, but at Philadelphus' question she suddenly
+chilled and blanched and shrank back. A new and supreme disadvantage
+of her loss presented itself to her at last. She could not prove her
+identity!
+
+Meanwhile, seeing Laodice falter, the woman's lip curled.
+
+"Weak! Very weak, Philadelphus," she said. "You must invent something
+better. The success of a jest is all that pardons a jester."
+
+"She robbed me!" Laodice panted impotently. "Robbed me, after my
+father had given her refuge!"
+
+"Of what?" the Greek asked.
+
+"My proofs--and two hundred talents!"
+
+"Lady," the actress said to Amaryllis, "my husband's emissary, Aquila,
+was a pagan. He had with him, on our journey, this woman and her old
+deformed father who fled when the plague broke out among us. She
+hoped, I surmise, that we should all die on the way. Even Samson gave
+up secrets to Delilah, and this Aquila was no better than Samson."
+
+Oriental fury fulminated in the eyes of Laodice. Philadelphus, fearing
+that she was about to spring at the throat of her traducer, sprang
+between the two women. In his eyes shone immense admiration at that
+moment.
+
+There was an instant of critical silence. Then Laodice drew herself up
+with a sudden accession of strength.
+
+"Madam," she said coldly to Amaryllis, "with-hold thy judgment a few
+days. I shall send my servant back to Ascalon for other proof. _He_
+can go safely, for he has had the plague."
+
+Philadelphus started; the actress flinched.
+
+"Friend," Philadelphus said in his smooth way, "I came upon this woman
+by the wayside in the hills. I and a wayfarer cast a coin for
+possession of her--and the other man won. Give thyself no concern."
+
+Laodice flung her hands over her face and shrank in an agony of shame
+down upon the exedra. Amaryllis looked down on her bowed head.
+
+"Is it true?" she asked. After a moment Laodice raised herself.
+
+"God of Israel," she said in a low voice, "how hast Thy servant
+deserved these things!"
+
+There was a space of silence, in which the two impostors turned
+together and talking between themselves of anything but the recent
+interview walked out of the chamber.
+
+After a time Laodice lifted her head and spoke to the Greek.
+
+"If thou wilt give me shelter, madam, for a few days only, I promise
+thee thou shalt not regret it," she said.
+
+The girl was interesting and Amaryllis had been disappointed in
+Philadelphus. Nothing tender or compassionate; only a little
+curiosity, a little rancor, a little ennui and a faint instinctive
+hope that something of interest might yet develop, moved the Greek.
+
+"Send your servant to Ascalon for proofs," she said. "I shall give you
+shelter here until you are proved undeserving of it. And since the
+times are uncertain, do not delay."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter X
+
+THE STORY OF A DIVINE TRAGEDY
+
+
+The following morning, there was a rap at the door of the chamber to
+which Laodice had been led and informed that it was her own.
+
+She had passed a sleepless night and had risen early, but the knock
+came late in the morning.
+
+She opened the door.
+
+Without stood a ten year old girl, of the most bewitching beauty, as
+barely clad as ever the children of her blood went over the green
+meadows of Achaia. Her golden hair was knotted on the back of her
+pretty head and held in place by an ampyx. On her feet were tiny
+sheepskin buskins; about her perfect little body, worn carelessly, was
+a simple chiton, out of which her dimpled shoulders and small round
+arms showed pink and tender as field-flowers. Nothing could have been
+more composed than her gaze at Laodice.
+
+"We breakfast in the hall, now. You are to join us," she said.
+
+Laodice stepped, out of the chamber into the court and followed her
+little guide.
+
+"The mistress and her guests rise late," the child went on. "That
+perforce starves the rest of us until mid-morning. Eheu! It is the one
+injustice in this house."
+
+Laodice dumbly wondered if she were to be classed with the house
+servants while she waited until the return of her devoted old mute.
+
+She was led into a long narrow room, showing the same simple elegance
+that marked all the house of Amaryllis, the Greek. Down the center
+were two tables, separated by a cluster of tall plants that almost
+screened one from the other.
+
+At the first table place was laid for one. At the other, she found by
+the talk and laughter the rest of the company were gathered. The
+little girl led Laodice to the single place, seated her, and kissing
+her hand to her with an almost too-practised bow, fled around the
+cluster of tall plants. There she heard her childish voice imperiously
+ordering a servant to attend the mistress' latest guest.
+
+Prisca appeared and silently served Laodice with melon, honey-cakes
+and milk. Other of the house-servants were visible from time to time.
+This, then, manifestly was not the breakfast of the menials. She
+glanced toward the cluster of tall plants. Through an interstice she
+was able to see all the persons seated at the other table.
+
+There first was the blue-eyed, golden-haired girl. Beside her was a
+youth, slim, dark, exquisitely fashioned, with limbs and arms as
+strong as were ever displayed in the games, yet powerful without
+brutality, graceful without weakness--marks of the ideal athlete that
+had long since disappeared with the coming of the Roman gladiator.
+Opposite was a grown man, tall, broad and deep chested, with prominent
+eyes wide apart and a large mouth. There was a singleness of attitude
+in him, as in all persons reared to a purpose. It was that certain
+self-centeredness which is not egotism, yet a subconsciousness of self
+in all acts. He was the finished product of a specific, life-long
+training, and the confidence in his atmosphere was the confidence of
+one aware of his skill and prepared at all times.
+
+Besides these three, there were two women, both in the garments of the
+ancient atelier. One was bemarked with clay; the other was stained
+with paint. Laodice knew at a glance that she looked at a gathering of
+artists.
+
+"Evidently a gift from John," the little girl was saying. "He can not
+see that our lady does anything but collect curiosities in this her
+search after art, and so he must needs add a contribution in this
+Stygian monster we saw yesterday evening."
+
+Laodice knew that they discussed Momus.
+
+"Perhaps," the athlete said, "he bought this left-handed catapult
+thinking he might throw the discus farther than I can throw it."
+
+"Well enough," the woman with paint on her tunic put in; "she sent the
+monster packing. He went out of the gates post-haste last night, they
+say."
+
+"The pretty stranger that came with him stayed, I observe," the
+athlete said.
+
+"Pst!" the girl said in a low voice. "Where are the man's eyes in your
+head, that you do not see her?"
+
+"Looking at you!" the athlete answered.
+
+"Too soon!" the child retorted. "A good six years before I shall know
+what your looks mean!"
+
+"Is she, this pretty stranger, something of John's taste?" the woman
+who had blue clay on her garment asked.
+
+"Tut!" the athlete broke in. "John never departed from his ancient
+barbarism to that extent. That, unless I misjudge my own inclinations
+in a similar matter, is something this mysterious Philadelphus hath
+arranged to relieve the tedium of--"
+
+"Tedium!" the girl exclaimed. "By Hector, this Jewish wife of his
+would open his Ephesian eyes were she to let loose all I suspect in
+her!"
+
+"Brrr! But you are suspicious!" the athlete shivered. The little girl
+shaped her lips into a kiss and the athlete leaning across the table
+snatched it from her before she could avoid him.
+
+The women caught him by the back of his tunic and pulled him down in
+his chair.
+
+"Sit down!" they whispered. "Don't you see that Juventius is about to
+speak?"
+
+The athlete glanced at the grown man, who had looked down into his
+plate at the youth's frolic with the child, with the utmost disdain
+and boredom in his expression. Now that the silence became noticeable,
+he spoke in an affected voice, but one of the deepest music.
+
+"Alas, these Jews!" he said. "How little they know about art! How long
+has it been since he introduced one of the Temple singers into our
+lady's hall to show what a piercing high note could be reached by a
+male voice? And he had the creature sing to prove his contention. I
+thought I should die! It was worse than awful; it was criminal!"
+
+The athlete laughed.
+
+"Any singer, then, but Juventius therefore is a malefactor!" he said.
+
+"No, it does not follow," Juventius protested in all seriousness,
+while the child flashed a look of intense amusement at the athlete.
+"But," waving a pair of long white hands, "none should trifle with
+music. It is one of the graces of Nature, divine and elemental.
+Wherefore, anything short of a perfect production becometh a mockery
+and a mockery against divine things is blasphemy. Ergo, the poor
+musician is in danger of Hades!"
+
+"The monster is safe, safe!" the girl protested. "He does not sing,
+and from what I caught through the crack of the door, the pretty
+stranger had better not. My lady, the princess, had a merry time with
+my lord, the prince, at breakfast this morning, all about this same
+pretty one. So this is why she breakfasts with us--the second table."
+
+Laodice heard this with a sinking heart. This was a strange house in
+which to live at no definite status, with a future blank and
+inscrutable.
+
+"Is it, then, that you are wary of offending the over-nice exactions
+of music, that you do not sing?" the athlete demanded of Juventius.
+
+"Song," replied the singer gravely, "is originally the expression of
+the highest exaltation. To sing before the high mark of feeling is
+reached is an insincerity."
+
+"Alas, Juventius," the girl was saying, "how much difficulty you lay
+up for yourself in determining the limits of art! Teach broadly and
+the fulfilment of your laws will not be such a task for the overworked
+and irritable gods of art."
+
+"Child!" Juventius cried passionately. "Your ignorance outreaches your
+presumption!"
+
+"Fie! Fie!" the athlete put in comfortably. "Let us make a truce, for
+I announce to you the opportunity each to have whatever you wish. We
+are to have at the proper moment, according to the Jews, a celestial
+visitation which will enable us to have what we most desire."
+
+"You announce it!" the girl scoffed indignantly. "I have heard of that
+ever since I was born!"
+
+"I, too, have heard it," said Juventius.
+
+"Well," said the unabashed athlete, "the Pharisee that brings
+Amaryllis her fruit is so full of it that he gets prophecies mixed
+with his prices and the patriarchs with his fruit. He says that there
+are those that declare he is already in the city."
+
+"That he has been seen?" Juventius asked, after a little silence.
+
+"No; merely suspected. They say that things go on in the Temple which
+seem to show that some resident of their Olympus already inhabits the
+air."
+
+"I saw Seraiah to-day," one of the women said in a low voice.
+
+"Silent as ever? Spotless as ever? Mysterious as ever?" the athlete
+asked.
+
+The woman who had spoken shook her head at him as if alarmed.
+
+"I can not bear to hear him ridiculed," she said. "Somehow it seems
+blasphemous. They say he marks every one who laughs in his hearing."
+
+"They are not many," the girl said. "For the most part, the citizens
+of Jerusalem feel as apprehensive about him as you do."
+
+"I wonder that John will stay in the Temple with a god in it,"
+Juventius said, as if he had not heard the rest of the discussion.
+
+"John!" the athlete exclaimed. "John is an adventurer that believes
+in nothing, has no cause and furthers this warfare for loot and the
+possible chance of escape when the conflict comes."
+
+"Simon is different," another said. "Now he is wild and mad and
+insolent and foolhardy, because he believes that, no matter what
+tangle the situation is in, the celestial emissary he expects will
+straighten it out for him."
+
+"In short, he means to work such a complexity here that the man who
+unravels it must needs be divine."
+
+At this moment the door that cut off the rest of the house from this
+dining-room opened smartly and the supposed Philadelphus stepped in.
+He closed the door behind him and glanced at the filled table. Those
+there seated rose. He spoke to each one by name, and after they had
+greeted him, they filed out into the court and the servants began to
+remove the remnants of their meal. Laodice rose at sign of this
+concerted deference to Philadelphus but sat down again, with her lips
+compressed. However they had disposed her, she would not accept the
+menial attitude. She had not finished her honey-cakes.
+
+He came round to her, drew up a chair and sat down beside her. She
+ignored him, making a feint that was not entirely successful at
+interest in her fruit.
+
+"Who art thou, in truth?" he asked finally.
+
+"Laodice," she answered coldly.
+
+He sighed and she added nothing more.
+
+"What can your purpose be in this?" he asked.
+
+She ignored the question. After a longer silence, he said in an
+altered and softened tone:
+
+"What an innocent you are! Certainly this is your first attempt! What
+marplot told you that such a thing as you have essayed was possible?"
+
+She put aside her plate and her cup, and turned to him.
+
+"By your leave I will retire," she said.
+
+"Not yet," he answered, smiling. "It is my duty as a Jew to help you
+while there is time."
+
+She settled back in her chair and looked at the cluster of plants
+while he talked.
+
+"Nothing so damages the beauty of a woman as trickery. No bad woman is
+beautiful very long. There comes a canker on her soul's beauty, in her
+face, that disfigures her, soon or late. Whoever you are, whatever
+your condition, you are lovely yet. Be beautiful; of a surety then you
+must be good."
+
+It was the same old hypocritical pose that the bad man assumes to
+cloak himself before innocence. Laodice remembered the incident in the
+hills.
+
+"Where," she asked coldly, "is he who was with you at Emmaus?"
+
+The pretender started a little, but the increase of alarm on his face
+showed that he realized next that here was a peril in this woman which
+he had overlooked.
+
+"Gone," he said unreadily, "gone back to Ephesus."
+
+She did not know what pain this announcement of that winsome
+stranger's desertion would waken in her heart. Her eyes fell; her
+brows lifted a little; the corners of her mouth became pathetic. The
+pretender, casting a sidelong glance at her, saw to his own safety
+that she had believed him.
+
+"He was a parasite," he sighed, "living off my bounty. But even that
+did not invite him when he neared the peril of this city. So he turned
+back. I--I do not blame him," he added with a little laugh.
+
+"Blame him?" she said quickly. "You--you do not blame him?"
+
+"No! Any place, any condition is more desirable than residence in
+Jerusalem at this hour."
+
+"If one seeks but to be comfortable. But here is a place for work and
+for achievement," she declared.
+
+"Too desperate an extreme. Nothing can be done here," he observed,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+She gazed at him with immense contempt.
+
+"That from a son of Judas Maccabaeus!" she exclaimed.
+
+He looked disconcerted.
+
+"Why not?" he urged. "It is neither rational nor practical to attempt
+the impossible. Jerusalem is doomed. I would but add myself to the
+sacrifice did I interfere between destruction and its sure prey."
+
+After a silence in which she confronted him with many emotions showing
+on her face, she said with infinite pity and disappointment:
+
+"O Philadelphus, you to throw greatness away!"
+
+"Where, O my mysterious genius, are my army, my engines, my
+subsistence, my advantage and the prize?"
+
+"What was that dowry which was stolen from me to purchase for you but
+these things? I brought it for this purpose. Another than myself
+delivered it to you; the end is achieved; what use will you make of
+it?"
+
+"There is no nation here for that dowry to defend, no crown for it to
+support. But for this same madness which possesses my lady, the
+princess, I should depart this day for a safer venture, in some safer
+country!"
+
+She faced him intently.
+
+"And you will do nothing for Judea?" she asked.
+
+"What can be done?" he asked, throwing out his hands with a careless
+gesture.
+
+"Oh," she exclaimed with a rush of passionate feeling, "that I were
+you! You, with the materials for empire-building at your feet! You,
+with the hour beseeching you, with a people searching for you, with a
+treasury filled for you, with ancient prophecy establishing you,
+ancient precept teaching you, and the cause of God arming you!
+Philadelphus, son of a great patriot, what are you saying! What can
+there be done! Oh rather, how dare you not do! What have you about you
+but the inevitable end of Judah, living contrary to God's plan for it!
+It is the conscience of Israel rising against its sin and submission!
+It is the blood of David rebelling against the heathen yoke! It is the
+hour foretold by Isaiah and Jeremiah and Ezekiel and Daniel and the
+Twelve, when Israel shall repent and be chastened and return to the
+heritage of Jacob. Be the repairer of the breach! Be the restorer of
+the paths to dwell in, my husband! Go out and let Israel behold you!
+Help them to wipe out the shame of Babylonia and Persia and Macedonia
+and Rome! Make Jerusalem not only a sanctuary but a capital! Restore
+the glory of David and the peace of Solomon, for those were God's days
+and Judah can not prosper except as it returns to them!
+Philadelphus--"
+
+Laodice halted abruptly in her appeal, breathless with feeling.
+
+The amusement had gone out of his face and his expression was one of
+mingled discomfort and surprise at her speech.
+
+"Since you are a thinking woman," he answered, "I must answer you
+soberly. Even I, expecting disorder and uproar in Jerusalem, when I
+came from Ephesus, was not prepared for this chaos! Never was such a
+time! Order is not possible in this extreme. It is unthinkable.
+Nothing human can save Jerusalem!"
+
+She laid her hand upon him.
+
+"Nothing human!" she repeated quickly. "Seest not that this is the
+time of the Messiah? Be ready to be helped of God!"
+
+Philadelphus drew away from her uneasily and looked at her from under
+lowered brows.
+
+"They say," he said in a suppressed voice, as fearing his own words,
+"that He has come and gone!"
+
+She looked at him blankly. He was glad he had thought of this; it
+would divert her from a discourse momently growing unpleasant for him.
+And yet he was afraid of the thing he had said.
+
+"What dost thou say?" she asked.
+
+"He is come and gone--they say."
+
+"Come and gone!"
+
+He nodded irritably. It made him nervous to dwell on the subject.
+
+"Who say?" she demanded.
+
+"Many! Many!" he whispered.
+
+"It is not--do you believe it?" she persisted, with strange terror
+waiting upon his answer. He moved uneasily but he answered the truth.
+It was superstition in him that spoke.
+
+"Something in me says it is true," Philadelphus whispered.
+
+She stood transfixed; then all her horror rose in her and cried out
+against the story.
+
+"It can not be!" she cried. "See the misery and oppression, here,
+tenfold! Nothing has been done! Nobody heard of Him! He could not
+fail! What a blasphemy, what a travesty on His Word, to come and
+fulfil it not and go hence unnoticed! It can not be!"
+
+"But, but--" he protested, somehow terrified by her denial, "only you
+have not heard. Everywhere are those who believe it and I saw--I
+saw--"
+
+The growing violence of dissent on her face urged him to speak what
+his shamed and guilty tongue hesitated to pronounce.
+
+"I saw in Ephesus one who saw Him; I saw in Patmos one who had
+reclined on His breast!"
+
+"A--a--woman?" she whispered.
+
+"No! No!" he returned in a panic. "A man, a prisoner, old and white
+and terrible! But it was in his youth! He told me! And the one in
+Ephesus, a red-beard, hunchbacked and half-blind and even more
+terrible than the first! He saw Him after He was dead!"
+
+"Dead!" Her lips shaped the word.
+
+"They--yes! He was crucified!"
+
+Her lips parted as if to speak the word, but her mind failed to grasp
+it certainly. She stood moveless in an actual pain of horror.
+
+"But He rose again from the dead," he persisted, "and left the earth
+to its own devices hereafter. And so behold Jerusalem!
+
+"And there was one woman," he added, "who had been a scarlet woman.
+She had anointed His feet with precious oil and wiped them with her
+hair. And I saw her also--I sought them all out, because they could do
+miracles and foretell events. Thousands upon thousands believe in
+them."
+
+"Crucified!" she whispered.
+
+"They say," he went on, "that He pronounced judgment on Jerusalem and
+that it now cometh to pass!"
+
+The accumulated effect of the calamitous recital was to stun her. She
+gazed at him with unintelligent eyes, and her lips moved without
+speaking. For one reared in constant contemplation of God's nearness
+to His children, acquainted with divine politics, divine literature
+and divine law, cut off from the world and devoted wholly to religion,
+the story of a divine tragedy carried with it the full force of its
+fearful import. Philadelphus' narrative meant to her the crumbling of
+earth and the effacement of Heaven. She cried wildly her unbelief when
+words returned to her. But under the fury of her denunciation,
+unconsciously directed against the conviction that the story was true,
+she felt her hope of a restored Kingdom of David wavering toward a
+fall.
+
+While she stood thus, Amaryllis, languid and pre-occupied, entered the
+room with John of Gischala at her side. The Greek noted Philadelphus
+with a quick accession of interest. John's attention had been
+instantly arrested by the presence of the other man. Philadelphus
+turned with fine ease to meet the man whom he must regard as his enemy
+and Laodice shrank back in an attempt to get out of sight of the trio.
+
+"Welcome!" said Amaryllis to Philadelphus. "A fortunate visit that
+makes possible an amnesty for two of my friends at once. This, John,
+is Philadelphus of Ephesus, a seeker of diversion out of mine own
+country come to see the end of this great struggle thou wagest against
+Rome. And thou, Philadelphus, seest before thee, John of Gischala, the
+arbiter of Judea's future. Be friends."
+
+With a comprehensive sweeping glance John inspected the man before
+him.
+
+"John of Gischala," he repeated in his feline voice, "the oppressor
+John. Art thou not afraid of me, sir?"
+
+"Dost thou meditate harm for me, sir?" Philadelphus smiled.
+
+"Art thou, in that case, against me, sir?" John parried.
+
+"On that hingeth his answer," Amaryllis said, glancing at Laodice.
+"And here is this same pretty stranger who bewitched thee yesterday.
+Know her as Laodice. Let that be parentage, history, ambition and
+religion for her. She, too, seeks diversion in Jerusalem, and is my
+guest for a while."
+
+The Gischalan took Laodice's hand and held it.
+
+"Welcome, thou," he said. "I will tolerate another man under thy roof
+if thou wilt but make this pretty bird of passage a permanency," he
+said to the Greek, after a silent study of Laodice's beauty.
+
+"Let her be a hostage dependent on thy good behavior. Lapse, and I
+shall send her back to Olympus where they keep such nymphs."
+
+Philadelphus smiled at Laodice, but the shock of their recent talk had
+shaken her too much to enter into this idle chaff on the lips of those
+upon whom the fortunes of Israel depended at that very hour.
+
+John looked at her for a long time.
+
+"Amaryllis veils thee in the enchantment of mystery. I think she is
+tired of me and would have me interested in another woman. She does
+all things well. Who art thou, in truth?"
+
+The Greek lifted her head and gazed with overt anxiety at the girl;
+Philadelphus turned toward her uneasily. Here was an opportunity for
+Laodice either as a disappointed adventuress or as a supplanted wife,
+to take revenge by exposing this pair of conspirators pledged to
+undermine the Gischalan. But the girl had no such thought.
+
+"I am Laodice," she said unreadily. "What history I have belongs to
+another. What future shall be mine depends on others. I wait."
+
+"If you mean to throw me off, Amaryllis, I shall not miss you," said
+John.
+
+The Greek smiled and plucking Philadelphus' sleeve led both men away.
+
+"Do not commit yourself," she said to John, "there is yet another
+woman under this roof. You shall have a choice."
+
+They disappeared in the direction of her hall.
+
+Laodice, stunned, amazed and shaken, stood still. The stock of her
+troubles amounted to a sum of such magnitude that she could not grasp
+it clearly. The entire structure which her life training and all her
+purposes, the hope of her house and her husband's, the future of Judea
+and the King to come, had constituted, had been attacked and
+threatened to crumble and be swept away in a few hours' time.
+
+Out of the wreck she rescued one hope. Momus would return from the
+west with proofs in a few days' time--only a few days!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XI
+
+THE HOUSE OF OFFENSE
+
+
+On his way to the oaken door that was for ever double-barred, in that
+small hall which led to the apartments of Amaryllis' corps of artists,
+Philadelphus met Salome, the actress. He would have passed her without
+a word, but the woman, armed with the nettle of a small triumph over
+the man who held her in contempt, could not forbear piercing him as he
+passed.
+
+"Hieing away to excite your disappointment further?" she said. "Has
+the forlorn lady convinced you, yet, that she is indeed your wife?"
+
+"Had I that two hundred talents, I would confess her!" he declared.
+
+"Cruel obstacle! But that two hundred talents is locked away safely,
+out of your reach. Why do you not run away with this pretty creature?"
+
+Philadelphus glowered at her.
+
+"I have been known to make way with those who stood in my way," he
+declared.
+
+"I sleep with my door locked," she answered, "and I ever face you. I
+need never be afraid, therefore."
+
+For a moment he was silent, while she sensed that overweening hate and
+menace which charged the air about him.
+
+"It is not all as it should be," he said finally. "You are not rid of
+me. I shall stay."
+
+"You should," she responded comfortably. "You are a show of
+domesticity which lends color to our claim of wedded state. But you
+may go or stay. As usual, you are not essential."
+
+"I have been known to be superfluous. However it may be, I get much
+pleasure in the companionship of this lovely creature, the single flaw
+in the fine fabric of your villainy. Do not fear her convincing me.
+She might convince others."
+
+There was no response; after a silence he said as he moved on:
+
+"I shall warn her to feed a morsel of her food to the parrots ere she
+tastes it, however."
+
+He was gone. The woman felt of the keys that swung under the folds of
+her robes. Then she, too, went on.
+
+The oaken door was still fast closed when Philadelphus reached it, but
+he knew that the girl, who lived within, came out to walk in the
+sunshine of Amaryllis' court at certain hours while the household was
+engaged within doors.
+
+He had not long to wait. She came out in a little while, and glanced
+up and down the hall; but he had heard the turn of the bolt and had
+stepped into shadow in time. Reassured that no one was near, she
+emerged and passing down the hall entered the court.
+
+And there presently he joined her.
+
+He sat down on one of the stone seats and smiled at her.
+
+"Do I appear excited?" he asked.
+
+She glanced at him indifferently.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"I have this day seen destruction resolved for the city."
+
+She took his easy declaration with a frown. If it were true he should
+not show that flippancy; if it were not he should not have jested.
+
+"I saw," he continued, "Titus and his beloved Nicanor ride around the
+walls. Though they were the full length of a bow-shot from me, I knew
+what they talked about. Now, this young Nicanor is a gad that tickles
+Titus when his soft heart would urge him into tendernesses toward the
+enemy. But for Nicanor, Titus would have withdrawn his legions long
+ago and left Jerusalem to die of its own violences.
+
+"On the day that you came into Jerusalem, Titus, as a display of
+amicable intentions, rode up to the walls without arms or armor,
+trusting to the Jews' soldierly honor in refusing to attack an unarmed
+man. But the Jews have never been instructed in the nice points of
+military courtesy, so they went out against him by thousands. And but
+for the fact that he is practised in dodging arrows and his horse is
+used to running away, Emperor Vespasian would have to leave the ęgis
+to the unlovely Domitian.
+
+"Any Roman but Titus would remember this against the Jews until he had
+put the last one in bondage, but Titus is not a Roman. I think
+some-times that he is a Christian, since it is their boast to love
+their enemies. Whatever his feelings after that ignominious adventure
+of a few days ago, forth he rides this morning; beside him the Gad,
+Nicanor; behind him, that sweet traitor, Josephus.
+
+"The Darling of Mankind rode so meditatively, so dejectedly, that I
+knew by his attitude, he said: 'Alack, it galls me to go against this
+goodly city!'
+
+"By the swagger of the Gad I knew he said: 'Dost gall thee, in truth?
+Then truly, alack! Withhold thy hand until the city comes out against
+thee, so thou canst hush thy conscience saying that they began it!'
+
+"Saith the Darling, 'But there be babes and innocent men and women
+within those walls, who, deserving most of all, shall suffer the
+greatest!'
+
+"'By Hecate!' quoth the Gad, 'there is not a yearling within that city
+possessing the power to pucker its lips but would spit upon thee!'
+
+"'It would be sacred innocence!' declares Titus.
+
+"'Or an old man that would not burn thine ears with malediction!'
+
+"'That would be holy dotage!'
+
+"'Or a fine young man but would pale thee on a pike!'
+
+"'Then let some one whom they hate less venomously, beseech them to
+their own salvation,' implores the Darling.
+
+"Whereupon the Gad beckons insinuatingly to Josephus.
+
+"'Josephus,' says he, 'let us, being more lovable men than Titus, go
+up unto these walls and give the Jews a chance to be kind.'
+
+"Josephus turns pale, but Nicanor rides upon Jerusalem. And at that
+what should a miscreant Jew do but string an arrow and plunge it
+nicely, like a bodkin in a pincushion, in the fat shoulder of the Gad!
+Alas! It was the ruin of the Holy City! When Titus, pale with concern,
+reaches his friend kicking on the ground, does the Gad curse the Jews
+and inveigh against the hardy walls that contain them? Not he! He
+struggles about so that he may look into the eyes of Titus and
+commands him to make war on them instantly under pain of the
+accusation of partiality to them against his friends! And behold, war
+is declared. I, with mine own eyes, saw siege laid effectively about
+our unhappy city!"
+
+She gazed at him with alarmed, angry, accusing eyes.
+
+"And yet you do nothing!" she said to him.
+
+He smiled and let his lazy glance slip over her, but he made no
+response.
+
+"O Philadelphus," she said to him, "how you affront opportunity!"
+
+"There are more captivating things than such opportunity. I have known
+from the beginning that there was nothing here."
+
+She looked at him with unquiet eyes. Why, then, had he written so
+confidently to her father, if he had not believed in the hope for
+Judea?
+
+"From the beginning?" she repeated with inquiry. "You wrote my father
+from Cęsarea--"
+
+"Your father?" he repeated, smiling with insinuation.
+
+"My father!"
+
+"Who is your father?" he asked.
+
+She turned away from him and walked to the other end of the garden. He
+had never meant to aspire to the Judean throne! He had simply written
+so determinedly to Costobarus, that the merchant of Ascalon would have
+no hesitancy in giving him two hundred talents! In these past days,
+she had learned enough that was blameworthy in this Philadelphus to
+make him more than despicable in her eyes. Again, as hourly since the
+last interview in the depression in the hills beyond the well, the
+fine bigness of that lovable companion of his, that had vanished for
+all time from her life, rose in radiant contrast. She turned back to
+her husband, with the pallor of longing and homesickness in her face.
+
+"Does this other woman see no fault in this, your idleness?" she
+demanded.
+
+"She! By the Shades, she sees nothing in me but fault! I would get me
+up like a sane man and go out of this mad place, but she hath locked
+up her dowry away from me, which was the simple cause that invited me
+to join her, and bids me go without her. And I might--but for one
+other attraction, dearer than the treasure, which also I would take
+with me."
+
+"Even if she forces you into deeds, I shall forgive her," she declared
+at last.
+
+He smiled a baffling smile and she looked at him in despair. The very
+charm of his personal appearance awakened resentment in her; his deft
+and easy complaisance angered her because it could be effective. She
+hated the superficial excellence in him which made him a pleasant
+companion. He had refused to discuss her identity further, except to
+prevent her in her own attempts to identify herself. He did not refer
+to the incidents of their journey to Jerusalem, but she felt that he
+was conscious of all these things, and her resentment was so great
+that she put it out of sight, lest at the time when she should be
+proved she would have come to hate him to the further thwarting of
+their work for Israel.
+
+"It is sweet to have you concerned for me. Now you may understand how
+much I am troubled for your own welfare. Do not regard me with that
+unbending gaze. I am, first and before all else, your friend."
+
+"You have changed," she said slowly. "I did not find in you this
+solicitude in the hills."
+
+"Unhappiness," he sighed, "makes most men law-less. I should be even
+now as bad, were I not sure of the sympathy you feel for me."
+
+She looked at him with large disdain.
+
+"Does not this woman treat you well?" she asked with the first glimmer
+of sarcasm in her eyes.
+
+"Her displeasure in me is that I do not make her a queen; yours,
+however, that I can not save this doomed nation! Her ambitions are for
+herself; yours are for me. Which waketh the response in my heart,
+lady?"
+
+"What have I lived for?" she burst out. "For what was I brought up and
+schooled? For what have I sacrificed all the light and desirable
+things of my youth, but for--"
+
+"Nay! Do not show me, yet, that you are only bent on being queen!" he
+exclaimed.
+
+"I care for nothing but the rescue of Judea!" she cried passionately.
+"There is nothing left to me but that!"
+
+"Then your ambitions are still for me. Alas, that the Messiah has come
+and gone!"
+
+It was his first reference to the great calamity he had told to her a
+short time before. Its recurrence after she had resolved to regard it
+as an impossible and blasphemous tale brought a chill to her heart.
+
+"If I can prove to you that there is no hope for Jerusalem, what
+then?" he asked suddenly.
+
+She flung off the question with a gesture.
+
+"Answer me. What then?"
+
+"It is unimaginable what shall come to pass when God deserts His own."
+
+"No need for imaginings. Look at Jerusalem and observe the fact. And
+if we be abandoned, what fealty do we owe to a God that deserts us? If
+you believe or not you are lost. Let us go out and live."
+
+"If God has deserted us," she said scornfully, "how shall we be
+happier elsewhere than here?"
+
+"Every god to its own country. The Olympians are a jovial lot. I have
+seen Joy's very self in heathendom."
+
+She moved away but he rose and followed her.
+
+"Whoever you are," he said in another tone, "your heritage of
+innocence and earnestness is plain as an open scroll upon your face.
+Nothing in all the world so appeals to the generosity in the heart of
+a man as the purity of the woman who is pure. I have said that I am
+your friend. I do not hold it against you that you doubt that word.
+Nothing remains but the deed to confirm it. This place is lost--as
+good as a heap of ashes and splintered rock, this hour! Come away!
+I'll sacrifice the treasure to protect you!"
+
+"Philadelphus," she said gravely, "we were sent hither to succeed or
+to suffer the penalty of our failure. My father died that we might
+have this opportunity. We must use it, or perish with it!"
+
+He shook his head and walked away a step or two.
+
+"You have not the true meaning of life," he said. "Indeed how few of
+us understand! Obstacles are not an incentive toward attaining
+impossible things. They are barriers set up by the kindly disposed
+gods to inform man that he is opposing destiny when he aspires to
+things he should not have. We were not made to fling ourselves against
+mighty opposition throughout the little daylight we have; to wound
+ourselves, to deny ourselves, to alienate that winsome sprite
+Pleasure, to attain something which was not intended for us by the
+signs of the obstructions placed in our paths. Who are we that we
+should achieve mightily! What are we when the gods have done with us,
+but a handful of dust! Who saves himself from age and unloveliness and
+ultimate imbecility, by all the superhuman efforts he may exert! A
+pest on the first morose man that made dismal endeavor a virtue!"
+
+She looked at him with amazement, though until that hour she believed
+that this man could astonish her no more.
+
+"Misfortune comes often enough without our knocking at her door," he
+continued. "Mankind is the only creature with conceit enough to seek
+to emulate the gods. It is wrong to think that to be moral is to be
+miserable. Nature's scheme for us, faithfully fulfilled, is always
+pleasurable. We have only to recognize it, and receive its benefits.
+Nothing on earth is luckier than man, if he but knew it. A murrain on
+ambition! Let us be glad!"
+
+How could she be glad with such a man! The time, the call of the hour,
+the need of her nation, the obligation to her dead father--all these
+things stood in her way. How had she felt, were this that engaging
+stranger who had called himself Hesper, urging her to be glad with
+him! She felt, then and there, the recurrence of guilt which the sight
+of the reproachful face of Momus had brought to her when she found
+herself forgetting her loyalty in the presence of that winsome man.
+The thought stopped the bitter speech that rose to her lips. She
+looked away and made no answer. He was close beside her.
+
+"Come away and let this woman who wishes the kingdom have it. She had
+liefer be rid of me than not."
+
+She gazed at him with a peculiar blankness stealing over her face.
+
+"Oh, for the quintessence of all compounded oaths to charge my vow!"
+he said.
+
+"For what?" she asked.
+
+"My love, Phryne!"
+
+At the old pagan name with which he had affronted her that morning in
+the hills, Laodice drew back sharply.
+
+"Dost thou believe in me?" she asked.
+
+"Believe what?"
+
+"That I am thy wife."
+
+"Tut! Back to the old quarrel! No! But by Heaven, thou art my
+sweetheart!"
+
+She stopped at the edge of an exclamation and looked at him with
+widening eyes.
+
+"Come, let us get out of this place. I can get the dowry! Let her stay
+here and be queen over this place if she will. I had rather possess
+you than all the kingdoms!"
+
+But Laodice flung him off while a flame of anger crimsoned her face.
+
+"Thou to insult me, thy lawful wife!" she brought out between clenched
+teeth. "Thou to offer affront to thine own marriage! I to live in
+shame with mine own husband!"
+
+The insult in his speech overwhelmed her and after a moment's
+lingering for words to express her rage, she turned and fled back to
+her room and barred her door upon him.
+
+After sunset the lights leaped up in the hall of Amaryllis the Greek.
+Presently there came a knock at Laodice's door. The girl, fearing that
+Philadelphus stood without, sat still and made no answer. A moment
+later the visitor spoke. It was the little girl who acted as page for
+the Greek.
+
+"Open, lady; it is I, Myrrha."
+
+Laodice went to the windows.
+
+"Amaryllis sends thee greeting and would speak with thee, in her
+hall," the girl said.
+
+Reluctantly Laodice, who feared the revelation which the light might
+have to make of her stunned and revolted face, followed the page.
+
+The Greek was standing, as if in evidence that the interview would not
+be long. She noted the intense change on the face of her young guest
+and watched her narrowly for any new light which her disclosure would
+bring.
+
+"I have sent for thee," the Greek began smoothly, "to tell thee
+somewhat that I should perhaps withhold, that thou shouldst sleep
+well, this night. But it is a perplexity perhaps thou wouldst face at
+once."
+
+Laodice bowed her head.
+
+"It is this: Titus and his friend, Nicanor, approached too close the
+walls this day, and Nicanor was wounded by an arrow. In retaliation,
+perfect siege hath been laid about the walls. None may come into the
+city."
+
+"And--Momus, my servant," Laodice cried, waking for the first time to
+the calamity in this blockade, "he can not come back to me?"
+
+"No. If he attempts it, he will be captured and put to death."
+
+Laodice clasped her hands, while drop by drop the color left her face.
+
+"In God's name," she whispered, "what will become of me?"
+
+Amaryllis made no answer.
+
+"Can--can I not go out?" Laodice asked presently, depending entirely
+on the Greek as adviser.
+
+"You can--but to what fortune? Perhaps--" She stopped a moment. "No,"
+she continued, "you have never been in a camp. No; you can not go
+out."
+
+"What, then, am I to do?" Laodice cried with increasing alarm.
+
+Amaryllis shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"I can advise with John," she said. "Doubtless he will allow you to
+remain here until you can provide yourself with other shelter."
+
+Laodice heard this cold sentence with a chill of fear that was new to
+her. Faint pictures of hunger and violence, terrifying in the extreme,
+confronted her. Yet not any of them frightened her more than the
+offered favor of the Gischalan. Her indignation at the woman who had
+supplanted her swept over her with a reflexive flush of heat.
+
+"God of my fathers, judge her in her lies, and pour the fire of Thy
+wrath upon her!" she exclaimed vehemently.
+
+Amaryllis gazed curiously at the girl. In her soul, she asked herself
+if there might not be unsounded depths of fierceness in this nature
+which she ought not to stir up.
+
+"Thou hast hope," she said tactfully. "She hath no such beauty as
+thine!"
+
+"Nothing but my proofs!" Laodice broke in.
+
+"And Philadelphus is a young man."
+
+"Rejecting her only because I am fairer than she! He is no just man!"
+Laodice cried hotly.
+
+"Softly, child," the Greek said, smiling; "thou hast said that he is
+thy husband."
+
+Laodice turned away, her brain whirling with anger, fear and shame.
+
+"Well?" said the Greek coolly, after a silence.
+
+"Where shall I go?" Laodice asked.
+
+"Thou hast been too tenderly nurtured to go into the streets. I shall
+ask John to shelter thee until thou canst care for thyself."
+
+Laodice looked at her without understanding.
+
+"Thou canst not stay here for long because the wife to Philadelphus is
+in a way a power in my house and she will not suffer it. But never
+fear; Jerusalem is not yet so far gone that it would not enjoy a
+pretty stranger."
+
+The curious sense of indignation that possessed Laodice was purely
+instinctive. Her mind could not sense the actual insult in the Greek's
+words.
+
+"I would advise you to be kind to Philadelphus."
+
+"But, but--" Laodice cried, struggling with tears and shame, "he has
+this day offered insult to his own marriage with me, by asking that I
+live in shame with him till it could be proved that I am his wife!"
+
+The Greek's smile did not change.
+
+"If we weigh all the unpleasantness of wedded life in too delicate a
+balance, my friend, I fear there would be little, indeed, that would
+escape condemnation as humiliating."
+
+Laodice raised her scarlet face to look in wonder at the Greek. The
+cold smiling lips dismayed her for a moment.
+
+"And thou seest no shame in this?" she faltered.
+
+"Thou sayest he is thy husband; why resent it?"
+
+"Dost thou not see--see that--what am I but a shameless woman, if I
+live with him, though I be married to him thrice over!"
+
+"After all," said the Greek, after a silence which said more than
+words, "it is the consciousness of your own integrity which must
+influence you; not what others think of you. It is not as if your
+husband thought better of you than you really are."
+
+"And you believe that I--" Laodice began and stopped, bewildered.
+
+Amaryllis, smiling, moved toward the inner corridor of her house. At
+the threshold of the arch she called back:
+
+"Please yourself, my friend," and was gone.
+
+Laodice was, by this time, stunned and intensely repelled. The hand on
+which Amaryllis had laid hers in passing tingled under the touch.
+Unconsciously she shook off the sensation of contact. The whole clear
+white interior of the hall became instantly unclean. Her standards of
+right and wrong were shaken; the wholesale assaults on her ideals left
+her shocked and unconfident. She felt the panic that all innocent
+women feel when suddenly aroused to the unfitness of their
+surroundings.
+
+When she turned to hurry to her room, a flood of scarlet rushed into
+her cheeks and she shrank back, shaken with surprise and delight.
+
+Before her stood a man, pale and thin, with his eyes upon her.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII
+
+THE PRINCE RETURNS
+
+
+Joseph, the shepherd, son of Thomas of Pella, moved out of the green
+marsh before sunset, as he had planned to do, but not for the original
+motive. The sheep, indeed, would not have flourished in that dampness,
+rich as it was in young grass, but, more than that, there was no
+shelter for the wounded man who lay by the roadside.
+
+The shepherd, who knew the hills of Judea as far as the Plain of
+Esdraelon as well as he knew the stony streets of the Christian city,
+located the nearest roof as one which a fagot-maker had occupied two
+years before. It was some distance up in the hills to the west. Since
+the scourge of war had passed over Palestine, there were scores of
+such hovels, vacant and abandoned to the bats and the small wild life
+about the countryside, and the boy doubted seriously if the thatch
+that covered it were still whole. But he attracted the attention of a
+pair of robust young Galileans on the way to the Passover, and, by
+their help, carried the wounded man to shelter in this hut. Urge, the
+sheep-dog, rushed the sheep out of the sedge and hurried them after
+his master, and in an hour Joseph was once more settled, his sheep
+were once more nosing over the rocky slants of a hill, his dog once
+more flat on his belly, watching. But it was a different day, after
+all.
+
+The hut of the fagot-maker was the four walls and a roof and the earth
+that floored it, but it was wealth because it was shelter. It had two
+doors which were merely openings in the sides and between them lay the
+man on sheep-pelts with a cotton abas, which one of the Galileans had
+left, over him. At one of these doors, sitting sidewise, so that he
+could watch in or out, sat Joseph.
+
+All night the man on the sheepskins spoke to the blackened thatch
+above him of the siege of Jerusalem and the treachery of Julian of
+Ephesus. He read letters from Costobarus and instructed Aquila over
+and over again. Then he tossed a coin and spent hours counting the
+hairs in the long locks that fell from the shining head of the moon
+down upon his breast, at midnight.
+
+At times the boy, with the exquisite beauty of sleep on his heavy
+lids, would creep over from his vigil at the door and lay his cool
+hand on the sick man's forehead. And the sick man would speak in a low
+controlled voice, saying:
+
+"Naaman being a leper, my friend, why was not the law fulfilled
+against him?"
+
+But the soothing influence of that touch did not endure. Again, he
+took census of the fighting-men of Judea, by the Roman statistics
+which he had from the decurion, and searched through his tunic for his
+wallet to write down the result. Failing to find it, he raised himself
+to shout for Julian to return his property.
+
+Again the cool hands would stroke the fevered forehead and the sick
+man would say:
+
+"Good my Lord, they fetched snow from the mountains to cool this
+wine."
+
+But how white the hands of that fair girl in the hills! Why, these
+hands beside hers were as satyrs' hooves to anemones! Her lashes were
+so long, and he knew that her lips were as cool as the heart of a
+melon; but that husband of hers knew better than he!
+
+And he, grandson of the just Maccabee, allied by marriage to the noble
+line of Costobarus through his daughter, Laodice, the bride with the
+greatest dowry in Judea, had staked his soul on the toss of a coin and
+had lost it!
+
+At this the shepherd boy straightened himself and gave attention.
+
+But he was wholly lost, the sick man would go on, rolling his head
+from side to side; he could not join Laodice because he had loved a
+woman of the wayside and could not cast out that love; he was not a
+Jew because he had rather linger with this strange beauty in the hills
+than hasten on the rescue of Jerusalem; he had not apostatized, though
+he was as wholly lost as if he had done so; he hated the heathen and
+would not be one of them. He would abide in the wilderness and perish,
+if this young spirit that abode by his side, with a face like
+Michael's and a form so like the shepherd David's, would only suffer
+the darkness to come at him.
+
+"Unless I mistake," the little shepherd said at such times, "there is
+more than a wound troubling this head."
+
+Thus day in and day out the shepherd watched by the sick man who had
+no medicine but the recuperative powers of his strong young body. So
+there came a night when the boy, rousing from a doze into which he had
+dropped, saw the sick man stretched upon his pallet motionless as he
+had not been for days. The shepherd felt the forehead and the wrists
+and sank again into slumber. At dawn he rose from the earth which had
+been his bed throughout this time and went forth to attend his flocks,
+and when he was gone, the sick man opened his eyes.
+
+He looked up at the blackened rafters; he looked out at either door
+and frowned perplexed, first at the hills, then at the valley. He
+raised his head and dropped it suddenly with great amazement and much
+weariness. Finally he ventured to lift a wilted and fragile hand and
+looked at it. It was not white; but it was unsteady as a laurel leaf
+beside a waterfall. After a moment's rest from the exertion he parted
+his lips to speak, but a whisper faint as the sound of the air in the
+shrubs issued from them. He listened but there was no answer. There
+was the activity of birds and insects, moving leaves and bleating
+sheep without, but it was all blithely indifferent to him. Finally he
+extended his arms and pressing them on his pallet tried to rise, but
+he could have lifted the earth as easily. Falling back and dazed with
+weakness, he lay still and slept again.
+
+When he awoke rested sufficiently to think, he recalled that he had
+been twice stabbed by Julian of Ephesus by the marsh on the road to
+Jerusalem. He had probably been carried to this place and nursed back
+to life by the householder.
+
+Then he remembered. In his search after cause for his cousin's attack
+upon him, he readily fixed upon Julian's rage at the Maccabee's
+preėmption of the beautiful girl in the hills. Instantly, the disgrace
+of violence committed in a quarrel between himself and his cousin over
+the possession of a woman, appealed to him. And even as instantly, his
+defiant heart accepted its shame and persisted in its fault. It is an
+extreme of love, indeed, if no circumstance however impelling raises a
+regret in the heart of a man; for he flung off with a weak gesture any
+chiding of conscience against cherishing his dream, and abandoned
+himself wholly to his yearning for the girl in the tissue of
+moonbeams.
+
+There was a quiet step on the earth at the threshold. Joseph, the
+shepherd, stood there. The two looked at each other; one with inquiry
+and weakness in his face; the other with good-will and reassurance.
+
+"Boy," said the Maccabee feebly, "I have been sick."
+
+"Friend, I am witness to that. I am your nurse," the boy replied.
+
+After a little silence the Maccabee extended his hand. The boy took it
+with a sudden flush of emotion, but feeling its weakness, refrained
+from pressing it too hard, and laid it back with great care on his
+patient's breast. The Maccabee looked out at the door, away from the
+full eyes of his young host.
+
+He was touched presently, and a cup of milk was silently put to his
+lips. He drank and turning himself with effort fell asleep.
+
+When he awoke again, after many hours, it was night. In the door with
+his head dropped back between his shoulders gazing up at the sky
+overhead, sat the boy.
+
+"Where," the Maccabee began, "are the rest of you?"
+
+The boy turned around quickly, and answered with all seriousness.
+
+"I am all here."
+
+"Did you," the Maccabee began again, after silence, "care for me
+alone?"
+
+"There has been no one here but us," the boy said, hesitating at the
+symptoms of gratitude in the Maccabee's voice.
+
+"Us?"
+
+"You and me."
+
+After another silence, the Maccabee laughed weakly.
+
+"It requires two to constitute 'us' and I am, by all signs, not a
+whole one!"
+
+"But you will be in a few days," the boy declared admiringly. "You are
+an excellent sick man."
+
+The Maccabee looked at him meditatively.
+
+"I am merely perverse," he said darkly; "I knew it would be so much
+pleasure to my murderer to know that I died, duly."
+
+The shepherd repressed his curiosity, as the best thing for his
+patient's welfare, and suggested another subject rather disjointedly.
+
+"I have been thinking," he said, "about Jerusalem. I was there once
+upon a time."
+
+"Once!" the Maccabee said. "You are old enough to attend the
+Passover."
+
+"But our people do not attend the feast. We are Christians."
+
+The Maccabee moved so that he could look at the boy. He might have
+known it, he exclaimed to himself. It was just such an extreme act of
+mercy, this assuming the care of a stranger in a wilderness, as he had
+ever known Christians to do in that city of irrational faiths,
+Ephesus.
+
+"Well?" he said, hoping the boy would go on and spare him an
+expression on that announcement.
+
+"I can not forget Jerusalem."
+
+"No one forgets Jerusalem--except one that falls in love by the
+wayside," the man said.
+
+Again the boy detected a ring of unexplained melancholy in his
+patient's voice, and talked on as a preventive.
+
+"Urban, the pastor, took me there. It was in the days of mine
+instruction for baptism. He went to Jerusalem to trial, but there was
+disorder in the city about the procurator, who was driven out that
+day, and Urban was not called. But he remained, lest he be accused of
+fleeing, and then it was he took me over the walks of Jesus."
+
+"Jesus--that is the name," the Maccabee said to himself. "They are
+born, given in marriage, fall or flourish, live and die in that name.
+Likewise they pick up a wounded stranger and care for him in that
+name. They are a strange people, a strange people!"
+
+"They would not let us into the Temple," Joseph went on, "because I am
+an Arab, born a Christian. So I could not see where Jesus was
+presented, in infancy. But we went to the synagogues where He taught;
+we went out upon Olivet to Gethsemane where He suffered in the Garden;
+we climbed that hill to the south from which He looked upon the City
+and wept over it, and prophesied this hour. Then we sought the ravine
+where Judas betrayed Him with a kiss, and afterward Urban led me over
+the streets by which He was taken first to Annas and to Caiaphas and
+thence to Pilate and to Herod. After that, by the Way of the Cross to
+Golgotha; from there to His Tomb. And when we had seen the
+Guest-chamber and stood upon the Place of the Ascension, I needed no
+further instruction."
+
+The boy had forgotten his guest. By the rapt light in his eyes, the
+Maccabee knew that the boy was once more journeying over the stones of
+the streets of the Holy City, or standing awed on the polished
+pavements of its lordly interiors, or on the topmost point of her
+hills with the broad-winged wind from the east flying his long locks.
+
+"_If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning.
+If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my
+mouth; if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief joy_," the Maccabee
+said, half to himself.
+
+The boy heard him, but his patient's words merged with the dream that
+held him entranced. The Maccabee went on.
+
+"So said the Psalmist to himself," he said. "What had he to do for
+Jerusalem; what did he fear would win him away from that labor for
+Jerusalem, that he took that vow? It was easy enough to revile
+Babylon, the oppressor, that stood between him and Jerusalem; but what
+if he had been the captive of beauty, and chained by the bonds of
+lovely hair!"
+
+The boy turned now and looked at the Maccabee. The eyes of the two met
+fair. Then the Maccabee unburdened his soul and told of the girl to
+this child, who was a Christian and a humble shepherd in the starved
+hills of Judea.
+
+"I met her," the boy said after a long silence. "And by what I learned
+of her spirit that night, she will not be happy to know that you have
+stepped aside for her sake."
+
+"You met her, also; and you loved her, too?"
+
+The boy assented gravely. The Maccabee slowly lifted his eyes from the
+young shepherd's face, till they rested on the slope of sky filled
+with stars visible through the open door.
+
+"And she would have me go on to this city, to the one who awaits me
+there and whom I shall not be glad to see; take up the labor that will
+be robbed of its chief joy in its success and live the long, long days
+of life without her?"
+
+The boy made no answer to this; he knew that this white-faced man was
+wrestling with himself and comment from him was not expected. By the
+light of the failing fire without, he saw that face sober, take on
+shadow and grow immeasurably sad. The minutes passed and he knew that
+the Maccabee would not speak again.
+
+Thereafter followed three days of silence, except the essential
+communication or the mutterings of the Maccabee against his weakness
+and unsteadiness. On the fourth day the Maccabee declared that he was
+able to travel. Joseph protested, but not for long. He had learned in
+the sojourn of his guest that this man was in the habit of doing as he
+pleased. So the shepherd sighed and let him go reluctantly.
+
+"But," he insisted to the last moment, "remember that Pella is a City
+of Refuge. If Jerusalem ceases to be hospitable, come to Pella."
+
+A thought struck him.
+
+"She," he said in a low tone, "promised that she would come."
+
+"Then expect me," the Maccabee said.
+
+The shepherd boy smiled contentedly and blessed the Maccabee and let
+him go. As long as the man could see, his young host watched him, and
+at the summit of the hill the Maccabee turned to wave his final
+farewell. When the path dipped down the other side of the hill, the
+man felt that more than the sunshine had been cut off by its great
+shadow.
+
+He did not go forward with a light heart. The whole of his purpose had
+suddenly resolved itself into duty. There had been a certain nervous
+expectancy that was almost fear in the thought of meeting the grown
+woman he had married in her babyhood. He had lived in Ephesus with an
+unengaged heart in all the crowd of opportunities for love, good and
+bad. He had magnetism, strength, aloofness and a certain beauty--four
+qualifications which had made him over and over again immensely
+attractive to all classes of Ephesian women. But whatever his response
+to them, he had not loved. Love and marriage were things so apart from
+his activities as to be uninteresting. When finally he was called in
+full manhood to assume without preliminary both of these things, he
+was uncomfortable and apprehensive. But after he had met the girl in
+the hills, his sensations of reluctance became emphatic, became an
+actual dread, so that he thrust away all thought of the domestic side
+of the life that confronted him, and bitterly resigned all hope in the
+tender things that were the portion of all men. The villainy of Julian
+of Ephesus engaged him chiefly, and his punishment. After that, then
+the establishment of his kingdom, politics, conquest and power--but
+not love!
+
+Late that afternoon, he stepped out of a wady west of Jerusalem and
+halted.
+
+Ahead of him ran a road depressed between worn, hard, bare banks of
+earth, past a deserted pool, marged with stone, up shining surfaces of
+outcropping rock, through avenues of clustered tombs, pillars, pagan
+monuments which were tracks of the Herods, dead and abandoned,
+splendid pleasure gardens, suburban palaces lifeless and still, toward
+the looming Tower of Hippicus, brooding over a fast-closed gate.
+
+The Maccabee nodded. It was as he had expected. The city was besieged.
+
+It was afternoon, a week-day at the busiest portal of Jerusalem; but
+save for the fixed and pygmy sentry upon the tower, there was no
+living thing to be seen, no single sound to be heard.
+
+Beyond the mounting hills of the City of David stood up, shouldering
+like mantles of snow their burden of sun-whitened houses. Above it
+all, supreme over the blackened masonry of Roman Antonia, stood a
+glittering vision in marble and gold--the Temple. At a distance it
+could not be seen that any of those inwalled splendors lacked;
+Jerusalem appeared intact, but the multitudes at the gate were absent
+and the voice of the city was stilled.
+
+For one expecting to find Jerusalem animated and beholding it still
+and lifeless, how quickly its white walls, its white houses and its
+sparkling Temple became haunted, dead crypts and sepulchers.
+
+But presently there came across the considerable distance that lay
+between him and Jerusalem, a sound remarkably distinct because of the
+utter stillness that prevailed. It was the jingle of harness and the
+ring of hoof-beats upon stones embedded in the gray earth.
+
+A Roman in armor polished like gold, with a floating mantle
+significantly bordered in purple, rode slowly into the open space,
+drew up his horse and stopped. The Maccabee looked at him sharply,
+then quitted his shelter and walked down toward the rider. At sight of
+him, the horseman clapped his hand to his short sword, but the
+Maccabee put up his empty hands and smiled at the man of all superior
+advantage. Then the light of recognition broke over the Roman's face.
+
+"You!" he cried.
+
+"I, Cęsar," the Maccabee responded. For a moment there was silence in
+which the Jew watched the flickering of amazement and perplexity on
+Titus' face.
+
+"What do you here, away from Ephesus, and worse, attempting to run my
+lines?" he demanded finally.
+
+The Maccabee signed toward the walls.
+
+"My wife is there," he said briefly.
+
+The Roman made an exclamation which showed the sudden change to
+enlightenment.
+
+"Solicitous after these many years?" he demanded.
+
+"She has two hundred talents," the Maccabee replied.
+
+Titus smiled and shook his head.
+
+"I ought to keep her there. Rome must get treasure enough out of that
+rebellious city to repay her for her pains in subjugating it."
+
+"Pay yourself out of another pocket than mine. It will take two
+hundred talents to repay me for all that I have suffered to get it. I
+want the countersign, Titus. You owe me it."
+
+"Will you come out of there, at once?" the Roman demanded. "Not that I
+suspect you will make the city harder to take, but I should dislike to
+make war on an old comrade in my Ephesian revels."
+
+The Maccabee looked doubtful.
+
+"I can not promise," he said. "At least do not hold off the siege
+until you see me again without the walls. It might lose you prestige
+in Rome."
+
+Titus swung his bridle while he gazed at the Maccabee.
+
+"I wish Nicanor were here," he said finally. "He might be able to see
+harm in you; but I never could. You will have to promise me
+something--anything so it is a promise--before I can let you in.
+Something to appease Nicanor, else I shall never hear the last of
+this."
+
+The Maccabee laughed, the sudden harsh laugh of one impelled to
+amusement unexpectedly.
+
+"Assure Nicanor, for me, that I shall come out of Jerusalem one day.
+Dead or alive, I shall do it! You need not add that I did not specify
+the date of my exodus. What is the word?"
+
+"Berenice. And Jove help you! Farewell."
+
+Titus rode on.
+
+A little later, after a parley with the Roman sentries and again with
+the sentries at the Gate of Hippicus, the Maccabee was admitted to the
+Holy City.
+
+About him as he passed through the gates were the soldiers of Simon.
+They were not such men as he expected to see defending the City of
+David. There was an extravagant, half-pastoral manner about them, a
+pose of which they should not have been conscious at this hour of
+peril for the nation and the hierarchy. He looked at their incomplete,
+meaningless uniform, at their arms, half savage, at their faces, half
+mad, and believed that he, with an army rationally organized and
+effectually equipped, would have little difficulty in subduing the
+unbalanced forces of Simon.
+
+Since siege was laid, he did not expect to be met by Amaryllis'
+servant in the purple turban. He approached a citizen.
+
+"I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid," he said.
+
+The eye of the Jew traveled over him, with some disapproval.
+
+"The mistress of the Gischalan?" was the returned inquiry. The
+Maccabee assented calmly. The young man indicated a broad street
+moving with people which led with tolerable directness toward the base
+of Moriah.
+
+"Hence to the Tyropean Bridge at the end of this street; thence down
+beside the bridge into Gihon. Cross to the wall supporting Moriah and
+builded against it thou wilt find a new house, of the fashion of the
+Greeks. If thou canst pass her sentries, thou wilt find her within."
+
+The Maccabee thanked his informant and turned through the Passover
+hosts to follow the directions.
+
+To a visitor recently familiar with the city, Jerusalem would have
+been strange; he would have been lost in its ruined and disordered
+streets. But this man came with only the four corners of the compass
+to direct him and the Temple as a landmark to guide him. Therefore
+though he entered upon territory which he had not traversed since
+childhood he went forward confidently.
+
+It was not simple; it was not readily done; but the darkness found him
+at his destination.
+
+When he was within a rod of the house, he was halted by a Jewish
+soldier. He whispered to the man the word which Amaryllis had sent to
+him, and the soldier stepped aside and let him pass.
+
+In another moment he was admitted to the house of Amaryllis.
+
+A wick coated with aromatic wax burned in the brass bowl on a tripod
+and cast a crystal clear light down upon the exedra and the delicate
+lectern with its rolls of parchment and brass cylinders from which
+they had been withdrawn. Opposite, with her arms close down to her
+sides, her hands clenched, her shoulders drawn up, stood the girl he
+had played for and won in the hills of Judea!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII
+
+A NEW PRETENDER
+
+
+A sudden wave of delight, a sudden rush of blood through his veins,
+swept before it and away for that time all memory of his struggle and
+his resolution to renounce her. All that was left was the irresistible
+storm of impulse upon his reserve and his self-control.
+
+When she recognized him, she started violently, smote her hands
+together and gazed at him with such overweening joy written on her
+face, that he would have swept her into his arms, but for her quick
+recovery and retreat. In shelter behind the exedra she halted, fended
+from him by the marble seat. He gazed across its back at her with all
+the love of his determined soul shining in his eyes.
+
+"You! You!" she cried.
+
+"But you!" he cried back at her across the exedra.
+
+The preposterousness of their greetings appealed to them at that
+moment and they both laughed. He started around the exedra; she moved
+away.
+
+"Stay!" he begged. "I want only to touch--your hand."
+
+Shyly, she let him take both of her hands, and he lifted them in spite
+of her little show of resistance and kissed them.
+
+"We might have saved ourselves farewells and journeyed together," he
+said blithely.
+
+"But I thought you had gone back to Ephesus," she said.
+
+"What! After you had told me you were going to Jerusalem? No. I have
+been nursing a knife wound in a sheep hovel in the hills since an hour
+after I saw you last."
+
+Her lips parted and her face grew grave, deeply compassionate and
+grieved. If there remained any weakness in his frame before that
+moment, the spell of her pity enchanted him to strength again. He
+found himself searching for words to describe his pain, that he might
+elicit more of that curative sweet.
+
+"I was very near to death," he added seriously.
+
+"What--what happened?" she asked, noting the pallor on his face under
+the suffusion which his pleasure had made there.
+
+"There was one more in the party than was needed; so my amiable
+companion reduced the number by stabbing me in the back," he
+explained.
+
+There was instant silence. Slowly she drew away from him. Entire
+pallor covered her face and in her eyes grew a horror.
+
+"Did--do you say that Philadelphus stabbed--you--in the back?" she
+asked, speaking slowly.
+
+"Phila--" he stopped on the brink of a puzzled inquiry, and for a
+space they regarded each other, each turning over his own perplexity
+for himself.
+
+"Ask me that again," he commanded her suddenly. "I did not
+understand."
+
+She hesitated and closed her lips. Her husband had stabbed this man in
+the back! Because of her? No! Philadelphus had refused to believe her.
+Why then should he have committed such a deed?
+
+"So you are not ready to believe it of this--Philadelphus?" he asked,
+venturing his question on an immense surmise that was forcing itself
+upon him.
+
+She looked at him with beseeching eyes. How was she to regard herself
+in this matter? A partizan of the man she hated, or a sympathizer with
+this stranger who had already given her too much joy? Was she never to
+know any good of this man to whom she was wedded? For a moment losing
+sight of her concern for Judea and her resolution that her father
+should not have died in vain, she was rejoiced that another woman had
+taken her place by his side. The quasi liberty made her interest in
+this stranger at least not entirely sinful.
+
+"Who are you?" he demanded finally.
+
+How, then, could she tell him that she was the wife of the man who had
+treacherously attempted his life? How, also, since she was denied by
+every one in that house, expect him to believe her? The bitterness of
+her recent interview with Amaryllis rose to the surface again.
+
+"I am nothing; I have no name; I am nobody!" she cried.
+
+He was startled.
+
+"What is this? Are you not welcome in this house?" he demanded.
+
+"Yes--and no! Amaryllis is good--but--"
+
+"But what?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Surely, thou canst speak without fear to me," he said gently.
+
+"There is--only Amaryllis is kind," she essayed finally.
+
+He laid his hand on her wrist.
+
+"Is it--the woman from Ascalon?" he asked, his suspicion lighting
+instantly upon the wife whom he had expected to meet.
+
+She flung up her head and gazed at him with startled eyes. He believed
+that he had touched upon the fact.
+
+"So!" he exclaimed.
+
+"She has deceived Philadelphus--" she whispered defensively, but he
+broke in sharply.
+
+"Whom hath she deceived?"
+
+She closed her lips and looked at him perplexed. Certainly this was
+the companion of Philadelphus, who had told her freely half of her
+husband's ambitions, long before he had come to Jerusalem. She could
+not have betrayed her husband in thus mentioning his name.
+
+"Your companion of the journey hither--whom you even now
+accused--Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+
+There was a dead pause in which his fingers still held her wrist and
+his deep eyes were fixed on her face. He was recalling by immense
+mental bounds all the evidence that would tend to confirm the
+suspicion in his brain. He had told her his own story but had invested
+it in Julian of Ephesus. His wallet, with all its proofs, was gone;
+the Ephesian had examined him carefully to know if any one in
+Jerusalem would recognize him; and lastly, without cause, Julian had
+stabbed him in the back. Could it be possible that Julian of Ephesus,
+believing that he had made way with the Maccabee, had come to
+Jerusalem, masquerading under his name?
+
+While he stood thus gazing, hardly seeing the face that looked up at
+him with such troubled wonder, he saw her turn her eyes quickly,
+shrink; and then wrenching her hands from his, she fled.
+
+He looked up. Two women were standing before him.
+
+"I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid," he said, recovering himself.
+
+"I am she," the Greek said, stepping forward.
+
+"Thou entertainest Laodice, daughter of Costobarus of Ascalon?" he
+added.
+
+The Greek bowed.
+
+"I would see her," he said bluntly.
+
+Amaryllis signed to the woman at her side.
+
+"This is she," she said simply.
+
+The Maccabee looked quickly at the woman. After his close
+communication with the beautiful girl for whom his heart warmed as it
+had never done before, he was instantly aware of an immense contrast
+between her and the woman who had been introduced to him at that
+moment. They were both Jewesses; both were beautiful, each in her own
+way; both appeared intelligent and winsome. But he loved the girl, and
+this woman stood in the way of that love. Therefore her charms were
+nullified; her latent faults intensified; all in all she repelled him
+because she was an obstacle.
+
+The injustice in his feelings toward her did not occur to him. He was
+angry because she had come; he hated her for her stateliness; he found
+himself looking for defects in her and belittling her undeniable
+graces. Confused and for the moment without plan, he looked at her
+frowning, and with cold astonishment the woman gazed back at him.
+
+"Thou art Laodice, daughter of Costobarus?" he asked, to gain time.
+
+She inclined her head.
+
+"When--when dost thou expect Philadelphus?" he asked next.
+
+"Why do you ask?" she parried.
+
+"I--I have a message for him," he essayed finally. "Is he here?"
+
+"Tell me, who art thou?" the woman asked pointedly.
+
+A vision of the girl, flushed and trembling with pleasure at sight of
+him, flashed with poignant effect upon him at that moment. The warmth
+and softness of her hands under the pressure of his happy lips was
+still with him. It would be infidelity to his own feelings to renounce
+her then. It was becoming a physical impossibility for him to accept
+this other woman.
+
+He hesitated and reddened. An old subterfuge occurred to him at a
+desperate minute.
+
+"I--I am Hesper--of Ephesus," he essayed.
+
+"What is thy business with Philadelphus?" the woman persisted.
+
+Again the Maccabee floundered. It had been easy to invent a story to
+keep the woman he loved from discovering that he was a married man,
+but the point in question was different. Now, filled with dismay and
+indignation, apprehension and reluctance, his fertile mind failed him
+at the moment of its greatest need.
+
+And the eyes of the Greek, filling with suspicion and intense
+interest, rested upon him.
+
+"I asked," the actress repeated calmly, "thy business with
+Philadelphus."
+
+At that instant a tremendous shock shook the house to its foundations;
+the hanging lamps lurched; the exedra jarred and in an instant several
+of the servants appeared at various openings into passages. Before any
+of the group could stir, a second thunderous shock sent a tremor over
+the room, and a fragment of marble detached from a support overhead
+and dropped to the pavement.
+
+"It is an attack!" Amaryllis cried.
+
+"On this house?" Salome demanded.
+
+There was a clatter of arms and several men in Jewish armor rushed
+through the chamber from the passage that led in from the Temple.
+
+"I shall see," said the Maccabee, and followed the men at once.
+
+Without he saw the night sky overhead crossed by dark stones flying
+over the wall to the east. Warfare had begun.
+
+But the attack was simply preliminary and desultory. It ceased while
+he waited. Presently it began farther toward the north. The catapult
+had been moved. The Maccabee hesitated in the colonnade.
+
+The beautiful girl in the house of Amaryllis was in no further danger.
+The interruption had saved him at a critical moment.
+
+He walked down the steps and out into the night.
+
+"Liberty!" he whispered with a sigh of relief. "Now what to do?"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV
+
+THE PRIDE OF AMARYLLIS
+
+
+The night following the wounding of Nicanor, John spent on his
+fortifications expecting an attack. It was one of the few nights when
+the Gischalan kept vigil, for he refused to contribute fatigue to the
+prospering of his cause.
+
+Sometime in mid-morning he appeared in the house of Amaryllis and sent
+a servant to her asking her to breakfast with him. The Greek sent him
+in return a wax tablet on which she had written that she was shut up
+in her chamber writing verse, but that she had provided him a
+companion as entertaining as she.
+
+When he passed into the Greek's dining-room, the woman who called
+herself wife to Philadelphus awaited him at the table.
+
+When he sat she dropped into a chair beside him and laid before him a
+bunch of grapes from Crete, preserved throughout the winter in casks
+filled with ground cork.
+
+"It is the last, Amaryllis says," she observed. "And siege is laid."
+
+John looked ruefully at the fruit.
+
+"Perhaps," he said after thought, "were I a thrifty man and a spiteful
+one, I would not eat them. Instead, I should have the same cluster
+served me every morning that I might say to mine enemies, with truth,
+that I have Cretan grapes for breakfast daily. They will keep," he
+added presently, "for it is tradition that stores laid up for siege
+never decay."
+
+"Obviously," said the woman, "they do not last long enough."
+
+John plucked off one of the light green grapes and ate it with relish.
+
+"Since thou doubtest the tradition, I shall not have these spoil."
+
+"But you destroy even a better boast over your enemy. Then you could
+say to him, 'We can not consume all our food. Behold the grapes rot in
+the lofts!'"
+
+John smiled.
+
+"Half of the lies go to preserve another's opinion of us. How much we
+respect our fellows!"
+
+"Be comforted; there are as many lying for our sakes! But how goes it
+without on the walls?"
+
+"Against Rome or against Simon?"
+
+"Both."
+
+"Ill enough. But when Titus presses too close Simon will lay down his
+hostility toward me; and when Titus becomes too effective, we are to
+have a divine interference, so our prophets say."
+
+"I observe," the woman said, "we Jews at this time are relying much on
+the prophets to fight our battles. Behold, our stores will hold out,
+we say, because it is said; and we shall fight indifferently, because
+Daniel hath bespoken a Deliverer for us at this time!"
+
+John, with his wine-glass between thumb and finger, looked at her.
+
+"I should expect a heretic to be so critical for us," he said.
+
+The woman sat with her elbows on the table, her chin in her hands,
+gazing moodily at the sunlight falling through the brass grill over
+the windows on the court. She ignored his remark, but answered
+presently in another tone.
+
+"There is nothing to employ a surfeited mind in this city."
+
+"No?" he said lightly, while interest began to awaken in his eyes.
+"The making of enjoyment is here. I have found it so."
+
+"Perchance you have," but she halted and resumed her moody gaze at the
+flood of sunlight.
+
+"Are you weary?" he asked. "What is it?"
+
+"Idleness! Eating, sleeping--no; not even that; for idleness steals
+away my appetite and my repose."
+
+"Strange restiveness for one reared in the quiet inner chambers of a
+Jewish house," he observed.
+
+Her eyes dropped away to the floor; he saw that she was breathing
+quickly.
+
+"I dreamed of a free life once," she said in a restrained way. "I have
+not since been satisfied. I dreamed of cities and kings, that were
+mine! of crises that I dared, of--of things that I did!"
+
+There was indignation and pride in the words, too much recollection of
+an actuality to rise from the reminiscences of a dream. John watched
+her alertly.
+
+"Enough will happen here in time to divert you," he said.
+
+She made a motion with her hand that swept the round of masonry about
+her.
+
+"Not until this falls."
+
+"Come, then, up into my fortress and see my fellows from Gischala," he
+offered. "They fled with me from that city when Titus took it and
+together we came to this place. They are hardened to disaster; they
+and death are fellow-jesters."
+
+"Soldiers?"
+
+"Everything! Better athletes than soldiers, better mummers than
+athletes; villains most engaging of all!"
+
+She showed no interest and, after a critical pause, he continued:
+
+"They robbed the booth of some costumer whom the Sadducees had made
+rich and captured a maid whom they held until she had taught them how
+to use henna and kohl. So I had a garrison of swearing girls until
+they wearied of the fatigue of stepping mincingly and untangling their
+garments. It was that which robbed the sport of its pleasure and
+changed my harem back to a fortress. But while it lasted they were
+kings over Jerusalem. And what dear mad dangerous wantons they were!
+What confusion to short-sighted citizens; what affrights to sociable
+maidens! Even I laughed at them."
+
+"What antics indeed!" she murmured perfunctorily.
+
+"Now they want new entertainment; something immense and different," he
+said.
+
+She looked up at him; in her eyes he read, "Even as I do!"
+
+"But they are not unique in that," he continued. "All the world seeks
+diversion. Observe the pretty stranger come here fresh from some
+lady's tiring-room, hunting adventure, bearding thee and wearing thy
+name!"
+
+Her eyes sparkled.
+
+"She shall have adventure enough," she declared.
+
+"I hear," John pursued, "that she does not expect her servant to
+return, whom she sent to Ascalon for proofs."
+
+"No?" the woman cried, sitting up.
+
+"How can she, when the siege is laid?"
+
+There was a moment of silence. The woman drew in a deep breath that
+was wholly one of relief.
+
+"Now what will she do?" she asked.
+
+"She expects," John answered, "the mediation of the Messiah. It is the
+talk among the slaves that He is in the city and she has heard it. She
+seems not to be overconfident, however."
+
+"It is her end," the woman remarked with meaning.
+
+"Perchance not. She is a good Jew, it seems, whatever else she may be,
+and every good Jew may have his wishes come to pass if the Messiah
+come. So it has become the national habit to expect the Messiah in
+every individual difficulty. Now, according to prophecies, the time is
+of a surety ripe and the whole city is expectant. She may have her
+wish."
+
+She stared at him coolly. There was implied disbelief in this speech.
+She debated with herself if it would serve to resent his doubt.
+Whatever her conclusion she added no more to the discussion of
+Laodice's hopes.
+
+"Are you expectant?" she asked.
+
+"I see the need of a Messiah," he responded.
+
+"Doubtless. You and Simon do not unite the city; nothing but an
+united, confident and supremely capable people can resist Rome in even
+this most majestic fortification in the world--unless miracle be
+performed, indeed."
+
+"Nothing but a divine visitor can achieve union here."
+
+"What an event to behold!" she mused. "That would be an excitement!
+Surely that would be a new thing! No one really ever beheld a god
+before."
+
+"What learned things dreams are! What things of experience!" he
+remarked with a sly smile. She refused to observe his insisted
+disbelief in her claim, but went on as if to herself.
+
+"Whatever Jove can do, man can do!" she declared. "I never heard that
+the gods do more than change maidens into trees or themselves into
+swans for an old mortal purpose that even man's a better adept at. Why
+can there not rise one who is greater than Alexander and of stouter
+heart than Julius Cęsar? There is no limit to the greatness of
+mankind. Behold, here is a city rich beyond even the wealth of
+Croesus; and a country which the emperor is longing to bestow upon
+some orderly king! Heavens, what an opportunity! I could pray,
+Jerusalem should pray, that the hour may bring forth the man!"
+
+Her eyes shone with an unnatural yearning. The immense scope of her
+desires suddenly brought a smile to his lips that he checked in time.
+He had remembered offering his Idumeans in women's clothing for her
+diversion.
+
+Hunger for power, the next greatest hunger after hunger for love! He
+felt that he stood in the presence of a desire so immense that it
+belittled his own hopes. He was not too much of a Jew to have sympathy
+with the ambition that dwells in the breasts of women. Cleopatra had
+been an evil that he had admired profoundly, because she had attained
+that which his own soul yearned after but which had eluded him. Yet he
+was large enough not to be envious of a success. He was made of the
+stuff that seekers of excitement are made of. If he could not furnish
+the intoxication of activity he was a ready supporter of that one who
+could.
+
+"What disorder, then, in the world," she went on, as if she had
+followed a train of imagination through the triumph of the risen great
+man. "Rome, the ruler of nations humbled! Conquest from Germany to the
+First Cataract, from Gaul to the dry rocks of Ecbatana! A world in
+anarchy, for one greater than Alexander to subjugate! The ancient
+splendor of Asia, the wisdom of Africa and the virginity of Europe to
+be his, and the homage of the four corners of the earth to be to him!"
+
+John said nothing. Before him, the woman had entirely stripped off her
+disguise. Now for the purpose!
+
+At that moment one of Amaryllis' servants, who had stood guard without
+the door, dodged apprehensively into the room and fled across to the
+opposite arch. There he paused, ready for flight, and looked back with
+wide eyes. John turned hastily but with an impatient gesture fell
+again to his neglected meal. The actress looked to see what had
+annoyed him. There passed in from the outer corridor a young man,
+tall, magnificently formed, covered with a turban and draped in quaint
+garments, which to her who was familiar with all the guises of the
+theater seemed to be Buddhistic. He looked neither to the right nor
+left, but passed with a step infinitely soft and gliding across to the
+arch, from which the terrified servant vanished instantly. The
+stranger stayed only a dramatic instant on the threshold and then
+disappeared into the corridor which led up into the Temple. When he
+had gone the startled actress retained a picture of a face, fearless,
+beatified, mystic to the very edge of the supernatural.
+
+"Who was that?" she asked of the Gischalan, who was gazing at the
+color of his wine, sitting in a shaft of sunlight.
+
+"Seraiah! But more than that, no one knows. He appeared with the
+slaying of Zechariah the Just. He haunts the garrisons. Hence his
+name--Soldier of Jehovah!"
+
+"He did not speak; why did he come?"
+
+"He never speaks; he goes where he will; no one would dare to stop
+him!"
+
+Then suddenly realizing that he was showing disinterest the Gischalan
+drew himself up and smiled.
+
+"He is mad; I believe he is mad. The city is full of demoniacs."
+
+"There is something great about him!" the woman declared. "He seems to
+be the instrument of miracle."
+
+"Is it that?" John asked in an amused tone.
+
+She studied him for a moment that was tense with meaning.
+
+"Do you know," she began slowly, "that neither you nor Simon, nor any
+of these who aspire to the control of Jerusalem, have come upon the
+plan which will best appeal to your distracted subjects?"
+
+"Have we not?" he repeated. "We have bought them and bullied them; we
+are fighting the Romans for them; we are preaching patience in the
+will of the Lord. What more, lady?"
+
+"What have you to offer them in their hope of a Messiah?" she said
+pointedly.
+
+"Messiah! What else is preached in the Temple but the Messiah, or in
+the proseuchae or the streets or on the walls? We eat, drink, sleep,
+fight, buy, sell, rob or restore in the name of the Messiah! They are
+surfeited with religion."
+
+"Are they?" she asked sententiously. "But you haven't given them a
+Messiah."
+
+He looked at her without comprehending.
+
+"You have a mad city here; you can not reason with it; indulge it,
+then, as you indulge your lunatics," she suggested.
+
+He shook his head, smiling that he did not understand her. She turned
+again to Seraiah.
+
+"Watch him," she insisted. "He possesses me."
+
+After a long silence in which John trifled with his wine, she prepared
+to rise.
+
+"Send me the roll of the law," the woman said suddenly.
+
+"Posthumus shall bring it. He is another lunatic. Experiment with him
+and learn how I shall act toward the city."
+
+"Well said," she averred; "and I will see your Idumeans. Is it proper
+for me to appear in the Temple?"
+
+The Gischalan's eyes flashed a sudden elation and delight. He bent low
+and kissed her hand.
+
+"And I will fetch somewhat which will divert us," she added and was
+gone.
+
+When a few moments later John passed again into the Greek's apartment,
+Amaryllis entered from an inner corridor. Before she spoke to the
+master of the house she addressed a servant who had been a moment
+before summoned.
+
+"Send hither my guest."
+
+"The stranger?" John asked. "Is she still with you?"
+
+"I mean to add her to my household, if you will," she explained.
+
+"Keep her or dismiss her at your pleasure."
+
+"It shall be for my pleasure. She has a charm that besets me. It will
+be entertainment to discover her history."
+
+"I see no mystery in her. It is plain enough that there is between her
+and this married Philadelphus some cause for her coming. His wife is
+much more engaging."
+
+She sighed and dropped into her ivory chair, pushed back the locks of
+fair hair that had loosened from their fillet and waited languidly.
+
+John studied her critically. In the last hour the slowly dissolving
+bond between them seemed to have vanished, wholly, at once.
+
+"O Queen of Kings," he said, "art thou lonely in this mad place?"
+
+"I have found diversion," she answered.
+
+"With these new guests?"
+
+"With these new guests. Observe them; there are a pair of lovers among
+them, mersed in difficulty, hampering themselves, multiplying sorrow
+and sure to accomplish the same end as if they had proceeded happily."
+
+"Interested no longer in thine own passion? Alas, my Amaryllis, that
+love is dead that is interested no longer in itself."
+
+"O thou bearded warrior, are we then still in the self-centered period
+of our romance?"
+
+"I fear not; I see the twilight."
+
+Amaryllis looked down and her face grew more weary.
+
+"You have maintained a long fidelity, John," she said.
+
+He gazed at her, waiting a further remark, and she went on at last.
+
+"I wonder why?"
+
+He flung out his hands.
+
+"Shall I be faithless to Sheba? Is the charm of the Queen of Kings
+faded? Shall I turn from Aphrodite or weary of the lips of Astarte?"
+
+"Nothing so stamps your love of me as wicked, in your own eyes, as the
+paganism you fall into when you speak of it!"
+
+He laughed.
+
+"But it is not that I am lovely which made you a lover--until now,"
+she went on. "I have seen men faithful to women unlovely as Hecate. It
+is not that. And I am still as I was, but--"
+
+He looked down on the triple bands of the ampyx that bound her
+gold-powdered hair and said:
+
+"It is you who have grown weary; not I."
+
+She astutely drew back from the ground upon which she had entered. It
+lay in the power of this Gischalan to refuse further protection to her
+out of sheer spite if she made her disaffection too patent.
+
+"O leader of hosts, canst thou be mummer, languishing poet, pettish
+woman and spoiled princeling all in one? No! And I shall love the
+clanking of arms and thy mailed footsteps all the more if thou
+permittest me to look upon irresponsible folly while thou art absent."
+
+"Have thy way. I have mine. Furthermore, I wish to thank thee for the
+companion thou sentest me at breakfast. He who dines alone with her,
+hath his table full. Farewell."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV
+
+THE IMAGE OF JEALOUSY
+
+
+The Maccabee resolved that in spite of his heart-hunger, he must not
+be a frequent visitor to the house of Amaryllis because of the
+imminent risk of confronting the impostor Julian and the danger of
+exposure. Not danger to his life, but danger to his freedom to court
+the beautiful girl, which an unmasking might accomplish. Besides, he
+had made an extraordinary entry into the Greek's house in the
+beginning, and he was not prepared to explain himself even now, if he
+returned.
+
+But his longing to look at her again was stronger than his caution.
+Much had happened since he had left the house of the Greek on the
+evening of his first day in Jerusalem, and he feared that his
+absorption in his own plans might result in the loss of her soon or
+late. So when the evening of the second week to a day of his sojourn
+in the city came round, unable to endure longer, he turned his steps
+with considerable apprehension toward the house of Amaryllis.
+
+When he was led across the threshold of the Greek's hall, he saw
+Amaryllis sitting in her exedra, her slim white arms crossed back of
+her head, her tiring-woman, summoned for a casual attention, busy with
+a parted ribbon on the sandal of the lady's foot.
+
+The Maccabee awaited her invitation. Her eyes flashed a sudden
+pleasure when she looked up and saw him.
+
+"Enter," she said, with an unwonted lightness in her voice that was
+usually low and grave; "and be welcome."
+
+He came to the place she indicated at her side and sat. In silence he
+waited until the tiring-woman had finished her service and departed.
+Then it was Amaryllis who spoke.
+
+"You left us abruptly on occasion of your first visit."
+
+"The siege was of greater interest to you than I was. When I
+discovered the cause of the disturbance, you would have failed to
+remember me."
+
+"Yet I recall you readily after many days."
+
+"The city is in disorder; conventions can not always be observed in
+war-time. I returned when I could."
+
+"Our interest in you as our guest has not abated. Philadelphus is
+ready to see you, at any time," she said, watching his face.
+
+"And in time of war," he answered composedly, "we intend many things
+in the first place which we do not carry out in the second. I do not
+care to see--Philadelphus."
+
+She lifted her brows. He answered the implied question.
+
+"I was a familiar to this Philadelphus; he is young and boastful,
+talkative as a woman. If he means to be king, as those who knew him in
+Ephesus were given to believe, it is not unnatural that some of us,
+without fortune or tie to keep us home, should follow him--as
+parasites, if you will--to share in the largess which he will surely
+give his friends if he succeeds."
+
+He did not face her when he made this speech, and he did not observe
+the amusement that crept into her eyes. He could not sense his own
+greatness of presence sufficiently to know that his claim to be a
+parasite upon so incapable a creature as the false Philadelphus would
+awaken doubt in the mind of an intelligent woman like Amaryllis.
+
+He felt that he was not covering his tracks well, and put his
+ingenuity to a test.
+
+"The boon-craver therefore should not sit like a dog, begging crumbs,
+till the table is laid. My hunger would appear as competition, if I
+showed it him, while he is yet unfed. Of a truth, I would not have him
+know I am here."
+
+"I will keep thy secret," she promised, smiling.
+
+"I thank you," he said gravely. "I came, on this occasion, to ask
+after the young woman, whose name I have not learned--her whom you
+have sheltered."
+
+Amaryllis' smiling eyes darkened suddenly.
+
+"Pouf!" she said. "I had begun to hope that you had come to see me!"
+
+"I had not John's permission," he objected.
+
+"Have you Philadelphus' permission to see her?"
+
+He looked his perplexity.
+
+"What," she exclaimed, "has she not laid her claim before you yet?"
+
+The Maccabee shook his head.
+
+"Know, then, that this pretty nameless creature claims to be the wife
+of this same Philadelphus."
+
+He sat up in his earnestness.
+
+"What!" he cried.
+
+"Even so! Insists upon it in the face of the lady princess' proofs and
+Philadelphus' denial!"
+
+The Maccabee's brows dropped while he gazed down at the Greek.
+
+Julian of Ephesus was then the husband that she was to join in
+Jerusalem! Small wonder she had been indignant when he, the Maccabee,
+in the spirit of mischief, had laid a wife to Julian's door and had
+described her as most unprepossessing. And that was why her terror of
+Julian had been so abject! That was why she had flown to him, a
+stranger, rather than be left alone with a husband who, it seemed,
+would be rid of her that he might pursue his ends the better!
+
+"What think you of it!" he exclaimed aloud, but to himself.
+
+"And I never saw in all my life such pretensions of probity!" the
+Greek continued. "She is outraged by any little word that questions
+her virtue; she holds herself aloof from me as if she were not certain
+that I am fit for her companionship; and she flies with fluffed
+feathers and cries of rage in the face of the least compliment that
+comes from any lips--even Philadelphus!"
+
+The Maccabee continued to gaze at the Greek. He did not see the
+woman's search of his face for an assent to her speech. He was
+struggling with a desire to tell her that he was eager to exchange his
+wife for Julian's.
+
+"Perchance she is right," he said instead. "What know we of this
+paganized young Jew? He has been separated from his lady from
+childhood. It is right easy to marry, once we fall into the way."
+
+"No, no! Her claim is hopeless. She confesses it. But she maintains
+the assumption, nevertheless."
+
+"Absolutely? No little sign of lapse among thy handsome servants,
+here?"
+
+"I do not see her when she is with the servants," she said astutely.
+
+"What will you do with her?" he asked.
+
+"She is beautiful, unique, and so eligible to my collection of arts
+and artists under this roof. She shall stay till fate shows its hand
+for all of us."
+
+"You have housed Discord under your roof, then," he said. "Laodice,
+the wife to this Philadelphus, will not be a happy woman; and I--I
+shall not be a happy man. Let me return favor for your favor to me. I
+will take her away."
+
+She laughed, though it seemed that a hard note had entered her voice.
+
+"You will permit me, then, to surmise for myself why you came to
+Jerusalem. You seem to have known this girl before. I shall not ask
+you; in return for that promise that I may conclude what I will."
+
+"If you are too discerning, lady," he answered, while his eyes sought
+down the corridor for a glimpse of the one he had come to see, "you
+are dangerous."
+
+"And what then?"
+
+"I must devise a way to silence you."
+
+She lifted her brows. In that very speech was the portrait of the
+Maccabee that she had come to love through letters.
+
+"There is something familiar in your mood," she said thoughtfully. "It
+seems that I have known you--for many years."
+
+He made no answer. He had said all that he wished to say to this
+woman. She noted his silence and rose.
+
+"I shall send the girl to you."
+
+"Thou art good," he answered and she withdrew.
+
+A moment later Laodice came into the chamber. She was not startled. In
+her innocent soul she did not realize that this was a sign of the
+depth of her love for him. He rose and met her half-way across the
+hall; took her hand and held it while they walked back to the exedra,
+and gazed at her face for evidence that her sojourn in this house had
+been unhappy or otherwise; noted that she had let down her hair and
+braided it; observed every infinitesimal change that can attract only
+the lover's eye.
+
+"Sit," he said, giving her a place beside him. "I came of habit to see
+you. Of habit, I was interrupted. Is there no way that I can talk to
+you without the resentment of some one who flourishes a better right
+to be with you than I can show?"
+
+"Where hast thou been," Laodice asked, "so long?"
+
+"Was it long," he demanded impulsively, "to you?"
+
+"New places, new faces, uncertainty and other things make time seem
+long," she explained hastily.
+
+"Nay, then," he said, "I have been busy. I have been attending to that
+labor I had in mind for Judea, of which we spoke in the hills that
+morning."
+
+Laodice drew in a quick breath. Then some one, if not herself or the
+husband who had denied her, was at work for Judea.
+
+"There is no nation, here, for a king," he went on. "It is a great
+horde that needs organization. It wants a leader. I am ambitious and
+Judea will be the prize to the ablest man. Seest thou mine intent?"
+
+"You--you aspire--" she began and halted, suddenly impressed with the
+complication his announcement had effected.
+
+"Go on," he said.
+
+"You would take Judea?"
+
+"I would."
+
+"But it belongs of descent to the Maccabees!"
+
+"To Philadelphus Maccabaeus, yes; but what is he doing?"
+
+She dropped her head.
+
+"Nothing," she said in a half-whisper.
+
+"No? But let me tell you what I have done already. Three days ago
+Titus took revenge upon Coenopolis for her sortie against Nicanor by
+firing the suburbs. The citizens could not spare water to fight the
+fire, and after futile attempts they gathered up food and treasure and
+fled into Jerusalem. Now, a thousand householders in the streets of
+this oppressed city, with their gods and their goods in their arms,
+made the pillagers of Simon and John laugh aloud. They fell upon these
+wandering, bewildered, treasure-laden people and robbed them as
+readily and as joyously as a husbandman gathers olives in a fat year.
+Oh, it was a merry time for the men of Simon and the men of John! But
+I in my wanderings over the city came upon a party of Bezethans,
+reluctant to surrender their goods for the asking, and they were
+fighting with right good will a body of Idumeans twice their number.
+In fact they fought so well, so unanimously, so silently that I saw
+they lacked the essential part of the fight--the shouting. That I
+supplied. And when they had whipped the Idumeans and had a chance for
+flight before reinforcements came, they obeyed my voice in so far as
+they followed me into a subterranean chamber beneath a burned ruin on
+Zion.
+
+"We were not followed and our hiding-place was not discovered. In
+fact, their resistance was a complete success. Whereupon, they were
+ready to unite and take Jerusalem! No--it was not strange! It is the
+nature of men. I never saw a wine-merchant in Ephesus, who, after
+clearing his shop of brawlers single-handed, was not ready thereupon
+to march upon Rome and besiege Cęsar on the Palatine! So it was with
+these Bezethans.
+
+"I, with my voice, expressed the yearnings that they felt in their
+victorious breasts, and plotted for them. After council and
+organization we went forth by night and finding Idumean patrols by the
+score sleepy and inert from overfeeding we robbed them of that which
+was our own. Then we sought out hungry Bezethans and fed them when
+they promised to become of our party. Nothing was more simple! By dawn
+we had a hundred under our ruin, bound to us by oath and the
+enticements of our larder, and hungry only for fight! Will you believe
+me when I boast that I have an army in Jerusalem?"
+
+She heard him with a strange confusion of emotions. In her soul she
+was excited and eager for his success; but here was a strong and
+growing enemy to Philadelphus, who was reluctant to become a king! Her
+impulsive joy in a forceful man struggled with her sense of duty to
+the man she could not love.
+
+"Why do you tell me these things?" she said uneasily. "It is perilous
+for any one to know that you are constructing sedition against these
+ferocious powers in Jerusalem."
+
+"Ah, but you fear for me; therefore you will not betray me. None else
+but those as deeply committed know of it."
+
+He had confided in her, and because of it his ambitions took stealthy
+hold upon her.
+
+"But--but is there no other way to take Jerusalem, except--by
+predatory warfare?" she hesitated.
+
+"No," he laughed. "We are fighting thieves and murderers; they do not
+understand the open field; we must go into the dark to find them."
+
+"Then--then if your soldiers have the good of the city and the love of
+their fellows in their hearts, and if you feed them and shelter
+them--why shall you not succeed?" she asked, speaking slowly as the
+sum of his advantages occurred to her.
+
+He dropped his hand on hers.
+
+"It lacks one thing; if I have discouragement in my soul, it will
+weaken my arm, and so the arm of all my army."
+
+Intuition bade her hesitate to ask for that essential thing; his eyes
+named it to her and she looked away from him quickly that he might not
+see the sudden flush which she could not repress.
+
+"Tell me," she said, "more of that night--"
+
+"That would be recounting the same incident many times. But one thing
+unusual happened; nay, two things. In the middle of the night, after
+we had brought in our second enlistment of patriots, we were feeding
+them and I was giving them instruction. At the entrance, I had posted
+a sentry; none of us believed that any one had seen us take refuge in
+that crypt. Indeed, we were all frank in our congratulations and
+defiant in our security. Suddenly, I saw half of my army scuttle to
+cover; the rest stood transfixed in their tracks. I looked up and
+there before me in the firelight stood a young man, whom I had not, I
+am convinced, brought in with me. He was tall, comely, dressed as I
+have seen the Hindu priests dress in Ephesus, but in garments that
+were fairly radiant for whiteness. But his face gave cause enough to
+make any man lose his tongue. Believe me, when I say he looked as if
+he had seen angels, and had talked with the dead. His eyes gazed
+through us as if we had been thin air. So dreadful they were in their
+unseeing look that every man asked himself what would happen if that
+gaze should light upon him. He stood a moment, walked as soft-footed
+and as swiftly as some shade through our burrow and vanished as he had
+come. In all the time he tarried, he made not one sound!"
+
+Laodice was looking at him with awed, but understanding eyes.
+
+"It was Seraiah," she said in a low voice. "He entered this place on a
+day last week. All the city is afraid of him."
+
+"So my soldiers told me afterward, between chattering teeth. He almost
+damped our patriotism. We uttered our bombast, sealed our vows and
+made our sorties, thereafter, every man of us, with our chins over our
+shoulders! Spare me Seraiah! He has too much influence!"
+
+"Is he a madman?" she asked.
+
+"Or else a supernatural man. Would I could manage men by the fall of
+my foot, as he does. I should have Jerusalem's fealty by to-morrow
+night. But it was near early morning that the other incident occurred.
+That was of another nature. We stumbled upon a pair huddled in the
+shadow of a building. We stumbled upon many figures in shadows, but
+one of these murmured a name that I heard once in the hills hereabout,
+and I had profited by that name, so I halted. It was an old man,
+starved and weary and ill; with him was a gray ghost of a creature
+with long white hair, that seemed to be struck with terror the instant
+it heard my voice. At first I thought it was a withered old woman, but
+it proved to be a man--somehow seeming young in spite of the
+snow-white hair and wasted frame. I had them taken up, the gray ghost
+resisting mightily, and carried to my burrow where they now lie. They
+eat; they take up space; they add nothing to my cause. But I can not
+turn them out. The old man disarms me by that name."
+
+He looked down at her with softening eyes.
+
+"And the shepherd held thy hand?" he said softly. She turned upon him
+in astonishment. How much of joy and surprise and hope he could bring
+in a single visit, she thought. Now, behold he had met that same
+delightsome child that had passed like a dash of sunlight across her
+dark day.
+
+"Did you meet the shepherd of Pella?" she asked. Instant deduction
+supplied her the name that had moved him to compassion. "And did he
+serve you in the name of his Prophet?" she whispered.
+
+"He saved my life in the name of his Christ, but was tender of me in
+thy name," he replied.
+
+"His is a sweet apostasy," she ventured bravely, "if it be his
+apostasy that made him kind. And I--I owe him much, that he repaired
+that for which I feel at fault."
+
+He smiled at her and stroked her hand once, soothingly.
+
+"Let us not remember blames or injury. It damages my happiness. But of
+this apostasy that the shepherd preached me. I passed the stones of
+the Palace of Antipas to-day, a ruin, black and shapeless. Thought I,
+where is the majesty of order and the beauty of strength that was this
+place? And then," his voice fell to a whisper, "beshrew the boy's
+tattle, I said, the footprints of his Prophet before the throne of
+Herod are erased."
+
+"Even then," she whispered when he paused, "you do not forget!"
+
+"No! Why, these streets, that should ring for me with the footsteps of
+all the great from the days of David, are marked by the passage of
+that Prophet. I might forget that Felix and Florus and Gessius were
+legates in that Roman residence, but I do not fail to remember that
+they took that Prophet before Pilate there. By my soul, the street
+that leads north hath become the way of the Cross, and there are three
+crosses for me on the Hill of the Skull!"
+
+She looked at him gravely and with alarm. What was it in this history
+of the Nazarene which won aristocrats and shepherds alike? She would
+see from this man if there were indeed any truth in the story that
+Philadelphus had told her.
+
+"I have heard," she began, faltering, "I have heard that--" She
+stopped. Her tongue would not shape the story. But after a glance at
+her, he understood.
+
+"And thou hast heard it, also?" he whispered. "Thou believest it?"
+
+It seemed that to acknowledge her fear that the King had come and gone
+would establish the fact.
+
+"No!" she cried.
+
+"It is enough," he said nervously. "We do not well to talk of it. I
+came for another reason. Tell me; hast thou other shelter than this
+house?"
+
+"No," she answered.
+
+"Hast thou talked with this Philadelphus, here?" he asked after
+silence.
+
+She assented with averted face.
+
+"Is he that one who was with me in the hills?" he persisted.
+
+Again she assented, with surprise.
+
+His hands clenched and for a moment he struggled with his rage.
+
+"This house is no place for you!" he declared at last.
+
+"What manner of house is this?" she asked pathetically. "It is so
+strange!"
+
+"Why did you come here?"
+
+"Because there was nowhere else to go."
+
+He was silent.
+
+"Who is this Amaryllis?" she asked.
+
+"John's mistress."
+
+She shrank away from him and looked at him with horror-stricken eyes.
+
+"Hast thou not yet seen him, who buys thy bread and meat and insures
+this safe roof?" he persisted.
+
+"And--and I eat bread--bought--bought by--" she stammered.
+
+"Even so!"
+
+Her hands dropped at her sides.
+
+"Are the good all dead?" she said.
+
+"In Jerusalem, yes; for Virtue gets hungry, at times."
+
+She had risen and moved away from him, but he followed her with
+interested eyes.
+
+"Then--then--" she began, hesitating under a rush of convictions.
+"That is why--why I can not--why he--he--"
+
+He knew she spoke of Philadelphus.
+
+"Go on," he said.
+
+"Why I can not live in safety near him!"
+
+He, too, arose. Until that moment it had not occurred to him that
+Julian of Ephesus, as repugnant to her as she had shown him ever to
+be, might prove a peril to her life as he had been to the Maccabee who
+had stood in his way.
+
+"What has he said to you?" he demanded fiercely. "How do you live,
+here in this house?"
+
+She threw up her head, seeing another meaning in his question.
+
+"Shut in! Locked!" she said between her teeth.
+
+"But even then you are not safe!"
+
+She drew back hastily and looked at him with alarm. What did he mean?
+
+He was beside her.
+
+"Tell me, in truth, who you are," he said tenderly, "and I shall
+reveal myself."
+
+Then, indeed, Amaryllis had told him her claim and had convinced him
+that it was fraudulent.
+
+"And she told you?" she said wearily.
+
+"Tell me," he insisted. "I have truly a revelation worth hearing!"
+
+She made no answer.
+
+"You owe it me," he added presently. "Behold what damaging things I
+have intrusted to you. You can ruin me by the droop of an eyelash."
+
+"I should have told you at first who I am," she said finally. "I will
+not betray what you told me in ignorance--"
+
+"But Amaryllis told me this before you came."
+
+"Nevertheless, tell me no more; if I must be a partizan, I shall be a
+partizan to my husband."
+
+"There is nothing for you here, clinging to this man," he continued
+persuasively. "This woman brought him a great dowry. She is ambitious
+and therefore jealous. You will win nothing but mistreatment, and
+worse, if you stay here for him."
+
+"It is my place," she said.
+
+After a moment's helpless silence, he demanded bitterly:
+
+"Dost thou love that man?"
+
+The truth leaped to her lips with such wilful force that he read the
+reply on her face, though her eyes were down and by intense resolution
+she restrained the denial. He was close to her, speaking quickly under
+the pressure of his earnestness.
+
+"I have sacrificed name, birthright, fortune--even honor--that I might
+be free to love thee!"
+
+She drew back from him hurriedly, afraid that his very insistence
+would destroy her fortitude.
+
+"Let me not have bankrupted myself for a trust thou wilt not give!"
+
+"It--it is not mine to give," she stammered.
+
+"Otherwise--otherwise--" he prompted, leaning near her. But she put
+him back from her, desperately.
+
+"Go, go!" she whispered. "I hear--I hear Philadelphus!"
+
+He turned from her obediently.
+
+"It is not my last hope," he said to himself. "Neither has she
+suffered her last perplexity in this house. I shall come again."
+
+He passed out into the streets of Jerusalem.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVI
+
+THE SPREAD NET
+
+
+Beginning with the moment that the Maccabee first entered her hall,
+Amaryllis struggled with a perplexity. Certain discrepancies in the
+hastily concocted story which that stern compelling stranger who had
+called himself Hesper of Ephesus had told had started into life a
+doubt so feeble that it was little more than a sensation.
+
+Love and its signs had been a lifelong study to her; she knew its
+stubbornness; she was wise in the judgment of human nature to know
+that love in this stranger was no light thing to be dislodged. And to
+finish the sum of her perplexities, she felt in her own heart the
+kindling of a sorrowful longing to be preferred by a spirit strong,
+forceful and magnetic as was that of the man who had called himself
+Hesper of Ephesus.
+
+With the egotism of the courtezan she summarized her charms. Even
+there were spirits in that fleshly land of Judea to whom the delicate
+refinement of her beauty, the reserve of her bearing and the power of
+her mentality had appealed more strongly than a mere opulence of
+physical attraction. She had her ambitions; not the least of these was
+to be loved by an understanding nature. The greater the congeniality,
+the greater the attraction, she argued; but behold, was this iron
+Hesper, the man of all force, to be dashed and shaken by the rich
+loveliness of Laodice, who was simply a woman?
+
+"Such attachments do not last," she argued hopefully. "Such
+attachments make unfaithful husbands. They are monotonous and
+wearisome. She is but a mirror giving back the blaze of the sun,
+one-surfaced and blinding. It is the many lights of the diamond that
+make it charming."
+
+She had arrived at no definite resolution when she met Laodice in the
+hall that led to the quarters of the artists, as the Greek went that
+way for her day's observation of their work.
+
+"What an unrefreshed face!" the Greek said softly, as the light from
+the cancelli showed the weariness and distress that had begun to make
+inroads on the animation of the girl's beauty. "No woman who would
+preserve her loveliness should let her cares trouble her dreams."
+
+"How am I to do that?" Laodice asked with a flare of scorn.
+
+"Do I perceive in that a desire for advice or an explanation of a
+situation?"
+
+"Both."
+
+Amaryllis smiled thoughtfully at the girl, while the light of sudden
+intent appeared on her face.
+
+"You are unhappy, my dear, through your prejudices," she began. "We
+call convictions prejudices when they are other than our own beliefs.
+By that sign, you shall know that I am going to take issue with you. I
+am, perhaps, the ideal of that which you would not be. But no man will
+say that my lot is not enviable."
+
+"Are you happy?" Laodice asked in a low voice.
+
+"Are you?" the Greek returned. "No," she went on after a pause. "A
+woman has the less happy part in life, though the greater one, if she
+will permit herself to make it great. It was not her purpose on earth
+to be happy, but to make happy."
+
+"You take issue with Philadelphus in that," Laodice interposed. "It is
+his preachment to me that all that is expected of all mankind is to be
+happy."
+
+"He is a man, arguing from the man's view. It is inevitable law that
+one must be gladder than another. Woman has the greater capacity for
+suffering, hence her feeling for the suffering of others is the
+quicker to respond. And some creature of the gods must be
+compassionate, else creation long since had perished from the earth."
+
+Laodice made no answer. This was new philosophy to her, who had been
+taught only to aspire at great sacrifice as long as God gave her
+strength. She could not know that this strange and purposeful creed
+might some day appeal to her beyond her strength.
+
+"Yet," Amaryllis added presently in a brighter tone, "there is much
+that is sweet in the life of a woman."
+
+Laodice played with the tassels of her girdle and did not look up.
+What was all this to lead to?
+
+"I have spoken to Philadelphus about you," the Greek continued. "He
+has no doubt of this woman who hath established her claim to his name
+by proofs but without the manner of the wife he expected. Yet he can
+not turn her out. The siege hath put an end to your efforts in your
+own behalf and it is time to face your condition and make the best of
+it. John feels restive; I dare not ask too much of him. My household
+was already full, before you came."
+
+Laodice was looking at her, now with enlightenment in her face.
+
+"Philadelphus," Amaryllis continued, following up her advantage, "is
+nothing more than a man and you are very lovely."
+
+"All this," Laodice said, rousing, "is to persuade me to--"
+
+"There are two standards for women," the Greek interposed before
+Laodice finished her indignant sentence. "Yours and another's. As
+between yours, who would have love from him whom you have married, and
+hers, who hath love from him whom she hath not married, there is only
+the difference of a formula. Between her condition and yours, she is
+the freer; between her soul and yours, she is the more willingly
+faithful. If woman be born to a purpose, she fulfils it; if not she
+hath not consecrated her life to a mistake. You overrate the
+importance of marriage. It is your whole purpose to preserve yourself
+for a ceremony. It is too much pains for too trivial an end. At least,
+there are many things which are farther reaching and less selfish in
+intent. And who, by the way, holds the longest claim on history? Your
+kind or this other? The world does not perpetuate in its chronicles
+the continence of women; it is too small, too personal, too common to
+be noted. Cleopatra were lost among the horde of forgotten sovereigns,
+had she wedded duly and scorned Mark Antony; Aspasia would have been
+buried in a gynaeconitis had she wedded Pericles, and Sappho--but the
+list is too long; I will not bury you in testimony."
+
+Laodice raised her head.
+
+"You reason well," she said. "It never occurred to me how wickedness
+could justify itself by reason. But I observe now how serviceable a
+thing it is. It seems that you can reason away any truth, any fact,
+any ideal. Perhaps you can banish God by reason, or defend crime by
+reason; reason, I shall not be surprised to learn, can make all things
+possible or impossible. But--does reason hush that strange speaking
+voice in you, which we Jews call conscience? Tell me; have you
+reasoned till it ceases to rebuke you?"
+
+"Ah, how hard you are to accommodate," Amaryllis smiled. "I mean to
+show you how you can abide here. I can ask no more of John.
+Philadelphus alone is master of your fate. I have not sought to change
+you before I sought to change Philadelphus. He will not change so long
+as you are beautiful. This is life, my dear. You may as well prepare
+for it now."
+
+Laodice gazed with wide, terrorized eyes at the Greek. She saw force
+gathering against her. Amaryllis shaped her device to its end.
+
+"And if you do not accept this shelter," she concluded, "what else is
+there for you?"
+
+Hesper, many times her refuge, rose before the hard-pressed girl.
+
+"There is another in Jerusalem who will help me," she declared.
+
+"And that one?" Amaryllis asked coolly.
+
+"Is he who calls himself Hesper, the Ephesian," Laodice answered.
+
+"Why should you trust him?" the Greek asked pointedly.
+
+"He--when Philadelphus--you remember that Philadelphus told you what
+happened--"
+
+"That he tossed a coin with a wayfarer in the hills for you?" the
+Greek asked.
+
+Laodice dropped her head painfully.
+
+"This Hesper let me go then, and afterward--"
+
+"He has repented of that by this time. It is not safe to try him a
+second time. Besides, if you must risk yourself to the protection of
+men, why turn from him whom you call your husband for this stranger?"
+
+The question was deft and telling. Laodice started with the suddenness
+of the accusation embodied in it. And while she stood, wrestling with
+the intolerable alternative, the Greek smiled at her and went her way.
+
+Laodice stood where Amaryllis had left her, at times motionless with
+helplessness, at others struck with panic. On no occasion did
+homelessness in the war-ridden city of Jerusalem appear half so
+terrible as shelter under the roof of that hateful house.
+
+The little golden-haired girl from the chamber of artists beyond
+skipped by her.
+
+"Hast seen Demetrius?" she called back as she passed. "Demetrius, the
+athlete, stupid!"
+
+Laodice turned away from her.
+
+"Nay, then," the girl declared; "if I have insulted you let me heal
+over the wound with the best jest, yet! John hath written a sonnet on
+Philadelphus' wife and our Lady Amaryllis is truing his meter for him.
+Ha! Gods! What a place this is for a child to be brought up! I would
+not give a denarius for my morals when I am grown. There's Demetrius!
+Now for a laugh!"
+
+She was gone.
+
+Where was that ancient rigor of atmosphere in which she had been
+reared? thought Laodice. Had it existed only in the shut house of
+Costobarus? Was all the world wicked except that which was confined
+within the four walls of her father's house? Could she survive long in
+this unanimously bad environment? But she remembered Joseph of Pella,
+the shepherd; even then his wholesomeness was not without its canker.
+He was a Christian!
+
+Philadelphus was at her side.
+
+She flinched from him and would have fled, but he stopped her with a
+sign.
+
+"My lady objects to your presence in this house," he said. "You have
+not made it worth my while to insist on your shelter here."
+
+"Your lady," she said hotly, "is two-fold evilly engaged, then. She
+has time to ruin you, while she furnishes John with all the
+inspiration he would have for sonnets."
+
+"So she refrains from furnishing John with my two hundred talents, I
+shall not quarrel with her. You have your own difficulties to adjust,
+and mine, only in so far as they concern you."
+
+His voice had lost none of its smoothness, but it had become hard and
+purposeful.
+
+"I have come to that point, Philadelphus, where my difficulties and
+not yours concern me," she replied. "I had nothing to give you but my
+good will. You have outraged even that. Hereafter, no tie binds us."
+
+"No? You cast off our ties as lightly as you assumed them. With a word
+you announce me wedded to you; with another you speak our divorcement.
+And I, poor clod, suffer it? The first, yes; but the last, no. You
+see, I have fallen in love with you."
+
+She turned her clear eyes away from him and waited calmly till she
+could escape.
+
+"You have spent your greatest argument in persuading me to be a king.
+Kings, lady, are essentially tyrants, in these bad days. Wherefore, if
+I am to be one, I shall not fail to be the other. And you--ah, you!
+Will you endure the oppressor that you made?"
+
+There was enough that was different in his manner and his words for
+her to believe that something worthy of attention was to follow. She
+looked at him, now.
+
+"This roof, since the alienation of John to my wife, is mine empire.
+Within it, I am despot. From its lady mistress, the Greek, to the
+meanest slave, I have homage and subjection. Even thou wilt be
+submissive to me--for having lost one wife through indulgence, I shall
+be most tyrannical to the one yet in my power!"
+
+She drew herself up in splendid defiance.
+
+"I have not submitted!" she said. "I will not submit!"
+
+"No? Nothing stands in your way now but yourself. Your supplanter hath
+removed herself. And I shall make your submission easy."
+
+She turned from him and would have hurried back into the Greek's
+andronitis, but he put himself in her way.
+
+"Listen!" he said, suddenly lifting his hand.
+
+In the stillness which she finally was able to observe over the
+tumultuous beating of her enraged heart, a profound moan of great
+volume as from immense but remote struggle came into the corridor.
+Through it at times cut a sharp accession of sound, as if violence
+heightened at intervals, and steadily over it pulsated the throb of
+tireless siege-engines. It was the groan of the City of Delight in
+mortal anguish.
+
+"This," he said in a soft voice touching his breast, "or that,"
+motioning toward the dying city. "Choose. And by midnight!"
+
+While she stood, gazing at him transfixed with the horror of her
+predicament, there was the sweeping of garments, the soft tinkle of
+pendants as they struck together, and Salome, the actress, was beside
+the pair. Close at hand was Amaryllis. The Greek showed for the first
+time discomfiture and an inability to rise to the demand of the
+occasion. The glance she shot at Laodice was full of cold anger that
+she had permitted herself to be surprised in company with
+Philadelphus.
+
+Philadelphus drew back a step, but made no further movement toward
+withdrawing. Laodice would have retreated, but the actress stood in
+her way. With a motion full of stately indignation, Salome turned to
+Amaryllis.
+
+"It so occurs, madam, that I can point out to you the disease which
+saps my husband's ambition. You observe that he is diverted now, as
+all men are diverted six weeks after marriage--by another woman. I am
+not a jealous woman. I am only concerned for his welfare and the
+welfare of the city of our fathers. For it is not himself that his
+luxurious indolence affects; but all the unhappy city which is
+suffering while he is able to help it. He must be saved. And I shall
+go with him out of this house into want and peril, but he shall be
+saved."
+
+Laodice said nothing. She stood drawn up intensely; her brows knitted;
+her teeth on her lip; her insulted pride and growing resolution
+effecting a certain magnificence in her pose.
+
+"I can find her another house," Amaryllis said.
+
+"Also my husband can find it," the woman broke in. "Let the streets do
+their will with the woman of the streets. Bread and shelter are too
+precious to waste on the iniquitous this hour."
+
+Amaryllis turned to Laodice.
+
+"What wilt thou do?" she asked.
+
+"The streets can offer me no more insult than is offered me in this
+house," she said slowly.
+
+It was in her mind that there were certainly unprotected gates at
+which she could get out of the city and return to Ascalon.
+
+At least the peril for her in this house was already too imminent for
+her to remain longer. She continued to Amaryllis:
+
+"Lady, you have been kind to me--in your way. You have been so in the
+face of your doubt that I am what I claim to be. How happy, then, you
+would have made my lot had I not been supplanted and denied! For all
+this I thank you. Mine would be a poor gratitude if I stay to make you
+regret your generosity. Wherefore I will go."
+
+She slipped past the three and entered her room. Before Amaryllis
+could gather resolution to protest, she was out again, clothed in
+mantle and vitta and, walking swiftly, disappeared into the vestibule.
+As they sat in the darkening hall, the three heard the doors close
+behind her.
+
+"She will return," said Philadelphus coolly, moving away.
+
+Gathering her robes about her, Salome swept out of the corridor and
+away. Amaryllis stood alone.
+
+Somewhere out in the city was Hesper the Ephesian. Amaryllis knew that
+Laodice would not return.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVII
+
+THE TANGLED WEB
+
+
+Meanwhile Jerusalem was in the fury of barbarous warfare. At this
+ravine and that debouching upon Golgotha, the Vale of Hinnom and the
+Valley of Tophet, whole legions of besiegers were stationed. Along the
+walls the men of Simon and the men of John tramped in armor. From the
+various gates furious sorties were made by swarms of unorganized Jews
+who fell upon the Romans unused to frantic warfare, and slaughtered,
+set fire to engines, destroyed banks and threw down fortifications and
+retreated within the gates before the demoralized Romans could rally.
+
+Catapult and ballista upon the eminences outside the walls kept up an
+unceasing rain of enormous stones which whistled and screamed in the
+air and shook Jerusalem to its foundations. The reverberating boom and
+the tremor of earth were varied from time to time by the splintering
+crash of houses crushing and the increase of uproar, as scores of
+luckless inhabitants went down under the falling rock. Giant cranes
+with huge, ludicrous awkward arms, heaved up pots of burning pitch and
+oil and flung them ponderously into the city to do whatever horror of
+fire and torture had not been done by the engines. Hourly the rattle
+of small stones increased, merely to attract the attention of the
+citizens to an activity to which they were so accustomed that it was
+almost unnoticed. At times citizens and soldiers rushed upon a
+threatened gate or segment of the wall and lent strength to keep the
+Romans out; at other times the defenses were forsaken while the
+besieged fell upon one another. Back from the broad summit of Olivet,
+which was the mountain of peace, the echoes gave all day long the
+shudder of the struggling city.
+
+The sun daily grew more heated; the cisterns and pools within the city
+began to shrink so rapidly that the inhabitants feared that the enemy
+had come at the source of the waters of Jerusalem and had cut them
+off. Hundreds of the wounded were allowed to die, simply as a defense
+of the wells and store-houses. Burial became too gigantic a labor, and
+John and Simon ordered the bodies thrown over the walls to prevent
+pestilence.
+
+Titus riding around the city on a day came upon a heap of this outcast
+dead and turned suddenly white. He rode back to his camp and within
+the hour there approached the walls under a flag of truce an imposing
+Jew of middle-age, with a superb beard and a veritable mantle of rich
+black hair escaping from his turban and falling heavy with life and
+strength upon a pair of great shoulders. He was simply dressed, but
+his stately carriage and splendid presence made a kingly garment out
+of his white gown.
+
+Those upon the wall knew him and though they were obliged to respect
+the banner under which he approached, they gnashed their teeth and
+greeted him with epithets, poisonous with hate. He was Flavius
+Josephus, one time patriot and enemy of Rome, but now secure under
+Titus' patronage, abettor of his patron against his fellow-countrymen.
+
+The Maccabee, among the fighting-men on the wall, saw his approach and
+discreetly stepped behind a soldier that he might not be singled out
+as a familiar toward which the approaching mediator would logically
+direct his appeal. He had no desire to be addressed by his name before
+this precarious mob already mad with rage at a turncoat.
+
+And thus concealed the Maccabee heard Josephus appeal to the Jews with
+apparent sincerity and affection, promise amnesty, protection and
+justice in his patron's name; heard his overtures greeted with fury
+and finally saw the Jews swarm over the walls and drive him to fly for
+his life up Gareb to the camp of Titus.
+
+It was not the first incident he had seen which showed him his own
+fate if it became known that he intended to treat with Rome. He put
+aside his calculations in that direction as a detail not yet in order,
+and turned to the organization of his army. Here again he met
+obstacle.
+
+Among his council of Bezethans he found an enthusiasm for some
+intangible purpose, objection to his own plans and a certain hauteur
+that he could not understand.
+
+"What is it you hope for, brethren?" he asked one night as he stood in
+the gloom of the crypt under the ruin with fifty of his ablest
+thinkers and soldiers about him.
+
+"The days of Samuel before Israel cursed itself with a king," one man
+declared. The others were suddenly silent.
+
+"Those days will not come to you," he answered patiently. "You must
+fight for them."
+
+"We will fight."
+
+"Good! Let us unite and I will lead you," the Maccabee offered.
+
+"But after you have led us, perhaps to victory, then what?" they asked
+pointedly.
+
+The Maccabee saw that they were sounding him for his ambitions, and
+discreetly effaced them.
+
+"Do with me what you will; or if you doubt me, choose a leader among
+yourselves."
+
+They shook their heads.
+
+"Then enlist under Simon and John and fight with them," he cried,
+losing patience.
+
+Murmurs and angry looks greeted this suggestion, and the Maccabee put
+out his hands toward them hopelessly.
+
+"Then what will you do?" he asked.
+
+"It shall be shown us," they replied; and with this answer, with his
+organization yet uneffected, his plans more than ever chaotic, the
+Maccabee began another day. Shrewd and resourceful as he believed
+himself to be, he beheld plan after plan reveal its inefficiency.
+Forced by some act of the city to abandon one idea, the next that
+followed found a new intractability. It seemed that there were no two
+heads in Jerusalem of a similar thought. Whoever was not demoralized
+by panic was fatally stubborn or mad. The single purpose that seemed
+to prevail was to hold out against reason.
+
+Finally he determined to pick the most rational of his men and shape
+an army that would be distinctly Jewish and enviable. Nothing Roman
+should mar its organization. He would have again the six hundred
+Gibborim of David, and after he had formed them into a body he would
+trust to the existing circumstances to direct him how to proceed to
+the assistance of Jerusalem with them. He should be the sole captain,
+the sole authority, the single commander of them all. He would not
+have an unwieldy army, but one perfectly devoted. He would lead by his
+own genius, attract and command by his own personality. With six
+hundred absolutely subject to his will, trained in endurance and
+steadfastness, he could achieve more surely than with an undisciplined
+horde which first of all must be fed.
+
+Throughout those days of predatory warfare he made careful selection
+of material for his army. As yet, while famine had not reduced
+Jerusalem to a skeleton, he could select for bodily strength and
+mental balance. He worked swiftly, sparing his men daily to the
+defense of the city against the Roman and daily sacrificing precious
+numbers of them to the pit of the dead just over the wall.
+
+They were weary days--days of increasing storm and multiplying
+calamity. Famine in some quarters of the city reached appalling
+proportions. Insurrections in these regions were so vigorously
+suppressed that the victims chose to starve and live rather than to
+revolt and perish. Pestilence broke out among the inhabitants near the
+eastern wall, against the other side of which the dead had been cast
+by hundreds; and a general flight from the city was stopped in full
+flood by the spectacle of some scores of unfortunates crucified by the
+Roman soldiers and set up in sight of the walls.
+
+Simon and John had a disastrous quarrel and during the interval, when
+the sentries and the fighting-men were killing each other, the Romans
+possessed the first fortification around Jerusalem, the Wall of
+Agrippa. The following day Titus pitched his camp within the limits of
+the Holy City, upon the site of Sennacherib's Assyrian bivouac.
+
+At sight of this signal advance, tumult broke out afresh in the city
+and for days Titus lay calmly by, merely harassing the Jews while he
+watched Jerusalem weaken itself by internal combat. The Maccabee,
+steadily training his picked Gibborim, saw these lulls as signs that
+Titus was still in the hope that the city would submit to occupation
+and spare him the repugnant task of slaughtering half a nation. In his
+soul he knew that at no time would Titus be unwilling to receive the
+voluntary capitulation of the city.
+
+So, composed and intent through struggle and terror, he continued to
+prepare for the day when an organized army could take the unhappy
+inhabitants out of the bloody hands of the two factionists, Simon and
+John.
+
+During one of the casual attacks on the Second Wall, a lean,
+lash-scarred maniac that had not ceased to cry night or day for seven
+years, "Woe unto Jerusalem!" mounted the Old Second Wall, and there
+pointed to his breast and added, "Woe unto me also!" At that instant a
+great stone struck him and tumbling with it to the ground, he was
+crushed into the earth and left so buried for all time.
+
+With the hushing of that embodiment of doom, silence fell upon the
+city and after that, panic; and during that Titus heaved his four
+legions against the Second Wall and took it. Simon was seized with
+frenzy, and with a body of crazed Idumeans rushed out upon the banks
+of the Romans and in one hour's time overthrew the army's work of days
+and so thoroughly set back the advance of the besieger that Titus
+resolved that no more insane sorties should be made from the gates.
+
+He retired to his camp and in a short time soldiers appeared with
+tape, stakes, sledges and spades and laid out an immense circle, all
+but compassing the great city of Jerusalem.
+
+The Maccabee saw all this. He stood on the wall above the roar and
+frenzy and looked across bleached stretches of sunny, rocky earth
+toward the orderly ranks of soldiers, the simple business, the
+tranquil speed of Rome making war, and understood that peaceful
+despatch as deadly.
+
+He saw the young general ride down to this circle, dismount and,
+catching a spade from the nearest legionary, drive it into the earth.
+When he tossed out the first clay, each of the men in the visible
+segment of that great cordon struck his implement into the ground. And
+even as the Maccabee watched, he saw grow up under his eyes a wall!
+
+He understood. Titus was walling against a wall; turning upon the Jews
+that same thing which they had reared against him. As the Maccabee
+stood gazing transfixed at this grim work, he heard beside him an old
+voice say, with terrible conviction:
+
+"_O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest
+them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy
+children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her
+wings, and ye would not!... For the days shall come upon thee, that
+thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round,
+and keep thee in on every side, and shall lay thee even with the
+ground, and thy children within thee; and they shall not leave in thee
+one stone upon another; because thou knewest not the time of thy
+visitation._"
+
+The Maccabee, shaken with the culmination of Rome's resolution and
+afraid in spite of himself, whirled angrily upon that voice speaking
+doom at his side. There in the old ragged tunic bound about him with
+rope, stood the old man he had rescued and had sheltered persistently
+for many days.
+
+The old man faced the young man's rage with supernatural composure and
+strength. With clenched hands, the Maccabee stood away from him and
+felt that he threatened with his fists a hoary citadel that armies had
+beaten themselves against in vain.
+
+The Maccabee did not speak to his old pensioner. He felt the futility
+of words against this thing which seemed to be a revelation, denying
+absolutely all of his ambitions. He dropped from his position and,
+pushing his way through the distress upon the city, turned toward the
+house of Amaryllis. It was a climacteric hour, when men should look
+well to the protection of all that was near and dear to them.
+
+When he was gone a strange, bent figure with long white hair and a
+gray distorted face came from the shadow of one of the towers and
+plucked the old Christian's tunic. The Christian turned and seeing who
+stood beside him said with intense surety in his tones:
+
+"It is proven. Accept the Lord Jesus while it is time, my son, for
+behold the hour of the last day of this city is fulfilled!"
+
+The apparition lifted a palsied hand on which the skin was yet fair
+and young and pointed after the Maccabee, losing himself in the
+groaning mass in the city.
+
+"If I believe, I must tell him!" he said.
+
+"Whatever thou hast done against that man must be amended," the
+Christian declared.
+
+The palsied figure shrank and wringing his hands about each other said
+in a whisper that sounded like wind among dried leaves:
+
+"I, who saw the candor of perfect trust in his eyes, once, I can not
+behold their reproach--I, who love him, and sold him--for a handful of
+gold!"
+
+The old Christian laid his hand on the other's arm.
+
+"Another Judas?" he said. The apparition made no answer.
+
+"Nay, then; tell it me," the Christian urged. But the other shrank
+away from him, while distrust collected in his eyes.
+
+"I fear thee; the evil man fears the good one, even more than the good
+man fears the evil one. I will not tell thee."
+
+"But thou hast thy bread from this Hesper; thou hast thy shelter from
+him. He will not injure thee."
+
+"Injure me! Not with his hands, perhaps. But he would look at me, he
+would kill me with his eyes! Thou canst not dream what evil I have
+done him!"
+
+The old Christian looked at him for a time, but with the hopefulness
+of the spiritually confident.
+
+"Christ spare thee, till thou hast the strength to do right!" he
+exclaimed. But the palsied man covered his face with his hands and
+groaned. The old Christian took him by the arm and led him down from
+the wall and back to the cavern under the ruins.
+
+"In thy good time, O Lord," he said to himself, beginning with that
+incident a ministry that should not end.
+
+It was dark when the Maccabee came down into the ravine in which the
+Greek's house was builded. In the shadow the house cast before it he
+saw some one pass the sentry lines. The soldiers looked after that
+figure. Presently, emerging into the lesser darkness of the open
+streets, it proved to be a woman. The Maccabee stopped. By the
+movements, now hurried, now slow, he believed that the night was full
+of apprehension for this unknown faring into the disordered city. She
+was coming in his direction. He stepped into shadow to see who would
+come forth from shelter at such an hour.
+
+The next instant she hurried by his hiding-place and the Maccabee saw
+with amazement that it was the girl he loved. He sprang out to speak
+to her, but the sound of his footsteps frightened her and she ran.
+
+The whole hilly foreground of Jerusalem was lifted like a black and
+impending cloud over her, a-throb with violence and strife. Here and
+there were lights on the bosom of the looming blackness, but they only
+emphasized the darkness pressing on the outskirts of the radiance.
+Every area way and alley had its sound. The air was full of footsteps;
+behind her a voice called to her. She dashed by yawning darkness that
+was an open alley, hurried toward lights, halted precipitately at
+signals of danger and veered aside at unexpected sounds. Once she
+stumbled upon the body of a sleeper who had come down into the
+darkness of the ravine to pass the night. At her suppressed cry the
+Maccabee sprang forward, but she caught herself and ran faster.
+
+He ceased then to attempt to stop her. Curiosity to know what brought
+her out into danger at night impelled him to follow near enough to
+protect her, but unsuspected until she had revealed her mission to
+him.
+
+A hungry dog, probably the last one to escape the execution which had
+been meted out to all useless consumers of food, barked at her heels
+and brought her up sharply.
+
+The beast in his siege of her circled in the dark around near enough
+to the Maccabee hidden in the darkness for him to deliver a vindictive
+kick in the staring ribs of the brute. When the howl of the surprised
+dog faded up the black ravine, Laodice ran on. The Maccabee, silently
+pursuing, heard with a contracting heart that she was crying softly
+from terror and bewilderment. Not yet, however, had she approached the
+danger of Jerusalem, which John had kept far removed from the
+precincts of Amaryllis' house.
+
+She was entering Akra. The heap of grain, yet burning, showed a dull
+black-red mound over which towered a column of strong incense. Here,
+for the night was cool, lay in circles many of the unhoused Passover
+guests. Here, also, was wakefulness and the hatchment of evil.
+
+The running girl was upon them before she knew it. One of the figures
+that sat with its back to the dull glow saw her approaching. Instantly
+he rose upon one knee and snatched her dress as she ran.
+
+Jerked from her balance, she screamed and threw out her hands to keep
+from falling upon the shoulders of her assailant. One or two others
+with unintelligible sounds struggled up, and as she fell, the Maccabee
+leaped from the darkness, wrenched her from the grasp of her captor,
+and warding off attack with his knife, fled with her into the
+darkness.
+
+The transfer of control over her had been made so swiftly that in her
+stupor of terror she hardly realized it. She was struggling silently
+and strongly in his hold, when he clasped her to him with a firmer
+impulsive embrace and whispered to her:
+
+"Comfort thee, dear heart! It is I, Hesper!"
+
+She ceased to resist so suddenly and was so tensely still that he knew
+the shock of immense reaction was having its way with her.
+
+He knew without asking that she had been forced to leave the shelter
+of the Greek's roof, and though his rage threatened to rise up and
+blind him he was not entirely unaware of the benefit the inhospitality
+of others had given him. At last she was with him; entirely in his
+care.
+
+It was a safe shelter into which she was brought, but no luxurious
+one. There was light enough from the single torch stuck in a crevice
+in the ancient rock to show that it was habitable. The immense floor
+was packed hard by the trampling of many feet; overhead, lost in
+gloom, there must have been a rocky roof, but it was invisible. On the
+ledges of rocks were belongings by heaps and collections, showing that
+this was an abiding-place for great numbers. In the far shadows she
+distinguished long, silent, mummied windrows of men wrapped in
+blankets, sleeping. Huge gloomy piles of provisions filled up shadowy
+corners; about under the light was the litter left in the wake of
+human counsel; over all was the air of repose and occupancy that made
+a home out of the burrow.
+
+Though the place held a great number of refugees, the footstep of the
+Maccabee wakened resounding emptiness. At the threshold he slackened
+his step and looked with pathetic anxiety at whatever light on
+Laodice's face would show her opinion of her refuge. But the uncertain
+torch revealed nothing and he led her in and across to a solitary
+place where rugs from some looted house had been folded up for a
+pallet and spread about for carpets. She sat down and awaited his
+speech.
+
+He motioned to the spacious barrenness about him.
+
+"Canst thou content thyself in this place?" he asked, hesitating.
+
+She nodded, but feeling that her reply had not shown all that words
+might, she lifted her face that he might see therein that which she
+could not trust her lips to say.
+
+It was her undoing. Her weakness overwhelmed her and burying her face
+in the folds of her mantle, she wept.
+
+After a dismayed silence, he bent over her and said with a quiver of
+distress in his voice:
+
+"I--I have work, here, to do, but I shall take thee out of the city
+for better refuge--"
+
+That she should seem to be grieving over the nature of the shelter
+given her, stirred her deeply. She half rose and with the light
+shining on her face, filled with gratitude in spite of her tears, took
+his hand in both of hers and pressed it with pathetic insistence.
+
+He understood her.
+
+He laid a hand unsteady with its tremor of delight and young eagerness
+upon the vitta and it slipped off her hair. As it dropped, the subtle
+warm fragrance of the heavy locks, now braided in maidenly style,
+reached him; the liveliness of her relaxed young figure communicated
+itself to him without his touch; all the invitation of her
+helplessness swept him to the very edge of abandoning his restraint.
+On his dark face a transformation occurred. All the hardness, even his
+years and his experience vanished from him and a soft recovering flush
+faintly colored his cheeks. In that sudden bloom of beauty in his face
+was stamped a realization of the far progress of his triumph. She was
+in his house and dependent on him, within the very reach of his arms.
+
+When she looked up at him again, she read all this in his face, and
+instantly there returned to her, with warning intensity, the fear of
+her love of him. The last obstacle but her own conscience that stood
+between her and his perfect supremacy over her life had suddenly been
+swept away.
+
+She started away from him, and put up her hands to ward off his touch.
+
+"If you do that," she said in a tone sharp with distress, "it is sin
+and I shall be cursed! I shall have to go back to him!"
+
+Then she had voluntarily left Julian, perhaps to seek him!
+
+"You shall not go back to him!" he exclaimed. "After I have given up
+everything but my life to have you for myself!"
+
+"You must not think of me in that way!" she commanded him vehemently.
+"I am a married woman! You shall remember that! If you forget it, I
+will go out into the streets and ask the Idumeans to kill me!"
+
+"Nay, peace, peace! I shall do you no harm! You are frightened! I will
+do nothing that you would not have me do! Be comforted. Not any one in
+all the world has your happiness at heart so much as I. Believe me!"
+
+"Believe _me_!" she insisted. "I am weary of doubt and denial. I am
+only safe if you recognize me as that which I claim to be. Answer me!
+You do believe I am the wife of Philadelphus?"
+
+"I believed it, at once," he said frankly.
+
+"Then--then--" but she flung her hands over her face and slipped down
+on the rugs. For a moment he hesitated, restraining the impulse to
+break over the limits she had laid down for him.
+
+Then he rose and, summoning one of the women who had taken refuge in
+the crypt, sent her to remain with the girl, and departed, shaken and
+uncertain, to his own place.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVIII
+
+IN THE SUNLESS CRYPT
+
+
+The twilight of the cavern rarely revealed enough of the features of
+her fellows to Laodice for her to identify them or for them to
+identify her. She lived among them a dusky shadow among shadows. And
+because of her fear that Philadelphus might be searching for her, she
+stayed in the sunless crypt day by day until the Maccabee, noting with
+affectionate distress that she was growing white and weak, bade her
+take one of the women and venture up to the light.
+
+There were, besides the women, two men who took no part in the
+preparation for war which went on about them in the cavern day and
+night. While weapons and armor were made and tramping ranks formed and
+broke before the commands of the lithe dark commander of that fortress
+and subdued but fierce councils took place around torches--while all
+this went on, they kept back, even apart from the women, and said
+nothing.
+
+Laodice saw that they were physically unfit; that one was very old and
+the other very feeble and her heart warmed again to that stern master
+who saw them fed as abundantly as his most valued men. These, then,
+were those Christians whom he had taken into his protection because of
+the Name which had inspired a shepherd boy to save his life.
+
+When he commanded Laodice to go up into the sunlight, he approached
+the corner in which the two useless men hid and bade them, too, to go
+up into the air.
+
+"Let us have no sickness in this place," he said bluntly and turned on
+his heel and left them to obey.
+
+Laodice took one of the older women and timidly climbing the steps
+from which the rubbish had been pushed away by the climbing hundreds,
+went through the dusk of the passage that terminated in a brilliancy
+that dazzled her. And as she walked she heard the footsteps of the two
+men behind her.
+
+Up in the chaos of fallen columns, she stood a moment with her hands
+pressed over her eyes. Only little by little was she able to permit
+the full blaze of the Judean sun to reach them. The uproar on
+Jerusalem after the muffled silence of the underground cavern filled
+her with terror, and she pressed close to the shelter of the entrance
+until the woman at her side reassured her.
+
+"It is nothing," the woman said, with a dreary patience. "It is as it
+was yesterday. I come here every day. I know."
+
+After a while Laodice looked about her. The entrance to their refuge
+was about the middle of the ruin and therefore a great many paces back
+from the streets, so that she did not see Jerusalem's agonies face to
+face. But she saw enough to make her cold and to turn her shivering
+and panic-stricken into the darkness of the crypt below.
+
+She saw the ascending streets of Zion and the tall fortifications
+mounting the heights within the city's limits. There she saw the flash
+of swords, swung afar off, spears brandished and the running hither
+and thither of defenders on the wall. Below she saw the remote
+constricted passages between rows of desolate houses, moving with
+people, sounding with clamor. There she saw combats, terrible scenes
+of frenzy, deaths and unnamable horrors; starvelings gnawing their
+nails; shadows of infants pressed to hollow bosoms; old men too weak
+to walk that went on hands and knees; young men and young women in
+rags that failed to cover them, and wandering skeletons screaming,
+"Woe!"
+
+Meanwhile huge stones mounted over the walls and fell within the city;
+three great towers planted beyond the walls, out of range of the
+Jewish engines and equipped with superior machines, were steadily
+devastating the entire quarter near which they were erected. Here
+two-thirds of the forces of Jerusalem were concentrated in a vain
+effort to resist the dire inroads of these effective engines. Here,
+the Maccabee and his Gibborim stood shoulder to shoulder with the
+Idumeans and fanatics of Simon and John, and here the half-mad
+defenders awakened at last to the fact that only divine interference
+could save the city against Rome.
+
+In the south and the east conflagrations roared and crackled, where
+burning oil had been scattered over some remaining structures near the
+walls. When a great ram began its thunder somewhere near the Sheep
+Gate, there came a hollow booming noise of deafening volume from the
+charnel pits outside the walls and a black cloud of incredible depth
+soared up into the skies.
+
+Laodice, dumb with horror, looked at the prodigy without
+understanding, but the woman at her side shuddered.
+
+"God help us!" she exclaimed. "They are vultures!"
+
+Laodice turned to rush back into the cavern and so faced the two men
+who stood behind her.
+
+One, at sight of her, shrank with a gasp, and, averting his shaggy
+head till the long white locks covered his face, fled back into the
+crypt.
+
+The other was gazing with unseeing eyes across groaning Jerusalem.
+
+"_I am the man_," he was saying aloud, but to himself, "_that hath
+seen affliction by the rod of His wrath._"
+
+The sight of him had a paralyzing effect upon Laodice. She saw, before
+her, Nathan, the Christian, who had buried her father, who had blessed
+her, who would know and could testify to a surety that she was the
+wife of Philadelphus!
+
+She slipped by him without a sound and hurried down into the darkest
+corner of the cavern.
+
+Circumstance had found her in her refuge and would drive her away from
+this sweet home back to that hateful house, to the man she did not
+love!
+
+For many days, with increasing distress, Laodice avoided Nathan, the
+Christian. With that fascinated terror which at times forces human
+creatures to examine a peril, she felt irresistibly impelled to try
+his memory of events, that she might know if indeed he would recognize
+her.
+
+Though she turned cold and flashed white when he came upon her one day
+in the darkness of their shelter, she felt nevertheless the relief of
+approaching a solution to her perplexity.
+
+"They tell me," he said with the deliberate speech of the old, "that
+Titus is once more permitting citizens to depart from Jerusalem
+unharmed."
+
+"Then," she said, grasping at this hope, "why do you stay here in this
+peril?"
+
+"Why should I leave it? Even with the singers who wept by the waters
+of Babylon, I prefer Jerusalem above my chief joy. Except for the time
+when we of the Way were warned to depart, I have been in Jerusalem all
+my life. Then, though I had gone as far as Cęsarea on my way to
+Antioch to join the brethren there, homesickness overtook me and I
+turned in my tracks, saying no man farewell, and came back."
+
+"A weary journey for one so old," she said gently.
+
+Would he remember also that it had been dangerous?
+
+"Nay, but a journey full of works and reward. And I discovered at the
+end of it that I had lived in error forty years; that Christ never
+ceases to prove Himself."
+
+Already the forbidden tenets of the Nazarene faith had entered into
+his words. But feeling somehow that her deflection from uprightness
+covered her whole life, there was no reason why she should not hear
+what these people believed and have done with it.
+
+"Art thou a Christian?" she asked timidly.
+
+"I am a believer in Christ, but whether I may call myself one of the
+blessed I do not know, for they have had faith. But I demanded a sign.
+Behold it! The ruin of the City of David!"
+
+Her eyes widened with alarm.
+
+"Is there no hope?" she exclaimed.
+
+He looked at her, even in his old age impressed with the immense
+importance life and love must have to so beautiful and beloved a
+woman. Presently he said, as if to himself:
+
+"Yea, be thou blessed, O thou Redeemer, that givest life to them to
+whom life is dear and death approacheth."
+
+Her concern for concealment vanished entirely in her rising terror for
+the future of the Holy City.
+
+"I pray thee, Rabbi," she said in a low voice, drawing close to him,
+"tell me what thy people believe about the city. I have heard--but it
+can not be true!"
+
+"Do not be troubled about the city," he answered. "Ask me rather how
+to become safeguarded against any disaster, greater even than the fall
+of cities."
+
+"It is not for myself," she protested earnestly, "but for the world.
+Is there not a King to come to Israel?"
+
+"There is, but not yet, my daughter. Of that day and hour no man
+knoweth. Now is Daniel's abomination of desolation; the generation
+passeth and the prophecy is fulfilled. Jerusalem is perishing."
+
+Seeing the wave of panic sweep over her, he put out a soothing hand.
+
+"Yet, do not fear. For such as you the Redeemer died; for your kind
+the Kingdom of Heaven is built, and the King whom the earth did not
+receive is for ever Lord of it."
+
+The veiled reference to the tragedy which Philadelphus had recounted
+stood out with more prominence than the promise in his words.
+
+"Whom the earth did not receive?" she repeated. "O prophet, as thou
+boasteth truthful lips and a hoary head, tell me what hath befallen
+us."
+
+"Hear it not as a calamity," he said reassuringly. "Thou canst make it
+of all things the most profitable, if thou wilt. Forget the city. I,
+who would forget it but can not, bid thee do this. Behold, there is
+another Jerusalem which shall not fall. Look to that and be not
+afraid."
+
+Her lips, parted to protest against the vague answer, closed at the
+final sentence and the Christian pressed his advantage.
+
+"Of that Jerusalem there is no like on earth. Against its walls no
+enemy ever comes; neither warfare nor hunger nor thirst nor suffering
+nor death. This which David builded is a poor city, a humble city
+compared to that New Jerusalem. There the King is already come; there
+the citizens are at peace and in love with one another. There thou
+shalt have all that thy heart yearneth after, and all that thy heart
+yearneth after shall be right."
+
+In that city would it be right that she love Hesper instead of
+Philadelphus, and that she should have her lover instead of her lawful
+husband?
+
+While she turned these things over in her mind, he wisely went on with
+his story. Shrewdly sensing the young woman's anxiety, the old
+Christian guessed the interest to her of the Messiah's history before
+His teaching and began with prophecy to support the authenticity of
+the wonderful Galilean's claim to divinity. It was no fisherman or
+weaver of tent-cloth who brought forth the declarations of the
+comforter of Hezekiah, the captive prophet and the priest in the land
+of the Chaldeans. His was no barbarous manner or slipshod tongue of
+the market-place and the wheat-fields, but the polish and the
+clean-cut flawless language of the synagogues and the colleges.
+Laodice saw in the gesture and phrase the refinement of her father,
+Costobarus, of the gentlest Judean blood.
+
+"I saw Him," he went on in a low voice.
+
+Laodice with her intent gaze on the beatified face put her hand to her
+heart.
+
+"Forty years ago," the old voice continued, "I saw Him first in
+Galilee. There He was disbelieved and cast out. He came then unto
+Jerusalem and I saw Him there heal lepers, cast out evil spirits, cure
+the blind and the sick and the palsied. And in the house of Jairus and
+at Nain, I saw Him raise the dead.
+
+"I saw Him come to Jerusalem. Multitudes followed Him and accompanied
+Him, casting their mantles and palm-branches in the way that His mule
+might tread upon them."
+
+The old man pointed south toward the single summit from which Christ
+approaching could overlook Jerusalem.
+
+"On that hill," he said, "while the multitudes hailed Him and the
+sound of Alleluia shook the air, He reined in His meek beast and
+looked upon this city, and wept over it. When He spoke, He said, _If
+thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things
+which belong unto thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes. For
+the days shall come upon thee, that thine enemies shall cast a trench
+about thee, and compass thee round, and keep thee in on every side,
+and shall lay thee even with the ground, and thy children within thee;
+and they shall not leave in thee one stone upon another; because thou
+knewest not the time of thy visitation._
+
+[Illustration: "And there His enemies crucified Him."]
+
+"And three days later, I saw the Rock of David and all that multitude
+follow Him unto the Hill of the Skull and there His enemies crucified
+Him!"
+
+After a paralyzed silence, Laodice whispered with frozen lips,
+
+"In God's name, why?"
+
+But he wisely did not pause with the calamity. He had the whole of the
+beginnings of Christianity to tell, a long narrative that contained as
+yet no dogma. Paul had seen the great light on the road to Damascus,
+and accepting apostleship to all the world had fought a good fight and
+had come unto his crown of righteousness; Peter had established the
+Church and had fed the sheep and had been offered up by the Beast who
+was Nero; John the Divine was seeing visions of the Apocalypse in the
+Island of Patmos; Herod Antipas, "that fox," had passed to his own
+place, prisoner and exile, sacrifice to a mad Cęsar's imaginings;
+Judas had hanged himself; Pilate had drowned himself; thousands of the
+saints had died for the faith by fire and sword and wild beasts; kings
+had been converted and of the believers in Rome it was said, _Your
+faith is spoken of throughout the whole world_.
+
+Laodice sat with clasped hands, intent on each word as it fell from
+the lips of the aged teacher, seeing at one and the same time the
+Kingdom of Heaven constructed and her dream of an earthly empire
+falling.
+
+"He said," the Christian continued, "_They that are whole need not a
+physician; but they that are sick. I came not to call the righteous,
+but sinners to repentance._"
+
+Repentance was a rite for Laodice, a payment of offering, a process to
+the righteously inclined, a thing that could in no wise purify the
+sinner as to make him worthy of association with the upright. The old
+Christian's use of the word was different; he had said that the
+Messiah came to the sinner, and not to the righteous. Had the young
+Jewess been less in need of comfort in her own consciousness of
+spiritual delinquency she would have set down the old teacher as one
+of the idlest dealers in contradiction. But now she listened with
+keener zest; perchance in this doctrine there was balm for her hurt.
+She made some answer which showed the awakening of this new interest
+and then with infinite poetry and earnestness he began to unfold the
+teachings of Christ.
+
+A woman came to them with wine and food, for the midday had come, but
+neither noticed it. In his fervor to enlighten this tender soul, the
+old man forgot his weariness; in her wonder at the strangely gentle
+doctrine which had contradicted all the world's previous usage, the
+girl forgot her prejudice. She listened; and with such signs as change
+of expression, flushes of emotion, movements of surprise and
+brightenings of interest to encourage him, the old Christian talked.
+When he had progressed sufficiently to round out the theory of
+Christianity, she had grasped a new standard. The contrast between the
+old and the new made itself instantly felt. On one hand was the simple
+and logical; on the other the complex and dogmatic. The Christian was
+able to measure proportionately how much should be laid upon her mind
+for study at once and while she still waited, he rose from his place.
+
+"There is more; yet there are other days," he said.
+
+But she caught his hand as he rose and with a sudden yearning in her
+eyes whispered:
+
+"O Rabbi, what said He of love?"
+
+"Love?" he repeated, with a softening about his lips. "The Master
+blessed love between man and woman."
+
+"But, but--" she faltered, "if one love another than one's wedded
+spouse, then what?"
+
+His face grew grave.
+
+"That is not lawful even among you, who are still of the old faith."
+
+"But suppose--"
+
+He laid a kindly hand on the one that held his.
+
+"Suffer but sin not. He that endureth unto the end shall be saved."
+
+"What end?"
+
+"Death."
+
+She was silent while she gazed at him with change showing on her
+gradually paling face.
+
+"Then--then what is in thy faith for the forlorn in love?" she
+exclaimed.
+
+"Peace, and the consciousness of the joy of Christ in your
+steadfastness," he said.
+
+She rose. How much longer had she to live?
+
+"And thou sayest we die?"
+
+"_Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the
+soul_," he said gently.
+
+Fear Hesper, then, but not the Roman. While she stood in the immense
+debate of heart and conscience he laid a tender hand on her head.
+
+"Perchance in His mercy thou shalt be welcomed there first by thy
+father, whom I buried, and by thy mother."
+
+The sudden recurrence to that past tragedy and the unfolding of his
+recognition fairly swept Laodice off her feet with shock and alarm. If
+he noted her feeling, he was sorry he had not succeeded in comforting
+her with a promise of reunion with her beloved in that other land. He
+took away his tremulous hand from her hair.
+
+Leaving her transfixed with all he had said, he moved painfully away,
+stiffened by long sitting while he discoursed.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIX
+
+THE FALSE PROPHET
+
+
+It was a different Amaryllis that the pretended Philadelphus faced
+now, from the one who had welcomed him on his arrival in Jerusalem
+months ago. Then she had been so cold and self-contained that it would
+have been effrontery to discuss her hopes with her. Now, with the
+avarice of love in her eyes, with wishfulness and defeat making their
+sorry signs on her face, she was a creature that even the humblest
+would have longed to help.
+
+Philadelphus sat opposite her in the ivory chair which was hers by
+right. She sat in the exedra and listened eagerly to the things he
+said with her finger-tips on her lips and her eyes gazing from under
+her brow as her head drooped.
+
+She had ceased long ago to debate idly on the actual identity of the
+man who had called himself Hesper of Ephesus. There was another
+question that absorbed her. Of late, it had been brought home to her
+that the charm of Laodice for the stranger from Ephesus, to whom the
+Greek knew the girl had fled, had been her purity. Why should it
+matter so much about virtue? she had asked herself. Why should it
+weigh so immeasurably more than the noble gifts of wit and beauty and
+strength and charm? Behold, she was wise enough to educate a barbarous
+nation, beautiful enough to bewitch potentates--for a time--strong
+enough to take a city; yet Hesper, who best of all could appreciate
+the value of these things, had turned from her to Laodice, who was
+merely chaste.
+
+The greater part of the jealous and bitter passion that had shaken her
+then was dumb regret that the measure of charm was so irrational--and
+that she had not believed in it, in time, in time!
+
+Now, however, since she had become convinced that Laodice had gone to
+Hesper for refuge, hope had awakened in her, but so filled with
+uncertainty and lack of confidence in another's weakness that it was
+little more than a torture to her.
+
+If Laodice had gone to this winsome stranger, either claiming to be
+the wife of Philadelphus or acknowledging the imposture, there was now
+no difference between Laodice and herself!
+
+But, she asked herself, was it not possible that this lovely girl who
+had shown signs of illimitable fortitude, could live in the shelter of
+the captivating Hesper as uprightly as she had lived under the roof of
+the man she called her husband?
+
+In one exigency, the hopes of Amaryllis budded; in the other, her
+intuitive belief in the strength of Laodice discouraged her. And while
+she alternately hoped and doubted, Philadelphus, in the chair opposite
+her, talked.
+
+"It follows that you and I must work together to gain diverse ends. If
+our fortunes are to be tragic, we are undoing each other in this
+conjunction. Since I in all frankness prefer it to turn out comedy,
+let us make no error. Are you weary of John? Do you seek a new
+diversion?"
+
+She looked at him, at first puzzled, then with a frown. It leaped to
+her lips, grown impatient with suffering, to tell him all that she had
+evolved of the histories of himself, his lady and of Hesper; but there
+seemed to be an element of recklessness in that which threatened to do
+away with a means for her success. He did not wait for her answer.
+
+"And I," he said with mock intensity, "am done to death with
+weariness--with my moneyer, this lady of mine. Let us be diverted
+while we live, for by the signs we shall all die soon."
+
+"Where," he began when her mind wandered entirely from him, "dost thou
+think the mysterious man hath taken my other wife?
+
+"I would I knew," he continued, conducting his inquiry alone. "It will
+be right simple to have her beauty spoiled in this hungry town, unless
+he takes tenderest care of her."
+
+There was still no comment, but the lively sparkle in the Greek's eye
+showed that he had touched upon a jealous spot.
+
+"And by the by," he pursued, "what does this stranger, whom I can not
+remember having known, look like? A villain?"
+
+She answered now in a voice filled with rancor.
+
+"Win away the girl from him and thou wilt know thyself to be the
+better man; but study how much he hath outstripped thee and thou shalt
+decide for thyself, then, that he is handsomer, more winsome, stronger
+and more profitable. Describe him for thyself."
+
+"Out upon you! How irritable misfortune makes most of us! Now, here is
+my lady. She would fail to see the humor in my fetching back this
+pretty impostor. Alas! Were I Deucalion or Pyrrha or whoever else it
+was that repeopled the world, I should have left jealousy out of the
+make-up of wives. It is a needless element. It gives them no pleasure,
+and Jove! how inconvenient it is for husbands! Now, I am not jealous
+of my wife. In fact, had any man the hardihood to supplant me, I
+should not discourage him; I should not, by my soul!"
+
+"Why," she burst out again, irritated beyond control at his manner,
+"do you not leave this place?"
+
+He swung his foot idly and smiled.
+
+"I shall when I can take with me this dear pretty impostor who is so
+determined to have me," he answered lightly.
+
+"Will you?" she asked eagerly. "Is that why you remain?"
+
+"And for my lady's dowry. She keeps the key. But had I the girl
+cloaked and hooded for flight, I might go, even without the treasure.
+The times are precarious, you observe."
+
+She rose almost precipitately and hurried over to the swaying curtain
+of some heavy white material like samite, covering that which appeared
+to be a blind arch in the wall. She drew the hanging aside. It had
+hidden the black mouth of a tunnel, closed by a brass wicket which was
+locked.
+
+"Here," she said rapidly, "is what strengthens John in his folly. This
+is a passage that leads under the Temple through Moriah into Tophet.
+The whole city is underlaid with these galleries, but this is the only
+one which leads to safety."
+
+She dropped the curtain and approached him.
+
+"But thou canst not go out of that passage alone!"
+
+He smiled, and then with that boyish impulsiveness that he had
+cultivated to cover the evil in his nature, he thrust out his hand to
+her.
+
+"Here is my hand on it!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Go, then, and cease not till you have found her. Then, by any or all
+the gods, I shall see that you do not go out of that passage
+empty-handed."
+
+He smiled at her radiantly and went at once to his chambers.
+
+When he reached the apartments, he found them silent and deserted. He
+seized upon the opportunity as most propitious for a search for the
+possible hiding-place of the dowry of two hundred talents.
+
+When he opened first the great press in which his lady kept her
+raiment he was confronted by emptiness. Dismayed, he turned to look
+into the room and found the chests for the most part open and rifled.
+On the brazier, now cold, lay a wax tablet. He snatched it up and read:
+
+ Received of Julian of Ephesus the appended salvage in good repair.
+ Items: One wife, Two hundred talents.
+
+ JOHN, KING OF JERUSALEM.
+
+He went back to the andronitis of Amaryllis.
+
+"I have lost interest in the treasure," he said whimsically. "But I'll
+go out and look for the girl. I--I should like to discover of a truth
+if the passage leads out of Jerusalem."
+
+Amaryllis closed her lips firmly. Philadelphus read in the look that
+he could not escape without Laodice.
+
+Without further speech, he went to the vestibule, took his cloak and
+kerchief from the porter and went out into the city.
+
+It was nearly midnight when he passed into the streets. The tumult of
+assault on the walls had ceased. The long lines of beacon-fires on the
+walls showed only a few men in arms posted there. Without there came
+no sound of activity in the camp of the Roman. The streets below,
+lighted up by the ever-burning beacons, showed its usual restless
+tramping of houseless, hungry ones. But there was no talk; each one
+who walked the passages went wrapped in his own dismal thoughts; the
+thousands took no notice of one another. Jerusalem was as silent as a
+city stricken with plague.
+
+From the summit of Zion, which Philadelphus mounted, he could see
+three Roman war-towers, planted along the outer works, dimly lighted,
+and manned by a vigilant garrison of legionaries. These had been a
+dread and a destruction which the Jews had been unable to overthrow;
+coigns of vantage from which the enemy had been able to deal the
+sturdiest blows of the campaign. They had permitted no rest to the
+defenders on the wall; they had spread ruin by fire and carnage, by
+arrow and sling for days. Sorties against them had resulted in the
+death of their assailants, only. Jewish engines accomplished nothing
+against them. The three, alone, were taking Jerusalem.
+
+Philadelphus looked at their tall shapes, black against the remote
+illumination of the Roman camp, and inwardly hoped that they would
+hold off complete destruction of the city, until he had found the
+desirable woman.
+
+No one noticed him; men passed him like shadows with their eyes ever
+on the ground; no one spoke; nothing disturbed the deadly quiet of the
+falling city.
+
+But the next minute, Philadelphus, who walked alertly, saw people step
+out into gutters or press against walls, as if to allow some one to
+pass. Awakening interest ran abroad over the street ahead of him. A
+lane between the wandering multitude opened almost by magic. Through
+it, walking swiftly, his head up, his mystic eyes ignited, came
+Seraiah, soldier of Jehovah. There was no sound of his footfall. His
+garments flashed in the light of the beacons, but there was not even a
+whisper of their motion. But he had changed. There was fierce,
+superhuman intent in the despatch of his gait and in the uplift of his
+superb head. After him, as he passed, ran whispers. Each one stopped
+and looked. He went down the uneven slope of Zion as some great shade
+borne on a swift air.
+
+Two or three bold ones began to move after him. Others followed. The
+little nucleus grew. Philadelphus was caught in it. Numbers were added
+as courage grew with numbers. From intersecting streets people came.
+Some, although oppressed by the silence, asked what it was and were
+silenced quickly. Others began to mutter unintelligible predictions,
+and their neighbors shook their heads without understanding that which
+was said.
+
+The news of Seraiah's mysterious progress communicated itself to rank
+and rank and spread abroad. Faces appeared against a background of
+lights at barred windows, along the balustrades of house-tops, from
+areas and ruins. Philadelphus, fascinated and astonished at this
+curious demonstration, was contented to pass with it. Silence, except
+for the rustling of garments and the multitudinous footfall, fell
+about the vicinity.
+
+Ahead of them, Seraiah moved. His steps, finely balanced, passed over
+obstructions where most of his followers stumbled, and when he turned
+across Akra and faced the Old Wall, the excitement became painful.
+
+His pace was flying; many of his followers were running. It seemed
+that he was going against the Wall. Dozens anticipated that course and
+skirting through short ways clambered up on the fortifications and
+clung there though menaced by the sentries until Seraiah appeared.
+
+At a narrow point in the street that ended against the wall, Seraiah
+met that Jew who had become a maniac on the day Jerusalem attacked
+Titus. Without warning the maniac leaped up into an intensely rigid
+posture; his legs spread, his lean arms upstretched at painful
+tension, his mouth wide, his eyes dilated immensely in their hollow
+depths.
+
+Seraiah passed him as if no man stood in his way. Instantly the maniac
+wheeled, as a huge spread-eagle wind-vane on its staff, and stood at
+gaze, the broad uninterrupted light of the beacon shining down on him
+and the mysterious man. The street ended short of the wall. About the
+base of the fortification was an open space, in which was planted a
+scaling-ladder. Seraiah climbed this, an infinitesimal detail on the
+great blank of blackened stone.
+
+Hundreds, rushing upon the wall, though a goodly distance from the
+point at which the strange man had mounted, climbed it and beat off
+the sentries.
+
+And the foremost who reached the top saw the Roman Tower directly
+opposite Seraiah shudder suddenly and sink in a roaring cloud of dust
+upon itself to the earth.
+
+Instantly the maniac below broke the tense silence with a scream that
+was heard in the paralyzed Roman camp:
+
+"It is He, the Deliverer! Come!"
+
+Of the thousands of Jews that heard the madman's cry, every heart
+credited it. Hundreds melted away suddenly, as if stricken with terror
+at what they might see; other hundreds scrambled down from their
+places to run purposelessly, crying aimless things to the night over
+the city; yet others covered their faces with their arms and fell in
+their places, expecting the end of the world; and of the rest, the
+less imaginative, the more composed and the more curious, remained on
+the walls to see enacted a further miracle. Uproar had broken out
+instantly among the four stolid legions of Titus on the Assyrian
+bivouac. Lights flashed out everywhere; great running to and fro could
+be distinguished; rapid trumpet-calls and the prolonged roll of drums
+from company quarters to quarters were echoed back from Antonia and
+from Hippicus. The startled shouts of commanders; the nervous dropping
+of arms; the sharp excited response to roll-call; the sound of
+sentries challenging, the curt response by countersign, showed
+everywhere irregularities and the symptoms of panic in the immovable
+ranks of Titus.
+
+Seraiah meanwhile had disappeared from his place as mysteriously as he
+had come.
+
+Many of the Jews who remained on the wall believed that he had passed
+into the Roman camp and was troubling it. The fall of the tower, and
+the confusion it had wrought in the Roman camp, never occurred to them
+to have been fortuitous incidents with which Seraiah had nothing to
+do. Of the thousands that witnessed that miracle, most of them were
+convinced that the hour had come.
+
+Meanwhile Jerusalem was roaring with excitement. The city was ready
+for a Messiah. Seraiah had arisen at the psychological moment. Earlier
+the Jews would have been too critical to accept him readily; later
+they would have reviled him for coming too late. Whatever his advent
+lacked in thunders, in darkness, voices, and shaking of the earth, had
+been passed by his miraculous work against the Romans.
+
+Philadelphus, who had seen the fall of the tower, and had dropped down
+from the wall as soon as he had explained it all to himself, came upon
+new disorders. Great concourses of awakened Jews were hurrying to the
+walls to see what had happened, or to behold the Roman army wiped out
+by the Angel of Death as the army of Sennacherib had perished. Others
+collected at the end of the Tyropean Bridge and watched the pinnacle
+of the Temple for the miracle which should restore the city. But the
+burned ruin where the Herodian palace had stood was the center of the
+most characteristic frenzy.
+
+There thousands were congregated. A great bonfire had been kindled and
+above the multitude, on a colossal architrave fallen at one end from
+the giant columns that had supported it, stood a figure, redly
+illuminated by the fire, tiny as compared to the immense ruin of its
+high place, but Titan in its control over the wild mob below it.
+
+It was a woman, a Jewess, dressed in faithful imitation of the archaic
+garb of the prophetesses, mantled with a storm of flying black hair,
+stripped of veil or cloak, and splendidly defiant of the restrictions
+laid upon woman long after the days of Deborah.
+
+Over the heads of the panting multitude she shook a pair of arms that
+glistened for whiteness, and bewitched by the spell of their motion.
+From under her half-fallen lids shot gleams of fire that transfixed
+any upon whom they fell; from her supple body shaken at times with the
+power of its own dynamic force her hearers caught the grosser
+infection of physical excitement; they swayed with her as blown by the
+wind; they ceased to breathe in her periods; they groaned as the
+intensity of her fervor pressed upon them for response that they could
+not shape in words; they wept, they shouted, they prophesied, and over
+them swept ever the witchery of her wonderful voice, preaching
+impiety--the worship of Seraiah!
+
+Philadelphus looked at this frantic work with a creeping chill. He
+knew the sorceress. Salome of Ephesus, who could send the sated
+theaters wild with her appeal to their senses, had found enchantment
+of a half-mad city not hard. Aside from the impiety, in fear of which
+his own irreligious spirit stood, he saw suddenly opened to him the
+immense scope of her influence. Not Simon, not John, not Titus, had
+discovered the logical appeal to the city's unbalanced impulses. But
+the reckless woman, robing herself in the ancient garb of the days to
+which the citizens would revert, assuming the pose of a woman they had
+sanctified, preaching the dogma they would hear, showing them the sign
+that helped them most, held Jerusalem, at least for that hour, in her
+hands.
+
+He realized at once that to attempt to denounce her would expose him
+to destruction at the wolfish hands of the frenzied mob. There were
+not soldiers enough in the city to destroy her influence, for she had
+achieved in her followers that infatuation that goes down to death
+before it relinquishes its conviction. Her control was complete.
+Seraiah was the anointed one, but the prophetess, the instigator, the
+founder of the worship, as follows in all apostasies, was the final
+recipient of the benefits of that devotion.
+
+Philadelphus walked away from the sight of Salome's triumph. He had
+surrendered instantly his hope of regaining the treasure. The whole of
+mad Jerusalem had ranged itself with her to protect it. And Laodice
+was not yet found.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XX
+
+AS THE FOAM UPON WATER
+
+
+The madness on Jerusalem poured like an overwhelming flood into the
+cavern under the ruin of the Herodian palaces. There was Hesper, with
+most of his Gibborim gathered, preparing to proceed to the defense of
+the First Wall in Akra against which the Roman would hurl himself in
+the morning.
+
+For days he had controlled his men only by the force of his fierce
+will. Restlessness, little short of turbulence, had changed his six
+hundred from earnest recruits to bright-eyed, contentious,
+irresponsible enthusiasts whom only intimidation could manage. They
+seemed to be balanced, prepared, ready at the least whisper in the
+wind to scatter madly, each in his own direction, after a vagary,
+albeit the end were destruction.
+
+Throughout these latter days the Maccabee had become strained and
+unnatural in his manner. There was a vehemence in all he did which
+seemed to be a final resolution against despair. His decisions were
+arbitrary; his methods extreme. Laodice, sensing something climacteric
+in his atmosphere, kept aloof from him, and regarded him from the dusk
+of her corner with wonder and a pity that she could not explain. The
+Christian on the other hand seemed always in an unobtrusive way to be
+at the Maccabee's elbow. The apparition with the long white hair,
+however, ran away and was found on the streets by the Christian and
+brought back to the cavern, where he hid in a dark shadow in the
+remote end of the crypt and was not seen.
+
+Of late the cavern was always full of suppressed excitement;
+unpremeditated conferences among the Gibborim, which Hesper harshly
+forbade; and general sharp resentment against imposed regulations and
+military drill. On several occasions the six hundred were sent in
+defense of the walls only by sheer force of their leader's will-power.
+And there they fell in at once with the irregular methods of the
+Idumeans and fanatics that fought each after his own liking, and the
+careful instruction of the Maccabee was disregarded. Only so long as
+he cowed them, they obeyed him; and he seemed to feel, as they seemed
+to indicate, that when that thing happened which all Jerusalem
+indefinitely expected and could not name, his control over them would
+be lost beyond restoration.
+
+On the night of the fall of the Roman tower, the Maccabee's forces had
+been withdrawn for rest to their retreat and at midnight were formed
+again for return to the fortifications.
+
+By the strange inscrutable spread of rumor, sweeping with the air, the
+tidings of the miracle and the rise of Seraiah poured in upon the
+restive hundreds that the Maccabee was attempting to form in his
+fortress. It came like the gradual velocity of a burning star across
+the sky. From the ranks nearest the exit from the burrow the murmur
+issued, growing into intelligible sound, mounting to the wildness of
+hysteria and prevailing wholly over the Gibborim in the space between
+heart-beats. Everywhere they cast down their spears and their weapons,
+everywhere they gazed at him with brilliant threatening eyes and cried
+in loud voices so that the things each mad mind put into expression
+were lost in a great unintelligible raving.
+
+Laodice, the Christian and that white-haired trembler in his refuge,
+saw the Maccabee raise himself to his full height and lifting his
+sword confront in one grand effort at command a mob of six hundred
+madmen!
+
+Perhaps that manifestation of iron courage and strength, which the
+crazy lot somehow realized, saved him from death. Instead of falling
+upon him they turned away from the scene of the last vain effort for
+their own salvation and rushed, trampling one another, into the mad
+city of Jerusalem.
+
+From without, the hoarse uproar of their desertion was heard to merge
+with the great tumult over the Holy City. Tense silence fell in the
+crypt.
+
+The light of the torch wavered up and down the tall figure of the
+Maccabee as he stood transfixed in the attitude of command that had
+achieved nothing. It seemed the final inclination beyond the
+perpendicular that precedes the fall. The Christian started from his
+place and hurried toward the tense figure in the torch-light. Laodice,
+unconscious of what she did, approached him with an agony of distress
+for him written in her face. The white-haired apparition crept out a
+little way on his knees and putting aside his tangled locks gazed with
+burning eyes at the defeated man.
+
+Laodice, in her anxiety, moved into the range of the Maccabee's
+vision. The next instant he had thrown away his sword and had caught
+her in a crushing embrace to him. His voice, blunted and repressed as
+if something had him by the throat, was stunning her ear.
+
+"And thou!" he was saying. "What from thee, now? Hate! Curses!
+Ingratitude! Hast thou poison for me, or a knife? Or worse, yet,
+scorn? Speak! It is a day of enlightenment! I'll brook anything but
+deceit!"
+
+She stopped him in the midst of his vehement despair, by laying her
+hands on his hair. There surged to her lips all the eloquence of her
+love and sympathy, but beside her old Nathan stood--an embodiment of
+her conscience, watching.
+
+Twice she essayed to put into words the comfort of her submission to
+his love. Twice her lips failed her; but the third time she turned to
+the Christian.
+
+"Rabbi, what shall I do?" she implored. "Tell me out of thy wisdom!"
+
+"What is it?" he asked, feeling that there was more than sympathy for
+the defeated man in her heart.
+
+"What would thy Christ have me to do?" she insisted. "This stranger,
+here, is the joy of my heart; I am like to die if I can not give him
+the love that I feel for him this hour!"
+
+The startled Christian looked at her with suspicion growing in his
+eyes.
+
+"Art thou a wife? Wedded to another than this man?" he asked gravely.
+
+"Wedded," she whispered, "to one who hath denied me, affronted me and
+cast me out of his house! In this man I have found favor from the
+beginning. He has been tender of me, he has sheltered me, and he has
+strengthened me against himself to this hour. There has been nothing
+sinful between us!"
+
+The old Christian's face grew immeasurably sad.
+
+"There is but one thing for you to do," he said.
+
+She wrenched herself away from the Maccabee, who had been angrily
+protesting against her carrying his case to another for decision, and
+confronted Nathan.
+
+"But he rejected me!" she cried with earnestness. "That alone is
+enough among our people for divorcement!"
+
+The Christian shook his head sadly. He was not happy to lay down this
+prohibition before them who suffered.
+
+"There is no help in thy faith for such as I am. In that thy religion
+fails!" she cried.
+
+"Love, now, is all in all to thee, daughter. It is but the speech of
+thy young blood running through thy veins, the claim of thy youth to
+thy use upon earth. Resist it; for when thy years are as many as mine
+thou wilt lose thy rebellious spirit and the fervor will have died out
+of thy heart. Then, if thou hast fallen in this hour, how vain and
+worthless it will seem to thee! Divine fires in the heart of men never
+become changed in value. Love purely and thou wilt never repent; but I
+say unto thee thou fashionest for thyself humbled and shamed old age
+if thou transgressest the Law!"
+
+"What mercy, then, since thou preachest mercy, in filling me with this
+weakness if my life must be darkened resisting it, and my future show
+no relief for it?" she insisted passionately.
+
+It was the cry old as the world. He looked at her sadly, hopelessly.
+
+"As for God, His way is perfect," he said. "_How unsearchable are his
+judgments, and his ways past finding out!_ Thou shalt struggle with
+the truth, my daughter, but without fail and most readily thou shalt
+know when thou hast sinned!"
+
+She was past the influence of argument. Impulse controlled her now
+entirely. She would see if there were not an intelligence, even a
+religion which would see her sorrow from her own heart's position.
+
+She listened now to the words of her lover.
+
+"He is an exclaimer, a prophet of doom!" he was crying. "Love me and
+let us die!"
+
+Without in the entrance of the crypt some great-lunged fanatic was
+calling the multitude to harken to the prophetess.
+
+The Maccabee's lips were against her cheek as he continued to speak.
+
+"It is the end! There is no help for us. Love me, and let me be happy
+an hour before we perish! The Nazarene is right! The city is cursed!
+God's wrath is upon us. The hour is still ours. Love me and let us
+die!"
+
+Without the great voice, like an unwearying bell, was calling:
+
+"A sign! A sign! Behold the Deliverer! Come all ye who would share his
+triumph and hear! Hear! Come ye and be fed, ye hungry; be drunken, ye
+thirsty; love and be loved, ye forlorn!"
+
+Laodice stiffened in the Maccabee's clasp.
+
+"Dost thou hear?" she whispered. "It may be true!"
+
+He shook his head that he had bowed upon her shoulder.
+
+"Let us go," she urged. "Perchance he has comfort for us. Come,
+Hesper; let us see what he has for the forlorn."
+
+"Who?" he asked dully.
+
+"They say the Deliverer has come."
+
+He shook his head again, but with her two hands she lifted his face
+from its refuge, and urging with her eyes and her hands and her lips
+she led him toward the stairs. The Christian looked after them.
+
+"_For there shall arise false Christs; and false prophets, and shall
+shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they
+shall deceive the very elect_," he said sorrowfully.
+
+The horror of the city augmented hour by hour. The Jerusalem Laodice
+locked upon now was infinitely more afflicted than the one she had
+seen in the daylight days before.
+
+The walls were now outlined by fire which illuminated all the city
+that lay directly beneath the beacons. To the north gnomish outlines
+by hundreds against the flames showed where the soldiers of the
+factionists were placing the topmost stones upon an inner wall or
+curtain erected just within the Old Wall, which was by this time
+shaking and cracking under the assaults of a great siege-engine
+without. Titus, awakened by the fall of his tower, had immediately
+renewed the attack, although the morning was still some hours distant.
+
+But the citizens were no longer disinterested, no longer wrapped in
+hopelessness and dull misery.
+
+Hungry, sleepless, houseless, diseased and mad though they were, their
+hollow eyes gleamed now with hope that was almost defiant. Around the
+Maccabee and Laodice roared the comment of the multitude.
+
+"They say he climbed to the summit of the outer wall overlooking
+Tophet and remains there a target for the Roman arrows, which rebound
+from him!" cried one.
+
+"One of John's men says that the heads of the arrows are blunted and
+the most of them snapped in two when they are picked up."
+
+"The Romans have ceased to shoot at him!"
+
+"They say that his footprints in the dust on the Tyropean Bridge are
+Hebrew letters writing 'Elia' in gold!"
+
+"It is said that the inner Temple is rocking with trumpet blasts and
+that John is struck dead!"
+
+"They say that those who believe in him shall ask for whatever they
+would have and have it!"
+
+"The breaches in the First Wall have been healed; the old rock is back
+in its place!"
+
+"They say that the dead beyond the wall in Tophet are prophesying!"
+
+"There is a bolt of lightning fixed in the sky over Titus' camp. We
+are called to go forth and see it fall!"
+
+A voice swept by distantly crying that a woman had eaten her child.
+Crazed Posthumus, self-elected guardian of the Law, with the sacred
+roll under his arm, declaimed, without any of his audience attending,
+that prophecy which this horror fulfilled.
+
+All Jerusalem was in the streets; all Jerusalem poured into the
+immense open space where some palatial ruin stood, and melted in the
+giant concourse that gathered to hear the prophetess.
+
+Laodice and the Maccabee were unable to see the woman; only her voice,
+mystic, musical, pitched at a singing monotone, intoning rather than
+speaking, reached them from the distance. The long harangue, delivered
+as a chant, had long ago had a mesmerizing effect on her audience.
+Absolutely she controlled them; along the dead level of her preaching
+they maintained a low continuous murmur, accompanied by a slight slow
+swaying of the body; in the climaxes of the appeal they responded with
+cries and wild gestures, flinging themselves about in attitudes
+characteristic of their frenzy. In their faces was the reflection of a
+peculiar light that proved that derangement had settled over
+Jerusalem. It was the end of the reign of reason.
+
+"It is the abomination of desolation. Even so, it is finished! It is
+the time, it is full time, and Michael hath come. There are seventy
+weeks; behold them. The transgression is finished and the end hereto
+of all sins. Approacheth the hour for the reconciliation for iniquity
+and to bring in everlasting righteousness and to seal up the vision
+and prophecy and to anoint the most Holy! Prepare ye!"
+
+Somewhere in the city a voice that was heard even by the fighting-men
+on the wall in Akra cried:
+
+"The Sacrifice has failed! The Oblation is ceased! There is no
+Offering for the Altar; none is left to offer it!"
+
+The vast gathering heard it, and immediately from the high place of
+the prophetess came back the words, prompt and effective:
+
+"_And he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week: and in the
+midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to
+cease!_"
+
+Posthumus, buried in the midst of the crowd, was shouting, but over
+him the splendid mesmerism of the prophetess' voice soared.
+
+"_The hands of the pitiful women have sodden their own children; they
+were their meat in the destruction of the daughter of my people ...
+The punishment of thine iniquity is accomplished, O daughter of
+Zion; ... and for the overspreading of abominations he shall make it
+desolate, even until the consummation, and that determined shall be
+poured upon the desolate_!"
+
+Among the crowd now growing frantic, people began to cry:
+
+"A sign! A sign!"
+
+Others shouted:
+
+"Lead us!"
+
+"Persecute and destroy them in anger from under the Heaven of the
+Lord!"
+
+"Lead us!" they still shouted.
+
+They were hungry; they had been abstinent; they had surrendered their
+riches and their comforts. It was not independence but necessities
+that they wanted now. The primal wants were at the surface.
+
+"Come up and be filled!" she cried. "Ask and it shall be given unto
+you! Eat of the grapes and the honey; drink of wine and warm milk;
+sleep as kings; be housed in mansions; be rulers; command potentates!
+Let kings bow at your footstools! Be replenished; be great! Suffering
+hath been your portion since the earth was; but the end is come. Draw
+nigh and have your recompense. Laugh, you whose eyes have trickled
+down with the waters of affliction! You in the low dungeon come forth
+and range all the free boundaries of the world. Whosoever hath gravel
+between his teeth, let them be grapes! He who sitteth alone, gather
+company and revel unto him! Feast, ye hungry; be drunken, ye thirsty;
+love and be loved, ye forlorn!"
+
+Laodice leaned forward suddenly and hung on the woman's words.
+
+"The time for sacrifice and humiliation is paid out! It was a long
+time! Now, behold in the generosity of his repentance, ye shall ask
+and nothing shall be denied. Speak! Ask! The whole world, Heaven and
+earth and the delights of all the years are yours, now and for all
+time!"
+
+At Laodice's side was Amaryllis. The Greek's face was pale but lighted
+with a certain enlightenment that was almost threatening.
+
+Startled and frightened Laodice moved back from the Greek, who moved
+with her, without a glance at the Maccabee.
+
+The voice of the prophetess swept on:
+
+"Ye have bowed to tyrants and bent your necks to murderers; ye have
+waged wars for pillagers and shared not in the spoils. Why are ye
+hungry now? Who is full-fed in these days of want, yourselves or your
+masters? A sword, a sword is drawn; uphold the arm that wields it!"
+
+"Sedition!" Amaryllis whispered, as the mob began to murmur and stir
+at this new doctrine.
+
+"For behold, he shall go forth with great fury to destroy and utterly
+to make away many!"
+
+Amaryllis bent so she could whisper in Laodice's ear.
+
+"John hath taken him a new woman to keep him cheerful this hour. I was
+not daring enough. Philadelphus' wife hath supplanted me. Your place
+with him is vacant. Go back and possess it!"
+
+"Why was appetite and desire and thirst of power and the love of
+riches lighted in you, but to be satisfied?" The prophetess' words
+swept in after Laodice's sudden fear of returning to Philadelphus. "We
+have expiated the sin of Adam, the greed of Jacob and the fault of
+David. The judgment is run out; ye have come to your own! Verily, I
+say unto you, if ye follow me in the name of him who hath come unto
+you, the world shall be yours!"
+
+Amaryllis still continued to whisper, and Laodice, fearing that the
+Maccabee might hear, drew farther away. He stood where she had left
+him, with his head lowered, waiting--at last a creature dependent on
+another's will.
+
+"Listen!" Amaryllis said. "I have been seeking you since midnight!
+Philadelphus' doubt was awakened in this woman. He questioned her, so
+minutely that she betrayed ignorance of many things she should have
+known had she been the real daughter of Costobarus. And when finally
+he taxed her with imposture, she robbed him of the dowry and fled to
+John. Convinced that you are his wife, he set forth and hath since
+searched for you without ceasing! See, over there! He seeks you, now!"
+
+Laodice looked the way the Greek pointed and saw Philadelphus,
+standing with lifted head and stretched to his full height, as if
+searching over the crowd for her.
+
+Panic seized her. She wrenched herself from the Greek's hold and,
+forgetting even the protection of Hesper who was within touch of her,
+she threw herself into the crowd behind her and struggled out of the
+press.
+
+Nathan, the Christian, saw her turn and followed instantly in the path
+she made.
+
+Once out, she turned in a bewildered manner this way and that. What
+refuge, now, for her, indeed, but the cavern under the ruin and the
+care of Hesper, until the end which should swallow them all!
+
+A trembling hand was laid on her arm.
+
+She whirled, expecting to find Philadelphus. Beside her, his old face
+radiant with emotion, stood Momus!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXI
+
+THE FAITHFUL SERVANT
+
+
+Within the Roman lines was a bent and deformed figure of an old waif
+that the soldiers had picked up attempting to run the lines into
+Jerusalem the second day after the siege had been laid about the Holy
+City.
+
+The old man, though wrinkled and twisted and bowed, had fought with
+such terrible savagery and had incontinently laid in the dust in
+succession three of the camp's best fighting-men, that the Roman
+soldiers, for ever partizan to the strong man, had finally with great
+difficulty succeeded in trussing the old belligerent and had brought
+him before Titus.
+
+There they laid the twisted old burden before the young general and
+shamelessly told how he, thrice the age of the vanquished men, had
+finished them with despatch.
+
+It was evident that the old man was a Jew; it became also apparent
+that he was dumb and partly deaf, and further to their amazement and
+admiration, they discovered that his right leg and arm were too stiff
+for ordinary use and that he had done his wonderful execution with
+terrific left limbs.
+
+This saved his life and gave him a partial liberty. Titus, however,
+admitted to Carus that the old man's distress at being kept out of
+Jerusalem was pitiable enough to urge the young general to deport him
+and get him out of sight.
+
+For it was manifest that the old minotaur was in deep trouble. But his
+paralyzed tongue would not serve him, and his menial ignorance had not
+provided him with the means of telling his desire by writing. Titus
+was unable to understand from his signs anything further than that he
+wished to get into the city. The young general in one of his outbursts
+of generosity would have permitted this, but that Nicanor happened in
+at an evil moment and drew such pictures of calamitous effect in
+passing the old servant into Jerusalem that Titus was forced
+reluctantly and irritably to be convinced of the folly of his
+kindness. So here, through the terrible days of the siege, old Momus
+at times desperate and savage, at others piteously suppliant, wore on
+the sentries' peace of mind and stood like a shadow, for ever watching
+the white walls of the besieged city.
+
+The Romans were now within the city. Only Zion and the Temple held
+against them. A wall built with the thoroughness of David, the
+ancient, and solidified by the mortising of Time, ran directly from
+Hippicus to the Tyropean Valley, joining the tremendous fortifications
+of Moriah and so cut off Zion from the advance of the army. Securely
+intrenched within that quarter and the Temple, Simon and John began
+the last resistance which should tax Roman endurance and Roman
+patience as it had not been taxed before.
+
+Titus no longer lagged. Famine had long since become a powerful ally
+and the honor of the Flavian house rested upon his immediate
+subjugation of the rebellious city. He no longer expected
+capitulation; yet he did not neglect to be prepared for it and to
+encourage it. Though the heart of the historian Josephus broke, he did
+not fail to serve his patron as mediator, though without hope. Titus
+himself, as from time to time the horror of his work impressed itself
+upon him, made overtures to the factionists, neglecting no art or
+inducement which should convince the seditious that their resistance
+was foolhardy, even mad. At such times, Nicanor's face became
+contemptuous and Carus himself frowned at the young general's
+attitude. But the spirit of a Roman and the traditions of a soldier
+even could not prevent the young man from weakening at times before
+the charnel pit in Tophet where countless thousands of vultures
+fattened with roaring of wings and hissing of combat.
+
+But under an ever-thickening veil of horrid airs, the struggle went
+on.
+
+The Roman Ides of July arrived.
+
+Titus had erected banks upon which his engines were raised to batter
+the walls of the Temple.
+
+From Titus' camp, the Romans on sick leave, the commissaries, those
+attached to the army who were not fighting-men, and old Momus, saw
+first, before the attack on the Temple began, a soft increasing
+dun-colored vapor rise between the Temple and Antonia. It issued from
+the cloister at the northwest which joined the Roman tower. As they
+watched, they saw that vapor grow into a pale but intensely luminous
+smoke, as if fine woods and burning metals were consumed together. In
+a moment the whole north-west section was embraced in a sublime pall
+of fire.
+
+John was burning away the connection between the Temple and the tower
+and was making the sacred edifice four-square.
+
+As soon as it became confirmed, in the minds of the watchers in the
+Roman camp, that the Temple had been fired, the old mute among them
+seemed to become wholly unbalanced. Without warning, he leaped upon
+the nearest sentry who, not expecting the attack, went down with a
+clatter of armor and a shout of astonishment. The next instant the old
+man was making across the intervening space between the camp and
+Jerusalem as fast as his stiff legs could carry him.
+
+The purple sentry sprang to his feet and strung an arrow, but before
+he could send it singing, the old minotaur was mixed with a second
+soldier in such confusion that the first sentry hesitated to shoot
+lest he should kill his fellow. Another moment and a second soldier
+was struggling in the impediment of his armor in the dust and the old
+mute was again hobbling straight away toward the walls of Jerusalem.
+He was now a fair mark for the first sentry, but that Roman's rancor
+died after he had seen his own disgrace covered by the overthrow of
+his fellow. Two of Titus' scouts next stood in the path of the running
+old man. One went to the ground so suddenly and so violently that the
+watchers, now breaking into howls of delight, knew that he had been
+tripped. The other stood but a moment longer, than he, too, rolled
+into the dust.
+
+The old man might have gone no farther at this juncture, for at every
+latest triumph he left a crimson soldier murderous with shame. But
+before the arrow next strung to overtake him could fly, Titus, Carus
+and Nicanor, accompanied by their escort, rode between the fugitive
+and the men he had defeated.
+
+"There goes our minotaur," Carus said quietly. Titus drew up his horse
+and looked. Nicanor with a sidelong glance awaited the young Roman's
+command to his escort to ride down the fugitive. But he waited, and
+continued to wait, while Titus with lifted head and with indecision in
+his eyes watched the deformed old shape hobble on toward the Wall of
+Circumvallation.
+
+"Shall we let him go?" Nicanor inquired coldly.
+
+"If some of my legionaries or those erratic Jews fail to get him
+between here and Jerusalem, he shall get into Jerusalem. But by
+Hector, he will earn his entry!"
+
+They saw the old man mount by the causeway of earth which the Romans
+had built over the siege wall for the passage of the troops, saw him
+an instant outlined against the sky on the summit, and the next
+instant he disappeared.
+
+Titus touched his horse and rode at a trot toward the causeway
+himself. He would see the end of this mad venture.
+
+In the hour of sunrise the sentinel above the North Gate in the Old
+Wall saw among the ruins of the houses of Coenopolis a figure dodging
+painfully hither and thither. It was not habited in the brasses of the
+Roman armor. Also, it hobbled as if lame and ran toward the gate fast
+closed below the sentry.
+
+The Jew, too intensely interested in the great climax enacting in the
+city below, ceased to remark on this figure.
+
+Presently, however, he looked again into ruined Coenopolis. He saw
+there this un-uniformed figure wrapped in fierce embrace with a young
+legionary. Almost before the sentry's astonishment shaped itself into
+exclamation, the legionary was tumbled aside as if crushed and the old
+figure hobbled on.
+
+Suddenly there appeared in the path of the wayfarer a galloping
+horseman, who drew his mount back on his haunches, then spurred him to
+ride down the old man.
+
+The sentry on the Old Wall made a choked sound, unslung his bow and
+sent an arrow singing. There was a shout and the figure of the
+horseman plunged from his saddle face down on the earth.
+
+The wayfarer flung himself away and rushed toward the wall, only a
+little distance away.
+
+But all Coenopolis seemed to swarm now with legionaries, afoot or
+horseback.
+
+The Jewish sentry rushed to the edge of the tower overhanging the
+gate.
+
+"Open!" he shouted below. "One cometh!"
+
+With a rattle and clang of falling bars and chains the gate of the Old
+Wall swung.
+
+Disregarding the known wishes of Titus, two of the legionaries
+simultaneously let fly their javelins. But the mute, hobbling
+uncertainly, was not a steady mark and under the whistle of arrows
+received and sent, he blundered up the causeway leading to the Gate of
+the Old Wall, and the portal slowly and ponderously closed behind him.
+
+Wild howls of derision and exultation went up from the Jews. Many of
+the soldiers clambered down to satisfy their curiosity about the
+latest addition to the starving garrison. But he proved to be a
+deformed old man, mute and weary, who was distressed for fear he would
+be detained by them and who hobbled out into the besieged city and
+posted as fast as his legs could carry him toward the house of
+Amaryllis, the Seleucid.
+
+But at the edge of a great open space where the Herodian palaces had
+stood he came upon a concourse which seemed to be all Jerusalem. It
+was a gaunt horde, shouting, raging, prophesying and drowning the roar
+of battle at the Temple fortifications with the sound of religious
+frenzy.
+
+Momus, fresh from the orderly camp of Titus, was struck with terror.
+He would have retreated and followed some side street toward his
+destination, when he caught sight of a girl on the very outskirts of
+this mob. Momus laid a trembling hand on her arm. She threw up her
+head with a start.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXII
+
+VANISHED HOPES
+
+
+The tremulous old man, weakened from his long and superhuman struggle
+to enter the doomed city, held Laodice to his breast while she stroked
+his rough cheeks and murmured things that he did not hear and which
+she did not realize in the rush of her helplessness and dismay.
+
+At the corner of Moriah and the Old Wall, the tumult was infernal. Out
+of the suffocating sallow smoke from the tuns of burning tar heaved
+over the fortification upon the engines and their managers, the stones
+from the catapults soared into view and fell upon the sun-colored
+marbles that paved the Court of the Gentiles. Clouded by the vapor,
+targets for the immense missiles, the Jews heaving and writhing in
+personal encounters appeared black and inhuman. Every combatant
+shouted; the great stones screamed; the boiling pitch hissed and
+roared, and the thunder of the conflict shook the Temple to its very
+foundations.
+
+Without, the Romans planted scaling ladders, mounted them and were
+pitched backward into the moat regularly. Regularly, the ladders were
+set up again after struggle, mounted without hesitation and thrown
+down again, with an inevitability which furnished a grim travesty to
+the struggle. The two remaining towers were set in position against
+the base of Moriah and resumed execution. One after another the
+engines of the Romans were hauled into position, and worked
+unceasingly until covered with burning oil from the battlements above
+and consumed. Others were hauled into place; fresh detachments of
+Romans seized upon the scaling-ladders or mounted to the towers, and
+the roar of the conflict never abated.
+
+Meanwhile on the slopes of Zion the whole of Jerusalem, gaunt, dying
+and demoniacal, was packed in the ruins of the palace of Herod.
+
+Old Momus with triumph and tearful exultation was holding out to
+Laodice a heavy roll of writings, dangling important seals, ancient
+papers showing yellow beside the fresh parchment, and an old record
+dark with long handling.
+
+Here were the proofs of her identity!
+
+Laodice shrank from him with a gasp that was almost a cry. Behold, the
+faithful old servant had suffered she knew not what to bring such
+evidence as would force her to do that which she believed she could
+not do and survive!
+
+Momus sought to put the papers in her hands, but she thrust them away
+and he stood looking at her in amazement and sorrow.
+
+Nathan, the Christian, stood close to her. From the opposite side,
+Philadelphus rounded the outskirts of the mob, searching. He did not
+see her. She flung herself between Momus and Nathan and cowered down
+until Philadelphus had passed from sight. When she lifted her head,
+Momus was gazing at her with the light of shocked comprehension
+growing in his eyes. Nathan, the Christian, touched her.
+
+"Who was that man?" he asked gravely.
+
+She rose and laid her hands on the Christian's shoulders.
+
+"My husband," she said.
+
+Something had happened at the Temple. She saw the Jews at the wall
+recoil from the dust of battle, rally, plunge in and disappear. From
+out that presently shone now and again, then with increasing frequency
+and finally in great numbers, the brass mail of Roman legionaries.
+Titus' forces had scaled the wall.
+
+From her position, she saw running toward them John of Gischala, with
+his long garments whipping about him, wrapping his tall figure in live
+cerements. He was disarmed and bleeding. She saw next Amaryllis, with
+compassionate uplifted hands stop in his way; saw next the Gischalan
+thrust her aside with a blow and the next instant disappear as if the
+earth had swallowed him.
+
+Nathan was speaking to her.
+
+"How often, O my daughter, we recognize truth and deny it because it
+does not give us our way! God put a sense of the right in us. We
+transgress it oftener than we mistake it!"
+
+The roar of the turning battle and the mob about her drowned his next
+words, except,
+
+"You can not be happy in iniquity; neither blessed; but you are sure
+to be afraid. Right has its own terror, but there is at least courage
+in being right, against your desires."
+
+He was talking continuously, but only at times did the wind from the
+uproar sweep his fervent words to her.
+
+"Christ had His own conflict with Himself. What had become of us had
+He listened to the tempter in the wilderness, or failed to accept the
+cup in the Garden of Gethsemane! How much we have the happiness of
+Christ in our hands! Alas! that His should be a sorrowful countenance
+in Heaven!
+
+"The love of a man for a woman was near to the Master's heart! How can
+you feel that you must love and be loved in spite of Him! Pity
+yourself all you may you can not then be pitied so much as He pities
+you!
+
+"Love as long and as wilfully as you will, and then it is only a
+little space. The time of the supremacy of Christ cometh surely, and
+that is all eternity! Which will you do--please yourself for an hour,
+or be pleased by the will of God through all time? Love is in the
+hands of the Lord; you can not consign it longer than the little span
+of your life to the hands of the devil."
+
+Momus, in whose mind had passed an immense surmise, was again at her
+side.
+
+"O daughter of a noble father," his dumb gaze said, "wilt thou put
+away that virtue which was born in thee and let my labor come to
+naught?"
+
+But the preaching of Nathan and the reproach of Momus were feeble,
+compared to the great tumult that went on in her soul. She had seen
+John of Gischala cast Amaryllis aside. Even the Greek's sympathy was
+hateful to him. Yet when Laodice had first entered the house of
+Amaryllis, the woman had been obliged to dismiss John from her
+presence for his own welfare and the welfare of the city. Why this
+change?
+
+Amaryllis was no less beautiful, no less brilliant, no less attractive
+than she had once been; but the Gischalan had wearied of her.
+
+Laodice recalled that she had not been surprised to see the man throw
+Amaryllis aside. It seemed to be the logical outcome of love such as
+theirs. How, then, was she to escape that which no other woman escaped
+who loved without law? In the soul of that stranger who had called
+himself Hesper, were lofty ideals, which had not been the least charm
+which had attracted her to him. Was she, then, to dislodge these holy
+convictions, to take her place in his heart as one falling short of
+them, or were they still to exist as standards which he loved and
+which she could not reach? In either event, how long would he
+love--what was the length of her probation before she, too, would
+encounter the inevitable weariness?
+
+It occurred to her, then, how nearly the natural law of such love
+paralleled the religious prohibition that the Christian had shown to
+her. However harsh and unjust the sentence seemed, it was rational.
+With her own eyes she had seen its predictions borne out. Already the
+relief of the sorrowing righteous possessed her. She turned to the
+Christian.
+
+"Take me to my husband," she said. "Now! While I have strength."
+
+Momus caught the old Christian by the arm and, signing eagerly that he
+would lead, hurried away in advance of the two down into the ravine
+and crossed to the house of Amaryllis.
+
+There were no soldiers to stop them about the house. When no response
+was made to her knock, Laodice opened the door and passed in.
+
+Her old conductors followed her.
+
+Amaryllis sat in her ivory chair; opposite her in the exedra was
+Philadelphus. At sight of him, the last of the soft color went out of
+Laodice's face. A curve of despair marked the corners of her mouth and
+she seemed to grow old before those that looked at her.
+
+Philadelphus and the Greek sprang to their feet, the instant the group
+entered.
+
+Laodice waited for no preliminary. Amaryllis' design was patent to
+her; it was part of her sorrow that now Hesper would be free to the
+devices of this deceitful woman. So she did not look at the Greek. She
+addressed Philadelphus in a voice from which all hope and vivacity had
+gone.
+
+"I have brought proofs. Behold them!"
+
+Nathan, the Christian, stood forth.
+
+"I, Nathan of Jerusalem, met and talked with this Laodice, daughter of
+Costobarus, in company with Aquila, the Ephesian, three men-servants
+in all the panoply and state of a coming princess three leagues out of
+Ascalon, her native city. I buried by the roadside her father, who
+died of pestilence on their journey hither. I bear witness that she is
+the daughter of Costobarus and thy wedded wife."
+
+A great light sprang into the face of the Greek. Philadelphus,
+nervous, albeit the news he heard filled him with pleasure, stood and
+waited.
+
+The Christian stepped back and Momus, bowing, approached and handed
+the leather roll into the none too steady hands of the Ephesian. He
+opened it and drew forth parchments.
+
+Aloud he read a minute description of Laodice from the rabbi of the
+synagogue in Ascalon; under the great seals of the Roman state, he
+found and read the oath of the prefect, that such a maiden as the
+rabbi had described had been married before him to Philadelphus
+Maccabaeus fourteen years before. Then followed the depositions of
+forty Jews and Gentiles who were nurses, tradesmen and other people
+like to have daily contact with the young woman in her house, setting
+entirely at naught any claim that Laodice was other than the wife who
+had been supplanted by an adventuress. Philadelphus did not read them
+all. Before he made an end he dropped the documents and flung wide his
+arms. But Laodice with a countenance frozen with suffering held him
+off for a moment.
+
+"Go," she said to the old Christian, "unto Hesper and lead him into
+the belief of the Lord Jesus Christ which is mine."
+
+The old Christian approached the fountain in the center of the
+andronitis and taking up water in his palm sprinkled a few drops on
+her hair while she knelt.
+
+"In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, I baptize
+thee, Laodice. Amen!"
+
+While she knelt, he said:
+
+"I shall search for him also. Christ have mercy on thee now and for
+ever. Farewell."
+
+He was gone.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIII
+
+THE FULFILMENT
+
+
+When Nathan, the Christian, stepped into the streets once more there
+was an immense accession of tumult about him.
+
+He turned to look toward the corner of the Old Wall in time to behold
+Jews in armor and Romans in blazing brass rush together in a great
+cloud of dust as the Old Wall went in and Titus swept down upon
+Jerusalem.
+
+At the same instant from the ruined high place upon Zion came a roar
+of stupendous menace. The Christian, with sublime indifference to
+danger, kept his path toward the concourse from which he had taken
+Laodice. As he ascended the opposite slope of the ravine, he saw,
+descending toward the battle, the front of a rushing multitude, as
+irresistible and as destructive as a great sea in a storm.
+
+He saw that the mob was turning toward Akra, and to avoid it, the
+Christian climbed up to the Tyropean Bridge, and from that point
+viewed the whole of Jerusalem sweeping down upon the heathen.
+
+At the head of the inundation passed a melodious voice crying:
+
+"An end, an end is come upon the four corners of the land! Draw near
+every man with his destroying weapon in his hands for the glory of the
+Lord! For His house is filled with cloud and the Court is full of the
+brightness of the Lord's glory! A sword! A sword is sharpened! The way
+is appointed that the sword may come! For the time for favor to Zion
+is here; yea, the set time is come!"
+
+After this poured a gaunt horde numbering tens of thousands. They bore
+paving-stones, stakes, posts, railings, garden implements, weapons
+from kitchens, from hardware booths and from armories; anything that
+one man or a body of men could wield; torches and kettles of tar;
+chains and ropes; knotted whips, and bundles of fagots; iron spikes,
+instruments of torture, anything and everything which could be turned
+as a weapon or to inflict pain upon the Roman, who believed at this
+moment that Jerusalem was his!
+
+The Christian overlooked this ferocious inundation and shook his head.
+On a mound near him stood the spirit of the mob concentrated and
+personified. It was crazed Posthumus.
+
+He was screaming: "It is finished; the law is run out! All prophecy is
+fulfilled!"
+
+And over his head he was swinging a parchment fiercely burning.
+
+It was the Scroll of the Law!
+
+After uncounted minutes, vibrating with roar, the terrible flood
+rushed by. Feeble arms clasped the Christian about the knees and he
+looked down on the tangled white locks of the palsied man, who had
+searched for him until he had found him. The Christian laid his hand
+on the man's head but did not speak.
+
+At the breach in the Old Wall, the watchers on that almost deserted
+street saw the brazen wave of four legions gather and sweep forward to
+gain ground in the city before the mob swept down on them.
+
+Between the two warring bodies, one orderly, prepared but
+apprehensive, the other mad and perishing, was a considerable space.
+Fighting still went on at the breach in the walls, but the supreme
+conflict of a comparatively small body of soldiers and an uncounted
+horde was not yet precipitated.
+
+Ordinarily, the Roman army could have reduced any popular insurrection
+with half that number of men. But at present the legionaries
+confronted desperate citizens who were simply choosing their own way
+to die. Reason and human fear long since had ceased to inspire them.
+They were believing now and following a prophet because it was the
+final respite before despair. There was no alternative. It was death
+whatever they did, unless, in truth, this splendid sorceress was
+indeed the Voice of the Risen Prince. Force would be of no avail
+against them. Madness had flung them against Rome; only some other
+madness would turn them back.
+
+The Christian, from his commanding position, expected anything.
+
+It was the moment which would show if the false prophet would triumph.
+If the four legions went down before the multitude, it would mean the
+ascendancy of a strange woman over Israel, and the obliteration of the
+faith in Jesus Christ in the Holy Land.
+
+It can not be said that the Christian watched the crisis with a calm
+spirit. He did not wish to see the heathen overthrow the ancient
+people of God, nor could he behold the triumph of a false Christ. He
+put his hands together and prayed.
+
+A figure appeared between the two bodies of combatants, rushing on
+intensely, to grapple.
+
+It was a tall commanding form, clothed in garments that glittered for
+whiteness. By the step, by the poise of the head, the Christian
+recognized Seraiah.
+
+The front of the multitude fell on their faces at that moment as if he
+had struck them down.
+
+Out of the forefront, the prophetess appeared. The Christian heard her
+splendid voice out of the uproar, and while he gazed, he saw mad
+Seraiah turn away from her, with the front of the mob turning after
+him, as a needle turns to the pole.
+
+In that fatal moment of pause, out of which the warning cry of the
+prophetess rang wildly, the Roman tribune, in view for a moment under
+the blowing veils of smoke, flung up his sword, the Roman bugle sang,
+and the brassy legions of Titus hurled themselves upon the halted mob.
+
+The Christian dropped his head into the bend of his elbow and strove
+to shut out the sound. The nervous arms of the palsied man at his feet
+gripped him frantically.
+
+Up from the corner of the Old Wall, came the prolonged "A-a-a-a!" of
+dying thousands.
+
+Jerusalem had fallen.
+
+The foremost of the mob, turning with Seraiah, escaped the onslaught
+of the Romans, and as the mad Pretender strode toward the broad street
+from which the Tyropean Bridge crossed to the demesnes of the Temple,
+they followed him fatuously, blind to the death behind them and the
+oncoming slaughter in which they might fall.
+
+Seraiah passed above the spot where the sorrowful Christian stood,
+crossed the great causeway leading toward the Royal Portico and after
+him six thousand blind and insane enthusiasts followed, expecting
+imminent miracle. Above them towered the heights of Moriah, now veiled
+in smoke. Up the great white bank of stairs they rushed after him,
+facing an ordeal which must mean a baptism in fire, and on through a
+curtain of luminous smoke into a gate pillared in flame, up into the
+Royal Portico, resounding with the tread of the advancing Destroyer,
+out into the great Court of Gentiles wrapped in cloud through which
+the Temple showed, a stupendous cube of heat, through the Gate
+Beautiful where the Keeper no longer stood, thence into the Women's
+Court, raftered with red coals, up smoking stones tier upon tier till
+the roof of the Royal Portico was reached.
+
+At the brink of the pinnacle, they saw through tumbling clouds Seraiah
+towering. He was looking down through masses of smoke upon the City of
+Delight, perishing. They who had followed watched, uplifted with
+terror and frenzy, and while they waited for the miracle which should
+save, the roof crumbled under them and a grave of thrice heated rock
+received them and covered them up.
+
+Below, Nathan, the Christian, seized upon the shoulders of the
+Maccabee as he was dashing after the thousands. His face was black
+with terror for Laodice. He struggled to throw off Nathan, crying
+futilely against the uproar that Laodice was perishing.
+
+"Comfort thee!" the Christian shouted in his ear. "She is saved. She
+sent me to thee."
+
+The Maccabee stopped, as if he realized that he need not go on, but
+had not comprehended what was said to him.
+
+Nathan dragged him out of the way, still choked with people struggling
+to pass on to the Temple or to flee from it. Half-way down the Vale of
+Gihon, where speech was a little more possible, the Maccabee, who had
+been crying questions, made the old man hear.
+
+"Where is she? Where is she?"
+
+"She has returned to her husband. In love with thee, she has done that
+only which she could do and escape sin. She has gone to shelter with
+him whom she does not love!"
+
+The Maccabee seized his head in his hands.
+
+"It is like her--like her!" he groaned.
+
+In the Christian's heart he knew how narrowly Laodice had made her
+lover's mark for her.
+
+"It is her wish," Nathan continued, "that I teach thee Christ whom she
+hath received."
+
+"How can I receive Him, when He sent her from me?" the unhappy man
+groaned, unconscious of his contradictions.
+
+"How canst thou reject Him when His teaching led thy love to do that
+which thine own lips have confessed to be the better thing?"
+
+"Then what of myself, when I love where I should not love?" the
+Maccabee insisted.
+
+"You may suffer and sin not," the Christian said kindly.
+
+The unhappy man dropped to his knees.
+
+"O Christ, why should I resist Thee!" he groaned. "Thou hast stripped
+me and made me see that my loss is good!"
+
+The Christian laid his hands on the Maccabee's head.
+
+"Dost thou believe?" he asked.
+
+"Will Christ accept me, coming because I must?"
+
+"It is not laid down how we shall baptize in the thirst of a famine,"
+Nathan said, "yet He who sees fit to deny water never yet hath denied
+grace."
+
+But the Christian's hand extended over the kneeling man was caught in
+a grip steadied with intense emotion. The unknown had seized him.
+
+But for his feeling that this interruption was necessary to the
+welfare of another soul, the Christian would not have paused in his
+ministry.
+
+The phantom straightened himself with a superb reinvestment of
+manhood.
+
+"Thou, son of the Maccabee, Philadelphus!" he exclaimed to the
+kneeling man.
+
+The Ephesian's arms sank.
+
+"Who art thou that knoweth me?" he asked in a dead voice.
+
+"I am all that plague and sin hath left of thy servant Aquila," the
+phantom declared.
+
+The Maccabee lifted his face for what should follow this revelation.
+It was only a manifestation of his subjection to another will than his
+own. He was not interested--he who was hoping to die.
+
+"Hear me, and curse me!" Aquila went on. "But save thy wife yet. I say
+unto thee, master, that she whom thou hast sheltered in the cavern is
+thy wife, Laodice!"
+
+The Maccabee struggled up to his feet and gazed with stunned and
+unbelieving eyes at this wreck of his pagan servant, who went on
+precipitately.
+
+"Her I plotted against at the instigation of Julian of Ephesus. Her,
+my mistress, Salome the Cyprian, robbed and hath impersonated thus
+long to her safety in the house of the Greek. This hour, through
+ignorance of thine own identity, through my fault, she hath gone
+reluctantly to his arms. Curse me and let me die!"
+
+The Maccabee seized the hair at his temples. For a moment the awful
+gaze he bent upon Aquila seemed to show that the gentler spirit had
+been dislodged from his heart. Then he cried:
+
+"God help us both, Aquila! My fault was greater than thine!"
+
+He turned and fled toward the house of the Greek.
+
+The four legions of Titus swept after him.
+
+Aquila lifted his eyes for the first time and gazed at Nathan.
+
+"I cursed thee for sparing me to such an existence as was mine!
+Behold, father, thou didst bless me, instead. I am ready to die."
+
+"Wait," the Christian said peacefully.
+
+A moment later, the Maccabee dashed into the andronitis of Amaryllis.
+
+After him sprang a terrified servant crying:
+
+"The Roman! The Roman is upon us!"
+
+A roar of such magnitude that it penetrated the stone walls of
+Amaryllis' house, swept in after the servant. Quaking menials began to
+pour into the hall. Among them came the blue-eyed girl, the athlete
+and Juventius the Swan. These three joined their mistress who stood
+under a hanging lamp. Into the passage from the court, left open by
+the frightened servants, swept the prolonged outcry of perishing
+Jerusalem. Over it all thundered the boom of the siege-engines shaking
+the earth.
+
+The slaves slipped down upon their knees and began to groan together.
+The silver coins on the lamp began to swing; the brass cyanthus which
+Amaryllis had recently drained of her last drink of wine moved
+gradually to the edge of the pedestal upon which she had placed it.
+
+The dual nature of the uproar was now distinct; organized warfare and
+popular disaster at the same time. The Roman was sweeping up the
+ancient ravine. Jerusalem had fallen.
+
+The gradual crescendo now attained deafening proportions; the hanging
+lamp increased its swing; the silver coins began to strike together
+with keen and exquisitely fine music. Juventius the Swan, with his dim
+eyes filled with horror, was looking at them. The peculiar desperate
+indifference of the wholly hopeless seized him. His long white hands
+began to move with the motion of the lamp; the music of the meeting
+coins became regular; he caught the note, and mounting, with a bound,
+the rostrum that had been his Olympus all his life, began to sing. The
+melody of his glorious voice struggled only a moment for supremacy
+with the uproar of imminent death and then his increasing exaltation
+gave him triumph. The great hall shook with the magnificent power of
+his only song!
+
+The Maccabee confronted Amaryllis, with fierce question in his eyes.
+She pointed calmly at the heavy white curtain pulled to one side and
+caught on a bracket. The brass wicket over the black mouth of the
+tunnel was wide.
+
+Without a word, the Maccabee plunged into it and was swallowed up.
+
+Amaryllis looked after him.
+
+"And no farewell?" she said.
+
+The thunder of assault began at her door. Juventius sang it down. The
+athlete and the girl crept toward the mouth of the black passage,
+wavered a moment and plunged in. After them tumbled a confusion of
+artists and servants who were swallowed up, and the hall was filled
+only with music.
+
+The woman by the lectern and the singer on the rostrum had chosen. To
+live without beauty and to live without love were not possible to the
+one who had known beauty all his life, to the one who had learned love
+so late--after she had been beggared of her dowry of purity.
+
+There was hardly an appreciable interval between the time of the
+desertion of her artists and the thunder of assault at her door, but
+in that space there passed before Amaryllis that useless retrospect
+which is death's recapitulation of the life it means to take. And out
+of that long procession, she singled one conviction which made the
+step of the Roman on her threshold welcome. It was an old, old moral,
+so old that it had never had weight with her, who believed it was time
+to reconstruct the whole artistic attitude of the world.
+
+And that was why she waited impatiently at her doorway for death,
+which was a kinder thing than life.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIV
+
+THE ROAD TO PELLA
+
+
+There was no incident in the Maccabee's long struggle through the inky
+blackness of the tunnel leading under Moriah.
+
+It was night when the first new air from the outside world reached
+him. So he rushed into great open darkness, lighted with stars, before
+he knew that he had emerged from the underground passage.
+
+Entire silence after the turmoil which had shaken Jerusalem for many
+months fell almost like a blow upon his unaccustomed ears. The air was
+sweet. He had not breathed sweet air since May. The hills were
+solitary. Week in and week out, he had never been away from the sound
+of groaning thousands. Not since he had assumed his disguise to
+Laodice in the wilderness had he been close to the immemorial repose
+of nature. All his primitive manhood rushed back to him, now
+infuriated with a fear that his love was the spoil of another.
+
+All instinct became alert; all his intelligence and resource assembled
+to his aid. It came to him as inspiration always occurs at such times,
+that if the pair proceeded rationally, they would move toward a secure
+place at once. Pella occurred to him in a happy moment.
+
+He took his bearings by the stars and hurried north and east.
+
+He came upon a road presently, almost obliterated by a summer's drift
+of dust and sand. It had been long since any one had gone up that way
+to Jerusalem. There was no moon to show him whether there were any
+recent marks of fugitives fleeing that way.
+
+He did not expect that Julian of Ephesus would have courage to halt
+within sight of the glow on the western horizon which was the burning
+from the Temple. He expected the Ephesian to flee far and long, and in
+that consciousness of the cowardice of his enemy he based his hope.
+
+But he ran tirelessly, seeking right and left, led on by instinct
+toward the Christian city in the north.
+
+At times, his terror for Laodice made him cry out; again, he made
+violent pictures of his revenge upon Julian; and at other moments, he
+believed, while drops stood on his forehead from the effort of faith,
+that his new Christ would save her yet. There were moments when he was
+ready to die of despair, when he wondered at himself attempting to
+trace Julian with all the directions of wild Judea to invite the
+fugitives. Why might they not have fled toward Arabia as well, or even
+toward the sea? Perhaps they had not gone far, but had hidden in the
+rock, and had been left behind. Conflicting argument strove to turn
+him from his path, but the old instinct, final resource after the mind
+gives up the puzzle, kept him straight on the road to Pella.
+
+He came upon the rear of a flock of sheep, heading away from him. A
+Natolian sheep-dog, galloping hither and thither in his labor at
+keeping them moving, scented the new-comer. There was a quick savage
+bark that heightened at the end in an excited yelp of welcome. The
+shepherd, a dim figure at the head of the flock, turned in time to see
+his dog leaping upon the Maccabee.
+
+"Down, Urge," the shepherd cried.
+
+"Joseph, in the name of God," the Maccabee cried, "where is Laodice?"
+
+He threw off the excited dog and rushed toward the boy, who turned
+back at the cry with extended hands.
+
+"True to thy promise, friend, friend!" the boy cried. "She is here!"
+
+The Maccabee stiffened.
+
+"Is there one with her?" he demanded fiercely.
+
+"A man and her servant."
+
+The Maccabee threw off the boy's hands.
+
+"Where?" he cried.
+
+"Ahead of the sheep," the boy said a little uncertainly.
+
+The Maccabee dashed through the flock and rounding a turn in the road
+came upon Laodice walking; behind her Momus; at her side was Julian of
+Ephesus.
+
+Immense strain had sharpened their sense of fear until it was as acute
+as an instinct. Before the sound of the Maccabee's furious approach
+reached Julian, the Ephesian whirled.
+
+Towering over him, the very picture of retribution, was the man he had
+left, apparently dead by his hand, by the roadside in the hills of
+Judea months and months before.
+
+For an instant, Julian stood petrified. Over his lips came a faint,
+frozen whisper that Laodice heard--that was proof enough to her, the
+moment after.
+
+"Philadelphus--Maccabaeus!"
+
+When his outraged kinsman put out vengeful hands to seize him, the
+Maccabee grasped the air. Julian of Ephesus had vanished!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Among the rocks at the base of the cliff that sheltered Christian
+Pella from the rude winds of the Perean mountains, the procurator of
+the city, Philadelphus Maccabaeus, and his wife, Laodice, sat side by
+side in the morning sun. There was a path little wider than a man's
+hand wandering along below them toward a well in the hollow of the
+rocks. Along this way, in early morning, Joseph, the shepherd, was in
+the habit of driving his sheep to drink. And hither the procurator and
+his wife came to visit the boy from time to time. Within their hall,
+there was too much state. Something in the wild open of Judea with its
+winds gave them all an ease whenever they wished to talk with Joseph.
+
+But the shepherd was not in sight. The pair sat down and waited for
+him.
+
+Laodice rested against her husband's arm, laid along the rock behind
+her. Presently he freed that arm and with the ease of much usage
+withdrew the bodkins from her hair. The heavy coil dropped over his
+breast down to his knee. With delicate touches he began to free from
+the splendid tangle a single strand of glistening white hair. When she
+saw it shining like spun silver across the back of his hand, she
+looked up at him. With infinite care he searched her face, while she
+waited with questioning in her tender eyes.
+
+"This," he said, lifting the hand that supported the silver threads,
+"is the sole evidence that thou hast seen the abomination of
+desolation."
+
+"And that came the night I journeyed away from Jerusalem, without
+you," she declared. "But, my Philadelphus," she said, turning herself
+a little that she might hide her face away from him, "had I stayed
+with you against my conscience, I had been by this time wholly white."
+
+He kissed her.
+
+"I did not expect you to stay," he said. "I knew from the beginning
+that you would not. Ask Joseph. He will bear me out."
+
+Low on the slope of the hill, the shepherd approached, calling his
+sheep that trailed after him contentedly by the hundreds. The excited
+bark of Urge, the sheep-dog, came up faintly to them.
+
+While they leaned watching them, old Momus, bent and broken, stood
+before them. Laodice hurriedly drew away from her husband's clasp. It
+was a habit she had never entirely shaken off, whenever the mute
+appeared, in spite of the old man's pathetic dumb protest.
+
+He handed a linen scroll to his master.
+
+It read:
+
+ The captives whom thou hast asked for freedom at Cęsar's hand are
+ this day sent to thee, Philadelphus, under escort. They should
+ reach thee a little later than this messenger. However, it is
+ Cęsar's pain to inform thee that the Greek Amaryllis as well as
+ the actress Salome were not to be found. Julian of Ephesus, who
+ named the woman for us, is here at Cęsarea, but being a Roman
+ citizen, is not a captive. However it shall be seen to that his
+ liberty is sufficiently curtailed for the welfare of the public.
+ Also, I send herewith a shittim-wood casket found with John of
+ Gischala when he was captured in a cavern under Jerusalem. It
+ contains treasure and certain writings which identify it as
+ property of thy wife. There were other features in it which,
+ coming to my hand first, made it advisable that the State should
+ not know of its existence. And privately, it will be wise in thee
+ to destroy them.
+
+The Maccabee stopped at this point and looked at Laodice.
+
+"What does he mean?" he asked.
+
+"My father put your last letter in the case," she said, with a little
+panic in her face.
+
+The Maccabee laughed, and went on,
+
+ Those that go forward to thee are Nathan of Jerusalem and Aquila
+ of Ephesus. To thy wife my obeisances. To thyself, greeting.
+
+ CARUS, TRIBUNE.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The City of Delight, by Elizabeth Miller
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The City of Delight, by Elizabeth Miller
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The City of Delight
+ A Love Drama of the Siege and Fall of Jerusalem
+
+Author: Elizabeth Miller
+
+Illustrator: F. X. Leyendecker
+
+Release Date: May 31, 2005 [EBook #15953]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF DELIGHT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Stefan Cramme and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="ctr">
+<h1>THE CITY OF DELIGHT</h1>
+
+<h2><i>A Love Drama of the Siege and Fall
+of Jerusalem</i></h2>
+
+<h2>by</h2>
+
+<h2>Elizabeth Miller</h2>
+
+<h3>Author of</h3>
+
+<h3>The Yoke <i>and</i> Saul of Tarsus</h3>
+
+<h3>With Illustrations by</h3>
+
+<h3>F.X. Leyendecker</h3>
+</div>
+
+<h6>Indianapolis<br />
+The Bobbs-Merrill Company<br />
+Publishers<br />
+1908<br />
+March</h6>
+
+<div class="ctr">
+ <a href="images/image01l.jpg">
+ <img src="images/image01.jpg"
+ alt="Frontispiece"
+ title="Frontispiece" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="ctr">
+<p>
+To
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My Elder Brother
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Otto Miller
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<ol class="TOC">
+ <li><a href="#ch1">A Prince's Bride <span class="tocright">1</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch2">On the Road to Jerusalem <span class="tocright">31</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch3">The Shepherd of Pella <span class="tocright">56</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch4">The Travelers <span class="tocright">85</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch5">By the Wayside <span class="tocright">108</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch6">Dawn in the Hills <span class="tocright">124</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch7">Imperial Cęsar <span class="tocright">148</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch8">Greek and Jew <span class="tocright">169</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch9">The Young Titus <span class="tocright">189</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch10">The Story of a Divine Tragedy <span class="tocright">212</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch11">The House of Offense <span class="tocright">233</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch12">The Prince Returns <span class="tocright">253</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch13">A New Pretender <span class="tocright">274</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch14">The Pride of Amaryllis <span class="tocright">284</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch15">The Image of Jealousy <span class="tocright">300</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch16">The Spread Net <span class="tocright">322</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch17">The Tangled Web <span class="tocright">337</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch18">In the Sunless Crypt <span class="tocright">358</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch19">The False Prophet <span class="tocright">374</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch20">As the Foam upon Water <span class="tocright">390</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch21">The Faithful Servant <span class="tocright">408</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch22">Vanished Hopes <span class="tocright">417</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch23">The Fulfilment <span class="tocright">427</span></a></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#ch24">The Road to Pella <span class="tocright">441</span></a></li>
+</ol>
+
+
+
+<h1>THE CITY OF DELIGHT</h1>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch1">Chapter I</h2>
+
+<h2>A PRINCE'S BRIDE</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+The chief merchant of Ascalon stood in the guest-chamber
+of his house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although it was a late winter day the old man
+was clad in the free white garments of a midsummer
+afternoon, for to the sorrow of Philistia the cold
+season of the year sixty-nine had been warm, wet and
+miasmic. An old woman entering presently glanced
+at the closed windows of the apartment when she
+noted the flushed face of the merchant but she made
+no movement to have them opened. More than the
+warmth of the day was engaging the attention of
+the grave old man, and the woman, by dress and
+manner of equal rank with him, stood aside until he
+could give her a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His porter bowed at his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The servants of Philip of Tyre are without," he
+said. "Shall they enter?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They have come for the furnishings," Costobarus
+answered. "Take thou all the household but Momus
+and Hiram, and dismantle the rooms for them. Begin
+in the library; then the sleeping-rooms; this
+chamber next; the kitchen last of all. Send Hiram to
+the stables to except three good camels from the herd
+for our use. Let Momus look to the baggage.
+Where is Keturah?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A woman servant hastening after a line of men
+bearing a great divan, picking up the draperies and
+pillows that had dropped, stopped and salaamed to
+her master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is our apparel ready?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Prepared, master," was the response.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then send hither&ndash;" But at that moment a man-servant
+dressed in the garb of a physician hastened
+into the chamber. Without awaiting the notice of
+his master he hurried up and whispered in his ear.
+Costobarus' face grew instantly grave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How near?" he asked anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In the next house&ndash;but a moment since. The
+household hath fled," was the low answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Haste, haste!" Costobarus cried to the rush of
+servants about him. "Lose no time. We must be
+gone from this place before mid-afternoon. Laodice!
+Where is Laodice?" he inquired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then his wife who had stood aside spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is not yet prepared," she explained unreadily.
+"She needs a frieze cloak&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus broke in by beckoning his wife to one
+side, where the servants could not hear him say compassionately,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let there be no delay for small things, Hannah.
+Let us haste, for Laodice is going on the Lord's
+business."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A matter of a day only," Hannah urged. "A
+delay that is further necessary, for Aquila's horse
+is lame."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man shook his head and looked away to
+see a man-servant stagger out under a load of splendid
+carpets. The old woman came close.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The wayside is ambushed and the wilderness is
+patrolled with danger, Costobarus," she said. "Of a
+certainty you will not take Laodice out into a country
+perilous for caravans and armies!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"These very perils are the signs of the call of the
+hour," he maintained. "She dare not fail to respond.
+The Deliverer cometh; every prophecy is fulfilled.
+Rather rejoice that you have prepared your daughter
+for this great use. Be glad that you have borne
+her."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in Hannah's face wavered signs of another
+interpretation of these things. She broke in on him
+without the patience to wait until he had completed
+his sentence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are they prophecies of hope which are fulfilled,
+or the words of the prophet of despair?" she insisted.
+"What saith Daniel of this hour? Did he
+not name it the abomination of desolation? Said he
+not that the city and the sanctuary should be destroyed,
+that there should be a flood and that unto the
+end of the war desolations shall be determined? Desolations,
+Costobarus! And Laodice is but a child and
+delicately reared!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All these things may come to pass and not a hair
+of the heads of the chosen people be harmed," he
+assured her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But Laodice is too young to have part in the conflict
+of nations, the business of Heaven and earth and
+the end of all things!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A courier strode into the hall and approached Costobarus,
+saw that he was engaged in conversation and
+stopped. The merchant noted him and withdrew to
+read the message which the man carried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A letter from Philadelphus," he said over his
+shoulder, as he moved away from Hannah. "He
+hath landed in Cęsarea with his cousin Julian of
+Ephesus. He will proceed at once to Jerusalem. We
+have no time to lose. Ah, Momus?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke to a servant who had limped into the hall
+and stood waiting for his notice. He was the ruin of
+a man, physically powerful but as a tree wrecked by
+storm and grown strong again in spite of its mutilation.
+Pestilence in years long past had attacked him
+and had left him dumb, distorted of feature, wry-necked
+and stiffened in the right leg and arm. His
+left arm, forced to double duty, had become tremendously
+muscular, his left hand unusually dexterous.
+Much of his facial distortion was the result of his
+efforts to convey his ideas by expression and by his
+attempts to overcome the interference of his wry neck
+with the sweep of his vision.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whom have we in our party, Momus?" Costobarus
+asked. As the man made rapid, uncouth signs,
+the master interpreted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Keturah, Hiram and Aquila&ndash;and thou and I,
+Momus. Three camels, one of which is the beast of
+burden. Good! Aquila will ride a horse; ha! a horse
+in a party of camels&ndash;well, perhaps&ndash;if he were
+bought in Ascalon. How? What? St&ndash;t! The
+physician told me even now. Let none of the household
+know it&ndash;above all things not thy mistress!"
+The last sentence was delivered in a whisper in response
+to certain uneasy gestures the mute had made.
+The man bowed and withdrew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A second servitor now approached with papers
+which the merchant inspected and signed hastily with
+ink and stylus which the clerk bore. When this last
+item was disposed of, Hannah was again at her husband's
+side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Costobarus," she whispered, "it is known that
+the East Gate of the Temple, which twenty Levites
+can close only with effort, opened of itself in the sixth
+hour of the night!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A sign that God reėntereth His house," the merchant
+explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A sign, O my husband, that the security of the
+Holy House is dissolved of its own accord for the
+advantage of its enemies!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus observed two huge Ethiopians who appeared
+bewildered at the threshold of the unfamiliar
+interior, looking for the master of the house to tell
+them what to do. The merchant motioned toward a
+tall ebony case that stood against one of the walls
+and showed them that they were to carry it out.
+Hannah continued:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And thou hast not forgotten that night when the
+priests at the Pentecost, entering the inner court, were
+thrown down by the trembling of the Temple and
+that a vast multitude, which they could not see, cried:
+'Let us go hence!' And that dreadful sunset which
+we watched and which all Israel saw when armies were
+seen fighting in the skies and cities with toppling
+towers and rocking walls fell into red clouds and
+vanished!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What of thyself, Hannah?" he broke in. "Art
+thou ready to depart for Tyre? Philip will leave
+to-morrow. Do not delay him. Go and prepare."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the woman rushed on to indiscretion, in her
+desperate intent to stop the journey to Jerusalem at
+any cost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But there are those of good repute here in Ascalon,
+sober men and excellent women, who say that our
+hope for the Branch of David is too late&ndash;that
+Israel is come to judgment, this hour&ndash;for He is
+come and gone and we received Him not!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus turned upon her sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is this?" he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O my husband," she insisted hopefully, "it measures
+up with prophecy! And they who speak thus
+confidently say that He prophesied the end of the
+Holy City, and that this is not the Advent, but
+doom!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is the Nazarene apostasy," he exclaimed in
+alarm, "alive though the power of Rome and the diligence
+of the Sanhedrim have striven to destroy it
+these forty years! Now the poison hath entered
+mine own house!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A servant bowed within earshot. Costobarus turned
+to him hastily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Philip of Tyre," the attendant announced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let him enter," Costobarus said. "Go, Hannah;
+make Laodice ready&ndash;preparations are almost complete;
+be not her obstacle."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But&ndash;but," she insisted with whitening lips, "I
+have not said that I believe all this. I only urge that,
+in view of this time of war, of contending prophecies
+and of all known peril, that we should keep her, who is
+our one ewe lamb, our tender flower, our Rose of
+Sharon, yet within shelter until the signs are manifest
+and the purpose of the Lord God is made clear."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned to her slowly. There was pain on his
+face, suffering that she knew her words had evoked
+and, more than that, a yearning to relent. She was
+ashamed and not hopeful, but her mother-love was
+stronger than her wifely pity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Must I command you, Hannah?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her figure, drawn up with the intensity of her
+wishfulness, relaxed. Her head drooped and slowly
+she turned away. Costobarus looked after her and
+struggled with rising emotion. But the curtain
+dropped behind her and left him alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later the curtains over the arch parted
+and a middle-aged Jew, richly habited, stood there.
+He raised his hand for the blessing of the threshold,
+then embraced Costobarus with more warmth than
+ceremony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is this I hear?" he demanded with affectionate
+concern. "Thou leavest Ascalon for the peril
+of Jerusalem?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Can Jerusalem be more perilous than Ascalon
+this hour?" Costobarus asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, by our fathers!" Philip declared. "Nothing
+can be so bad as the condition of the Holy City.
+But what has happened? Three days ago thou wast
+as securely settled here as a barnacle on a shore-rock!
+To-day thou sendest me word: 'Lo! the time long
+expected hath come; I go hence to Jerusalem.'
+What is it, my brother?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sit and listen."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philip looked about him. The divan was there,
+stripped of its covering of fine rugs, but the room
+otherwise was without furniture. Prepared for surprise,
+the Tyrian let no sign of his curiosity escape
+him, and, sitting, leaned on his knees and waited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Philadelphus Maccabaeus hath sent to me, bidding
+me send Laodice to him&ndash;in Jerusalem," Costobarus
+said in a low voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philip's eyes widened with sudden comprehension.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He hath returned!" he exclaimed in a whisper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a time there was silence between the two old
+men, while they gazed at each other. Then Philip's
+manner became intensely confident.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I see!" he exclaimed again, in the same whisper.
+"The throne is empty! He means to possess it, now
+that Agrippa hath abandoned it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus pressed his lips together and bowed his
+head emphatically. Again there was silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Think of it!" Philip exclaimed presently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have done nothing else since his messenger
+arrived at daybreak. Little, little, did I think when
+I married Laodice to him, fourteen years ago, that
+the lad of ten and the little child of four might one
+day be king and queen over Judea!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philip shook his head slowly and his gaze settled
+to the pavement. Presently he drew in a long breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is twenty-four," he began thoughtfully.
+"He has all the learning of the pagans, both of letters
+and of war; he&ndash;Ah! But is he capable?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is the great-grandson of Judas Maccabaeus!
+That is enough! I have not seen him since the day
+he wedded Laodice and left her to go to Ephesus, but
+no man can change the blood of his fathers in him.
+And Philip&ndash;he shall have no excuse to fail. He
+shall be moneyed; he shall be moneyed!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus leaned toward his friend and with a
+sweep of his hand indicated the stripped room. It
+was a noble chamber. The stamp of the elegant simplicity
+of Cyrus, the Persian, was upon it. The
+ancient blue and white mosaics that had been laid by
+the Parsee builder and the fretwork and twisted pillars
+were there, but the silky carpets, the censers and
+the chairs of fine woods were gone. Costobarus looked
+steadily at the perplexed countenance of Philip.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Seest thou how much I believe in this youth?"
+he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shade of uneasiness crossed Philip's forehead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou art no longer young, Costobarus," he said,
+"and disappointments go hard with us, at our age&ndash;especially,
+especially."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall not be disappointed," Costobarus declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The friendly Jew looked doubtful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The nation is in a sad state," he observed. "We
+have cause. The procurators have been of a nature
+with their patrons, the emperors. It is enough but to
+say that! But Vespasian Cęsar is another kind of
+man. He is tractable. Young Titus, who will succeed
+him, is well-named the Darling of Mankind.
+We could get much redress from these if we would be
+content with redress. But no! We must revert to
+the days of Saul!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes; but they declare they will have no king but
+God; no commander but the Messiah to come; no
+order but primitive impulse! But the Maccabee will
+change all that! It is but the far swing of the first
+revolt. Jerusalem is ready for reason at this hour, it
+is said."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes," Philip assented with a little more spirit.
+"It hath reached us, who have dealings with the East,
+that there is a better feeling in the city. Such slaughter
+has been done there among the Sadducees, such
+hordes of rebels from outlying subjugated towns have
+poured their license and violence in upon the safe City
+of Delight, that the citizens of Jerusalem actually
+look forward to the coming of Titus as a deliverance
+from the afflictions which their own people have visited
+upon them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The hour for the Maccabee, indeed," Costobarus
+ruminated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And the hour for Him whom we all expect,"
+Philip added in a low tone. Costobarus bowed his
+head. Presently he drew a scroll from the folds of
+his ample robe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hear what Philadelphus writes me:
+</p>
+
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>
+Cęsarea, II Kal. Jul. XX.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To Costobarus, greetings and these by messenger;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I learn on arriving in this city that Judea is in truth no
+man's country. Wherefore it can be mine by cession or conquest.
+It is mine, however, by right. I shall possess it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I go hence to Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fail not to send my wife thither and her dowry. Aquila,
+my emissary, will safely conduct her. Trust him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Proceed with despatch and husband the dowry of your
+daughter, since it is to be the corner-stone of a new Israel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Peace to you and yours. To my wife my affection and my
+loyalty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+PHILADELPHUS MACCABAEUS.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nota Bene. Julian of Ephesus accompanies me. He is my
+cousin. He will in all probability meet your daughter at the
+Gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+MACCABAEUS."
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+Slowly the old man rolled the writing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He wastes no words," Philip mused. "He writes
+as a siege-engine talks&ndash;without quarter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So I am giving him two hundred talents," he said
+deliberately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Two hundred talents!" Philip echoed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I summoned thee, Philip, to say that in addition
+to my house and its goods, thou canst have my
+shipping, my trade, my caravans, which thou hast
+coveted so long at a price&ndash;at that price. I shall
+give Laodice two hundred talents."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Two hundred talents!" Philip echoed again,
+somewhat taken aback.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus went to a cabinet on the wall and drew
+forth a shittim-wood case which he unlocked. Therefrom
+he took a small casket and opened it. He then
+held it so that the sun, falling into it, set fire to a bed
+of loose gems mingled without care for kind or value&ndash;a
+heap of glowing color emitting sparks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here are one hundred of the talents," Costobarus
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A flash of understanding lighted Philip's face not
+unmingled with the satisfaction of a shrewd Jew who
+has pleased himself at business. One hundred talents,
+then, for the best establishment in five cities, in all the
+Philistine country. But why? Costobarus supplied
+the answer at that instant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would depart with my daughter by mid-afternoon,"
+he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I doubt the counting houses; if I had known
+sooner&ndash;" Philip began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Aquila arrived only this morning. I sent a messenger
+to you at once."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philip rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We waste time in talk. I shall inform thee by
+messenger presently. God speed thee! My blessings
+on thy son-in-law and on thy daughter!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus rose and took his friend's hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou shalt have the portion of the wise-hearted
+man in this kingdom. And this yet further, my
+friend. If perchance the uncertainties of travel in
+this distressed land should prove disastrous and I
+should not return, I shall leave a widow here&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And in that instance, be at peace. I am thy
+brother."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus pressed Philip's hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Farewell," he said; and Philip embraced him and
+went forth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus turned to one of his closed windows and
+thrust it open, for the influence of the spring sun had
+made itself felt in the past important hour for Costobarus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Noon stood beautiful and golden over the city.
+The sky was clean-washed and blue, and the surface
+of the Mediterranean, glimpsed over white house-tops
+that dropped away toward the sea-front, was a wandering
+sheet of flashing silver. Here and there were
+the ruins of the last year's warfare, but over the fallen
+walls of gray earth the charity of running vines
+and the new growth of the spring spread a beauty,
+both tender and compassionate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In such open spaces inner gardens were exposed
+and almond trees tossed their crowns of white bloom
+over pleached arbors of old grape-vines. Here the
+Mediterranean birds sang with poignant sweetness
+while the new-budded limbs of the oleanders tilted suddenly
+under their weight as they circled from covert
+to covert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the energy of the young spring was alive only
+in the birds and the blossoming orchards. Wherever
+the solid houses fronted in unbroken rows the passages
+between, there were no open windows, no carpets swung
+from latticed balconies; no buyers moved up the
+roofed-over Street of Bazaars. Not in all the range
+of the old man's vision was to be seen a living human
+being. For the chief city of the Philistine country
+Ascalon was nerveless and still. At times immense and
+ponderous creaking sounded in the distance, as if a
+great rusted crane swung in the wind. Again there
+were distant, voluminous flutterings, as if neglected
+and loosened sails flapped. Idle roaming donkeys
+brayed and a dog shut up and forgotten in a compound
+barked incessantly. Presently there came faint,
+far-off, failing cries that faded into silence. The
+Jew's brow contracted but he did not move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From his position, he could see the port to the east
+packed with lifeless vessels. The stretches of stone
+wharf and the mole were vacant and littered with rubbish.
+The yard-arms of abandoned freighters were
+peculiarly beaded with tiny black shapes that moved
+from time to time. Far out at sea, so far that a blue
+mist embraced its base and set its sails mysteriously
+afloat in air, a great galley, with all canvas crowded
+on, sped like a frightened bird past the port that had
+once been its haven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A strange compelling odor stole up from the city.
+Costobarus glanced down into his garden below him.
+It was a terraced court, with vine-covered earthen
+retaining walls supporting each successive tier and
+terminating against a domed gate flanked on either
+side by a tall conical cypress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He noted, on the flagging of the walk leading by
+flights of steps down to the gate, a heap of garments
+with broad brown and yellow stripes. Wondering at
+the untidiness of his gardener in leaving his tunic here
+while he worked, Costobarus looked away toward the
+large stones that lay here and there in gutters and on
+grass-plots, remnants of the work of the Roman catapults
+the previous summer. In the walls of houses
+were unrepaired breaches, where the wounds of the
+missiles showed. On a slight eminence overlooking the
+city from the west center-poles of native cedar which
+had supported Roman tents were still standing. But
+no garrison was there now, though the signs of the
+savage Roman obsession still lay on the remnants of
+the prostrate western wall. So as Costobarus' gaze
+wandered he did not see far above that heap of striped
+garments in his garden walk, fixed like an enchanted
+thing, moveless, dead-calm, a great desert vulture
+poised in air. Presently another and yet another
+materialized out of the blue, growing larger as they
+fell down to the level of their fellow. Slowly the three
+swooped down over the heap on the garden walk. The
+tiny black shapes that beaded the yard-arms in port
+spread great wings and soared solemnly into Ascalon.
+The three vultures dropped noiselessly on the pavement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cries began suddenly somewhere nearer and instantly
+the tremendous booming of a great oriental
+gong from the heathen quarters swept heavy floods of
+sound over the outcry and drowned it. The vultures
+flew up hastily and Costobarus saw them for the first
+time. A chill rushed over him; revulsion of feeling
+showed vividly on his face. He shut the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Noon was high over Ascalon and Pestilence was
+Cęsar within its walls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the penalty of warfare, the long black
+shadow that the passage of a great army casts upon a
+battling nation. Physicians could not give it a name.
+It seized upon healthy victims, rent them, blasted
+them and cast them dead and distorted in their tracks,
+before help could reach them. It passed like fire on a
+high wind through whole countries and left behind it
+silence and feeding vultures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Costobarus turned from his window to pace up
+and down his chamber, Hannah's argument came back
+to him with new energy. He felt with a kind of panic
+that his confident answer to her might have been
+wrong. When a girl appeared in the archway, he
+moved impulsively toward her, as if to retract the
+command that would send her out into this land that
+the Lord had spoken against, but the strength and
+repose in her face communicated itself to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Above all other suggestions in her presence was
+that overpowering richness of oriental beauty which
+no other kind in the world may surpass in its appeal
+to the loves of men. Enough of the Roman stock in
+her line had given structural firmness and stature to a
+type which at her age would have developed weight
+and duskiness, but she was taller and more slender than
+the women of her race, and supple and alive and splendid.
+About her hips was knotted a silken scarf of
+red and white and green with long undulant fringes
+that added to the lithe grace in her movements.
+Under it was a glistening garment of silver tissue that
+reached to the small ankles laced about by the ribbons
+of white sandals. For sleeves there were netted
+fringes through which the fine luster of her arms was
+visible. About her wrists, her throat and in her hair,
+heavy and shining black, were golden coins that
+marked her steps with stealthy tinkling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus, in spite of the shock of doubt and fear
+in his brain, looked at her as if with the happy eyes
+of the astonished Maccabee. In those full tender lips,
+in the slope of those black, silken brows, in the sparkling
+behind the dusky slumbrous eyes, there was all the
+fire and generosity and limitless charm that should
+make her lover's world a place of delight and perfume
+and music.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How is it with you, Laodice?" he asked, faltering
+a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am prepared, my father," she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I commend your despatch. I would be gone within
+an hour."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She bowed and Costobarus regarded her with growing
+wistfulness. At this last moment his love was to
+become his obstacle, his fear for his child his one cowardice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dost thou remember him?" he asked without preliminary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice answered as if the thought were first in her
+mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not at all; and yet, if I could remember him, I
+may not discover in the man of four-and-twenty anything
+of the lad of ten."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He may not have changed. There are such
+natures, and, as I recall him, his may well be one of
+these. His disposition from childhood to boyhood did
+not change. When I knew him in Jerusalem, he was
+worthy the notice of a man. The manner he had
+there he bore with him to this, a smaller city, and
+hence to Ephesus, a city of another kind. It was
+good to see him examine the world, reject this and
+that and look upon his choice proudly. He made the
+schools observe him, consider him. He did not enter
+them for alteration, nor was he shut up in a shell of
+self-satisfaction. He entered them as a citizen of the
+world and as an examiner of all philosophy. Yet the
+world taught him nothing. It gave him merely the
+open school where regulation and atmosphere helped
+him to teach himself. O wife of a child, thou shalt
+not be ashamed of thy husband, man-grown!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How is he favored?" she asked with the first
+maiden hesitation showing in the question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He was slender and dark and promised to be tall.
+He was quick in movement, quick in temper, resourceful,
+aye, even shifty, I should say; stubborn, cold in
+heart, hard to please."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fit attributes for a king," she said, half to herself,
+"yet he will be no soft husband."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus looked away from her and was silent
+for a time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Daughter," he said finally, "thou hast learned
+indeed that thine is to be no luxurious life. In thy
+restrained heart there are no dreams. Let not thy
+youth, when thou seest him, put obstacle in the way of
+thy duty. Whether thou lovest him or lovest him not,
+he is thy husband, thy fellow in a great labor for God
+and for Israel. Remember the times and the portents
+and shut thine ears against selfish desire. Thou seest
+Judea. That which the Lord hath uttered against it
+through the prophets has come to pass. Abandon thy
+hopes in all save the Son of God; forget thyself; prepare
+to give all and expect nothing but the coming of
+the King! For verily thou lookest over the edge of
+the world past the very end of time!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The solemn announcement of the Advent by this
+white-bearded prophet should have discovered in her
+a very human and terrified girl. But it was no
+new tidings to her. Since her earliest recollection
+she had heard it, expected it, contemplated it, till the
+magnitude and terror of it had been lost in its familiarity.
+She clasped her hands and dropped her eyes
+and her lips moved in a silent prayer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus remained for a space sunk in glorified
+meditation. But presently he raised himself, with
+signs of his recent feeling showing on his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Send hither thy mother; bid Aquila and our servants
+stand here before me a little later."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She bowed and withdrew. As she passed out a
+servant stepped aside to give her room and at a sign
+from his master approached.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A messenger from Philip of Tyre," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later an old courier carrying a sheepskin
+wallet came into the chamber. He salaamed and
+produced a tablet which he handed to Costobarus.
+</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>
+Herewith, O my brother, I send thee one hundred talents.
+May it prove part of the corner-stone of a new Israel.
+Peace to thee and thine!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+PHILIP OF TYRE.
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus looked up at the old courier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Take my blessings to thy master. May he come
+to a high seat in that new Israel which he hath helped
+to build! Farewell."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The courier withdrew. When his footsteps died
+away the old merchant reached under the divan and
+drew forth the shittim-wood box. Producing a key
+he unlocked and opened it. From his bosom he drew
+forth the letter from Philadelphus and laid it within.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let her take it with her," he said, speaking
+aloud. "Here," lifting a cylinder of old silver exquisitely
+chased, "are her marriage papers; this,"
+lifting delicately embroidered squares of linen, "her
+marriage tokens, and here, her dowry."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He opened the inner box and laid the sheepskin
+wallet in upon the gems. He closed the lid, and, locking
+the case, lifted it and set it beside him on the
+divan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he looked up, he saw a man standing within
+a few paces of him and perfunctorily gazing at anything
+but the display of Laodice's fortune.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was lean, muscular, somewhat younger than
+forty but already gray at the temples, of nervous
+temperament, direct of gaze and of attractive presence.
+He wore a tunic of gray wool bordered with
+red, and a gray mantle hung negligently from his
+shoulders. Limbs and arms were bare and his head-covering
+of red wool hung from his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus, a little discomfited that he had been
+surprised with Laodice's dowry exposed, spoke
+briskly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, Aquila? Prepared?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Everything is in order. I am ready to proceed
+at once."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How many in your party?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But myself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have you ever been to Jerusalem?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How, then," Costobarus asked, with a keen look,
+"came Philadelphus to appoint you to conduct Laodice
+to the city?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"His retinue is small; he could not come himself,
+and he chose me as safer than the other member of
+his party," was the direct reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus studied this reply before he questioned
+his son-in-law's courier further.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jerusalem, they say, is in disorder. How will
+you get my daughter to shelter when you have reached
+the city?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Philadelphus hath instructed me that there will be
+a Greek at the Sun Gate daily, awaiting us. He will
+wear a purple turban embroidered with a golden star.
+He will conduct us to the house of Amaryllis the
+Seleucid, who is pledged to the Maccabee's cause.
+Philadelphus will be in her house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why hers?" Costobarus persisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Because it is the only secure house in Jerusalem.
+She stands in the good graces of John of Gischala
+and she is safe."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus ruminated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is too much detail; too many people to
+depend upon and therefore too many who may fail
+you. Aquila!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sir?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am going to Jerusalem with you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned without waiting to see the effect of this
+speech upon the Maccabee's courier and clapped his
+hands for an attendant. To the servitor who responded
+he said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Send hither our party. It is time. Bring me my
+cloak."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked then suddenly at Aquila. The Roman's
+face had cleared of its astonishment and discomfiture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well enough," the courier said bluntly and closed
+his lips. The servitor reappeared with his master's
+cloak and kerchief. After him came Keturah, the
+handmaiden, and Hiram, a camel-driver, prepared for
+a journey. The mute Momus presently appeared.
+Costobarus got into his cloak without help, made inquiry
+for this detail and that of his business and of
+his journey, gave instruction to his attendants, and
+then asked for Laodice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a moment of silence more distressed than
+embarrassed. Momus dropped his eyes; Keturah
+looked at her master with moving lips and sudden
+flushing of color, as if she were on the point of tears.
+Aquila stared absently out of the arch beyond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus glanced from one to the other of his
+company and then went toward the corridor to call
+his daughter. As he lifted the curtain, he started
+and stopped.
+</p>
+
+<div class="ctr">
+ <a href="images/image02l.jpg">
+ <img src="images/image02.jpg"
+ alt="At her feet Hannah knelt."
+ title="At her feet Hannah knelt." /></a>
+ <p class="caption">At her feet Hannah knelt.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+The lifted curtain had revealed Laodice. At her
+feet Hannah knelt, as if she had flung herself in her
+daughter's path, her arms clasping the young figure
+close to her and an agony of appeal stamped on her
+upraised face. The last of the rich color had died out
+of the girl's face and with pitiful eyes and quivering
+lips she was stroking the desperate hands that meant
+to keep her for ever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Except for the sudden sobbing of the woman servant,
+tense and anguished silence prevailed. The old
+merchant was confronted with a perplexity that found
+him without fortitude to solve. He felt his strength
+slip from him. He, too, covered his face with his
+hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the opposite arch another house servant appeared,
+lifted a distorted, blackening face and, doubling
+like a wounded snake, fell upon the floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment of stupefied silence in which Hannah,
+with her mother instincts never so acutely alive,
+turned her strained vision upon the writhing figure.
+Then shrieks broke from the lips of the serving-woman;
+the hall filled with panic. Hannah leaped to
+her feet and thrust Laodice toward her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Away!" she cried. "The pestilence! The pestilence
+is upon us!"
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch2">Chapter II</h2>
+
+<h2>ON THE ROAD TO JERUSALEM</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+News of the appearance of the plague in the house
+of Costobarus traveled fast after the death of the
+gardener, who had fallen in the open and in sight of
+the watchful inhabitants of Ascalon. So by the time
+the house servants of the merchant were made aware
+of their peril by the death of one of their own number,
+Philip of Tyre with the courage of affection and
+loyalty stood on the threshold of the guest-chamber
+informed of the situation and prepared to help. Hannah,
+supported by the Tyrian's assurance of her rescue
+and protection, succeeded in urging Costobarus
+and Laodice not to delay for her to the peril of the
+thrice precious daughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So with his house yet ringing with the first convulsion
+of terror Costobarus ordered his party with
+all haste to the camels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Keturah, Laodice's handmaiden, had fainted with
+terror and was carried parcel-wise over the great arm
+of Momus, the mute, out into the street and deposited
+summarily on the floor of Laodice's bamboo howdah.
+The camel-driver, Hiram, seemed only a little less stupefied
+than she. The mute, with a face as determined
+and threatening as an uplifted gad, drove him from
+the shelter of a dark corner out to his place on the
+neck of his master's camel. Aquila, the emissary,
+showed the immemorial composure in the face of disaster
+that was the badge of the Roman in the days of the
+degenerate Cęsars, and, mounting his horse when the
+rest of the party were in their places, headed the procession
+toward the northeast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From an upper window behind a lattice, Hannah
+cried her farewells and fluttered her scarf. She was
+smiling the drawn, white smile of a mother who is
+forcing herself to be cheerful in the face of danger,
+for the peace of those she loves. Laodice understood
+the tender deception and when a sharp turn of the
+street cut off the sight of the plumy trees of the garden,
+she covered her face and wept inconsolably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On either side of the passage there came muffled
+sounds from houses; out of open alleys leading into
+interior courts stole the fetor of death that even the
+spice of burning unguents could not smother. The
+whole air shuddered with the drumming of heathen
+physicians in the pagan quarters, through which the
+silence of long stretches of ominously quiet houses
+shouted its meaning. At times frantic barefoot flights
+could be glimpsed as households deserted stricken
+houses, but whatever outcry arose came from bedsides.
+Ascalon fled as a frightened animal flees, silently and
+under cover.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They rode now through a shrieking wind, burdened
+with sallow smoke and dreadful odors. Denser and
+denser the cloud grew till the streets ahead were hidden
+in yellow vapor and near-by houses loomed with dim
+outlines as if far off, and even the sounds of death and
+disaster became choked in the immense prevalence of
+smell. Blinded, with scarf and kerchief wrapped over
+mouth and nostril, the fleeing party swept down upon
+the very heart of that stifling mystery. Through it
+presently, as the houses thinned out, they saw cores
+of great heat surmounted by black-tipped flames that
+crackled savagely. Momus, now in the lead, turned
+sharply to his right and the next instant had the wind
+behind him. Almost involuntarily each member of
+the party looked back. Outside the breach of the
+broken wall, standing clear to view with the wind from
+the hills sweeping townward from them, were diabolical
+figures, naked and black, feeding immense pyres
+with hideous fuel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Past this grisly line, a camel with a single rider
+swept in from seaward. The traveler lifted an arm
+and signaled to the party. Aquila seemed not to see
+this hail, and rode on; but Costobarus, after the traveler
+motioned to them once more, spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Does not this person make signs to us, Aquila?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pagan looked back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why should he?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He can tell us," the master observed and spoke to
+Momus and Hiram, who drew up their camels. The
+traveler raced alongside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a woman, veiled and wrapped with all the
+jealous care of the East against the curious eyes of
+strangers. Aquila took in her featureless presence
+with a single irritated look and apparently lost interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Greeting, lady," Costobarus said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Peace, sir, and greeting," she replied respectfully.
+Her tones were marked with the deference of the serving-class
+and Costobarus gave her permission to
+speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Art thou a Jew and master of this train?" she
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus assented.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I was journeying to Jerusalem with a caravan of
+which my master was owner, but the Romans came
+upon us and took every one prisoner, except myself.
+I escaped, but I am without protection and without
+friends. In Jerusalem, I have relatives who will care
+for me, yet I fear to make the journey alone. I pray
+thee, with the generosity of a Jew and the authority
+of a master, permit me to go in the protection of thy
+company!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Costobarus reflected and while he hesitated he became
+aware that Momus was looking at him with
+warning in his eyes. But Laodice, so filled with loneliness
+and apprehension, was moved to sympathy for
+the solitary and friendless woman. She leaned toward
+her father and said in a low voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let her come with us, father; she is a woman and
+afraid."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aquila heard that low petition and he flashed a look
+at the stranger that seemed reproachful. But Costobarus
+was speaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ride with us, then, and be welcome," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman bowed her shawled head and murmured
+with emotion after a silence:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The blessings of a servant be upon you and
+yours; may the God of Israel be with you for evermore."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She dropped back to the rear of the party and the
+train moved on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, Keturah, who sat huddled on the floor
+of Laodice's howdah, had not moved since they had
+left the doorway of Costobarus' house. Momus,
+on the neck of Laodice's camel, had observed
+her once or twice, and now he reached back and
+touched her. He jerked his hand away and brought
+up his camel with a wrench. Hiram, following close
+behind, by dint of main strength managed to avoid a
+collision with Momus' beast so suddenly halted. The
+mute leaped down from his place and in an instant
+Costobarus joined him. Alarmed without understanding,
+Laodice had risen and was drawn as far as she
+might from the serving-woman. Momus, lifting himself
+by the stirrup, seized the stiff figure and laid it
+down upon the sands. Aquila dismounted and the
+three men bent over the woman. Then Costobarus
+glanced up quickly at Laodice, made a sign to Momus,
+who, with a face devoid of expression, climbed back
+into his place on the neck of the camel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The strange woman who had stood her ground was
+heard to say in a low voice, half lost in the muffling
+of her wrappings:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"One!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus drove on leisurely and Laodice, knowing
+that she must not look, slipped down in her place and
+wrapped her vitta over her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pestilence was riding with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a long time, Costobarus' camel ambled up
+beside hers, and she ventured to uncover her eyes.
+Her father smiled at her with that same heart-breaking
+smile which her mother had for her in face of
+trouble.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The frosts! The frosts!" he whispered to Momus,
+and the mute laid goad about his camel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aquila, seeing this haste, checked his horse's gait
+and fell back beside the strange woman. Together
+they permitted the rest of the party to ride ahead,
+while they talked in voices too restrained to be heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is pestilence in this company," Aquila said
+angrily; "will that not persuade you to abandon this
+plan?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. When all of you are like to die and leave
+this great treasure sitting out in the wilderness without
+a guardian?" she said lightly. There was no
+trace of a servant's humility in her tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hast had the plague that thou seem'st to feel
+secure from it?" he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O no; then there would be no risk in this game.
+There is no sport in an unfair advantage over conditions.
+No! But how comes this Costobarus with
+you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He would not trust his daughter and a dowry to
+me, alone."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How shall we get to Emmaus, then?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We shall not get to Emmaus; so you must inform
+Julian, who will expect us there," he declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman played with the silken reins of her
+camel. Behind her veil a sarcastic smile played about
+the corners of her mouth. Aquila watched her resentfully,
+waiting with an immense reserve of caustic
+words for her refusal to accept the charge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So, my Mars of the gray temples, thou meanest
+in all faith to deliver up this lady and her treasure
+to Julian?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By those same gray temples, I do! And hold thy
+peace about my white hairs. Nothing made them so
+but thyself&ndash;and this evil plot in which I am tangled.
+What does Julian mean to do with this poor
+creature?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He has not got her yet and by the complication
+thou seest now, wearing its turban over one ear in
+yonder howdah, it may come to pass that he will never
+have her&ndash;and her dowry."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pfui! How little you know this Julian! Besides,
+I am pledged to deliver him&ndash;at least the
+treasure."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And thou meanest to line his purse with this great
+treasure because he paid thee to do it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall; and be rid of it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman smiled sarcastically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And scorn it for thyself?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aquila made no answer, but rode on in sulky silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perpol, it must be pleasant to be a queen," the
+woman observed with an assumption of childishness
+in her voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Peril's own habit!" Aquila declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Peril! Fie! That is half the pleasure of this
+game of life. It is tiresome to live any other way
+than hazardously."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou shalt have pleasure enough in this journey
+thou art to take," Aquila declared a little threateningly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman laughed. When Aquila spoke again,
+his voice was full of concern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I was a fool for not forcing you to stay in Ascalon.
+You are reckless&ndash;reckless!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It was that which made me attractive," the woman
+broke in, "to Nero, to Vitellius and to you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Reckless and useless!" Aquila went on decisively.
+"Hear me, now; I trifle no longer. Sometime to-night
+thou'lt leave us and journey to Emmaus and
+inform Julian what has wrecked his plans, and send
+him with despatch to Zorah. This thou wilt do, by all
+the Furies, or when I do catch thee as I shall, since
+there is no other fool in Judea who will undertake to
+feed thee, I shall leave the print of my displeasure on
+thee from thy head to thy heel! Mark me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman laughed aloud, with such peculiar insolence
+and amusement that one of the servants heard
+her and turned his head that way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pah! What a timid villain thou art," the woman
+said, when the servant looked away again. "How
+much better it would have been had Julian fixed upon
+<i>me</i> as his confederate!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not for Julian! You plot against him even
+now. But say what you will, you go to Emmaus
+to-night, without fail. I have spoken!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aquila touched his horse and riding away from the
+woman came up beside Costobarus who was gazing
+over the country through which they were passing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a great plain, advancing by benches and
+slopes to the edge of a rocky shore. Without forests,
+spotted only with verdure, vast, barren, exhausted with
+the constant production of fourteen centuries, it was
+a cheerless sea-front at its best. To the west the wash
+of the tideless Mediterranean tumbled along an unindented
+coast; to the east the sallow stony earth went
+up and up, toward an ever receding sallow horizon.
+Between lay humbled towns, wholly abandoned to the
+bats and to the ignoble wild life of the Judean wilderness.
+There were no sheep or cattle. Vespasian had
+passed that way and required the flocks of the nation
+for the subsistence of his four legions. There were
+no olive or fig groves. They had been the first to fall
+under the Roman ax, for the policy of Roman warfare
+was that the first step in subduing a rebellious
+province was to starve it. The vineyards had suffered
+the same end. The enriched soil of these inclosures,
+made one now with the wild at the leveling of their
+hedges, produced acres of profitless weeds, green
+against the rising brown bosom of the hill-fronts.
+Here and there were the fallen walls of isolated homes&ndash;wastes
+of masonry already losing all domestic
+signs. There were no gardens; it had been two seasons
+since the wheat and the barley had been reaped
+last, and the seaboard of southern Judea, in the path
+of Rome the destroyer, was a wilderness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Over all this immense slope the eyes of Costobarus
+wandered. However he had felt in the preceding
+days when he looked upon this ruin of the land of milk
+and honey, he realized now suddenly and in all its
+fearful actuality the predicament of Judea, its despair
+and the gigantic travail before those who would save
+it from the united sentence passed upon it by God and
+the powers. Immense dejection seized him. He
+looked from the face of the country, upon which not a
+single thing of profit showed, toward the bowed head
+and oppressed figure of his young and inexperienced
+daughter who was to put her tender self between Ruin
+and its victim. Chills, succeeded by flashes of fever,
+swept over him. He raised himself as if to give command
+to Aquila but settled back under the canopy,
+grown immeasurably older and feebler in that moment
+of helpless surrender to conditions of which he had
+been part an artificer. It was not as if he had made
+an incautious move in a political game; it was, as it
+seemed to him undeniably then, that he had advanced
+against the Lord God of Hosts, and there was no turning
+back!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He settled slowly into a stunned anguish that
+seemed to rise gradually, like a filling tide, shutting
+out the sunset and the seaboard, the bald earth and the
+streaming wind, and engulfing him in roaring darkness
+and intense cold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were in sight of a cluster of Syrian huts, the
+first inhabited village they had come upon since leaving
+Ascalon, but he was not aware of it. The sudden
+halting of his camel and a hoarse strained cry at hand
+seemed to bear some relation to his condition, but he
+did not care. He felt his howdah lurch to one side as
+some one leaped up beside him; he felt remotely the
+great grasp of hands on him, which must have been
+Momus'; the quick military voice of Aquila he heard
+and then, keen and distinct as a call upon him, the
+sound of Laodice's tones made sharp with terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He opened his eyes and saw her, holding him in her
+arms. Somewhere in the background were the faces
+of Momus and Aquila. Between the pagan and the
+old servant passed a look that the old man caught.
+Then he heard Aquila say:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The village&ndash;his sole chance, if there is a physician
+there."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice held him fast only for a moment, when it
+seemed that she was wrenched away. The dying man
+was glad. If this were pestilence, she should not come
+near. The hiss of the lash and the bound of the stung
+camel disturbed him but he lapsed into the immense
+cold again as they raced down the slight declivity
+toward the Syrian village. But Pestilence was riding
+with them and the odds were with it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the dwellers of that little huddle of huts had
+nothing to do but to sit in their doorways and suspect.
+Whatever came their way from the sea for many
+months had brought them disaster and long since they
+had learned to defend themselves. So now, when a
+party riding at breakneck speed, bearing with them
+an old man on whom the inertia of death was plain,
+came across the frontiers of their little town, they met
+them with the convenient stones of their rocky streets,
+with their savage, stark-ribbed dogs, with offal from
+kitchen heap and donkey stall and with insults and
+curses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Away, ye bringers of plague! Out, lepers; be
+gone, ye unclean!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice and Aquila who rode in the open were
+fair targets for half the hail that fell about them.
+The girl groaned as the missiles fell into the howdah
+upon the helpless shape of Costobarus, who did not
+lift a hand to fend off the stones. The pagan,
+bruised and raging, drew his weapon and spurred
+his horse to ride down his assailants, but they scattered
+before him and from safe refuge continued their
+assault with redoubled determination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus, seeing only injury in attempting to enforce
+hospitality, turned his camel and, swinging
+around the outermost limits of the settlement, fled.
+Aquila followed him, and a moment later the rest of
+the party joined them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without the range of the village, the party halted.
+Momus and Aquila lifted Costobarus down and laid
+him on a rug that Laodice had spread for him. But
+when she would have knelt by him, he motioned to
+Aquila not to permit her to approach. The mute
+stood by his master. In that countenance fast passing
+under shade was written charge and injunction
+as solemn as the darkness that approached him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here, O faithful servant, is the wife of a prince,
+the daughter of thy master, the joy of thine own
+declining days. Shield her against wrong and misfortune
+by all the strength that in thee lies, as thou
+hopest in the King to come and the reward of the
+steadfast. Promise!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were silent lips that once knew the art and
+the sound of speech. The old habit never entirely
+fell away from them. Under this anguish they moved&ndash;fruitlessly;
+over the deformed face flitted the keen
+agony of regret; then he lifted his great left arm and
+bent it upward at the elbow; the huge, even monstrous
+muscles, knotted and kinked from shoulder to
+elbow, sank down under the broad barbarian bracelet
+of bronze and rippled under and rose again from
+elbow to wrist, ferocious, superhuman! In that
+movement the dying man read the mute's consecration
+of his one great strength to the protection of
+the tenderly loved Laodice. Costobarus motioned to
+the shittim-wood casket and Momus undid it and
+strapped it on his own belt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The frosts! The frosts!" the dying man whispered.
+The mute understood. Then the father's
+eyes wandered toward the figure of his daughter
+fended away from him by the pagan. The agony
+of her suffering and the agony of his distress for her
+bridged the space between them. And while they
+yearned toward each other in a silence that quivered
+with pain, the light darkened in Costobarus' eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Laodice came to herself, she was laid upon
+a spot of rough grass, in the shelter of an overhanging
+bluff. It was not the scene upon which her sorrow-stunned
+eyes had closed a while before. The
+village was nowhere in sight; the plain had been left
+behind; any further view was shut off by Aquila's
+horse, and the two camels whose bridles were in the
+hands of Hiram. Beside the stricken girl knelt Momus
+and Aquila; standing at her feet was a new-comer,
+on whom her wandering and half-conscious
+gaze rested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was an old man, clad in a short tunic, ragged
+of hem and girt about him with a rope. Barefoot,
+bareheaded and provided only with a staff and a small
+wallet, he was to outward appearances little more
+than one of the legion of mendicants that infested
+the poverty-stricken land of Judea. But his large
+eyes, under the tangle of wind-blown white hair and
+white shelving brows, were infinitely intelligent and
+refined. Now, they beamed with pity and concern on
+the bereaved girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she forgot him the next instant, for returning
+consciousness brought back like a blow the memory
+of the death of her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From time to time she caught snatches of conversation
+between the old wayfarer and Aquila. They
+were spoken in low tones and only from time to time
+did they reach her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He was Costobarus, principal merchant of this
+coast," she heard Aquila explain shortly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall go on to Ascalon; I do not fear," the
+old man said next. "I shall bring his people to
+fetch his body. I marked the spot. Comfort her
+with that, when she can bear to talk of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We go to Jerusalem," Aquila went on, some time
+later, "else we should turn back with him ourselves.
+But we dare not risk the pestilence on her account, for
+it seems that she is very necessary to the Jews at this
+hour&ndash;very necessary."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I follow to the Holy City," the old wayfarer
+added at last. "The Passover is celebrated there
+within two weeks. But I shall not fail; nothing will
+harm me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What talisman do you carry to protect you?"
+the pagan asked a little irritably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No talisman, but the love of Jesus Christ, the
+Saviour!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A Christian!" Aquila exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even through her stupor of grief and hopelessness,
+Laodice heard this exclamation. Here, then,
+was one of the Nazarenes, that mysterious sect whose
+tenets she had never been permitted to hear; But also,
+she knew that the old apostate had braved the plague
+and had buried her father. She turned to look at
+him in time to see him extend his hands in blessing
+over her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and his comfort
+be with you, for ever; amen</i>. Farewell."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was gone. Momus raised her in his arms and,
+lifting her into her howdah, laid her tenderly on the
+improvised reclining seat that had been made of the
+chair therein. In a twinkling the whole party had
+mounted, and passed swiftly on toward Jerusalem.
+As they moved forward, the strange woman murmured
+softly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Two!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice's camel mounted the slope toward the east
+and stretched away on a comparative level toward an
+immense white moon. Aquila's horse kept up with
+the matchless speed of the tall camel only at times,
+and Laodice, dully sensing that they were going at
+hot haste, realized that a race was on between them
+and the pestilence. Momus was wielding the goad
+for a run to the frosts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A camel raced up beside Aquila.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Look!" the woman said to him in a lowered tone,
+showing back over the road by which they had come.
+Aquila turned in his saddle and looked. Momus rose
+in his seat and looked. Behind them only one camel
+rocked along in their wake. The other and its driver
+had disappeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Deserted!" Aquila exclaimed under his breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Three!" the woman said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A pest on your counting for a Charon's toll-taker!"
+Aquila whispered savagely. "We will have
+no more of it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No?" the woman said with a meaning that made
+the pagan shiver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus laid goad about his camel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The way continually ascended toward the east; the
+soil was no longer sandy, but rocky; no longer given
+up to desolate gardens, but black with groves of
+cedars and highland shrubs. They swung off a
+plateau that would have ended in a cliff, down a shaly
+sheep-path into a wady. Under the moonlight, the
+bottom was seen to be scarred with marks of hoof and
+wheel. It debouched suddenly into a Roman road,
+straight, level, magnificently built and running as
+a bird flies on to Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The camel's gait increased. Momus settled himself
+in a securer position and Laodice, careless of the
+outcome of this breathless hurry, yielded herself to
+the careen of her howdah. At times, her indifferent
+vision caught, through moonlit notches and gaps,
+glimpses of great blue vapors, crowned with pale fire
+and piled in glorious disorder low on the eastern
+horizon. They were the hills encompassing Jerusalem.
+The stream of wind on her face cooled and
+drove stronger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aquila rode closer to her, his horse panting under
+the effort. His face looked strange and distressed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lady," he said in low tones, "necessity forces
+me to speak to you in your grief; do not blame
+me for indifference to your desire to be alone. But
+we must care for you, though in your heart this
+moment you may resent a wish to live. But your
+father commanded me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gave him attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let us not carry peril with us," he added in a
+half-whisper. "Let us not carry food for pestilence
+with us."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not understand," she answered, adopting his
+low tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The more we are, the more of us to die. You
+must live; I must live," he explained, nodding toward
+Momus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a little silence, she asked:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do we not ride toward the frosts?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes; but even now pestilence may ride on beside
+us&ndash;your servant and this woman. Let us save ourselves."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Abandon them?" she questioned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lest they go on without us," he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus turned suddenly and gazed at Aquila.
+Then he imperiously signed the pagan to fall back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They rode on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pagan slackened his horse's gallop and reined
+in beside the woman. They talked together, argumentatively,
+for a single tense minute and then Aquila,
+with a bitter word, put spurs to his animal and
+dashed up beside Laodice's camel. In his one uplifted
+hand a knife gleamed. The other reached
+toward the casket bound to Momus' hip. Laodice,
+raised to an upright attitude in her fresh fright, saw
+that his face was black and twisted and that he
+wavered stiffly in his saddle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the mute did not await the attack. He seized
+the pagan's outstretched hands with that monstrous
+left and flung him backward. Without an effort to
+save himself, falling rigidly and with a strange cry,
+Aquila dropped back over his horse's crupper into
+the dust of the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Momus!" Laodice screamed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Back of her the woman cried out:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On! On! It is the pestilence!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus wielded his goad. Laodice, shaking and
+crying aloud, looked back to see the strange woman
+swerve her camel past the dark shape lying with
+out-flung arms in the road and sweep quickly on
+after them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scourge had overtaken Aquila.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All night the camels fled east, all night the soft
+footfall of the woman's beast pursued them; all night
+the wind freshened until Laodice's bared face stiffened
+with the cold and the breath of the mute that
+sat upon her camel's neck steamed in the moonlight.
+Up and up, by steep and winding wadies they
+mounted; under overhanging cliffs and past bald towers
+of hill-rock staring white in the moon, along black
+passes between brooding eminences of solid night,
+crowned with ghost-light; over high plateaus darkened
+with groves, down dales with singing, invisible
+streams running seaward and up again and on until
+the hills engulfed them wholly and those before were
+higher than any they had seen. Then their flying
+beasts, leaving the Roman road over which they had
+sped for some distance, followed a sheep-path and
+burst into an open immersed in moonlight. Below
+in the distance was a cluster of huts, white and lifeless.
+But abroad, over the crisp grass and misty
+white on all the exposed slopes, sparkled the deep
+hoar frost!
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch3">Chapter III</h2>
+
+<h2>THE SHEPHERD OF PELLA</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Momus drew up his camel. The woman who had
+followed halted. Except for the hurried breathing
+of their beasts, a critical silence brooded over the
+moon-silvered wilderness. The moment was tense
+with the agony of human bitterness against the immitigable
+despatch of death. There could be no
+thanksgiving for their own safety from those who
+were not glad to be given life. Laodice resented her
+preservation; old Momus, aside from the wound of
+personal loss sore in his heart, was stricken with
+the realization of the grief of his young mistress,
+which he could not help. He did not raise his eyes
+to her face when he turned toward her; there was no
+speech. In the young woman's heart the pain was
+too great for her to venture expression safely. The
+silence was poignant with unnatural restraint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently Momus inquired of her by signs if she
+wished to go on to the lifeless village below the camp.
+She did not observe his gestures, and Momus decided
+for her. He drove on and the woman, who had
+wrapped her cloak about her as the biting wind of
+the hills heightened through the narrow defiles to the
+north, followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But almost the next instant Momus drew up his
+mount so suddenly that Laodice was roused. He
+turned and began to make rapid signs. Laodice half
+rose as she read them and pressed her hands together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Seven days!" she exclaimed in dismay. There
+was silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus made the camel kneel. He dismounted
+slowly, and began to undo the tent-cloth in a roll beside
+the howdah. The woman rode up and instantly
+the mute stepped between her and his young mistress
+and went on with his work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice understood the question in the woman's
+attitude although, with true sense of an inferior's
+place, the stranger did not speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are unclean," Laodice said with effort. "We
+have come from a pestilential city and we have touched
+the dead. We can not enter a town with these defilements
+upon us, except to present ourselves to a priest
+for examination and separation. Furthermore, we
+must burn our unessential belongings. If you are a
+Jewess all these things are known to you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman extended her hands, palms upward,
+with a grace that was almost dainty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lady," she said behind her unlifted veil, "I am
+an unlettered woman and have been accustomed to the
+instruction of my masters. I am obedient to the laws
+of our people."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You would have been in less peril to have ridden
+alone," Laodice sighed. "Our company has been no
+help to you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We can not say that confidently. There are
+worse things than pestilence in the wilderness," the
+woman replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus seemed to observe more confidence than was
+natural in the ready answers of this professed servant,
+and before he would leave Laodice to pitch camp, he
+helped her to alight and drew her with him. The
+woman remained on her mount.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gathering up sticks, dead needles of cedar and last
+year's leaves, he made a fire upon which he heaped
+fuel till it lighted up the near-by slopes of the hills
+and roared jovially in the broad wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a pocket in the heart of high hills into
+which they had fled. The bold, sure line of a Roman
+road divided it, cutting tyrannically through
+the cowed hovels of the town as an arrow drives
+through a flock of pigeons. On either side were the
+dim shapes of great rocks and semi-recumbent cedars.
+Retiring into shadow were the darker outlines of the
+surrounding circle of hills, rived by intervals of black
+night where wadies entered. From their summits the
+flying arch of the heavens sprang, printed with a few
+faint stars, but all silvered with the flood-light of a
+moon cold and pure as the frost itself. It was unsympathetic,
+aloof and wild&ndash;a cold place into which
+to bring broken hearts to assume banishment from
+the comfort and companionship of mankind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice slowly and with effort began to separate
+those belongings which were to be laid upon the fire
+from those which were too necessary to be burned.
+The woman alighted but, on offering to assist, was
+warned away from the girl with a menacing gesture
+of Momus' great arm. The stranger drew herself
+up suddenly with a wrath that she hardly controlled
+but came no nearer Laodice. When the girl finally
+finished her selection, the woman begged permission
+to attend to the camels and getting the beasts on their
+feet led them together to be tethered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice, assisted by Momus, took up the condemned
+supplies and flung them one at a time upon the roaring
+fire. Little by little, with growing reluctance,
+the heap of spare belongings was examined and condemned,
+until finally only the garments they wore, the
+tents that were to shelter them and the essential harness
+of the camels were left. Then Momus drew
+from his wallet a fragment of aromatic gum and cast
+it on the blaze. While it ignited and burned with
+great vapors of penetrating incense, he unstrapped
+the precious casket, set it down between his feet,
+stripped off his comfortable woolen tunic and passed
+it through the volumes of white smoke piling up from
+the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And while he stood thus a deft hand seized the
+casket from behind. There was a sharp, warning
+cry from Laodice. The old man staggered only a
+moment from the tripping that the wrench gave him,
+but in that instant of hesitation the pillager vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old mute shouted the infuriated, half-animal
+yell of the dumb and started in pursuit, but at his
+second step he saw the fleeter camel swing down the
+declivity, at top-speed, with the other trailing with
+difficulty at full length of its bridle behind. The
+next instant the muffled beat of the padded hooves
+drummed the solid bed of the Roman road, and the
+shapes of camels and fugitive were lost in blue darkness
+beyond the town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no need for the pair left behind to await
+a realization of all that the loss meant to them. One
+running swiftly as a fine young creature can run when
+spurred by desperation, and the other, lamely but
+doggedly, as an old determined man, rushed down
+the rough side of the slope, leaped into the roadway
+and ran irrationally after the fugitive mounted upon
+a camel, fleeter than the fastest horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus saw with fear that Laodice on this straight
+inviting road would out-distance him to her peril.
+He shouted inarticulately after her, but her reply
+came back, high with desperation and terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The corner-stone of Israel! All his treasure!
+God's portion, lost, lost!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was out of his sight. The sudden barking of
+dogs told him that she had crossed the outskirts of
+the village, and groaning with alarm for her the old
+man stumbled on after her. He saw lights flash
+out; heard shouts, and out of the confusion distinguished
+Laodice's, vehement and urging. The yapping
+of the town curs became less threatening and,
+by the time Momus reached the settlement, half-dressed
+Jews were hurrying east out of the village
+after the flying feet of the girl, in pursuit of the
+robber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For unmeasured time, while the moon crossed its
+meridian and sloped down the west, the search continued.
+Momus did not overtake the fleet-footed party
+that preceded him. Stragglers that lost interest
+dropped back with him from time to time; but finding
+him dumb and immensely distressed, they disappeared
+eventually and returned to the town. One by one, at
+times by twos and threes the party dropped off. The
+three or four who remained helpful continued against
+hope, for simple pity for the girl. But when she
+dropped suddenly by the wayside, exhausted with the
+strain of many troubles, they stopped to tell her that
+the chase was fruitless and to offer their rough condolences.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Momus hobbled up to them. Laodice refused
+to raise her head to listen to them and they turned to
+the old man. But by signs, he showed them that his
+tongue was dead, and finally, with suppressed remarks
+upon the exceeding misfortune of the pair, they, too,
+disappeared. A thoughtful one invited them to return
+to the village. Laodice, careless now of what
+he should think of his exposure to pestilence, told him
+bluntly that they were unclean. Hastily he exclaimed
+at the sum of their troubles, hastily blessed them, and
+hastily departed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pallor along the under-rim of the
+east; the wind freshened with the sweet vigor of
+early morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Over the stunned silence came the sound of the
+infinite trotting of tiny hooves and a high, wild,
+youthful yell. Laodice, too worn to observe, sat still;
+but Momus, with a rush of old fairy-tales in mind,
+sprang to her side and seized her arm. His alarmed
+eyes searched the dark landscape for whatever visitation
+it had to reveal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was the rush of countless hoof-beats and a
+low cloud of dust obscured the crest of the hill just
+above them. The soft tremolo of multitudinous
+bleating came out of it. The quick excited bark of a
+fresh Natolian sheep-dog wakened an echo in one of
+the ravines through a hill on the opposite side of the
+road, while strong and insistent and happy the young
+cry preceded this sudden animation in the wilderness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a fall of gravel on the slope over their
+heads and the next instant a fourteen-year-old boy
+descended upon the pair in a fall of earth, his sandaled
+feet planted one ahead of the other, his bare
+arms thrown above his head as he balanced himself,
+his long, stiff, crinkled black locks blowing backward,
+his face bright with the eager enjoyment of his simple
+feat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After him came a veritable avalanche of Syrian
+sheep, scrambling to right and left as they parted
+behind Momus and Laodice and eddying around the
+young shepherd who stopped at seeing the pair. His
+yell died away at once, though the effort of sliding
+down a frozen, rocky slope had not interfered
+with a single note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He might well have been a young satyr, fresh from
+the groves of Achaia, with his big, serious mouth
+and its range of glittering teeth, his shining deer-like
+eyes, wide apart, his faun curls low on his forehead,
+his big head set on a short neck, his shoulders
+yet childish, his slim brown body half smothered in
+skins, half bare as he was born, his large hard
+hand gripping a crook of horn and wood. His gaze
+at Momus was frank with boyish curiosity. His
+bright eyes plainly remarked on the oddity of the old
+servant's appearance. Having catalogued old Momus
+as worthy of further inspection, he looked then
+at Laodice. Under the lowering moon and the listless
+effort of coming day, her unmantled dress of silver
+tissue made of her a moon-spirit, banished out of
+her world of pallor and solitude. Before her splendid
+young beauty, pale with distress and weariness,
+he was not abashed. His simple eyes studied her with
+equal frankness, but with an admiration beyond words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Feeling somehow that his sudden appearance might
+have distressed her, he said finally:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go on, lady, or stay as it pleases you. I will not
+hurt you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus' shoulders submerged his ears in an indignant
+shrug. That this young calf of the pastures
+should insure him safe passage!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Laodice was still filled with the calamity of
+her loss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hast seen a robber, here, along this road?" she
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Many of them," was the prompt answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"With a chest of jewels?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I never examined their booty," he said with perfect
+respect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Or then a woman riding one camel and leading
+another?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never anything like that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice, with this hope gone, let her face fall into
+her hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"His fortune given freely to Israel," she groaned.
+"His whole life's ambition reduced to material form
+for the help of his brethren&ndash;gone, gone!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherd grew instantly distressed. He looked
+at Momus and asked in a whisper what had happened.
+But the old servant signed to his lips irritably,
+and stroked his young mistress' hair in a dumb
+effort to comfort her. The silence grew painful. In
+his anxiety to relieve them, he bethought him of their
+uncovered heads and houseless state.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you live in the village; or do you camp near
+by?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus shook his head. Laodice appreciated the
+boy's concern for them but could not make an attempt
+to explain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then," he offered promptly, "come have my fire
+and my rock. It is the best rock in all these hills;
+and my tent," he added, showing the skins that
+wrapped him. "I wear my tent; it saves my carrying
+it. Indeed I do not need it; you may have it.
+Come!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke hurriedly, as if he would thrust his desire
+to comfort between her and the wave of disconsolation
+that he felt was about to cover her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Old Momus, sensibly accepting the boy's suggestion
+as the wisest course, raised Laodice and motioning
+the shepherd to lead on, led his young mistress
+up the hill as the boy retraced his steps. The flood
+of Syrian sheep turned back with him and followed
+bleating between the urging of the sheep-dog, as the
+boy climbed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On a slope to the west as a wady bent upon itself
+abruptly before it debouched upon the hillside, there
+was a deep glow illuminating a space in the depression.
+The shepherd dropped down out of sight. His
+voice came over the shuffle and bleat of the sheep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Follow me; this is my house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus led his mistress over to the wady. There
+the shepherd with uplifted hands helped her down
+with the superior courtesy of a householder offering
+hospitality. There was a red circle of fire in the
+sandy bottom of the dry wady, and beside it was a
+flat boulder at the foot of which were prints of the
+shepherd's sandals and, on the bank behind it, the
+mark where his shoulders had comfortably rested. He
+made no apology for the poverty of his entertainment;
+he had never known anything better.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now, brother," he said busily to Momus, "if
+thou'lt lend me of thy height, thou shalt have of my
+agility and we will set up a douar for the lady."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With frank composure he stripped off the burden
+of skins that covered him until he stood forth in a
+single hide of wool, with a tumble of sheep pelts at
+his feet. In each one was a thorn preserved for use
+and with these he pinned them all together, scrambled
+out on the bank, emitting his startling cry at the
+sheep that obstructed his path. From above he
+shouted down to Momus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Stretch it, brother, over thy head. I shall pin
+it down with stones on either side. Now, unless some
+jackal dislodges these weights before morning, ye will
+be safe covered from the cold. There! God never
+made a man till He prepared him a cave to sleep
+under! I've never slept in the open, yet. How is it
+with thee now, lady?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was down again before her with the red light
+of the great bed of coals illuminating him with a
+glow that was almost an expression of his charity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw that he had the straight serious features
+of the Ishmaelite, but lacked the fierce yet wondering
+gaze of the Arab. Aside from these superior indications
+in his face there was nothing to separate him
+from any other shepherd that ranged the mountainous
+pastures of Palestine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She, who all her life had never known anything
+but to expect the tenderest of ministrations, was
+humbly surprised and grateful at the free-handed
+generosity of the young stranger. Momus looked at
+him with grudging approval.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is kindly shelter," she said finally with effort,
+"and it is warm. You are very good to us!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But you have not eaten of my salt," he declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus showed interest. It had been long since the
+last meal in the luxurious house of Costobarus. The
+boy in the meantime produced unleavened loaves from
+the carry-all of sheepskin that hung over his shoulders,
+and without explanation disappeared among his
+flock. Presently he returned with a small skin of
+milk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We have goats in the flock," he said. "A shepherd
+can not live without a goat. You do not know
+about shepherds," he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice thought that she detected tactful inquiry
+in his last remark and roused herself painfully to make
+due explanations to her host. But he waved his hands
+at her, with the desert-man's courtesy which covers
+fine points better than the greater ones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Eat my fare; I do not purchase thy history with
+salt and shelter," he said, with a certain sublimity of
+honor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus ate, and looked with growing grace at his
+young host. But Laodice succeeded only in drinking
+the goat's milk and lapsed into benumbed gazing at
+the red glow of fire that cast its warmth about her.
+The shepherd talked on, attempting to interest her in
+something other than her consuming sorrow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"These be Christian sheep about you, friends," he
+said, "and I am a Christian shepherd."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus sat up suddenly with a bit of the boy's
+bread arrested on its way to his lips. He was eating
+the fare of an apostate, of a despised Nazarene. The
+boy went on composedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are from Pella, the Christian city. We are,
+my sheep, my city and I, the only secure people in
+all Judea. We, I and the sheep, have been in the
+hills since the first new grass in February. We are
+many leagues from home."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So am I," Laodice said wearily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jerusalem?" the shepherd asked, glad he had
+brought out a response. "No? Yet all Judea is
+going to Jerusalem at this time. Are you fugitives?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come then to Pella," the shepherd urged. "You
+will be fed there; Titus will not come there. We are
+poor but we are happy&ndash;and we are safe."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice thanked him so inertly that he sensed her
+disinterest, and while he sat looking at her, searching
+his heart for something kind to say, she put out her
+hand impulsively and took his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"God keep thee and forget thy heresy," she said.
+"If thou livest in Pella, Pella is indeed happy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed with a flush stealing up under the
+brown of his cheeks. A faint light came into Laodice's
+eyes as she looked at him; he returned her gaze
+with a gradual softening that was intensely complimentary.
+Between the two was effected instant and
+lasting fellowship. Before Momus' indignant eyes
+the shepherd was blushing happily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who art thou?" Laodice asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They call me Joseph, son of Thomas."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a silence she said softly,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am not at liberty to tell my name." She remembered
+the secrecy of Philadelphus' mission.
+"Yet perchance if the God of my fathers prosper
+me and my husband, I may come to Pella&ndash;as thy
+queen."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy's eyes brightened and he drew in a sharp
+breath, but almost instantly the animation died and
+he looked at her sorrowfully. It seemed that she
+read dissent and sympathy commingled in his gaze.
+But he was a Christian; he could not believe and
+hope as she hoped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Can I do aught for you?" he asked disjointedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Our duty is rather toward you, child," she answered,
+suddenly arousing to the peril they might
+bring their free-handed host. "We have newly come
+from a country where there is pestilence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he smiled down on her uplifted face, with immense
+confidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am not afraid. Besides, if I perish giving you
+comfort, I have done only as Jesus would have me
+do."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is Jesus?" Laodice asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherd made a little sign and bent his knee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Christ!" he responded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus plucked quickly at Laodice's sleeve and
+shook his head at her in an admonitory manner. He
+had laid down his bread unfinished. But the shepherd
+looked at him sympathetically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never fear," he said. "It will not hurt her to
+hear about Him. He makes Pella safe from armies.
+Let her come there and see for herself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice pressed his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall come," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He heaved a contented sigh&ndash;contented with himself,
+contented with her promise to come. Then he
+drew his hands away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The sheep are noisy; they will not let you sleep.
+We shall go." Then as if afraid of her thanks he
+drew away, and halted at the threshold of the shelter.
+Then the boy extended his hands with a gesture so
+solemn that both of his guests bowed their heads
+instinctively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you
+for evermore.</i> Farewell," he said in a half-whisper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the rush of little feet swept after him
+and his high, wild, youthful yell rang faintly in the
+distance. The delicate crackling from the heated bed
+of coals was all that was heard in the sheltered wady
+roofed with skins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the second time within the past few hours,
+Laodice had met a Christian. Both had helped her;
+both had blessed her. And one was an old man and
+one was a child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The interest of the recent interview and the excitement
+of the night slowly died away, leaving Laodice
+in the dead hopelessness of weary despair. She lay
+down suddenly with her face against the warmed sand
+and wept. Momus sat down beside her, covered her
+with a leopard skin taken from his own swarthy shoulders,
+and soothed her with awkward touches on cheek
+and hair, till her tears exhausted her and she slept.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stealthily then the old man rolled up her own
+mantle and put it under her head and prepared to
+watch. And then as he sat with his knee drawn up,
+his head bowed upon it, the weakness of slumber gradually
+stole away his watchfulness and his concern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some time later, before the deliberate dawn of a
+March day had put out the last of the greater stars,
+two men on horses descended the declivity just above
+the shelter of sheepskins and attracted by the dull
+glow of the fire drew up cautiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At a word from one of the men, the other alighted
+and, peering from the shelter of a prostrate cedar,
+inspected the pair. After assuring himself that there
+were but two about the camp, one a woman and both
+asleep, he tiptoed back to his fellow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Only a man and a woman," he said. "Jews on
+their way to the Passover. Their fire is almost out.
+Let us ride on."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What haste!" the one who had kept his saddle
+said. "One would think it were you going forward
+to meet a bride and her dowry! I am hungry. Let
+us borrow of this fire and get breakfast."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Emmaus is only a little farther on," the first
+man protested. "I am tired of wayside meals, Philadelphus.
+I would eat at a khan again before I forget
+the custom."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How is the pair favored?" the other said provokingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I did not approach near enough," the other retorted.
+"It seemed to be an old man and a girl."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pretty?" the one called Philadelphus asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I did not see."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Married, Julian?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How could I tell?" Julian flared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus laughed, and dismounted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall see for myself," he declared, walking over
+to the sheltering cedar to look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian followed him nervously, saying under his
+breath:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You waste time deliberately!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tut! You merely wish to keep me from seeing
+this girl," Philadelphus retorted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, too, stopped at the prostrate cedar and gazed
+under the sagging shelter of skins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shade of Helen!" he exclaimed under his breath
+as the firelight gave him perfect view of the sleeping
+girl. "What have we here?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian made no response. He drew nearer and
+looked in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now what are they to each other?" Philadelphus
+continued. "Father and daughter; lady and servant
+or&ndash;a courtezan and her manager?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the continued silence of his companion, he argued
+his question himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No such ill-fashioned peasant loins as his ever
+begat such sweet patrician perfection as that!" he
+declared. "And a lady rich enough to have one
+servant would travel with more than one or not at
+all&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian broke in with sudden avid interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Look at that deal of feminine flummery&ndash;that
+dress of silver tissue, the ends of that silken scarf
+you see below the covering&ndash;all those jewels and
+trinkets! Odd garb for travel afoot, is it not? It is
+a badge not to be put off even in as barren a market as
+this. She is going to Jerusalem for the Passover.
+He will carry the purse, however, mark me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How well you know the marks of delinquency!"
+Philadelphus said with a glimmer of resentment in
+his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who does not? What do the Jewish psalmists
+and proverbialists and purists depict so minutely as
+that migrating iniquity, the strange woman?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But look at her!" Philadelphus insisted. "I
+have not seen anything so bewitching since I left
+Ephesus!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; nor a long time before!" Julian declared.
+"I must have a nearer look."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Careful! You will wake her!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian's face showed a sneer at his companion's
+concern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll have a care not to wake the old Boeotian,"
+he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stepped between Laodice and her sleeping servant.
+The mute with the stupor of slumber further
+to disable his dulled hearing, did not move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Young!" Philadelphus exclaimed in a whisper.
+"And new to the life!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pfui!" Julian scoffed. "Sleep makes even
+Venus look innocent!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then this is the most innocent wickedness I have
+seen in months!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So you catalogue innocence as a charm! It's not
+here. But if she had no beauty but that eyelash I'd
+be speared upon it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus turned toward the old servant plunged
+in the exhausted sleep of weary age.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou grizzled nightmare!" he exclaimed vindictively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced again at the girl. Julian had knelt
+beside her. Between the two men passed a look that
+was mutually understood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Remember," Julian whispered, "you are a married
+man."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus paled suddenly with anger as the
+intent of his companion dawned upon him, but he put
+off his temper shrewdly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And so approaching a time when wayside beauties
+will no longer be free to me," he said, cutting off
+his fellow in the beginning of his preėmption. "And
+you have a long freedom before you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was so much challenge in his manner that
+Julian accepted it. He reached into his tunic and
+drew forth a pair of dice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We will play for her," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee put the tesserae aside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We will not use them," he said. "I know them
+to be cogged. Let us have the judgment of a coin."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A bronze coin of Agrippa was produced. Julian
+in getting at his purse brushed against the sleeping
+girl and as the pair glanced at her before they tossed,
+her large eyes opened full in Julian's face. A moment,
+almost breathless for the two, and terror flared
+up in her eyes. She started up, but Julian's hand
+dropped on her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Peace, Phryne!" he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shrank from his touch, literally into the arms
+upon which Philadelphus rested his weight. She
+looked up into his eyes, and saw them soften with a
+smile, and moved no farther. Philadelphus took the
+coin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let Vespasian decide for me," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For me Fortunatus," said Julian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus filliped the coin and flung out a strong
+and fending hand against his fellow covering it.
+Under the brightening day, the lowering profile of
+the old plebeian emperor Vespasian showed distinctly
+on the newly minted bronze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian made a sharp menacing sound, and with
+clenched hands rose on his knees. But Philadelphus
+looked at him steadily, half-amused at the implied
+threat, half-inviting its fulfilment, and under his
+gaze, Julian rose slowly and drew away. Philadelphus
+tossed the coin after him. His cousin picked
+it up and put it in his purse.
+</p>
+
+<div class="ctr">
+ <a href="images/image03l.jpg"><img src="images/image03.jpg"
+ alt="Philadelphus looked down upon his prize."
+ title="Philadelphus looked down upon his prize." />
+ </a><p class="caption">Philadelphus looked down upon his prize.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus looked down at his prize.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had not flinched from him when she had found
+him beside her, with Julian threatening her. But now
+her wide open eyes fixed upon his brimmed with an
+agony of appeal. Innocent of the world's wickedness,
+she could only sense supreme peril in this mysterious
+game without understanding the stake. Momus
+was not in sight&ndash;dead for all she knew&ndash;and
+the desert was an ally against her. Over her, now,
+bent a face characteristic of a great spirit, yet one
+which was coeval with the times&ndash;times of violence
+and the supremacy of force. His lips were thin, the
+contour of his face angular at the jaw, the nose
+straight and long, his brows black and low over
+dark blue eyes of a fathomless depth, the forehead
+strongly molded, and marked with deep perpendicular
+lines between the eyes. He was dark, heavy-haired,
+young, lean, broad and of fine height even as he
+knelt beside her. Laodice did not note any of these
+things. She was only conscious of the immense power
+her terror and her helplessness had to combat. Back
+of all this iron selfishness, she hoped that somewhere
+was a gentleness, even if inert and useless. All her
+strength was concentrated in the effort to bring it
+to life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He gazed at her, apparently unconscious of the desperation
+in the face lifted to him. The slow smile that
+presently grew again in his eyes was none the less unthoughted.
+He slipped his hand under a strand of
+her rich hair that had fallen and drew it out, slowly,
+at full length. Slowly his eyes followed it as inch
+by inch it slipped through his fingers. Old memories
+seemed to struggle to the surface; old tendernesses;
+recollection of pure hours and holy things; paganism
+dropped from him like a husk and the spiritual hauteur
+of a Jew brought the expression of the unhumbled
+house of Judah into his face. Through a
+notch in the hills a golden beam shot from the sun
+and penetrating this inwalled valley lay like an illuminating
+fire on the man's face and glorified it.
+Laodice's breath stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slowly his fingers slipped along the fine silken
+length of that shining strand until his arm extended
+to the full; and the end of the lock yet rested on her
+breast. Thus might have been the hair of that
+Rahab, who was no less a patriot because she was
+frail; thus, the hair of Bathsheba, who was the mother
+of the wisest Israelite though she sinned; thus the hair
+of that mother of Samson, who slew armies single-handed!
+Badge of Judah, mark of the haughty
+strength of the oldest enlightenment in the world!
+He would not initiate his succor of Israel with violence
+against its purest type.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled slowly; slowly let the strand fall through
+his fingers. He looked into her eyes and she saw a
+sudden light immeasurably compassionate and tender
+grow there. A weakness swept over her; she felt that
+she had been longing for that light. Then he rose
+quickly and moved away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Old Momus, the mute, with his head on his knees
+slept on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian, who had been halted involuntarily by the
+attitude of his companion and had been an amazed
+witness of this extraordinary end of the incident,
+looked at Philadelphus' face in frank stupefaction.
+But Philadelphus laid a hand so forceful and compelling
+on his companion's shoulder that it left the
+pink print of his fingers on the flesh, turned him
+toward the horses and led him away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We will breakfast farther on," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment and they were swinging down the stony
+side of the hill toward the east, and Laodice, with her
+hand clutching her excited heart, had not thought of
+flinging herself upon Momus. She raised herself
+gradually to watch them as far as she could see, and
+her fixed and stunned gaze rested with immense homesickness
+and longing on the taller man radiant against
+the background of a risen sun.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch4">Chapter IV</h2>
+
+<h2>THE TRAVELERS</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee rode on, unconscious of Julian's critical
+gaze. The smile on his lips flickered now brightly,
+now very faint. The incident in the hills had not
+made him entirely happy, but it had awakened in him
+something which was latent in him, something which
+he had never felt before, but which held a sweet familiarity
+that the blood of his fathers in him had
+recognized.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian was intensely disgusted and disappointed.
+But there was still a sensation of shock on his shoulder
+where the Maccabee's iron hand had rested and
+his famous caution stood him in stead at this moment
+when a quarrel with such intense and executive earnestness
+in his companion's manner might prove disastrous.
+If quarrel they must before they reached
+Emmaus, now but a few leagues east of them, he
+must insure himself against defeat much less likely
+to be suffered from a man reluctant to quarrel. He
+had been hunting for a pretext ever since they had
+left Cęsarea, but this one, suddenly opened to him,
+startled him. He admitted now that it would not
+be wise to force a fight. Whatever must be done
+should be done with least danger to himself. It were
+better, he believed, to allay suspicion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How far is it to Jerusalem?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"About eighty furlongs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then if we continue, we shall approach the gates
+after nightfall."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We shall not continue," Philadelphus remarked.
+"We shall halt at Emmaus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you think it would be better for us to camp
+here in the hills rather than to stop without the walls
+of Jerusalem between the city forces and the winter
+garrison of Titus and await the opening of the
+Gates?" Julian asked after thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We shall wait in Emmaus," the Maccabee repeated,
+his soul too filled with dream to note the
+change in his companion's manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have already lost three days," Julian charged
+him irritably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jerusalem may be besieged; it may be long before
+I can ride in the wilderness again," the Maccabee
+answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Right; your next journey through this place
+may be afoot&ndash;at the end of a chain," Julian
+averred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee raised his brows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Losing courage at the last end of the journey?"
+he inquired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No! I never have believed in this project,"
+Julian declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who believes in the prospects of a man determined
+to leap into Hades?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Maccabee was already riding on with his
+head lifted, his eyes set upon the blue shadows on
+the western slopes of hills, lifted against the early
+morning sun. Julian went on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You go, cousin, on a mission mad enough to
+measure up with the antics of the frantic citizens of
+Jerusalem. It will not be even a glorious defeat.
+You will be swallowed up in an immense calamity too
+tremendous to offer publicity to so infinitesimal a detail
+as the death of one Philadelphus Maccabaeus.
+Agrippa has deserted the city and when a Herod lets
+go of his own, his own is not worth the holding. The
+city is torn between factions as implacable as the sea
+and the land. The conservatives are either dead or
+fled; pillage and disorder are the main motives of all
+that are left. And Titus advances with four legions.
+What can you hope for this mob of crazed Jews?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian's words had been more lively than the Maccabee
+had expected. He was obliged to give attention
+before his kinsman made an end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are fond of summaries, Julian," he said,
+"dealt in your own coin. Look you, now, at my
+hope. You confess that these Jews lack a leader.
+They have lacked him so long that they hunger and
+thirst for one. Also they have suffered the distresses
+of disorder so intensely that peace in any form is
+most welcome to them. Titus approacheth reluctantly.
+He had rather deliver Jerusalem than besiege
+it. I am of the loved and dethroned Maccabaean line&ndash;acceptable
+to every faction of Jewry, from the
+Essenes to the Sicarii. Titus is my friend, unless he
+suspects me as coming to undermine his better friend,
+the pretty Herod. I shall help Jerusalem help herself;
+I shall make peace with Rome; I shall be King
+of the Jews!&ndash;Behold, is not my summary as practical
+as yours?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian laughed with an amusement that had a ring
+of contempt in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is naught to keep an astronomer from
+planning a rearrangement of the stars," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Maccabee rode on calmly. Julian sighed.
+After a while he spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, how do you proceed? You tell me that
+these very visionaries whom you would succor have
+never laid eyes on you. What marks you as royal&ndash;as
+a sprig of the great, just and dead Maccabee?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I bear proofs, Roman documents of my family
+and of my birth. Certain of my party are already
+organized in Jerusalem and are expecting me, and I
+wear the Maccabaean signet. Is not that enough?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing of it worth the security of private citizenship
+and a whole head!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No? Not when there is a dowry of two hundred
+talents awaiting my courage to come and get it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ha! That wife! But will you enter that sure
+death for a woman you do not know?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And for a fortune I have not possessed and for a
+kingdom that I never owned."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She will not be there! Old Costobarus is not so
+mired in folly as to send his daughter into the Pit to
+provide you with money to&ndash;pay Charon."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Aquila sent me a messenger at Cęsarea," Philadelphus
+continued calmly, "saying that Costobarus
+was transfigured when he had my summons. He feels
+that his God has been good to him to choose his
+daughter to share the throne of Judea. Hence, by
+this time my lady awaits me in Jerusalem."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Julian sighed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And there is none in Jerusalem who knows your
+face?" he asked after a silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"None, except Amaryllis, and she has not seen me
+since I was sixteen years old."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And there also is an obstacle which I had forgotten
+to enumerate," Julian said argumentatively.
+"You have put your trust in a frail woman."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Amaryllis may be frail," the Maccabee admitted,
+"but she is sufficiently manly to have all that you
+and I demand of a man to put faith in him. She is
+a good companion and she will not lie."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Impossible! She is a woman!" Julian exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Even then," the Maccabee returned patiently,
+"her own ambition safeguards me. She can not succeed
+except as I am successful, and her purposes are
+of another kind than mine. She helps herself when
+she helps me. Therefore I am depending on her selfishness.
+It is usually a dependable thing."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What does she want?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The old classic times of the <i>heterae</i> in Greece.
+She wants to be the pioneer of art in Jerusalem. It
+is a fertile and a neglected field. She had rather be
+known as the mother of refinement in Judea than as
+the queen of kings over the world."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A modest ambition!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A great one. How many monarchs are forgotten
+while Aspasia is remembered! Who were the reigning
+kings during Sappho's time?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But go on. You repose much on her influence.
+Perhaps she has the will but not the power to help
+you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Power! She is the mistress of John of Gischala
+and actual potentate over Jerusalem at this hour."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Unless Simon bar Gioras hath taken the upper
+hand within the last few days. Remember the fortunes
+of factionists are ephemeral."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus jingled his harness. He was sorry
+that he had permitted this discussion. Now its continuance
+was particularly irritating, when he had
+rather think of something else. He was near Jerusalem;
+but he was not going forward, now, with the
+same eagerness, nor with the same enthusiasm for his
+cause. The incident in the hills had marked the
+change in him. It was not, then, with a patient
+tongue that he defended his intentions, which had
+grown less inviting in the last hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How little your wife will enjoy her," Julian's
+smooth voice broke in once more, "seeing that the
+frail one is lovely."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not know that she is lovely."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What!" Julian exclaimed in genuine amazement.
+"You do not know that she is lovely! Years of correspondence
+with a woman whom you do not know to
+be lovely! Reposing kingdoms on a woman's influence
+whom you do not know to be beautiful!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Beauty is no tie," the Maccabee retorted. "Have
+you forgotten Salome, the Jewish actress who could
+play Aphrodite in the theaters of Ephesus, to the
+confusion of the goddess herself? They said she
+snared three procurators and an emperor at one performance
+and lost them in a day!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have you seen her?" Julian asked with a sidelong
+glance. "Till your own eyes prove it, you
+should not accept that she is so bewitching."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is no need that I should see her; Aquila
+swears it! And I would take his word against the
+testimony of even mine own eyes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian looked up in a startled manner and hurriedly
+looked away again. A half-frightened, half-amused
+smile played about his lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Aquila is no judge of woman," he said finally.
+"And furthermore, they say she got to trifling with
+magic and prowling about the temples to see if the
+gods came true. They were afraid she would get
+them blasted along with her sometime for her sacrilege.
+I know all this because Aquila declared she attached
+herself to him in sheer poverty in Ephesus
+and swore to follow him to the ends of the earth."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nevertheless, he told me that he was afraid of
+her, but that she was a woman and in need and he
+could not reject her."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian's eyes grew insinuating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How much then your behavior this morning would
+have shocked him!" he murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The smile died on the Maccabee's face. Reference
+to the girl in the hills seemed blasphemy on this
+man's lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you do not recall your wife's face?" Julian
+persisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee's face hardened more. But he shook
+his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fourteen years can change a woman from a
+beauty to&ndash;a&ndash;a Christian, ugly and old and
+cold," Julian augured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee turned his head away from his tormentor
+and Julian's laughter trailed off into a half-jocular
+groan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How much you harp on beauty!" the Maccabee
+said deliberately. "Are you then going to regret
+the actresses you left behind when I tore you from
+your exalted calling as the forelegs of the elephant
+in the theaters at Ephesus?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian's face blackened. A foolhardy daring born
+of rage resolved him at that instant. He flung himself
+out from his saddle and raised his hand with a
+knife clenched in it. But the Maccabee with a composed
+laugh caught the hand and wrenching it about,
+dropped it, red and contracting with pain, at his companion's
+side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tut! Julian, you are a bad combatant. If you
+must make way with a man," the Maccabee advised,
+"stab him in the back. It is sure&ndash;for you. Ha!
+Is this Emmaus we see?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had ridden up a slight eminence and below
+them was a disorder of fallen or decrepit Syrian
+huts in the hollow place in the hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had been the history of Emmaus for centuries
+to be known. The feet of the Crucified One had
+pressed its ruined streets and His devoted chroniclers
+had not failed to set it down in their illuminated gospels.
+Army after army in endless procession had
+thundered through it since the first invader humbled
+the glory of Canaan, and few of the historians had
+forgotten to record the unimportant incident. Warfare
+had hurtled about it for centuries; the Roman
+army had come upon it and would continue to come.
+It had not the spirit to resist; it was not worthy of
+conquest. It simply stood in the path of events.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A single citizen appeared at the doorway of the
+most habitable house and looked absently over the
+heads of the new-comers. As they approached, the
+villager did not observe them. Instead, he looked at
+the near horizon lifted on the shoulder of the hills
+and meditated on the signs of the weather. It was
+Emmaus' habit to find strangers at its door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian, with natural desire to be first on this perilous
+ground and away from the side of the man who
+had defeated him and laughed at him, rode up to
+the door. The villager, seeing the traveler stop,
+gazed at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian had about him an air of blood and breeding
+first to be remarked even before his features. The
+grace of his bearing and the excellence of his bodily
+condition were highly aristocratic. His height was
+good, his figure modestly athletic as an observance of
+fine form rather than a preparation for the arena.
+He was simply dressed in a light blue woolen tunic.
+A handkerchief was bound about his head. His forehead
+was very white and half hidden by loose, curling
+black locks that escaped with boyish negligence from
+his head-dress. His eyes were black, his cheeks tanned
+but colorless, his mouth mirthful and red but hard
+in its outlines. Clean-shaven, lithe, supple, he did not
+appear to be more than twenty-two. But there was
+an even-tempered cynicism and sophistication in the
+half-droop of his level lids, indifference, hauteur and
+self-reliance in the uplift of his chin. His soul was
+therefore older, more seasoned and set than the frame
+that housed it. Now there was considerable agitation
+in his manner, enough to make him sharp in his
+speech to the villager.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is there a khan in Emmaus?" he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is," the villager responded calmly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The citizen motioned toward a low-roofed rambling
+structure of stone picked up on the native hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ask there," he said and passing out of his door
+went his way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian touched his horse and rode through the worn
+passage and into the court of the decrepit khan of
+Emmaus. The Maccabee followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Syrian host who was both waiter and hostler
+met Julian entering first.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Quick!" Julian said, leaning from his horse.
+"Is there a young man here with gray temples? A
+pagan?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Syrian, attracted by the anxiety in the demand,
+followed a train of surmise before his answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No pagans, here. Naught but Jews," he observed
+finally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Or a young woman of wealth? Quick!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No wealth at all; but plenty of women. The
+Passover pilgrims."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian heaved a sigh of relief and dismounted.
+The Maccabee rode into the court of the khan at that
+instant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The khan-keeper took their horses and a little later
+the two men were led into the single cobwebby chamber,
+low-ceiled, gloomy, cold and cheerless as a cave.
+There they were given food and afterward a corner
+of the hall where a straw pallet had been laid and a
+stone trough filled with water for a bath. After refreshing
+himself the Maccabee lay down and slept
+with supreme indifference to the rancor of the man
+who had attempted to kill him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Julian had another idea than pressing his
+vengeful advantage at that time. He went out into
+Emmaus and engaging the unemployed of the thriftless
+town sent them broadcast into the hills in search
+of a pagan who was young, yet gray at the temples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some of them went&ndash;and they were chiefly boys
+who were not old enough to know that these strangers
+who come in pagan guise to Emmaus are full of
+guile. But none returned to him. They had neither
+seen nor heard of a pagan who was young though the
+white hair of an old man snowed on his temples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Julian storming within went out into the hills
+himself, to search.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the Maccabee, a light sleeper and readily
+restored, awoke and found himself alone. The
+khan-keeper informed him on inquiry that Julian had
+ridden away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Too fair a hope to think that he has deserted
+me," the Maccabee observed. "I shall await him a
+decent time. He will return."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tramped about the chamber waiting for something
+that was not Julian, intending to do something
+but unable to define that thing. There was a vague
+admission that this last pause before his entry into
+Jerusalem where he must accomplish so much was an
+opportunity for some sort of preparation, but he
+lacked direction and resource. He was irritable and
+purposeless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of the low door that opened into the lewen of
+the khan he caught glimpses of the town spread over
+the tilt of the hill before him. It had become active
+since he had looked upon it in the very early hours of
+the day. Over the gate he could see the toss of canopies
+and the heads of camels passing; he could hear
+the ring of mule-hooves on the stones and the tramp
+of wayfarers. There were shoutings and debate; the
+cries of servants and the gossip of parties. All this
+moved on always in the direction of Jerusalem. Few
+paused. The single shop in Emmaus became active;
+the khan caught a little of the drift, but the great
+body of what seemed to be an unending stream of pilgrims
+passed on. The Maccabee spoke to his host.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is this?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The publican raised his brows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hast never heard of the Passover?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee started. How far he had drifted
+from the customs of his people, to fail to remember
+its vital feast&ndash;he who meant to be king over the
+Jews!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned away a little abashed. The train of
+thought awakened by the khan-keeper's answer led him
+back to the hieratic customs of his race. What was
+his status as a Jew after all these years of delinquency?
+What atonement did he owe, what offering
+should he make?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went out over the cobbled pavement of the lewen
+to the gate. Here he should see part of his people
+and learn from simple observation what material he
+would have in his work for Israel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From his memories of the old Passovers of his boyhood,
+he saw instantly that there had come a change
+over Judea and the worshiping sons of Abraham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went in bodies, in numbers from a handful
+from some remote but pious hamlet to great armies
+from the leveled cities of Joppa, Ptolemais and Anthedon,
+from Cęsarea and Tyre and Sidon, from the
+enthusiastic towns in Galilee, and even from far-off
+Antioch and Ephesus. They were not fewer in number,
+because of a year of warfare and the menace of
+an approaching army upon the city in which they
+were to take refuge. But there were more&ndash;double,
+even triple the number that usually went up to Jerusalem
+at this time. For of the millions of inhabitants
+in Judea in the unhappy year of 70 A.D., a
+third of them were plundered and homeless refugees
+from ruined cities. Therefore, instead of the armies
+of men, happy, hopeful and enthusiastic, who had
+journeyed in former years to Jerusalem, there passed
+before the Maccabee a mixed multitude of men and
+women and children. Thousands carried with them
+all that warfare had left to them&ndash;pitiful parcels of
+treasure or household goods, or extra clothing; other
+thousands bore nothing in their hands, and by the
+wear in their garments and the hunger in their faces,
+it seemed that they owned nothing to carry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee noted finally the entire absence of
+the travelers who fared in state. Not in all that long
+procession that wound up the stony passage from the
+west, did he see a single Sadducee. There went mobs
+of laborers and farmers, tradesmen, servants and
+small merchants, but the Jewish friends of Rome that
+had once made part of the Passover pilgrimage a
+royal progress were nowhere to be seen. Under the
+vast, vivid blue of the mountain skies they moved, indifferent
+to the splendid benevolence of the untroubled
+day. The pure wind swept in from the radiance
+in the east, flinging out multi-colored garments and
+scarves, rushing with its bracing chill without obstruction
+through even the compactest mass of wayfarers.
+The cedars on the hills about the little town
+whistled continuously and at times some extremely
+narrow defile with an uninterrupted draft would take
+voice and cry humanly. But there was no responsive
+exhilaration to the vigor of morning on a mountain-top.
+The great ever-growing migration was dark,
+dangerous and moody.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Somewhere beyond the highest of the blue hills to
+the east, the white walls of the city of David were
+receiving all this. Somewhere to the west the four
+brassy legions of Titus were marching down upon
+all this. About the Maccabee were assembling all the
+circumstances that govern a tremendous struggle.
+Eagerness, earnestness, all the strength and resolution
+of his strong and resolute nature surged into his
+soul. It was his hour. It should find him prepared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned out of the gate and crowding along by
+the stone wall to pass in the opposite direction from
+the flood of pilgrims pouring through Emmaus, he
+searched for the synagogue of the little town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came upon it, a solid square building of
+stone with an Egyptic faēade and an architrave
+carved with a great stone flower set in an olive wreath.
+Without was the proseuchae, paved with boulders now
+worn smooth by the summer sittings of the congregation
+who gathered around the reader's stone. The
+Maccabee stopped at the gate and unlacing his pagan
+sandals set them outside the threshold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once over the stone sill with the imminent gloom
+covering him, he felt the old sanctity envelop him
+with a reproach in its forgotten familiarity. Old incense,
+old litanies, old rites rushed back to him with
+the smell of the stagnant fragrance. He heard
+again from the farther depths of the dark interior
+the musical monotone of a rabbi reciting a ritual.
+The voice was young and low. Presently he heard
+the responses spoken in a woman's voice, so tender,
+so soft and so sad that he sensed instantly the meaning
+of the sympathy in the young priest's voice. Out
+of the incense-laden dusk he found old custom stealing
+back upon him. His lips anticipated words unreadily;
+gladly he realized that he could say these formulas,
+also; he had not forgotten; he had not forgotten!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this little synagogue in a poor town there were
+no privacies; communicants had to depend on the
+courtesy of their fellows for uninterrupted devotion.
+The wanderer had not forgotten this. So he effaced
+himself in the darkness and awaited his own turn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hardly knew why he had come. For what
+should he ask&ndash;forgiveness or for the hope of the
+King who was to come? What should he do&ndash;make
+atonement or promises; give an offering or ask encouragement?
+He did not doubt for an instant that
+he had done wisely in seeking the synagogue, but what
+had he for it, or what had it for him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the voice of the priest, disembodied in
+the gloom, had put off its ritualistic tone and was
+delivering a charge:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Since you are in haste to reach Jerusalem, you
+may depart, so that you will give me your word that
+you will in all faith abide upon the road seven days;
+and that at the end of the separation you will present
+yourselves for examination and cleansing at Jerusalem,
+and that you will in nowise transgress the law
+of separation on the journey hence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee heard the woman give her word.
+After a little further communication, he heard them
+move toward the entrance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The white light from the day without revealed to
+him in a few steps, a veiled woman, a deformed old
+man and a young rabbi. He did not need to take the
+evidence of her dress or of her companion to recognize
+under this veil the girl whom he had won from
+Julian of Ephesus, in the hills, that very morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As if in response to his inner hope that she would
+see him, she raised her eyes at the moment she passed,
+and started quickly. Even under the shelter of her
+veil he saw her flush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next instant she was out of the synagogue and
+gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee hesitated restlessly, forgot his mission
+to the synagogue and then, with no definite purpose,
+followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the edge of town, where the huddle of huts left
+off and the gravel and rock and cedar began, he saw
+the priest dismiss the pair with his blessing and turn
+back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Undecided, restless and regretful, the Maccabee lingered,
+looking after her as she went into the hills,
+unattended, except for an anomalous old man. The
+sun of noon shone on her silver dress that the dust of
+the wayside had not tarnished. He was gloomy and
+wistful without understanding his discomfort, and
+afraid for the beautiful unknown going out for seven
+days into the unfriendly wilderness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was the click of a horse's hoof beside him.
+He glanced up with a nervous start to see Julian of
+Ephesus, scowling, at hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is time," he said, "for us to be off."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee instantly determined that Julian of
+Ephesus should not come up with this defenseless girl
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am not ready," he returned promptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It was three days, this morning, that you have
+lost. To-morrow it will be four."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And Sabbath, it will be seven. A long time, a
+long time!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee turned and went back to the khan.
+A gap in the hills had hidden the girl in the silver
+tissue, and the blitheness of the Maccabee's spirit had
+gone with her.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch5">Chapter V</h2>
+
+<h2>BY THE WAYSIDE</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+By sunset, the Maccabee and Julian of Ephesus
+had taken the road to Jerusalem again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they reached the crest of a series of ridges there
+lay before them a long gentle slope smooth and dun-colored
+as some soft pelt, dropping down into a tender
+vale with levels of purple vapor hanging over it. At
+the end of this declivity, leagues in length, was a faint
+blue shape, cloudlike and almost merged with the cold
+color of the eastern horizon, but suddenly developing
+at its summit a delicate white peak. The sunset
+reaching it as they rode changed the point to a pinnacle
+of ruby before their eyes. Their shadows that
+had ridden before them merged with the shade over
+the world. Then with a soft, whispery, ghost-like
+intaking of the breath, a quantity of sand on the
+straight road before them got up under their horses'
+feet and moved away to another spot and dropped
+again with a peppering sound and was dead moveless
+earth again. The little breath of wind from under
+the edge of the sky had fallen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the silence between the muffled beat of hooves
+the Maccabee heard at his ears the quick lively throb
+of a busy pump. With it went the firm rush of
+a subdued stream. He was hearing his own heart-beat,
+his own life flowing through his veins. Since
+nature in him had hurried him out of the synagogue
+after its own desire, he seemed to have become primitive,
+conscious of the human creature in him. Now,
+though he rode through a bewitching air through an
+enchanted land, he did not ride in a dream. All his
+being was alert and sagacious. Though the confusion
+of footprints in the dust showed plainly where
+men had passed by thousands, he did not follow their
+lead. Over the tangle of marks lay a slim paw-printed,
+confident, careless trail of a jackal, following
+the scent to a well. The Maccabee was obedient to
+the instinct of the animal instead of the reason of
+man. At the end of that trail, surer than Ariadne's
+scarlet thread in the labyrinth, he knew that thirst
+had taken the girl in the dress of silver tissue. So as
+he rode along this faultless highway that fared level
+and undeviating by arches, causeways and bridges
+across mountains, over black marshes and profound
+valleys, he kept his eyes on the jackal's trail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Long after moonrise they came to a spot in the
+road where the human marks passed on, by hundreds,
+by other hundreds deserted the road and clambered
+up the side of the hill. Over this deviation the jackal
+had trotted. The Maccabee, tall on his horse, raised
+his fine head and searched all the brooding shapes of
+the hills about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The road at this point ran through a defile. On
+either side the slopes crowded upon the pass. Above
+them were bold summits with groves of cedars, and
+in one of these the Maccabee made out a thin curl of
+smoke dimly illuminated by a moon-drowned fire. Up
+there in the covert of the trees the girl in the silver
+tissue was resting from her perilous and outlawed
+journey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We will eat here," the Maccabee said abruptly
+to Julian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Eat!" Julian exclaimed. "What?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee signed to the pack on Julian's horse.
+Julian dismounted, shaking his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What a savage appetite this travel in the untaught
+wilds of Judea hath bred in you, my cousin!
+You, whom once a crust of bread and a cup of wine
+would satisfy!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Maccabee climbed out of the roadway and,
+finding a sheltered spot behind a boulder, kicked together
+some of the dead weeds and twigs and set fire
+to the heap with flint and steel. Then he lost interest
+in the preparation of his comforts. He turned to look
+up at the faint column of illumination in the little
+copse of cedars and presently, stealthily, went that
+way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a poor encampment that he came upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the low-growing limbs of a couple of gnarly
+cedars, old Momus had stretched the sheepskins which
+Joseph, the shepherd, had given them. Three sides
+of the shelter were protected thus, and the fourth side
+opened down-hill, with a low fire screening them from
+the mountain wind. Within this inclosure, wrapped
+in the coarse mantle of her servant, sat Laodice. She
+had raised her veil and its misty texture flowed like a
+web of frost over her brilliant hair and framed her
+face in cold vapor. In spite of the marks of grief
+that had exhausted her tears, the fatigue and discomfort,
+she seemed, to the Maccabee's eyes, more than
+ever lovely. He was angry with the hieratic banishment
+that sent her out to subsist by the roadside for
+seven days in early spring; angry with the harsh inhospitality
+of the hills; and angrier that he could
+not change it all. He looked at the old mute to see
+that he was carefully putting away the remnants of a
+meal of durra bread and curds. The primitive gallantry
+of the original man stirred in the Maccabee.
+He had come unseen; with silent step he departed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little later he stepped boldly into the circle of
+light from their camp-fire. To Laodice, in her lowly
+position, he seemed superhumanly big and splendid.
+Without mantle or any of the accessories that would
+show preparation against the cold, his bare arms and
+limbs and dark face, tanned, hardy and resolute,
+seemed to be those of a strong aborigine, sturdy friend
+of all of nature's rougher moods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not look at Momus, who got up as quickly
+as he might at the intrusion of the big stranger. His
+dark eyes rested on Laodice, who sat transfixed with
+her sudden recognition of the visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He held in one hand a brace of fowls, in the other
+a skin of wine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he spoke the polish of the Ephesian andronitis
+in his voice and manner destroyed the primitive
+illusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lady, I heard in the synagogue at Emmaus to-day
+the exclusion that is laid upon you for seven
+days. This is a hungry country and no man should
+waste food. I shall enter Jerusalem to-morrow by
+daybreak; we, my companion and I, have no further
+use for these. They are Milesian ducks, fattened on
+nuts. And this is Falernian&ndash;Roman. I pray you,
+allow me to leave them with your servant with my
+obeisances."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without waiting for her reply the Maccabee passed
+fowls and skin into the hands of Momus who stood
+near.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sir," she answered unreadily, with her small hands
+gripping each other before her and her eyes veiled,
+"I thank you. It was not the least of my anxieties
+how we should provide ourselves with food under prohibition
+and in a country perilous with war. You
+have made to-morrow easy for us. I thank you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To-morrow; yes," he argued, seizing upon a discussion
+for an excuse to remain, "but the next day,
+and the next five days, what shall you do?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perchance," she said gravely, "God will send us
+another stranger of a generous heart, with more than
+he needs for himself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not likely, indeed, he thought, would such beauty
+as hers go hungry as long as there were hearts
+in the wilderness as impressionable as his. But the
+thought of another than himself providing for her
+did not make him happy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was nothing more to be said, but he did not
+go. In his face gathered signs of his interest in her
+identity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is there more that I can do for you?" he asked.
+"Have you friends in Jerusalem? I will bear your
+messages gladly."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was a grateful privilege which she had to
+refuse with reluctance. If her husband awaited her
+in Jerusalem, he must wait, rather than be informed
+of the cause of her delay at peril of exposing his presence
+in the city. She shook her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is nothing more," she added. "I thank
+you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dismissal was so evident in her voice that he prepared
+to depart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shall you move on, then, in the morning?" he
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We have seven days in the wilderness," she explained.
+"We can not hasten. It is only a little way
+to Jerusalem."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But it is a long road and a weary one for tender
+feet," he answered; "and it is a time of warfare and
+much uncertainty."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She lifted her eyes now with trouble in them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is there any less dangerous way than this?" she
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee sat down and clasped his hands about
+his knees. This grasping at the slightest excuse to
+remain exasperated the perplexed Momus, who could
+not understand the stranger's assurance. But the
+Maccabee failed to see him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is," he said to Laodice. "One can journey
+with you. I am under no restriction, and the rabbis
+do not bind you against me. I can secure you comforts
+along the way, and give you protection. There
+in no such dire need that I enter Jerusalem under
+seven days."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice was confused by this sudden offer of help
+from a stranger in whom her confidence was not entirely
+settled. Nevertheless a warmth and pleasure
+crept into her heart benumbed with sorrow. She did
+not look at Momus, fearing instinctively that the command
+in her old servant's eyes would not be of a kind
+with the grateful response she meant to give this
+stranger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have no right to expect so much&ndash;from a stranger,"
+she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then I shall not be a stranger," he declared
+promptly. "Call me&ndash;Hesper&ndash;of Ephesus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ephesus!" she echoed, looking up quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The maddest city in the world," he replied.
+"Dost know it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hesitated. Could she say with entire truth that
+she did not know Ephesus? Had she not read those
+letters that Philadelphus had written to her father,
+which were glowing with praise of the proud city of
+Diana? Was it not as if she had seen the Odeum and
+the great Theater, the Temple with its golden cows,
+the mount and the plain and the broad wandering of
+the Rivers Hermus, Ca’ster and Maenander? Had
+she not made maps of it from her young husband's
+accounts and then with enthusiasm traced his steps
+by its stony, hilly streets from forum to stadium and
+from school to museum? Had she not dreamed of its
+shallow port, its rugged highways and its skyey
+marshes? It had been her pride to know Ephesus,
+although she had never laid eyes upon it. Even she
+had come to believe that she would know an Ephesian
+by his aggressive joy in life! It went hard with her
+to deny that she knew that city which she had all but
+seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee observed her hesitation and when
+she looked up to answer, his eyes full of question were
+resting upon her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not know Ephesus," she said quickly. "Are&ndash;are
+you a native?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She wanted mightily to know if he had met the
+young Philadelphus in that city, but she feared to
+ask further lest she betray him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A great city," he went on, "but there are greater
+pagan cities. It is not like Jerusalem, which has no
+counterpart in the world. Even the most intolerant
+pagan is curious about Jerusalem."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked again at his face. It was not Greek or
+Roman, neither more indicative of her own blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you a Jew?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He remembered that she had seen him in a synagogue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I was," he said after a silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him a moment before she made comment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I never heard a Jew say it that way before."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He acknowledged the rebuke with the flash of a
+smile that appeared only in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A Jew entirely Jewish wears the mark on him.
+You have had to ask if I were a Jew. Would I be
+consistent to claim to be that which in no wise shows
+to be in me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is time to be a Jew or against the Jews," she
+said gravely. "There is no middle ground concerning
+Judea at this hour."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Serious words from the lips of a woman in whom a
+man expects to find entertainment are obtrusive, a
+paradox. Still the new generosity in his heart for
+this girl made any manner she chose, engaging, so
+that it showed him the sight of her face and gave him
+the sound of her voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Seeing," he said, "that it is the hour of
+the Jewish hope, is it politic for us to declare ourselves
+for its benefits?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The call at this hour," she exclaimed reproachfully,
+"is to be great in sacrifice&ndash;not for reward.
+It is the word of the prophets that we shall not attain
+glory until we have suffered for it. We have not yet
+made the beginning."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She touched so familiarly on his own thoughts which
+had haunted him since ambition had awakened in him
+in his boyhood, that his interest in his own hope
+surged to the fore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How goes it in Jerusalem?" he asked earnestly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Evilly, they say," she answered, "but I have not
+been in the city. Yet you see Judea. That which
+has destroyed it threatens the city. Jews have no
+friends abroad over the world. We need then our
+own, our own!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Trust me, lady, for a good Jew. I have said
+that I had been one, because I admit how far I have
+drifted from my people. But I am going back!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Somehow that strong avowal touched the deep
+springs of her grief. She knew the pleasure that
+her father would have felt in it. With the greatness
+of his sacrifice in mind, she filled with the determination
+that his work should not have been in vain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose and flung back the cumbrous striped mantle
+on her shoulders and put out her hands to the
+Maccabee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hast seen these pilgrims going to the Passover?"
+she exclaimed, with color rising as her emotion grew.
+"All day they have passed; army after army of Jews,
+not only strong, but filled with the spirit that makes
+men die for a cause! Hast seen Judea, which was
+once the land of milk and honey? Wasted! a sight
+to make Jews gnash their teeth and die of hate and
+rage! What hast thou said of Jerusalem? 'The
+perfection of beauty and the joy of the whole earth!'
+threatened with this same blight that hath made a
+wilderness of Canaan! If the hour and the circumstance
+and the cause will but unite us, this unweaponed
+host will stretch away at once in majestic orders
+of tens of thousands&ndash;legions upon legions that
+would shame Xerxes for numbers and that first Cęsar
+for strength. Then&ndash;oh, I can see that calm battle-line
+pass like the ocean tide over the stony Roman
+front, and forget as the sea forgets the pebbles that
+opposed it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She halted suddenly on the edge of tears. The
+Maccabee, astonished and moved, looked at her in silence.
+This, then, was what even the women of the
+shut chambers of Palestine expected of him&ndash;if he
+freed Judea! If such spirit prevailed over the armies
+of men assembling in the Holy City, what might he
+not achieve with their help! The Maccabee felt confidence
+and enthusiasm fill his heart to the full. He
+rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Our blows will never weaken nor our hearts grow
+faint," he said, "if we have such eloquence and such
+beauty to inspire us."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew back a little. His persistent happiness
+of mood fell cruelly on her flinching heart at that
+moment. He noted her sudden relapse into dejection,
+with disappointment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do not be sad," he said. "Discomforts do not
+last for ever."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not that," she said in a low voice. "I have
+buried beloved dead on this journey and I have surrendered
+all my substance to a pillager."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was the silence of arrested thought. The
+Maccabee was taken aback and embarrassed. He felt
+that he was an intruder. But even the flush on her
+face in restraining emotion made her loveliness more
+than ever winsome. He let his hand drop softly on
+hers. But in the genuineness of his sympathy he was
+not too moved to feel that her hand warmed under
+his clasp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The difference between a fool and a blunderer,"
+he said contritely, "is that the blunderer is always
+sorry for his mistakes. I will go. None has a right
+to refuse another his hour to weep."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hesitated a moment, as if he would have kissed
+her hand. She glanced up at him with eyes too filled
+with the darkness of grief for words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The slow unconscious smile that had worked such
+perfect transformation that first morning grew in his
+eyes. It was comfort, compliment and protection all
+in one. Then he went away into the moonlight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Within a few feet he came upon Julian of Ephesus
+with immense rancor written on his face. The Maccabee
+was disturbed. It was not well that this conscienceless
+man should have discovered that they were
+traveling near this girl and her old servant. Much as
+the young man wished to loiter along the road to
+Jerusalem to keep her in sight while he could, he saw
+plainly that to defend her from Julian he must ride
+on and leave her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Your meal," said Julian, "is as cold as Jugurtha's
+bath."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have lost my appetite," the Maccabee said carelessly.
+"Saddle and let us ride on."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At his words, a picture of his own comfortable
+progress to Jerusalem compared to her long foot-weary
+tramp for days over the inhospitable hills appeared
+to him. The instant impulse did not permit
+himself to argue the immoderation of his care of her.
+Julian clung to his side until they were ready to depart.
+Then the Maccabee, using subterfuge to give
+him opportunity to escape the vigilant eyes of the
+Ephesian, suddenly clapped his hand to his hip, exclaiming
+that he had left his weapon at the camp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before Julian's sneer reached him, he mounted
+quickly and rode up the hill, meaning to offer his
+horse to the girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bed of coals still glowed cheerily, but the shelter
+of sheepskins, the old servant and the girl in the
+tissue of woven moonbeams were gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood still, vexed, disappointed and resentful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The old incubus has made her go on, purposely,
+to get rid of me!" he decided finally. "Perpol! He
+won't!"
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch6">Chapter VI</h2>
+
+<h2>DAWN IN THE HILLS</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+It was a night that the Maccabee did not readily
+forget. Since the girl had moved on to avoid him, he
+had become alive to a delinquency that was more of a
+sensation than an admission. His thought of her, that
+had been a diversion before, now seemed to be a transgression.
+An incident of this nature during the fourteen
+years of his life in Ephesus would have engaged
+his conscience only a moment if at all, but at this last
+hour it amounted to a deflection from his newly resolved
+uprightness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian rode in a constant air of expectancy and increasing
+irritation. The slightest sound from the
+haunted hills elicited a start from him and his intense
+attention until the origin of the sound proved itself.
+Many Passover pilgrims who had proceeded by night
+passed under his close scrutiny and from time to time
+he stopped the Maccabee in a speech with a peremptory
+command to listen. All this engaged the Maccabee's
+interest, but he made no comment until, on occasion
+of his casual word in praise of the fidelity of
+Aquila, Julian flew into a rage and reviled the emissary
+until the Maccabee brought him up with a sharp
+word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Enough of that!" he exclaimed. "What ails
+you, man?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian caught his breath and after a silence replied
+in a voice considerably sweetened that Aquila was a
+conscienceless pagan and not to be praised till he
+was dead. But the Maccabee, with the girl uppermost
+in his mind, believed that his cousin was inwardly
+resenting his preėmption of the pretty stranger.
+The fact that Julian had changed the pace of their
+advance confirmed him in this suspicion. From the
+smart trot that they had maintained from the time
+they had left Cęsarea, they had declined to a walk.
+Julian next showed inclination to loiter. He spent an
+unusual length of time at every spring at which they
+watered their horses; an unseen break in his harness
+engaged a prolonged halt on the road; he stopped at
+an unroofed hut to rouse sleeping Passover pilgrims
+who had taken refuge within to ask how far they
+were from Jerusalem, and wrangled with the sleepy
+Jew for many minutes over the hazy estimate the man
+had given him. With each of these pretenses the
+Maccabee's conviction grew that the girl had something
+to do with the altered behavior of his cousin.
+And with that growing conviction, he became the
+more convinced that he ought to maintain an espionage
+of Julian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At midnight they were both tired, exasperated,
+moody, and determined against each other. They
+had not journeyed thirty furlongs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In one of the high valleys in the hills a great well
+bubbled up from a hollow by the road, overflowed
+the stone basin that the ancients had built for it and
+wasted itself in the undrained soil about. Here, then,
+was one of the few marshes in Judea. The road by
+a series of arches crossed it and continued up the
+shoulder of the hills toward the east. All about it
+flourished the young growth of the rough sedge
+grass, green as emerald. The spot was treeless and
+marked with broad low hummocks of new sod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian halted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shall we camp here?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It hath the recommendation of variety," the Maccabee
+said wearily. "Eheu! How I shall miss the
+greensward of Ephesus! Yes, we'll camp!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They dismounted and while Julian unpacked their
+blankets, the Maccabee collected dead reeds and cedar
+twigs and built a fire. Then he stretched himself by
+the sweet-smelling flame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She can not have kept up with our horses; indeed
+it is unlikely that they moved far," he thought,
+and thus assured that there was no danger to the girl
+for whom he had become a self-constituted guardian,
+he ate a piece of bread, drank a cup of wine and fell
+asleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His slumber was not entirely unconscious. So long
+as the movements of his cousin continued regular
+about him, he lay still, but once, when Julian approached
+too near, his eyes opened full in the face of
+the man about to lean over him. The Ephesian raised
+himself hastily and the Maccabee's eyes closed again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A pest on an eye that only half sleeps!" Julian
+said to himself. "He hasn't lost count on the minutes
+since he left Cęsarea!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morning broke, the sun mounted, the deserted
+road became populous with all the previous day's
+host of pilgrims, and the silence in the hills failed
+before the procession that should not cease till night
+fell again. Through all the shouting at camel and
+mule, the talk of parties and the dogged trudging of
+lonely and uncompanionable solitaries, the Maccabee
+slept. From time to time Julian, who had wakened
+early, gazed with smoldering eyes at the insolent composure
+of his enemy sleeping. But slumber with so
+little control over the senses of a man was not to be
+depended upon for any work that demanded stealth.
+At times the gaze he bent upon the long lazy shape
+half buried in the raw-edged grass was malevolent
+with uneasiness and hate. Again, some one of the
+passing travelers that bore a resemblance to the expected
+Aquila would bring the Ephesian to his feet,
+only to sink back again with a muttered imprecation
+at his disappointment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A pest on the waxen-hearted satyr!" he said to
+himself finally. "Why should he have been more
+faithful to me than to his first employer! I am old
+enough to have learned by this time not to trust my
+success to any man but myself. Now where am I to
+look for him&ndash;Ephesus, Syene, Gaul, Medea? Jerusalem
+first! By Hecate, the fellow is handsome!
+And these Jewesses are impressionable!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rumination was broken off suddenly by a
+glimpse of an old deformed man bearing a burden on
+his shoulders, followed by a slender figure, jealously
+wrapped in a plebeian mantle that left only a hem of
+silver tissue under its border. They were skirting
+along the brow of the hill opposite, away from the
+rest of the pilgrims on the road. Both were walking
+slowly and the old man seemed to be examining the
+farther slope, as if meditating a halt. Julian got
+upon his feet and watched. He saw the old man sign
+to the girl presently and they moved down the farther
+side of the hill and were lost to view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian cast a look at the sleeper and hesitated.
+Then he scanned the road; he might miss Aquila. He
+seemed to relinquish the intent that had risen in him,
+and sat down again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a while as his constant gaze at the passers-by
+led him again toward the overflowing well, he saw
+there, standing in a long line, awaiting turn to dip a
+vessel in the water, the old bowed servant, with a skin
+in his hand. The girl was nowhere to be seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian sprang to his feet and, hastening across the
+road, considerably below the well, climbed the hill in
+the direction in which he had seen the girl disappear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That watchful alarm in the brain which, at moments
+of demand, is instantly alive in certain sleepers,
+aroused the Maccabee almost as soon as the stealthy,
+receding footsteps of Julian died away. He stirred,
+sat up and looked about him. Julian was nowhere to
+be seen. Both horses were feeding a little distance
+away. The Maccabee sprang up and looked toward
+the well. There patiently but apprehensively waiting
+was old Momus. The girl was not with him. Suspicion
+grew vivid in the Maccabee's brain. The tender
+rank grass about him showed the print of his
+cousin's steps as they led away toward the road. He
+followed intently. The slim marks of the well-shod
+feet led him across the dust of the road up into gravel
+on the slope and finally eluded him on the escarpment
+that soared away above him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee hurried to the top of the declivity
+to gain whatever aid that point of vantage might
+offer and from that height saw below him to the west
+a single nook shaped of rock and hummock and a
+tree out of which rose a blue thread of smoke. He
+dropped down the farther slope at a pace little short
+of a run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He mounted the slight ridge that overlooked the
+depression in time to see Julian of Ephesus appear
+over the opposite side. Within, with her mantle laid
+off, her veil thrown back, the girl knelt over a bed of
+coals, baking one of the Maccabee's Milesian ducks.
+Julian had made a sound; the Maccabee had come
+silently. She looked up and saw the less kindly man
+first, flashed white with terror, sprang to her feet with
+a cry, and whirled to flee up the other side. There
+she confronted the Maccabee with hands extended
+to ward off the encroachment of his cousin. Without
+an instant's hesitation she flew into the Maccabee's
+arms. His clasp closed around her and she shrank
+against him, clinging to the folds of his tunic over
+his breast with hands that were tremulous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her flight to him for refuge achieved an instant
+change in the Maccabee. The fear of defeat, the
+primal hate of a rival, died in him. All that remained
+was big wrath at the presumption and effrontery of
+Julian of Ephesus. He had no definite memory of
+what followed, because of the rush of blood in his
+veins, the whirl of pleasurable sensation in his brain
+and the weight of a sweet frightened figure pressed
+to him. The Ephesian went, leaving an impression
+of a most vindictive threat in the glittering smile and
+the motion of his shapely hand clenched at the victorious
+Maccabee. The girl drew away hastily. The
+veil was over her face and through its silken meshes
+he saw the glow on her cheeks and the sweep of her
+lowered lashes down upon that bloom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was faltering her thanks and her apologies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is mine to ask pardon," he exclaimed, still
+smoldering with wrath. "I had no part in this,
+except to interfere with this bad companion of mine.
+I did not follow you; believe me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It confused her to know that he had guessed why
+she had moved from their encampment the night
+before. As necessary as old Momus had made it seem
+to her then, it seemed now to have been ungrateful.
+She could make no reply to that portion of his
+speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My servant went to the well," she said. "He
+will return presently. I am not afraid now."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am; you ought to be. I shall wait till your
+extraordinary servant returns."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this decided speech Laodice showed a little
+panic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, no! I am not afraid. He&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Maccabee ignored the implied dismissal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I owe him both a reproof and thanks for leaving
+you here alone for any wayfarer to approach&ndash;and
+for me to discover. I wish," gazing abroad over the
+broken horizon, "there were no well between here and
+Jerusalem, and that he were as thirsty as Tantalus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She made no reply to this remark, but her whole
+presence expressed discomfort in his determination to
+remain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Heathen Hecate ought to get him in these wilds
+for forcing that cruel journey on you last night,
+when you were so weary and sad! There was no good
+in it. He wanted simply to get you away from me!
+Let us hope that Titus has got him for his museum
+by this time, and be at ease!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She raised her head and reproach flashed through
+the meshes of her veil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Momus is a good man," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He can not be," he insisted. "Have I not set
+forth his iniquities even now?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It was a short task," she maintained. "But time
+is not long enough to count his virtues."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can spend time better," he declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He saw her silken brows lower in a spirited frown
+and he was glad. She was showing some other feeling
+than that dead level of unhappiness that had possessed
+her from the first moment he had seen her. His
+was not the heart contented to go astray after a tear.
+Men fall in search of joy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Momus is carrying a burden under which more
+brilliant men would falter," she averred. "I am
+beyond reckoning his debtor!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Since he has shifted that sweet burden for a time
+on my shoulders, I will forgive him for his looks. If
+he will stay away, I'll be his debtor further. But
+enough of Momus! I came to ask after your health,
+when your long journey by night is done."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am well; we did not journey all night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sit, I pray you. There is no need for you to
+stand with that air of finality. I am not going, yet.
+I went back to your camp last night within a short
+time after I left you and found the camp broken and
+your fire lonely. I wanted to offer you my horse."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We did not walk all night. We camped a little
+farther on, and moved at daybreak this morning,"
+she explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He cast a reflective look at the sun and considered
+how much time Julian of Ephesus had lost for him
+upon the road, or else how long he had slept, that this
+pair, who had camped all night and had journeyed
+afoot by day, had caught up with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Still it was a cruel journey&ndash;for those little
+feet," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She glanced involuntarily at her sandals, worn and
+dusty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes," he said compassionately, following her
+eyes. "But let me see no more, else I meet this good
+and burdened Momus with the flat of my hand when
+he comes! What is he to you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My servant&ndash;now almost my father!" she insisted,
+trying to cover the tacit accusation that she
+had made in admitting by a glance that she was
+weary. "He orders all things for my good. Do you
+think that each of the stones over which I stumbled
+to-day did not hurt him worse because they hurt me?
+Do you think he would have me go on, unless the stake
+were worth the pain I had to endure? Say no more
+against him!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee shrugged his shoulders; then noting
+that she still stood, he smoothed down a spot of the
+sand with his foot, tossed upon it one of the sheepskins
+that Momus had unrolled, and extending his
+hand politely pressed her down on the place he had
+made. Then he dropped down beside her, lounging
+on his elbow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is the stake?" he asked after he had composed
+himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hesitated, regretting that her defense of
+Momus had led her to hint her mission and touch
+upon her husband's ambition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The welfare of hosts!" she replied finally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Heavens! What a menace I was!" the Maccabee
+smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She colored quickly and he resented the veil that
+was shutting away so much that was fine and fleeting
+by way of expression under its folds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But you are just as dangerous," he declared.
+"Now, we should be in Jerusalem this hour. Our
+welfare and the welfare of others depend upon us&ndash;I
+mean my companion and me. But there is no
+devoted prodigy to bear me away&ndash;thank fortune!
+I have come out of a great turmoil; I must plunge
+into a greater one before many days. Let me rest
+between them. It will be a long time before I shall
+possess anything so sweet as the smell of this cedar
+fire and the picture of you against this fair sky!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked down quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was Ephesus in turmoil?" she asked disconnectedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ephesus was never in any other state! A fit
+preparation for the disorder in Jerusalem! I was
+met at Cęsarea with such tales as depressed me until
+it required such delight as you are to bring back my
+spirits again! What takes you to Jerusalem?" he
+asked earnestly. "The Passover? God will forgive
+you if you neglect it one year. Nothing but the
+sternest necessity should send any one there at this
+hour."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My necessity is stern&ndash;it is Judea's necessity,"
+she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"More similarity!" he exclaimed. "That is why
+I go! Certainly Judea's fortunes have bettered with
+you and me both hastening to her rescue. Come, let
+us compare further. I am going to crown a king
+over Judea!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She raised her veil to look at him with startled eyes.
+The glimpse of her face, for ever a delight and an
+astonishment to him because of its extraordinary loveliness,
+swept him out of the half-serious air into which
+he had fallen. He stopped and looked at her with
+pleased, boyish, happy eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Aurora!" he said softly. "I see now why day
+comes gradually. Mankind would die of excitement
+if the dawn were unveiled to them like this suddenly
+every morning!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She released the veil hurriedly, but before it fell he
+put out a hand, caught it and tossed it back over her
+head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Be consistent with your part," he said, still smiling.
+"No man ever saw day cancel her dawn and
+live."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was pleasant, this sweet possession and command.
+How much like an overgrown boy he had become,
+since she had wakened to find herself in his power that
+morning in the hills! The harshness and inflexibility
+had left his atmosphere entirely. She was only afraid
+of him now because he had refused to be dismissed.
+But she drew down the veil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I, too, expect a king," she said in a lowered tone.
+"A conqueror and a redeemer."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Messiah?" he said, and she knew by the
+inflection that he had not meant that King when he
+had spoken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He noted that her hair was coiled upon her head
+when he threw back her veil and he turned to that at
+once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You wear your hair in a fashion," he said, "that
+once meant that which men dislike to discover of a
+woman whom they greatly admire. I hope it is no
+longer significant."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I go," she said after a silence, "to join my husband
+in Jerusalem."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee's lips parted and an expression of
+disappointment with an admixture of surprise and
+vexation came over his face. But what did it matter?
+Were she as free as air, he was a married man. The
+humor of the situation appealed to him. He dropped
+his head into the bend of his elbow and laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Welladay, this is a respite for us both, then," he
+said. But realizing that an admission that he was
+married might hopelessly reduce their hour to a formal
+basis, he took refuge in a falsehood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My companion expects to meet a wife in Jerusalem,"
+he continued. "A royal creature, daughter of
+an ancient and haughty family, with all her life purpose
+congealed in lofty and serious intent, her coffers
+lined with gold and her face as determined and unbending
+as Juno's with her jealousy stirred. He is
+not delighted, poor lad!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice sat very still and listened. There was
+enough similarity in this story to interest her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee, seeing that he had made an impression
+with this deception and feeling somehow a relief
+in making it, went on, delighted with his deceit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He has not seen her since he married her in his
+childhood, but he knows full well how she will look
+when he meets her."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Surprise paralyzed Laodice. Was the smiling and
+dangerous companion of this man, her husband?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee, meanwhile, deliberately remarked
+her charms and recounted their antithesis in making
+up a picture of the woman he expected to meet as his
+wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She will, according to his expectations, be meager
+and thin, not plump! Thoughtful women and women
+with a purpose are never plump! And she will be
+black and pale, all eyes, with a nose which is not the
+noble nose of our race. She will be religious and it
+will not make her happy. She will realize her value
+to her husband and he will not be permitted to forget
+it. She will be ambitious and full of schemes. She
+will be the larger part of his family, though by the
+balance she will weigh not so much as an omer of
+barley."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice got upon her feet in her agitation and
+raised her veil to stare at this slander. Was this a
+picture of herself she heard? The Maccabee was
+enjoying himself uncommonly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She will wear the garments of a queen, but&ndash;how
+little a slip of silver tissue will become her!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice looked down in alarm at her gleaming garment,
+and reached for her mantle. The Maccabee
+had no idea how much pleasure he was to derive in
+making his own story, Julian's. He continued, almost
+recklessly, now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Small wonder that he is so delinquent in the wilderness,
+with such square-shouldered righteousness
+awaiting him in town! Forgive him, lady, for his
+iniquities now, for he will be a good man after he
+reaches Jerusalem; by my soul, you may be sure he
+will be good!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice gasped under the pressure of astonishment
+and indignation. It was bad enough to be pictured
+thus unprepossessing, but to be suddenly made aware
+of her husband in a man whom she feared, was desperate.
+She stared with frank and horrified eyes at her
+tormentor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But&ndash;but&ndash;" she stammered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"True," he sighed. "One can not know what calamity
+forces another into misdeeds. Now were I my
+unfortunate friend, perhaps I should afflict you with
+my hunger for sweetness also."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And that smooth, insinuating, violent pagan was
+Philadelphus Maccabaeus! But what had her father
+said of him, as a child? "Quick in temper, resourceful,
+aye, even shifty, stubborn, cold in heart, hard to
+please!" And to this man she must present herself,
+late, penniless and unhelpful. Panic seized her!
+How could she go on to Jerusalem!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That long graceful figure stretched on the sand
+was speaking. What was it in his voice that drew her
+so mightily from any terror that possessed her at any
+time?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sit down, sit down! I have more to say," he was
+urging her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She obeyed him numbly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He gets worse as he approaches the city. I think
+I ought to leave him. It will not be safe to be near
+him when his moneyed lady claims him for her own!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She&ndash;she&ndash;" Laodice burst out, "is&ndash;may
+be such a woman!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Such a woman as you! No; she will not be.
+That is what makes him bad. And now that I
+bethink me, perhaps it is just as well that you proceed
+to Jerusalem. He may comfort himself with a
+sight of you, now and then."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I? I comfort him?" she exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By my soul I know it! What blunders Fortune
+makes in bestowing wives! Perchance your husband
+could have got on as well without so radiant a spouse,
+while my poor beauty-loving friend must needs be
+paired with a&ndash;Alas! there is too much marrying
+in this world!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a ring of genuine dejection in his voice
+and when she looked down at him, she saw that his
+eyes were larger and more sorrowful than she believed
+they could be. He was hurting himself with
+his own deceit. She looked away hastily, frightened
+at the sudden tenderness that his pathetic gaze had
+wakened in her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Alas!" he went on. "The greatest sacrifice and
+the frequentest in this world of cross-purposes never
+gets into poetry. I&ndash;" he halted a moment and
+looked away, "I ought to be sorry for her, too. She
+is not getting the best of men."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Verily!" she exclaimed impulsively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He whirled his head toward her, stared; then with
+a flash of intense expression in his eyes burst into a
+ringing laugh that shook him from head to foot. He
+flung out his hand and catching hers passed it across
+his lips without kissing it, and let it go before he
+regained composure enough to speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No! Not a good man! Verily! But hath he
+no cause to be delinquent?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No!" she said stubbornly. "He has judged her
+without seeing her, when, by your own words, he
+expects her to bring him fortune and position. What
+is he bringing her?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee looked at her thoughtfully before
+he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing! Not even his heart!" he vowed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice caught her breath in an agony of indignation
+and distress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He does not in any way deserve&ndash;" she stopped
+precipitately. She was about to add "the great
+fortune he is to get," when she realized that she was
+taking this husband nothing&ndash;not even her own
+heart. She went on, for the first time a little glad
+that she was penniless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He may find&ndash;neither fortune, nor position, nor
+heart awaiting him!" she finished pointedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee pulled one of his stubborn locks that
+had fallen over his eyes. The smile grew less vivid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had no comment to make to this. Meanwhile
+Laodice looked at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shall&ndash;you be with&ndash;your friend in Jerusalem?"
+she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It depends on his wife," he retorted with a
+grimace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She would be glad if this tall, comely trifler, with a
+voice as musical as some grave-toned viol, were to be
+seen from time to time to relieve the tedium of life
+with the offensive Philadelphus. This admission instantly
+brought a shock to her. She had learned to
+study herself in these last few days since she had become
+aware of the ways of the world. Life was to be
+no longer a period of obedience to laws which the
+Torah had laid down; it was to be a long resistance
+against desirable things that she yearned for but
+which she dared not have. She learned at this moment
+that she could be her own chief stumbling-block,
+and that love, the most precious illumination in every
+life, might be a destruction and a consuming fire.
+She looked at this man, who lounged beside her, with
+a new sensation. He was winsome, and therefore the
+more perilous. That smooth insulting stranger whom
+this man had revealed as her husband with all his violence
+and license was a humble and harmless thing
+compared to this one, who had snared her by his care
+of her and by his charming self.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She felt a desire to cry out for Momus to take her
+back to the inner chamber of the shut house in Ascalon,
+away from her danger to herself and from the
+sight of the man who had done her no harm&ndash;yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not know how plainly all this wrote itself
+on her candid face. Wise pupil of that unbridled
+school, the city of Diana, he could read in that slight
+frown on her forehead and the pathetic curve of her
+lips, that she was contented with him&ndash;that she was
+not glad to go on to that husband in Jerusalem. He
+was near to her before she knew he had moved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"After all," he was saying in a low voice, "I am
+glad you are going to Jerusalem. You shall not be
+lost from me again. Whose house shall I ask for
+when I can not endure separation longer?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She moved away from him. There was a step
+behind her and Laodice, coloring shamedly, looked
+straight into the accusing eyes of Momus who stood
+there. The stranger rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall see you again," he said to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took her hand and lifted it to his lips. The
+next instant he was gone.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch7">Chapter VII</h2>
+
+<h2>IMPERIAL CĘSAR</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+When the Maccabee had returned to the spot in the
+sedgy valley where he and Julian had halted, he
+found the Ephesian white to the lips and with ignited
+eyes awaiting him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How much longer?" the Ephesian demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What! Fast and slow!" the Maccabee said
+calmly. "Last night you wasted hours to spite me.
+To-day you begrudge me a moment's talk with a
+lovely wayfarer. Or is it because she prefers me?
+You have ordered our progress long enough. I shall
+move when it pleases me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat down by the fire, clasping his hands back
+of his head, and half-closed his eyes. The Ephesian
+rose and tramped restlessly about. As he glanced
+down at the reposeful attitude of the man whom he
+could not exasperate he saw the sun glitter on the
+Maccabaean signet on the hand clasped back of Philadelphus'
+head. The sight of it in a way collected
+Julian's purposes. He knew that by some misadventure
+he had missed Aquila whom he had hoped to
+meet in Emmaus, bearing treasure stolen from the
+daughter of Costobarus. By this time, then, the
+Maccabee's emissary had doubtless arrived in Jerusalem&ndash;the
+last possible point for the two conspirators
+to meet. To proceed to Jerusalem without the Maccabee,
+with whatever excuse he could invent, would not
+deliver the dowry of the bride into his hands, in the
+event that Aquila had not succeeded in his instructions
+to make way with Laodice before he reached Jerusalem.
+Nothing occurred to Julian at that moment
+but to impersonate the Maccabee until it was possible
+to get possession of the two hundred talents from
+those friends in Jerusalem who were interested in his
+cousin's welfare. No one in Jerusalem knew Philadelphus
+Maccabaeus. Aquila, as fellow-conspirator,
+would not dare to expose him if Julian appeared as
+his cousin. Perilous at best, it seemed the only plan
+by which he was to get possession of a fortune which
+even Cęsar would be glad to have.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The resolution formed itself in a brain turbulent
+with passion and desperation. He halted silently
+back of his cousin and with a sudden flare of intent
+on his dead white face snatched a dagger from his
+girdle and drove it between the shoulders of the Maccabee.
+Without a word, Philadelphus turned upon
+his assailant and started to his feet. But Julian,
+catching a glimpse of the dire purpose in his cousin's
+darkened eyes, struck again. The knife, blindly
+wielded, glanced on the Maccabee's head with wild
+force. Under a veil of scarlet Philadelphus sank to
+the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian with a sob of terror sprang out of range
+of his victim's gaze. After a time he took courage
+and looked. The lids were fallen and the breast
+was still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian bent hastily and snatched the signet from
+the nerveless hand and fumbling in the bosom drew
+forth the wallet there. He opened it, finding within
+ancient parchments with heavy seals, new writings,
+rolls of notes and a packet of letters. He rose, trembling
+violently, and backed away. After a moment's
+fascinated gaze at the roadway to see if the pilgrims
+passing had seen what he had done, he whirled about,
+mounted his horse and galloped frantically toward
+Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the midday activity on the Roman roadway
+swept by the smoldering fire and the motionless
+figure lying in the grass some distance back from the
+highway. Along the splendid causeway the Passover
+pilgrims fared, men afoot, men on camels, families
+and solitary travelers; the poor, the once rich, the
+humble and the haughty; figures in burnooses, gabardines,
+gowns and tunics; striped and checkered
+woolens, linens or rags; noisy or silent, angry or sad,
+hour in and hour out, until the hills were a-throb with
+the human atmosphere. Time and again the sweet
+invitation of the rare grass along the marsh invited
+the way-weary to halt to tie a sandal, to bind up a
+wound, to eat a crust spread with curds or simply to
+rest. No one approached the silent man who had
+fallen beside a dying fire. They were tired enough to
+refrain from disturbing a man who slept. So, though
+they looked at him from where they sat and two or
+three asked each other if he were asleep or merely
+weary, he was left alone. One by one they who
+halted took up their journey again and the figure in
+the grass lay still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally near the noon hour there came from the
+summit of a hill overhanging the road, a high, wild,
+youthful yell that cut with startling distinctness
+through the dead level of human communication on
+the highway. Each of the travelers below looked up
+to see a young shepherd in sheepskins with long-blowing
+stiff crinkled locks flying back from a dusky face,
+with eyes soft and shining as those of some wild
+thing. Around him eddied a mob of sheep as wild as
+he, and a Natolian dog raced hither and thither in a
+cloud of dust, rounding the edge of the flock and
+shaping it to the advance of the young faun that
+mastered it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sheep! by the prophets!" one of the sedate Jews
+exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The only flock in existence in Judea, I venture!"
+his companion declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And so hopelessly doomed to Roman possession
+that it can not be called in existence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Heigh! Hello! Young David!" one of the
+younger men called up to the shepherd. "Does Titus
+pay you for minding his mutton?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Salute, neighbors!" another shouted. "Here is
+the Roman commissary!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ill-fathered son of an Ishmaelite!" a Tyrian
+said to this jester. "That you should make sport of
+Judea's humiliation!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherd who had paused amid his whirlpool
+of sheep wisely held his peace. There was a division
+of sentiment here that were better not aggravated.
+He halted long enough for the road to clear below
+him and then descended into the valley and crossed to
+the low meadow on the opposite side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His scamper of sheep flocked into the sedge, parting
+around the prostrate figure by a circle of coals
+now dead, and plunged into the pasture. The boy
+inspected the earth and shook his head. It was too
+wet for a long stay, inviting as it seemed. But here
+his flock might pasture for a day without injury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced at the sleeper as he passed and continued
+to the farther side where the opposite hill
+sloped down into the depression. Here he found for
+himself a comfortable spot and lay down, prepared to
+watch all day. From time to time he looked across
+at the motionless figure in the grass and commented
+to himself that it was a weary man who slept so
+soundly, and then lost interest in the maze of dreams
+that can entangle the wits of a shepherd who is a boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The march of the Passover pilgrims continued to
+Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In mid-afternoon there came interruption. Along
+the level highway came the rapid beat of hooves and
+the musical jingle of harness. Every soul within
+sound of that un-Jewish mode of travel turned apprehensively
+and looked back. Bearing down upon them
+from the west came a stampede of Roman cavalry
+scouting. The sunshine on their brass armor transformed
+them into shapes of gold, and the recklessness
+of their advance swept the pilgrims out of their path
+as far as could be seen. Right and left the Jews
+scattered; some ran into the hills and hid themselves;
+others merely stepped aside and with darkening faces
+waited defiantly for the approach of the oppressor.
+The young shepherd full of excitement sprang to his
+feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither the fleeing Jews nor the Jews that had
+stood their ground attracted the attention of the
+approaching legionaries. It was the close-packed,
+avid-feeding sheep, deep in the grass, that won their
+instant and enthusiastic notice. The decurion in
+charge of the squad brought up his gray horse with
+such suddenness that the animal's feet slid in the
+gravel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sheep, by the wings of Mercury!" he shouted.
+"Dismount, fellows! Here's for a feast this night
+and an offering to Mars to-morrow!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ten in brazen armor threw themselves from
+their horses with the enthusiasm of boys and spread
+a panic of whooping and of waving arms about the
+startled flock. The young shepherd, too long a fugitive
+from the encroachments of this same army to misunderstand
+the nature of the attack, ran into the thick
+of the shouting Romans. His valiant dog with exposed
+teeth flew straight at the nearest legionary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Cerberus!" the soldier howled, dodging. "Your
+pike, Paulus! Quick! By Hector, it is a wolf!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the quickest soldier would not have been quick
+enough to elude the enraged beast had not the shepherd
+with a spring and a warning cry seized his dog
+by the ears and stopped him mid-bound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Down, Urge!" he cried. "Take away your
+men!" he shouted to the decurion. "I can not hold
+him long."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Only so long," Paulus growled, raising his pike
+over the snarling dog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Drop it!" the decurion ordered him peremptorily.
+"We are ten to one and a dog. No blood-letting
+this day. It is Titus' order. Boy, get you
+gone; these sheep are confiscate."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have been told they are only common stock,"
+the boy remonstrated gravely, "but you may be
+right. Howbeit, they are not mine and I can not
+leave them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have been misinformed," the decurion said
+gravely, while his men, circling around the growling
+dog, went on with their work. "These are Roman
+sheep, with the Flavian coat of arms and the mark of
+the army in black on their hides&ndash;if you shear them.
+But if you make away as fast as you can I shall
+not tell Titus which way you went."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheep had started pell-mell toward the Roman
+road. The decurion turned back to his horse. The
+shepherd released his dog, which ran after the flock,
+and stepped into the decurion's way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"However these sheep look when they are sheared,"
+he said, "this seems to be robbery to me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Robbery!" the good-natured decurion exclaimed.
+"This is but a religious rite that Mercury got out of
+the cradle at two days to establish. Only he took
+Apollo's cattle while we are contenting ourselves with
+the sheep of mortal ownership. Robbery! What an
+inelegant word!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the stampeded sheep were making in a
+cloud of dust back over the road toward the west from
+which the Romans had come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What shall I say to the citizens of Pella?" the
+little shepherd shouted, pursuing the decurion who
+was making back to his horse as fast as he could go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Salute them for me," the decurion shouted back,
+"and make them my obeisances, and say that I shall
+report on the flavor of the sheep by messenger from
+Jerusalem."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a moment the boy sprang into the decurion's
+way so suddenly that the soldier almost fell over him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Be fair!" the boy exclaimed. "At least leave
+me half!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The decurion was losing patience and the shepherd
+had grown more than ever serious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fair!" the Roman echoed. "Why, I have been
+indulgent! This is war! It is almost a breach of discipline
+to argue with you. Out of the way!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Roman army has all the world to feed it;
+Pella has only its sheep. We, then, must face hunger
+and cold because your appetites crave mutton this
+day!" the boy returned resentfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The decurion pointed down the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why waste your breath! There go the sheep."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy's dark eyes filled with tears. The decurion
+swung around him and went back to the horses that
+waited in the road. He knotted their bridles together
+and, leading one of the number, remounted and rode
+west after the receding cloud of dust which hid the
+flock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherd's head sank on his heaving breast and
+he stood still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lord Jesus, I pray Thee, give me my sheep
+again!" he prayed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A deep prolonged thunder that had been filling the
+hills with sound began to multiply as the nearest
+slopes caught it and tossed it from echo to echo. It
+was not loud but immensely prevalent. Those wayfarers
+who had fled came back to the brink of the hill
+and those who had stood their ground walked out into
+the grass to look back. Around the curve of a buttress
+of rock that stood out at the line of the road,
+the head of a column of Roman cavalry appeared.
+The superb color-bearer bore on his hip the staff supporting
+the Imperial standard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the forefront rode a young general; on either
+side a tribune. Behind came a detachment of six
+hundred horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheep huddling in the way were swept like a
+scurry of leaves out into the meadow alongside the
+road, and one of the tribunes and the general turned
+in their saddles to look at the confiscated flock. The
+second tribune observed their interest in this trivial
+incident with disgust. The young general, whose
+military cloak flaunted a purple border, called the
+decurion boyishly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well done, Sergius! A samnos of wine for your
+company to-night for this."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The decurion saluted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where did you get them?" the tribune demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherd who had withdrawn to the side of the
+road on the approach of the column looked at the
+questioner with resentful eyes from which the moisture
+had not vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"From me!" he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Both the purple-wearing young general and his
+tribune looked at him amusedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How many killed and wounded, Sergius?" the
+tribune asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The silent and disapproving tribune, observing
+that the commanding officer had not given an order
+to halt, brought the six hundred to, lest they ride
+their general down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You!" the general exclaimed with his eyes on the
+young shepherd.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy looked up into the face of the Roman who
+sat above him on a snow-white horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a young face, tanned by the sun of Alexandria,
+but bright with an emanation of light that
+somehow was made tangible by the flash of his teeth
+as he talked and the sparkle of his lively eyes. For a
+soldier exposed to the open air and the ruffian life of
+the camp and burdened with the grave task of subduing
+a desperate nation, he was free of disfigurements.
+His brows were knitted as if to give his full soft eyes
+protection and the frown, with the laughing cut of his
+youthful lips, gave his face a quizzical expression
+that was entirely winning. In countenance and figure
+he was handsome, refined and thoroughly Roman.
+The little shepherd was won to him instantly. Without
+knowing that the world from one border to the
+other had already named this charming young Roman
+the Darling of Mankind, the little shepherd, had his
+lips been shaped to poetry, would have called him
+that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Joseph, the shepherd, son of Thomas, the Christian,
+and Titus, son of Vespasian, Emperor of the
+World, looked at each other with perfect fellowship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Those are sheep from Pella," Joseph said soberly,
+"in my care. They were taken from me
+because," he paused till a more tactful statement
+should suggest itself, but, lacking it, drove ahead
+with spirit, "there was not more of me to stop your
+soldiers."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I believe you," Titus replied heartily. "But
+that is the fortune of war. Still, you Jews have a
+habit of refusing to accept defeat rationally."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am not a Jew," Joseph explained. "I am
+born of Arab blood, and I am a Christian."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Worse and worse," said Titus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joseph shifted his position argumentatively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is it?" he asked. "Are you making war on
+Pella or Jerusalem? Was it Pella or the hundred
+Jewish towns that cost Rome so much of late? Pella
+is not exactly your friend, though neither are most
+of your provinces; but are you going to pillage
+Egypt or Persia because Judea is in rebellion?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus threw his plump leg over the horn of his
+saddle and sat sidewise. One of his tribunes looked
+at the other with a flickering smile that was not
+entirely free of contempt. But his fellow returned a
+stare that for immobility would have done credit to
+the Memnon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now," Titus began, "I have heard of this fault
+in the Christians. They don't understand warfare."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We don't," Joseph declared bluntly. "We do
+not see why you should take my sheep to feed your
+army, when we have had nothing to do with bringing
+your army over here. We haven't cost you one drop
+of Roman blood or one denarius of Roman money,
+and yet you are taking at one act the whole of our
+substance and punishing us for the misdeeds of others&ndash;others
+whom you haven't succeeded in punishing
+yet."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is bad judgment," Titus said, frowning at
+the last sentence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Unpleasant truth always is," Joseph retorted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the tribunes laughed impulsively and Titus
+looked around at him reproachfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come, come, Carus," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thy pardon, Cęsar," the tribune replied, "but
+we'll be whipped in this wordy battle. And even a
+small defeat were an unpropitious sign on this expedition."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To Hades with your signs! If I am whipped
+with six hundred back of me, I ought to be! Boy,
+we have your sheep by conquest; you will have to
+take them back the same way."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joseph's face fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have had them since I was nine years old. I've
+tended them since they were lambs and their mothers
+before them. It is like surrendering so many children,"
+he said dejectedly. "In truth I can fight for
+them even if it be but to lose, and I am bidden not to
+fight at that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By Hector, that is not a Jewish tenet!" Titus
+exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joseph said nothing. He stood still in the path of
+the Roman six hundred with his curly head sunk on
+his breast. There was silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is it?" Titus demanded uncomfortably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; and for that reason you are still fighting
+them and will fight and lose and lose and lose, before
+you win. Still, it is no safeguard not to fight you;
+you take our substance anyhow. Be we peace-lovers
+or not, there is warfare; if we do not fight we are
+fought against."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus thrust his helmet back from his full front of
+intensely black curls and wiped his forehead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The sun is hot in these hills," he said disjointedly
+to the tribune he had called Carus, "and the wind is
+cold. Uncomfortable climate."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carus said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is it not?" Titus demanded irritably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very," Carus observed hastily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little shepherd stood in the road and the six
+hundred were silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well," said Titus with a tone of finality, "you
+never remember the wrongs the strong man endured&ndash;wrongs
+that the weak man did him because of his
+weakness."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It never hurts the strong man," Joseph said
+softly, "to give the weak one another chance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus closed his lips at that, and the tribune who
+had smiled sarcastically looked with sudden intent at
+Carus. Carus silently moved his horse to the sarcastic
+tribune's side with such threatening expression on
+his face that the other discreetly held his peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps," Titus said thoughtfully, but the boy
+failed to see more in that word than the simple
+expression. In his search for some further plea that
+would give him his sheep again, the presence of the
+young Roman appealed to him with hope. Surely
+one so young and laughing, so ready to stop an army
+to argue with a child, could not be beyond reach of
+persuasion. With the simple frankness so innocent
+of guile as to make charming that which upon other
+lips would have been the broadest insincerity, he put
+that moment's thought into words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I thought," he said slowly, "because your horse
+is so white and your dress so golden and your face
+so beautiful that I would have but to ask&ndash;and I
+would have my sheep again."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus looked at him, not with the idea that his compliment
+was effective, but with the thought that the
+boy was yet too young to have lost faith in attractive
+things; that another than himself would have to teach
+the shepherd that lesson in disappointment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have you examined these sheep for disease, Sergius?"
+he demanded, with a show of severity. "I
+never saw a flock in this country that was not full of
+peril for the cavalry."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sergius, wisely catching excuse in this demand,
+saluted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I did not," he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So? Well, do it hereafter. Go stop those legionaries
+and turn loose that flock. We lost five hundred
+horse in Cęsarea for just such negligence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joseph flung up his head, his eyes sparkling, his
+cheeks aglow, his whole figure alive with a gratitude
+so potent that it was painful. Titus, with the deep
+tide of a blush crawling over his forehead, scowled
+down at this joy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Look well," he continued severely to Sergius,
+"and if they are healthy&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Joseph laughed and stepped out of the young
+general's path.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And," said Titus, his face clearing before that
+laugh as he directed his words to the little shepherd,
+"Jerusalem shall have another chance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Transfiguration brightened the small dusky face.
+He put up his hands for that blessing that was a part
+of his farewell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>May my God supply all thy need according to
+his riches in glory, by Jesus Christ. Amen!</i>"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus, with a bowed head, touched his horse, and
+in response to a silent flash of an uplifted sword the
+picked six hundred of Cęsar's army rode on in the
+subdued thunder of hoof and the music of jingling
+harness toward Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a long time there came the quick patter of a
+running flock and the multitudinous complaint of
+lambs, and up from the east rushed the mob of sheep.
+Behind them trotting comfortably were the mounted
+scouts. The ten privates wore scornful countenances
+highly expressive of their contempt for the unwarlike
+restitution they had been forced to make, but as
+they rode past when the sheep swept out of the road
+to their tender, Sergius, the decurion, dropped back
+and with his tongue in his cheek made such jovial
+threatening signs that the little shepherd laughed
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The squad galloped after the main body and were
+lost to view. Many of the Jews called to the little
+shepherd, but after a time travel was resumed on the
+road and deep monotonous composure settled upon the
+valley again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Joseph, the Christian, turned into the high
+grass of the meadow with bowed head and clasped
+hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lord Jesus, what may I do for Thee?" he asked
+impulsively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stopped suddenly. At his feet lay the silent
+sleeper in the grass. On the tall growth upstanding
+about the prostrate form were clear shining scarlet
+drops. The little shepherd turned white and threw
+himself down on his knees beside the still figure and
+put his hand over the heart. Then he lifted his face
+to the skies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>I was sick and ye visited me</i>," he whispered radiantly.
+</p>
+
+<div class="ctr">
+ <a href="images/image04l.jpg">
+ <img src="images/image04.jpg"
+ alt="He threw himself down by the still figure."
+ title="He threw himself down by the still figure." />
+</a> <p class="caption">He threw himself down by the still figure.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch8">Chapter VIII</h2>
+
+<h2>GREEK AND JEW</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Julian of Ephesus, now the presumptive Philadelphus
+Maccabaeus, rode up the broad brown bosom of
+a hill that had confronted him for miles to the south,
+and the sun had sloped until its early spring rays
+struck level from the west. At the summit, he drew
+up his horse suddenly with a quick intaking of the
+breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Below him lay Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+South and east the barren summits of brown hills
+shaped a depression in which the city lay. North,
+clean-white and regular, the wall of Agrippa was
+printed against the cold blue of the sky. Below on
+three lesser mounts and overflowing the vales between
+was the goodliest city in all Asia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About it and through it climbed such walls, planted
+on such bold natural escarpment, that made it the
+most inaccessible fortification in the world. On its
+highest hill stood a vision of marble and gold&ndash;a
+fortress in gemstone&ndash;the Temple. Behind it
+towered Roman Antonia. Westward the Tyropean
+Bridge spanned a deep, populous ravine. The high
+broad street upon which the giant causeway terminated
+was marked by the solemn cenotaphs of Mariamne
+and Phaselis and ended against the Tower of
+Hippicus&ndash;a vast and unflinching citadel of stone.
+Under the shadow of this pile was the high place of
+the Herods; in sight was a second Herodian palace.
+South was the open space of the great markets; near
+the southernmost segment of the outer wall was the
+semicircular Hippodrome. Cut off from its neighbor
+by ancient walls were Ophlas, overlooking Tophet
+and under the shadow of the Temple; Mount Zion
+which the Lord had established, Akra of the valley,
+Moriah, the Holy Hill, and Coenopolis or Bezetha
+which Agrippa I had walled. About the immense
+outer fortifications crawled the shadowy valleys of
+Tophet, of Brook Kedron and of Hinnom. Thickly
+scattered like fallen patches of skies the pools of
+Siloam, Gihon, Shiloh, En-Rogel, the Great Pool,
+the Serpent's Pool and the Dragon's Well reflected
+the color of the mountain heavens. Between them
+wandered the blue threads of certain aqueducts that
+supplied them. Everywhere rose the shafts of monuments
+and memorials, old as the pride of Absalom,
+new as the folly of the Herods; everywhere the aggressive
+paganism of Rome and Greece, which would
+have paganized this monotheistic race out of very
+rancor against its uprightness, violated with insolent
+beauty the hieratic severity of the city's face.
+Rich, bold, strong, beautiful, Jerusalem was at that
+hour, as viewed from the hill to the north, the perfection
+of beauty and the joy of the whole earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment ambition struggled nobly in the
+breast of the man that overlooked it. Except for
+the obstacles he had placed in his own way by his
+misdeeds, Julian of Ephesus at that moment might
+have become great. But he had struck down his kinsman
+on the way, and such deeds were remembered
+even in war-ridden Judea; he had come to Jerusalem
+wearing his kinsman's name that he might despoil
+that kinsman's bride of her dowry; a hundred other
+crimes of his commission stood in the way to peace
+and success.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But about him the Passover pilgrims, catching
+their first glimpse of the Holy City, gave way to the
+storm of emotion that had gradually gathered as
+they drew near to the threatened City of Delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had moved him to look upon this most majestic
+fortification, embattled and begirt for resistance
+against the most majestic nation in the world. But
+he who came as a stranger could not feel within him
+the tenderness of old love, the sanctity of old tradition,
+and the desperation of kin in his blood as he
+gazed upon Jerusalem. Yonder was a roof-garden;
+to him, no more than that. But the inspired Jews
+beside him knew that in that place the sun of noon
+had shone upon Bathsheba, the beautiful; and in that
+neighboring high place the heart of the Singing
+King had melted; to the north was a stretch of
+monotonous ground overgrown with a new suburb;
+but that was the camp of Sennacherib, the Assyrian
+whom the Angel of the Lord smote and his army of
+one hundred and four score and five thousand, before
+the morning. Yonder were squalid streets, older
+than any others. But the Kings had walked them;
+the Prophets had helped wear trenches in their stones;
+the heroes and the strong-hearted women of the ancient
+days had gone that way. No house but was
+holy with tradition; no street but was sanctified by
+event. Small wonder, then, that these who came to
+this Passover, the most momentous one since that
+calamity which had occurred forty years ago on
+Golgotha, wept, cried aloud to Heaven; became beatified
+and made prophecies; railed; anathematized
+Jerusalem's enemies; assumed vows and were threatening.
+Julian of Ephesus was shaken. He looked
+about him on the tempestuous host, then touched his
+horse and rode down to the city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the Hill Scopus over which he approached an
+inferior number of Romans were camped, and these
+had maintained a semblance of siege only sufficiently
+effective to close all the gates on three sides. The
+Sun Gate to the south of the city was therefore the
+most accessible point of entry for the pilgrims.
+Following the people who had preceded him, Julian
+approached this portal, left his horse with the stable-keeper
+without and prepared to enter Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Collecting at the causeway of the Sun Gate the pilgrims
+came with such impetus that the foremost were
+rushed struggling and protesting through the tunnel
+under the wall and forced well into Jerusalem
+before they could control their own motion. Once
+within, the host spread out so that one looking at the
+immense space they instantly covered wondered how
+so great a mass ever passed through the circumscribed
+limits of a fifty-foot gate. At times stopping was impossible.
+Again there were momentary lulls, as when
+the sea recoils upon itself and is stilled for an instant.
+They who stood to watch, wearied of days of such
+invasion, unconsciously wished that the interval might
+endure till they could rest their number-wearied
+brains. But, as if the stagnation were the result of
+congestion somewhere without the walls, when the
+wave returned it came with redoubled height and
+power and the Sun Gate would roar with the noise of
+their entry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the Ephesian had been swept in with his own
+company of pilgrims, he saw that which even few of
+the new-comers had expected to see. The immediate
+vicinity of the gate was laid waste. Up Mount Zion
+opposite Hippicus and along the margin of the Tyropean
+Valley where the Herodian and Sadducean
+palaces had seemed so fair from the north were great
+blackened shells of walls and leaning pillars, partly
+buried in ruin and rubbish. Far and wide the streets
+were littered with debris and charred fragments of
+burned timbers. At another place on the breast of
+Zion was a chaos of rock where a mansion had been literally
+pulled down. Somewhere near Akra pale columns
+of pungent, wind-blown smoke still rose from a
+colossal heap of fused matter that the Ephesian could
+not identify. About it were neglected houses; not a
+sign of festivity was apparent; windows hung open
+carelessly; the hangings in colonnades were stripped
+away entirely or whipped loose from the fastenings
+and abandoned to the winds. Numbers of dwellings
+appeared to have been sacked; others were so closely
+barred and fortified that their exteriors appeared as
+inhospitable as jails.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Confusion prevailed on the smoked and untidy
+marble Walk of the Purified leading down from the
+Temple. Here those who held fast to the Law met
+and contested for their old exclusiveness with wild
+heathen Idumean soldiers, starvelings, ruffians and
+strange women from out-lying towns. Far and wide
+were wandering crowds, surly, defiant, discourteous,
+exacting. Manifestly it was the visitors who were
+the aggressors. They had been overthrown and
+driven from their own into an unsubjugated city
+which was secure. They felt the rage of the defeated
+which are not subdued, and the resentment against
+another's unearned immunity. The citizens of Jerusalem
+had not welcomed them and they were enraged.
+Half a dozen fights of more or less seriousness
+were in sight at once. A column of black wiry
+men in some semblance of uniform pushed across the
+open space toward the Essene Gate. They took no
+heed for any in their path. Those who could not
+escape were overturned and trampled on. Meeting a
+rush at the gate they drew swords and coolly hacked
+their way through screams of fear and pain and
+amazement. After them went a wave of curses and
+complaint. Citizens against the visitors; visitors
+against the citizens; soldiers against them all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And this cousin of mine meant to pacify all
+this!" the Ephesian exclaimed to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jerusalem, that had for fifteen hundred years
+adorned herself at this time with tabrets and had
+gone forth in the dance of them that make merry,
+was drunken with wormwood and covered with ashes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All at once the Ephesian saw four soldiers standing
+together and with them, manifestly under their
+protection, was a Greek of striking beauty. He
+wore on his fine head a purple turban embroidered with
+a golden star.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without a moment's hesitation, the Ephesian approached.
+The spears of the four soldiers fell and
+formed a barrier around the Greek. The new-comer
+smiled confidently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Greeting, servant of Amaryllis," he said. "I
+am your lady's expected guest."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek came forth from the square formed by
+his guard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am that servant of Amaryllis," he said courteously.
+"But show me yet another sign."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Ephesian drew from his bosom the Maccabaean
+signet and flashed its blue fires at the Greek. The
+servant stepped hastily between the soldiers and the
+new-comer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thy name?" he asked in a whisper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The servant bent and taking the hem of the woolen
+tunic pressed it to his lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Happy hour!" he exclaimed. "I pray you follow
+me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pretender breathed a relieved sigh and joined
+his protector.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They passed down into Akra and approached the
+straight column of pungent smoke towering up from
+a charred heap that the Ephesian in spite of his
+haste inspected curiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is that?" he asked of the Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That, master, is the city granaries."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The granaries!" the Ephesian cried, aghast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek inclined his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What&ndash;what&ndash;fired them?" the Ephesian
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"John and Simon differed on the point of its control
+and each fired it to keep the other from possessing
+it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment the Ephesian was thunderstruck.
+Then he quickened his pace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By the horns of Capricornus!" he avowed.
+"The sooner one gets out of this, the wiser he must
+be counted!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek looked at him with lifted brows and led
+on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They crossed the Tyropean Valley and approached
+a small new house of stone, abutting the vast retaining
+wall that was built against Moriah. A line of
+soldiers was thrown out from the entrance to the
+house and his conductor, after whispering a word to
+the captain, led the way up to a double-barred door.
+A long time after he had rapped, there was the sound
+of falling chains and the door swung open. A second
+Greek servant of no less beauty bowed the new-comer
+and his companion within. The noise of the streets
+was suddenly cut off. Soft dusk and quiet proved
+that the doors of Amaryllis had been shut upon unhappy
+Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The second servant drew a cord and a roller of
+matting lifted and showed a skylight. Philadelphus
+the pretender was in the andronitis of a Greek house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was typical. None but a Greek with the purest
+taste had planned it. Walls and pavement were of
+unpolished marble, lusterless white. A marble exedra
+built in a semicircle sat in the farther end, facing
+a chair wholly of ivory set beside a lectern of dull
+brass. At either end of the exedra on a pedestal
+formed by the arms, a brass staff upheld a flat lamp
+that cast its luster down on the seat by night.
+Against an opposite wall built at full length of the
+hall, was a pigeonholed case, which was stacked with
+brass cylinders. This was the library of the Greek.
+At a third side was a compound arch concealed
+by a heavy white curtain. There were low couches
+spread with costly white material which were used
+when Amaryllis set her table in her andronitis, and
+at the arches leading into the interior of the house
+there were draperies. But the chamber, with all its
+richness, had a splendid emptiness that made it imposing,
+not luxurious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a single admiring survey of the hall in which
+he had been left alone, the pretended Philadelphus
+fortified himself against his most critical test.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without a sound, without even so much as the
+rustling of a garment to announce her, a woman
+emerged from a passage leading into the interior of
+the house. He confronted the only person in Jerusalem
+who might know him as an impostor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woolen chiton of her countrywomen draped a
+figure almost too slender, yet perfect in its delicate
+modeling. Though her eyes were black, her hair was
+fair and brilliant with a wash of gold powder. Her
+features were Hellenic, cold, pure and classic, and for
+all her youth and beauty there was an atmosphere
+about her of middle-age, immense experience, and old
+sagacity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pretender braced himself for the scrutiny the
+eyes made of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are that Philadelphus, as my servant tells
+me?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am he."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She inclined her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Welcome; in the name of all the need of you!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a silence he came closer and lifted her hand
+to his lips. He added nothing, but presently raised
+his eyes softened with feeling and unexpressed appreciation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Certainly you have suffered, lady," he said finally
+in a subdued tone. "But please God you will
+not suffer alone hereafter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis' non-committal front changed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are gentler of speech than is common among
+the Maccabees," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nevertheless the Maccabees are the more touched
+by devotion," he maintained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He led her to the exedra, unslung his wallet and
+laid it on the lectern before them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"When thou hast leisure, perchance thou wilt
+find interest in these papers here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thanked him and there was a moment's silence.
+Under his lashes the impostor saw that he had not
+filled her fancied picture of the Maccabee made from
+long years of correspondence. She was disappointed;
+her intuition was perplexed. He would complete his
+work and get away in time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My wife is here?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She came yesterday," Amaryllis responded,
+clapping her hands in summons. A female servant
+of such prepossessing appearance that Philadelphus
+looked at her again, bowed in the archway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Send hither the princess," Amaryllis said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The princess," Philadelphus repeated to himself.
+"Then, by Ate, I am the prince!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"While we wait," Amaryllis continued, "let us
+talk of details which you may not have patience to
+hear after she comes. Jerusalem, as you have learned,
+is in grave danger&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jerusalem should fear the Roman army less than
+herself. I have seen its disease."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The citizens will hail Titus as a deliverer. But
+this week's ceremonies are bringing us disaster.
+Should Titus be forced to lay siege about us, how
+shall we feed this multitude of a million on the supplies
+gathered for only a third of that number?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Gathered and burned."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Even so. But of your creature comforts. My
+house is open to your chief enemy. It must be so.
+You must be hidden&ndash;not concealed, but disguised.
+You know my weakness for people of charm and people
+of ability. My house is full of them. The master
+of this place is indulgent; he permits me to add
+to my collection whatever pleases me in the way of society.
+Therefore, you are come as a student of this
+wonderful drama to be enacted in Jerusalem presently.
+You may live under part of your name.
+Substitute, however, your city for your surname.
+Be Philadelphus of Ephesus. No one then will question
+your presence here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have bound to me by oath and by fear one
+hundred Idumeans who will rise or fall with you.
+They are of John's own army and alienated to you
+without his knowledge. Hence they are in armor
+and ready at any propitious moment. This house
+is provisioned and equipped for siege; everything
+is prepared."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"At what cost, my Amaryllis?" he asked tenderly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew away from him quickly, as if his tone
+had touched a place of deeper disappointment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That I do not remember. I am your minister;
+you need no other. More than the one would be multiplying
+chances for betrayal."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what wilt thou have out of all this for thyself?"
+he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slowly she turned her face back to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would have it said that I made a king," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a step in the corridor leading into the
+andronitis, and, smiling, Amaryllis rose. Philadelphus
+got upon his feet and looked to catch the first
+glimpse of the woman who was bringing him two
+hundred talents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A woman entered the hall. Behind her came a
+servant bearing a shittim-wood casket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had Amaryllis been looking for suspicious signs,
+she would have observed in the intense silence that
+fell, in the arrested attitude of the pair, more than
+a natural embarrassment. Any one informed that
+these were a pair of impostors would have seen
+that there was no confusion here, but amazement,
+chagrin and no little fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instead, Amaryllis, nothing suspecting, glanced
+from one set face to the other and laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Poor children! Married fourteen years and
+more than strangers to each other! I will take myself
+off until you recover."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She signed to the servant to follow her and passed
+out of the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus then put off his stony quiet and gazed
+wrathfully at the woman who had entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hers was a fine frame, broad and square of shoulder,
+tall and lank of hip as some great tiger-cat, and
+splendid in its sinuosity. She had walked with a
+long stride and as she dropped into the chair she
+crossed her limbs so that her well-turned ankles
+showed and the hands she clasped about her knees
+were long and strong, white and remarkably tapering.
+Her features were almost too perfect; her
+beauty was sensuous, insolent and dazzling. Withal
+her presence intimated tremendous primal charm
+and the mystery of undiscovered potentialities. And
+she was royal! No mere upstart of an impostor could
+have assumed that perfect hauteur, that patrician
+bearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the pretended Philadelphus was not impressed
+by this beauty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How now, Salome?" he demanded. "What
+play is this?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Ephesian actress motioned toward the shittim-wood
+casket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For that," she said calmly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her voice became, instantly, her foremost charm.
+It was a deep voice; the profoundest contralto with
+an illimitable strength in suggestion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where is&ndash;what is that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Two hundred talents."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus took a step toward her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What!" he exclaimed evilly. "Whose two hundred
+talents?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Mine."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was silence in which the man's fingers bent,
+as if he felt her throat between them. Then he recovered
+himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But&ndash;this woman&ndash;where is she?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The actress lifted her shapely shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where is the Maccabee?" she asked in return.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did you get that treasure here&ndash;since yesterday?"
+he asked at last querulously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, by Pluto! I got it in the hills near to Emmaus.
+You would have had it in another day." She
+laughed impudently, in spite of the murderous blackening
+in his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then, since you are such a shrewd thief, why did
+you come here at all, since you had the gold?" he demanded,
+astonished in spite of his rage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She waved a pair of jeweled hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They said that the Maccabee was strong and ambitious
+and forceful, that he would be king over
+Judea. Knowing you, I believed he would still come to
+Jerusalem in spite of you. How did you do it?
+In his sleep? Now, I," she continued with an assumption
+of concern, "failed in that detail. She
+was guarded by a monster. I could not get near
+her. But I got the casket."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She will come here then!" Philadelphus exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What of it! Amaryllis does not know her; no
+one else does. And I have her proofs&ndash;and her
+dowry!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a silence in which she read the expression on
+his face, she rose and came near him with determination
+in her manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You will have the wisdom not to recognize her,"
+she said, "lest I suddenly discover that you are not
+the Philadelphus I expected."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made rapid survey of her advantage over
+him, and submitted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But there will be no need of waiting for such an
+issue," he fumed, after a silence. "I am here and
+not the Maccabee, whose crown you coveted. We
+shall get out of this perilous city."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So?" she said, lifting her finely penciled brows.
+"No, we shall not."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why?" he stormed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Because," she answered, "John of Gischala may
+yet be king of Judea&ndash;and John hath a queen's diadem
+for sale at two hundred talents&ndash;or a heart
+which I can have for nothing."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was malevolent and impotent silence in the
+andronitis of Amaryllis, the Greek.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch9">Chapter IX</h2>
+
+<h2>THE YOUNG TITUS</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+They who stood on the wall by the Tower of Psephinos
+in Coenopolis of Jerusalem on a day in March,
+70 A.D., saw prophecy fulfilled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since the hour in which the Roman eagles had appeared
+above the horizon to the west in their circling
+over the rebellious province of Judea there had not
+been one day of peace. Then their coming had meant
+the approach of an enemy. But in a short time such
+implacable and fierce oppressors, with such genius for
+ferocity and bloodshed, had developed among the
+Jews' own factions that the miserable citizens had
+turned to the tyrant Rome for rescue. They
+who had risen against Florus and had driven him
+out would have willingly accepted him again in
+place of Simon bar Gioras and John of Gischala,
+before two years had elapsed. Now, their plight was
+so desperate that they clambered daily upon the walls
+of their unhappy city to look for the first glimpse
+of the approaching enemy, Titus, whom they had
+learned to call the Deliverer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Near noon of this day in March certain citizens on
+the wall beside Hippicus saw a flash down the road
+to the west beyond the Serpent's Pool near Herod's
+monuments. Again they saw it and again, until they
+observed that its appearance was rhythmic, striking
+through a soft colored cloud of Judean dust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of that yellow haze, rolling nearer, they saw
+now the glittering Roman standards emerge, one by
+one; saw the spiky level of shouldered spears; saw
+the shapes of horses, saw the shapes of men; heard
+the soft thunder of six hundred horse on the packed
+earth, heard the music of six hundred whetting harnesses;
+heard like a tender, far-off song the winding
+of a Roman bugle and heard then in their own hearts,
+the shout: "He has come! The Deliverer!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the hour of the City's last hope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the near side of the Pool of the Serpent, they
+saw the body of horse break into a light trot and,
+wheeling in that fine concord in which even the dumb
+beasts were perfect, turn the broadside of the splendid
+column to Jerusalem as it swept up Hill Gareb
+to the north.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The citizens clambered down from the wall by Hippicus
+and, speeding silently but with moving lips
+and shining eyes through alleys and byways, came
+finally to an angle in Agrippa's wall that stood out
+toward Gareb. Here was built the Tower of Psephinos.
+Dumb and callous as beasts to the blows and
+commands of the sentries there mounted, the citizens
+clambered up on the fortifications and, with their
+chins on the battlements that stood shoulder-high,
+gazed avidly at the sight they saw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scattered confidently over the uneven country the
+six hundred had broken file and were in easy disarray
+all over Gareb. Spears were at rest, standards
+grounded, many were dismounted, whole companies
+slouched in their saddles. The Jews, long used to
+rigid military discipline among the Romans, looked in
+amazement. Then a light click of a hoof attracted
+their attention to the bridle-path immediately under
+the overhanging battlements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There a solitary horseman rode. Not a scale of
+armor was upon his horse; not a weapon, not even a
+shield depended from his harness. His head was uncovered
+and a sheeny purple fillet showed in the tumbled,
+dusty black hair. There was no guard on the
+hand that held the bridle; the cloak that floated from
+his shoulders was white wool; the tunic was the simple
+light garment that soldiers usually wear under
+armor; the shoes alone were mailed. It seemed that
+the young Roman had stripped off his helmet, breast-plate
+and greaves to ride less encumbered or to appear
+less warlike.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Jews who looked at him understood. Here
+was Titus come in peace!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The horse went with loosened rein, while the young
+Roman's eyes raised to the great wall towering over
+him had more of admiration and a generous foe's appreciation
+of his enemy's strength than of the note-making
+search of a spy in them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ha! By Hector, that penurious Herod was a
+builder!" they seemed to say. "There is enough
+stone insolence in these walls to trouble Rome for
+a while!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rod after rod of the slowly rising ground he traversed;
+rod after rod of the tall fortification passed
+under his inspection, and now the twin Women's
+Towers rose upon the ashes and scarped rock to the
+north.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus spoke to his horse and rode faster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile silent dozens climbed panting and
+dumbly resisting the sentries up beside the first Jews.
+They were citizens who dared not rejoice aloud. They
+followed the young Roman with brightened eyes,
+saying each within his heart:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thus David came up against Saul, unto Israel!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there was an increase of uproar in the city
+below, as if news of the coming of Titus had spread
+abroad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus was now almost a mile from the nearest of
+his soldiers. He passed the Gate of the Women's
+Towers. Hedges, gardens, ditches and wind-breaks
+of cedars of Lebanon from time to time obscured
+him. When he came in sight again, he had placed
+obstruction between himself and retreat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next instant the Gate of the Women's Towers
+swung in. Out of it rushed a sortie of motley soldiery,
+brandishing weapons and shouting the war-cries
+of Simon and John.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The citizens on the walls pressed their hands to
+their temples and watched, transfixed with horror.
+Jerusalem's defenders had gone out against the Deliverer!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The attack had been seen by the disorganized
+troops on Gareb and the rapid trumpet-calls showed
+formation. But between the time of their movement
+and the moment of their relief a company
+could have been unhorsed. Meanwhile Titus, with
+nothing less than Fate preserving him for its own
+work, dodged javelins and, enraging the white stallion
+that he rode, kept out of reach of hand-to-hand
+encounter with his assailants. Back and forward he
+rode, his horse carrying him at times out of range of
+missiles; again, all but surrounded by the unorganized
+enemy. About his head whizzed axes and spears,
+wild, and frequently slaying their own. Far up the
+slope of Gareb the six hundred gathered itself and
+swept in mass down upon the conflict.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Between them and Titus lay two furlongs. To
+join his column with all honor to himself, he had to
+work back over the wadies he had crossed and circle
+the gardens that stood in his way. But a hedge
+pressed too close upon the space he must pass, between
+it and the enemy, before he could return to his
+men. An ax glanced beside his ear; he wavered in
+his saddle. Then, that happened which a Roman
+of that day could not be forced to do and forget.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus wheeled his horse and, plunging his spurs
+into its sides, fled on into the open country to the
+north, with the jeers of the men of Simon and John
+following him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His troops rushed down upon his assailants. But
+the wary soldiers turned when the Roman had fled and
+the Gate of the Women's Towers closed upon them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up from the visitors within the wall rose a shout:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A sign, a sign! An omen! Thus shall the
+children of God overthrow the heathen in battle!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But one of the Jews on the wall thrust his fingers
+under his turban and seized his hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jerusalem is fallen! Woe! Woe to the wicked
+city!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned in his place and leaped a good twenty
+feet to the ground. When he raised himself the look
+of a maniac had settled on his face. Tearing his
+garments from him as he went, he entered a narrow
+street that made its ascent toward Zion by steps and
+cobbled slants. Here he came upon great crowds of
+terror-stricken citizens who had rushed together as
+the news spread abroad over Jerusalem that the men
+of Simon and John had gone out against the Deliverer.
+No definite news of the outcome of the sortie
+had reached them and they were moving in a dense
+pack down toward the walls to hear the worst. The
+whole hurrying mass seemed to vibrate with suspense
+and dread. The maniac met them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Woe, woe to Jerusalem!" he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A lean, apish, half-naked, lash-scarred idiot in the
+street, instantly, as if in echo to that mad cry, shouted
+in a voice of the most prodigious volume:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A voice from the east, a voice from the west, a
+voice from the four winds, a voice against Jerusalem
+and the Holy house, a voice against the bridegrooms
+and the brides and a voice against this whole people!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The temper of the crowd had reached that point of
+tension that needed only a little more strain to become
+panic. Some one received the discordant cries of the
+maniacs with piercing rapid screams. Instantly the
+choked passage filled with frantic uproar. Scores attempting
+to flee blindly trampled over those transfixed
+with fear. They fought, men with women, youths
+with old age, children with one another. Hundreds
+attracted by the tumult rushed in on the panic and
+added fresh victims and new death. Out of the horror
+rose the fearful cries of the madmen:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Woe, woe to this wicked city!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, the soldiers of Simon and John came
+to prevent citizens from gathering in bodies, and with
+sword and spear drove into the struggle and added
+murder to it all. The spirit of terror then issued
+out of that bloody alley and seized upon street by
+street. Far and wide the tumult ran, growing in
+volume with every accession, until the raging and
+humiliated Titus, among his six hundred, heard Jerusalem
+howl like a beaten slave and hushed his pagan
+curses to listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Late that same afternoon, the Esquiline Gate, inaccessible,
+despised and sealed, was broken open from
+within and under it and down its difficult and dangerous
+approach poured a silent multitude, numbering
+thousands. They were abandoning the Rock of David
+to its fate. Among them went the last remnants of
+that sect of Christians who had tarried long after their
+brethren had been warned away, hoping against
+hope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were not missed among the numbers in Jerusalem,
+for the Passover hosts still poured through
+the gates to the south and took their places in the
+unhappy city. And with these that same afternoon
+Laodice and her old servant came into Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the eighth day after they had applied to
+the priest at Emmaus whither they had fled in their
+search for the frosts, a good three leagues north of the
+direct road to Jerusalem. They had stopped at the
+Lavatory outside the walls, washed themselves and had
+purchased the white garments of the purified. Old
+Momus carried with him the price of the lambs, of the
+fine flour and the oil for their cleansing and the two
+were ready to present themselves for their purification
+at the Temple. But all the roar and disorder of the
+great city in its warfare and its discord confused them.
+Ascalon had not a thousandth part of this turmoil
+at its busiest season. Neither was there a servant
+in a purple turban with the gold star to meet them
+and they were bewildered and lost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rest of the visitors to the Passover hurried
+into the heart of the city; wave after wave of new-comers
+replaced them; but the young woman and her
+dumb old servant stood aside just within reach of
+the shadow of the immemorial portal and waited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Time and again wolfish Idumean soldiers who were
+numerous about the place noted the pair and commented
+to one another or spoke insolently to the
+shrinking girl who hid ineffectually behind her veil.
+Hour after hour they stood with growing distress and
+no friendly face in all that army of hurrying, restless,
+quarreling Jews welcomed them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The afternoon waned. Laodice thought of the
+darkness and trembled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An old man fumbling a talisman of bone drew near
+them. Laodice took courage and approached him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I pray thee, sir, I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man turned large, grave eyes upon her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Daughter, what dost thou know of this woman?"
+he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My husband knows her; I do not. I am to join
+him under her roof."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man looked reassured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Follow this street unto one intersecting it on the
+summit of Zion. That will be a broad street and a
+straight one, terminating on a bridge. Go thence to
+the hither side of that bridge, pass down the ravine
+and cross to the other side against Moriah. There
+thou shalt see a new Greek house. It is the residence
+of Amaryllis."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice thanked her informant and began the pursuit
+of the cloudy directions to her destination.
+Twice before she brought up at the sentry line before
+the house of the Seleucid, she asked further of other
+citizens. Many times she met affront, once or twice
+she perilously escaped disaster. At last, near sunset,
+she stood before the dwelling-place of the one
+secure citizen of the Holy City.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sentry dropped his spear across her path and
+she had not the countersign to give him. There she
+and her helpless old attendant stood and looked hopelessly
+at the refuge denied them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently a man appeared in the colonnade across
+the front of the house and descending to the sentry
+line called to him the officer in command. They
+stood within a few paces of Laodice and she heard
+the soldier address the man as John, and heard him
+deliver a report of the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the soldier withdrew to his place, Laodice
+stepped forward and called to the Gischalan. He
+stopped, noted that she was beautiful and waited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would speak with the Lady Amaryllis," she
+hesitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have you the countersign?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; else I should have entered. But Amaryllis
+will know me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Enter then," the Gischalan said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a moment she was admitted at the solid doors and
+led into a vestibule. Here, a porter took charge of
+Momus and showed him into a side passage, while
+Laodice followed her conductor through a corridor
+into an interior hall of splendid simplicity.
+Lounging on an exedra was a young woman in a
+woolen chiton, barefoot and trifling with the Greek
+ampyx that bound her golden hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice put up her veil and looked with hurrying
+heart at her hostess. Before she could get a preliminary
+idea of the woman she was to meet, John
+spoke lightly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Be wearied no longer. I have brought you a
+mystery&ndash;a stranger, without the countersign, asking
+audience with you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go back to the fortress," the young woman answered.
+"Sometime you will find strangers awaiting
+you there, also without the password. You will lose
+Jerusalem trifling with me. I have spoken!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John filliped her ear as he passed through into a
+corridor which must have led into the Temple precincts.
+Under the light, Laodice saw that he was a
+middle-aged Jew, not handsome, but luxuriant with
+virility. His face showed great ability with no conscience,
+and force and charm without balance or
+morals. Here, then, thought Laodice, is the first of
+Philadelphus' enemies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idler in the exedra, meanwhile, was awaiting
+the speech of her visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Art thou she whom I seek?" Laodice asked.
+"Amaryllis, the Seleucid?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am called by that name."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I was bidden," Laodice continued, "by one whom
+we both know, to seek asylum with thee."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So? Who may that be?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice whispered the name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek's eyes took on a puzzled look. Then
+she surveyed the girl and as a full conception of the
+beauty of the young creature before her formed in
+the Greek's mind, the perplexity left her expression.
+Her air changed; a subtle smile played about her lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He sent you to me for protection?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Until he arrives in Jerusalem," Laodice assented.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But he is already here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the moment that Laodice had avoided fearfully
+ever since she had gathered from that winsome
+stranger by the roadside that his companion was her
+husband. Although, after that fact had been made
+known to her, she had felt that she ought to join
+Philadelphus and proceed with him to the Holy City,
+she had endured the exposure of the hills, the want
+and discomfort of insufficient supplies and the affronts
+of wayfarers, that she might spare herself as
+long as possible her union with the unsafe man
+who had become even more hateful by comparison
+with the one who had called himself Hesper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perchance thou wilt lead me to him," Laodice
+said finally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis made no immediate answer. It would
+have been a natural impulse for her to wish to inquire
+for the girl's business with the man that the Greek as
+hostess was expected to conceal. But Amaryllis had
+her own explanation for this visit. It had been plain
+to less observant eyes than hers that the newly arrived
+Philadelphus was not delighted with the bride he had
+met.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek summoned a servant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go summon thy master, Prisca; and haste. I
+doubt not I have for him a sweet relief."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman bowed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If it please thee, madam, the master is without in
+the vestibule, returning from the city."
+Amaryllis signed to the ivory chair before her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sit, lady," she said to Laodice. "He will come
+at once."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young woman dropped into the seat and gazed
+wistfully at her hostess. Instinctively, she knew
+that in this woman was no relief from the darkened
+life she was to lead with her husband. The Greek's
+face, palely lighted by a thoughtful smile, vanished
+in sudden darkness. Laodice saw instead an image
+of a strong intent face, brightening under the sunrise,
+saw it relax, soften, grow inexpressibly kind,
+then pass, as a tender memory taking leave for ever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was brought to herself by the Greek's rising
+suddenly. The Ephesian appeared at the arch, tossing
+mantle and kerchief to the porter as he entered.
+Laodice rose to her feet with difficulty. It was he,
+indeed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was kissing Amaryllis' hand. The Greek was
+smiling an accusing, conscious smile. She indicated
+Laodice. The Ephesian's face showed startlement,
+suspicion and a quick recovery. He bowed low and
+waited for explanation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then I will go," Amaryllis said with amusement
+in her eyes, "if you are acting pretenses for my
+sake."
+</p>
+
+<div class="ctr">
+ <a href="images/image05l.jpg">
+ <img src="images/image05.jpg"
+ alt="Amaryllis the Greek."
+ title="Amaryllis the Greek." />
+</a> <p class="caption">Amaryllis the Greek.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+She turned toward the arch which led into the interior
+of the house. The pretender glanced again at
+Laodice and again at the Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is the play, lady?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis looked at Laodice standing stony white
+at her place, and lost her confident smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is this not he?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is this Philadelphus Maccabaeus?" Laodice
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Ephesian's face changed quickly. Enlightenment
+mixed with discomfiture appeared there for an
+instant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am he," he said evenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then," Laodice said, "I am she whom thou hast
+expected."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus smiled and dropped his head as if in
+thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"One always expects the pleasurable," he essayed,
+"but at times one does not recognize it when it comes.
+Who art thou, lady?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pestilence, war and the evil devices of men have
+desolated me," she said coldly. "I have only a name.
+I am Laodice."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Laodice!" he repeated amiably. "A familiar
+name; eh, Amaryllis?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice waited. Philadelphus looked again at her
+and appeared to wait.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am Laodice," the girl repeated, a little disconcerted,
+"thy wife."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So!" Philadelphus exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was such well-assumed astonishment in the
+exclamation that she raised her eyes quickly to his
+face. There was another expression there; one
+wholly incredulous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now did I in the profligacy of mine extreme
+youth marry two Laodices?" he said. "For another
+Laodice, wife to me, joined me some days since."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice gazed at him without comprehending.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I say," he repeated, "that my wife Laodice
+joined me some time ago."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, I&ndash;I am Laodice, daughter to Costobarus,
+and thy wife!" she exclaimed, while her eyes fixed
+upon him the full force of her astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned to Amaryllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What labyrinth is this, O my friend," he asked,
+"in which thou hast set my feet?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not know," Amaryllis laughed suddenly.
+"Call the princess."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus summoned a servant and instructed
+her to bring his wife. For a short space the three did
+not speak, though Laodice's lips parted and she
+stroked her forehead in a bewildered way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Salome, late actress in the theaters at Ephesus,
+came into the hall. Amaryllis bowed to her and
+the impostor gave her a chair. He turned to Laodice
+and with the faintest shadow of a grimace motioned
+toward the new-comer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This," he said, "is Laodice, daughter of Costobarus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice blazed at the insolent beauty who stared at
+her with curious eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That!" she cried. "The daughter of Costobarus!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fine brown eyes of the woman smoldered a
+little, but she continued to gaze without the least
+discomposure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is this, sir?" she asked of Philadelphus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That," said Philadelphus evenly, to the actress,
+"is Laodice, daughter of Costobarus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not understand," the actress said disgustedly.
+"You are clumsy, Philadelphus, when you are playful.
+If this is all, I shall return to my chamber."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose, but Laodice sprang into her path.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hold!" she cried. "Philadelphus, hast thou
+accepted this woman without proofs?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus smiled and shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And by the by," he asked, "what proof have
+you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up to that moment Laodice had burned with confident
+rage, feeling that, by force of the justice of her
+cause, she might overthrow this preposterous villainy,
+but at Philadelphus' question she suddenly
+chilled and blanched and shrank back. A new and
+supreme disadvantage of her loss presented itself
+to her at last. She could not prove her identity!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, seeing Laodice falter, the woman's lip
+curled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Weak! Very weak, Philadelphus," she said.
+"You must invent something better. The success
+of a jest is all that pardons a jester."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She robbed me!" Laodice panted impotently.
+"Robbed me, after my father had given her refuge!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Of what?" the Greek asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My proofs&ndash;and two hundred talents!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lady," the actress said to Amaryllis, "my husband's
+emissary, Aquila, was a pagan. He had with
+him, on our journey, this woman and her old deformed
+father who fled when the plague broke out among us.
+She hoped, I surmise, that we should all die on the
+way. Even Samson gave up secrets to Delilah, and
+this Aquila was no better than Samson."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oriental fury fulminated in the eyes of Laodice.
+Philadelphus, fearing that she was about to spring
+at the throat of her traducer, sprang between the two
+women. In his eyes shone immense admiration at that
+moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was an instant of critical silence. Then Laodice
+drew herself up with a sudden accession of
+strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Madam," she said coldly to Amaryllis, "with-hold
+thy judgment a few days. I shall send my servant
+back to Ascalon for other proof. <i>He</i> can go
+safely, for he has had the plague."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus started; the actress flinched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Friend," Philadelphus said in his smooth way, "I
+came upon this woman by the wayside in the hills. I
+and a wayfarer cast a coin for possession of her&ndash;and
+the other man won. Give thyself no concern."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice flung her hands over her face and shrank
+in an agony of shame down upon the exedra. Amaryllis
+looked down on her bowed head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is it true?" she asked. After a moment Laodice
+raised herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"God of Israel," she said in a low voice, "how hast
+Thy servant deserved these things!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a space of silence, in which the two impostors
+turned together and talking between themselves
+of anything but the recent interview walked out
+of the chamber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a time Laodice lifted her head and spoke to
+the Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If thou wilt give me shelter, madam, for a few
+days only, I promise thee thou shalt not regret it," she
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl was interesting and Amaryllis had been
+disappointed in Philadelphus. Nothing tender or
+compassionate; only a little curiosity, a little rancor,
+a little ennui and a faint instinctive hope that something
+of interest might yet develop, moved the Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Send your servant to Ascalon for proofs," she
+said. "I shall give you shelter here until you
+are proved undeserving of it. And since the times
+are uncertain, do not delay."
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch10">Chapter X</h2>
+
+<h2>THE STORY OF A DIVINE TRAGEDY</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+The following morning, there was a rap at the door
+of the chamber to which Laodice had been led and
+informed that it was her own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had passed a sleepless night and had risen early,
+but the knock came late in the morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She opened the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without stood a ten year old girl, of the most bewitching
+beauty, as barely clad as ever the children
+of her blood went over the green meadows of Achaia.
+Her golden hair was knotted on the back of her pretty
+head and held in place by an ampyx. On her feet
+were tiny sheepskin buskins; about her perfect little
+body, worn carelessly, was a simple chiton, out of
+which her dimpled shoulders and small round arms
+showed pink and tender as field-flowers. Nothing
+could have been more composed than her gaze at Laodice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We breakfast in the hall, now. You are to join
+us," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice stepped, out of the chamber into the court
+and followed her little guide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The mistress and her guests rise late," the child
+went on. "That perforce starves the rest of us until
+mid-morning. Eheu! It is the one injustice in this
+house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice dumbly wondered if she were to be classed
+with the house servants while she waited until the return
+of her devoted old mute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was led into a long narrow room, showing the
+same simple elegance that marked all the house of
+Amaryllis, the Greek. Down the center were two
+tables, separated by a cluster of tall plants that almost
+screened one from the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the first table place was laid for one. At the
+other, she found by the talk and laughter the rest
+of the company were gathered. The little girl led
+Laodice to the single place, seated her, and kissing
+her hand to her with an almost too-practised bow, fled
+around the cluster of tall plants. There she heard
+her childish voice imperiously ordering a servant to
+attend the mistress' latest guest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Prisca appeared and silently served Laodice with
+melon, honey-cakes and milk. Other of the house-servants
+were visible from time to time. This, then,
+manifestly was not the breakfast of the menials. She
+glanced toward the cluster of tall plants. Through
+an interstice she was able to see all the persons seated
+at the other table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There first was the blue-eyed, golden-haired girl.
+Beside her was a youth, slim, dark, exquisitely fashioned,
+with limbs and arms as strong as were ever displayed
+in the games, yet powerful without brutality,
+graceful without weakness&ndash;marks of the ideal athlete
+that had long since disappeared with the coming
+of the Roman gladiator. Opposite was a grown man,
+tall, broad and deep chested, with prominent eyes wide
+apart and a large mouth. There was a singleness of
+attitude in him, as in all persons reared to a purpose.
+It was that certain self-centeredness which is not egotism,
+yet a subconsciousness of self in all acts. He
+was the finished product of a specific, life-long training,
+and the confidence in his atmosphere was the confidence
+of one aware of his skill and prepared at all
+times.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Besides these three, there were two women, both in
+the garments of the ancient atelier. One was bemarked
+with clay; the other was stained with paint.
+Laodice knew at a glance that she looked at a gathering
+of artists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Evidently a gift from John," the little girl was
+saying. "He can not see that our lady does anything
+but collect curiosities in this her search after art, and
+so he must needs add a contribution in this Stygian
+monster we saw yesterday evening."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice knew that they discussed Momus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps," the athlete said, "he bought this left-handed
+catapult thinking he might throw the discus
+farther than I can throw it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well enough," the woman with paint on her tunic
+put in; "she sent the monster packing. He went out
+of the gates post-haste last night, they say."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The pretty stranger that came with him stayed,
+I observe," the athlete said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pst!" the girl said in a low voice. "Where are
+the man's eyes in your head, that you do not see
+her?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Looking at you!" the athlete answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Too soon!" the child retorted. "A good six
+years before I shall know what your looks mean!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is she, this pretty stranger, something of John's
+taste?" the woman who had blue clay on her garment
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tut!" the athlete broke in. "John never departed
+from his ancient barbarism to that extent.
+That, unless I misjudge my own inclinations in a similar
+matter, is something this mysterious Philadelphus
+hath arranged to relieve the tedium of&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tedium!" the girl exclaimed. "By Hector, this
+Jewish wife of his would open his Ephesian eyes were
+she to let loose all I suspect in her!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Brrr! But you are suspicious!" the athlete
+shivered. The little girl shaped her lips into a kiss
+and the athlete leaning across the table snatched it
+from her before she could avoid him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The women caught him by the back of his tunic and
+pulled him down in his chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sit down!" they whispered. "Don't you see
+that Juventius is about to speak?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The athlete glanced at the grown man, who had
+looked down into his plate at the youth's frolic with
+the child, with the utmost disdain and boredom in his
+expression. Now that the silence became noticeable,
+he spoke in an affected voice, but one of the deepest
+music.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Alas, these Jews!" he said. "How little they
+know about art! How long has it been since he introduced
+one of the Temple singers into our lady's
+hall to show what a piercing high note could be
+reached by a male voice? And he had the creature
+sing to prove his contention. I thought I should
+die! It was worse than awful; it was criminal!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The athlete laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Any singer, then, but Juventius therefore is a
+malefactor!" he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, it does not follow," Juventius protested in
+all seriousness, while the child flashed a look of intense
+amusement at the athlete. "But," waving a
+pair of long white hands, "none should trifle with
+music. It is one of the graces of Nature, divine and
+elemental. Wherefore, anything short of a perfect
+production becometh a mockery and a mockery against
+divine things is blasphemy. Ergo, the poor musician
+is in danger of Hades!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The monster is safe, safe!" the girl protested.
+"He does not sing, and from what I caught through
+the crack of the door, the pretty stranger had
+better not. My lady, the princess, had a merry
+time with my lord, the prince, at breakfast this morning,
+all about this same pretty one. So this is why
+she breakfasts with us&ndash;the second table."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice heard this with a sinking heart. This
+was a strange house in which to live at no definite
+status, with a future blank and inscrutable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is it, then, that you are wary of offending the
+over-nice exactions of music, that you do not sing?"
+the athlete demanded of Juventius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Song," replied the singer gravely, "is originally
+the expression of the highest exaltation. To
+sing before the high mark of feeling is reached is an
+insincerity."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Alas, Juventius," the girl was saying, "how
+much difficulty you lay up for yourself in determining
+the limits of art! Teach broadly and the fulfilment
+of your laws will not be such a task for the
+overworked and irritable gods of art."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Child!" Juventius cried passionately. "Your
+ignorance outreaches your presumption!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fie! Fie!" the athlete put in comfortably.
+"Let us make a truce, for I announce to you the opportunity
+each to have whatever you wish. We are
+to have at the proper moment, according to the Jews,
+a celestial visitation which will enable us to have
+what we most desire."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You announce it!" the girl scoffed indignantly.
+"I have heard of that ever since I was born!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I, too, have heard it," said Juventius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well," said the unabashed athlete, "the Pharisee
+that brings Amaryllis her fruit is so full of it
+that he gets prophecies mixed with his prices and
+the patriarchs with his fruit. He says that there
+are those that declare he is already in the city."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That he has been seen?" Juventius asked, after a
+little silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; merely suspected. They say that things go
+on in the Temple which seem to show that some resident
+of their Olympus already inhabits the air."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I saw Seraiah to-day," one of the women said
+in a low voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Silent as ever? Spotless as ever? Mysterious
+as ever?" the athlete asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman who had spoken shook her head at him
+as if alarmed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can not bear to hear him ridiculed," she said.
+"Somehow it seems blasphemous. They say he
+marks every one who laughs in his hearing."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They are not many," the girl said. "For the
+most part, the citizens of Jerusalem feel as apprehensive
+about him as you do."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wonder that John will stay in the Temple with
+a god in it," Juventius said, as if he had not heard
+the rest of the discussion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"John!" the athlete exclaimed. "John is an adventurer
+that believes in nothing, has no cause and
+furthers this warfare for loot and the possible chance
+of escape when the conflict comes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Simon is different," another said. "Now he is
+wild and mad and insolent and foolhardy, because he
+believes that, no matter what tangle the situation is
+in, the celestial emissary he expects will straighten it
+out for him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In short, he means to work such a complexity
+here that the man who unravels it must needs be
+divine."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this moment the door that cut off the rest of
+the house from this dining-room opened smartly and
+the supposed Philadelphus stepped in. He closed the
+door behind him and glanced at the filled table.
+Those there seated rose. He spoke to each one by
+name, and after they had greeted him, they filed out
+into the court and the servants began to remove the
+remnants of their meal. Laodice rose at sign of this
+concerted deference to Philadelphus but sat down
+again, with her lips compressed. However they had
+disposed her, she would not accept the menial attitude.
+She had not finished her honey-cakes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came round to her, drew up a chair and sat
+down beside her. She ignored him, making a feint
+that was not entirely successful at interest in her
+fruit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who art thou, in truth?" he asked finally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Laodice," she answered coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sighed and she added nothing more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What can your purpose be in this?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She ignored the question. After a longer silence,
+he said in an altered and softened tone:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What an innocent you are! Certainly this is
+your first attempt! What marplot told you that
+such a thing as you have essayed was possible?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She put aside her plate and her cup, and turned
+to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By your leave I will retire," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not yet," he answered, smiling. "It is my duty
+as a Jew to help you while there is time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She settled back in her chair and looked at the
+cluster of plants while he talked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing so damages the beauty of a woman as
+trickery. No bad woman is beautiful very long.
+There comes a canker on her soul's beauty, in her face,
+that disfigures her, soon or late. Whoever you are,
+whatever your condition, you are lovely yet. Be
+beautiful; of a surety then you must be good."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the same old hypocritical pose that the bad
+man assumes to cloak himself before innocence. Laodice
+remembered the incident in the hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where," she asked coldly, "is he who was with
+you at Emmaus?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pretender started a little, but the increase of
+alarm on his face showed that he realized next that
+here was a peril in this woman which he had overlooked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Gone," he said unreadily, "gone back to Ephesus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not know what pain this announcement of
+that winsome stranger's desertion would waken in her
+heart. Her eyes fell; her brows lifted a little; the
+corners of her mouth became pathetic. The pretender,
+casting a sidelong glance at her, saw to his own
+safety that she had believed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He was a parasite," he sighed, "living off my
+bounty. But even that did not invite him when he
+neared the peril of this city. So he turned back. I&ndash;I
+do not blame him," he added with a little laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Blame him?" she said quickly. "You&ndash;you
+do not blame him?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No! Any place, any condition is more desirable
+than residence in Jerusalem at this hour."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If one seeks but to be comfortable. But here is
+a place for work and for achievement," she declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Too desperate an extreme. Nothing can be done
+here," he observed, shrugging his shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gazed at him with immense contempt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That from a son of Judas Maccabaeus!" she
+exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked disconcerted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why not?" he urged. "It is neither rational
+nor practical to attempt the impossible. Jerusalem
+is doomed. I would but add myself to the sacrifice
+did I interfere between destruction and its sure prey."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a silence in which she confronted him with
+many emotions showing on her face, she said with
+infinite pity and disappointment:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O Philadelphus, you to throw greatness away!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where, O my mysterious genius, are my army,
+my engines, my subsistence, my advantage and the
+prize?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What was that dowry which was stolen from me
+to purchase for you but these things? I brought it
+for this purpose. Another than myself delivered it
+to you; the end is achieved; what use will you make
+of it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is no nation here for that dowry to defend,
+no crown for it to support. But for this same madness
+which possesses my lady, the princess, I should
+depart this day for a safer venture, in some safer
+country!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She faced him intently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you will do nothing for Judea?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What can be done?" he asked, throwing out his
+hands with a careless gesture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh," she exclaimed with a rush of passionate
+feeling, "that I were you! You, with the materials
+for empire-building at your feet! You, with the hour
+beseeching you, with a people searching for you, with
+a treasury filled for you, with ancient prophecy establishing
+you, ancient precept teaching you, and the
+cause of God arming you! Philadelphus, son of a
+great patriot, what are you saying! What can there
+be done! Oh rather, how dare you not do! What
+have you about you but the inevitable end of Judah,
+living contrary to God's plan for it! It is the conscience
+of Israel rising against its sin and submission!
+It is the blood of David rebelling against the heathen
+yoke! It is the hour foretold by Isaiah and Jeremiah
+and Ezekiel and Daniel and the Twelve, when Israel
+shall repent and be chastened and return to the heritage
+of Jacob. Be the repairer of the breach! Be
+the restorer of the paths to dwell in, my husband!
+Go out and let Israel behold you! Help them to wipe
+out the shame of Babylonia and Persia and Macedonia
+and Rome! Make Jerusalem not only a sanctuary
+but a capital! Restore the glory of David and
+the peace of Solomon, for those were God's days and
+Judah can not prosper except as it returns to them!
+Philadelphus&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice halted abruptly in her appeal, breathless
+with feeling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The amusement had gone out of his face and his
+expression was one of mingled discomfort and surprise
+at her speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Since you are a thinking woman," he answered,
+"I must answer you soberly. Even I, expecting disorder
+and uproar in Jerusalem, when I came from
+Ephesus, was not prepared for this chaos! Never
+was such a time! Order is not possible in this extreme.
+It is unthinkable. Nothing human can save
+Jerusalem!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laid her hand upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing human!" she repeated quickly. "Seest
+not that this is the time of the Messiah? Be ready
+to be helped of God!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus drew away from her uneasily and
+looked at her from under lowered brows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They say," he said in a suppressed voice, as fearing
+his own words, "that He has come and gone!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him blankly. He was glad he had
+thought of this; it would divert her from a discourse
+momently growing unpleasant for him. And yet he
+was afraid of the thing he had said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What dost thou say?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is come and gone&ndash;they say."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come and gone!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He nodded irritably. It made him nervous to dwell
+on the subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who say?" she demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Many! Many!" he whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not&ndash;do you believe it?" she persisted,
+with strange terror waiting upon his answer. He
+moved uneasily but he answered the truth. It was
+superstition in him that spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Something in me says it is true," Philadelphus
+whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood transfixed; then all her horror rose in
+her and cried out against the story.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It can not be!" she cried. "See the misery and
+oppression, here, tenfold! Nothing has been done!
+Nobody heard of Him! He could not fail! What a
+blasphemy, what a travesty on His Word, to come
+and fulfil it not and go hence unnoticed! It can
+not be!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But, but&ndash;" he protested, somehow terrified by
+her denial, "only you have not heard. Everywhere
+are those who believe it and I saw&ndash;I saw&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The growing violence of dissent on her face urged
+him to speak what his shamed and guilty tongue hesitated
+to pronounce.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I saw in Ephesus one who saw Him; I saw in
+Patmos one who had reclined on His breast!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A&ndash;a&ndash;woman?" she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No! No!" he returned in a panic. "A man, a
+prisoner, old and white and terrible! But it was in
+his youth! He told me! And the one in Ephesus, a
+red-beard, hunchbacked and half-blind and even more
+terrible than the first! He saw Him after He was
+dead!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dead!" Her lips shaped the word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They&ndash;yes! He was crucified!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her lips parted as if to speak the word, but her
+mind failed to grasp it certainly. She stood moveless
+in an actual pain of horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But He rose again from the dead," he persisted,
+"and left the earth to its own devices hereafter.
+And so behold Jerusalem!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And there was one woman," he added, "who had
+been a scarlet woman. She had anointed His feet
+with precious oil and wiped them with her hair. And
+I saw her also&ndash;I sought them all out, because they
+could do miracles and foretell events. Thousands
+upon thousands believe in them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Crucified!" she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They say," he went on, "that He pronounced
+judgment on Jerusalem and that it now cometh to
+pass!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The accumulated effect of the calamitous recital
+was to stun her. She gazed at him with unintelligent
+eyes, and her lips moved without speaking. For one
+reared in constant contemplation of God's nearness
+to His children, acquainted with divine politics, divine
+literature and divine law, cut off from the world and
+devoted wholly to religion, the story of a divine
+tragedy carried with it the full force of its fearful
+import. Philadelphus' narrative meant to her the
+crumbling of earth and the effacement of Heaven.
+She cried wildly her unbelief when words returned to
+her. But under the fury of her denunciation, unconsciously
+directed against the conviction that the story
+was true, she felt her hope of a restored Kingdom of
+David wavering toward a fall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While she stood thus, Amaryllis, languid and pre-occupied,
+entered the room with John of Gischala at
+her side. The Greek noted Philadelphus with a quick
+accession of interest. John's attention had been instantly
+arrested by the presence of the other man.
+Philadelphus turned with fine ease to meet the man
+whom he must regard as his enemy and Laodice
+shrank back in an attempt to get out of sight of the
+trio.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Welcome!" said Amaryllis to Philadelphus. "A
+fortunate visit that makes possible an amnesty for
+two of my friends at once. This, John, is Philadelphus
+of Ephesus, a seeker of diversion out of mine
+own country come to see the end of this great struggle
+thou wagest against Rome. And thou, Philadelphus,
+seest before thee, John of Gischala, the arbiter
+of Judea's future. Be friends."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a comprehensive sweeping glance John inspected
+the man before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"John of Gischala," he repeated in his feline
+voice, "the oppressor John. Art thou not afraid of
+me, sir?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dost thou meditate harm for me, sir?" Philadelphus
+smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Art thou, in that case, against me, sir?" John
+parried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On that hingeth his answer," Amaryllis said,
+glancing at Laodice. "And here is this same pretty
+stranger who bewitched thee yesterday. Know her
+as Laodice. Let that be parentage, history, ambition
+and religion for her. She, too, seeks diversion in
+Jerusalem, and is my guest for a while."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Gischalan took Laodice's hand and held it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Welcome, thou," he said. "I will tolerate
+another man under thy roof if thou wilt but make
+this pretty bird of passage a permanency," he said
+to the Greek, after a silent study of Laodice's beauty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let her be a hostage dependent on thy good behavior.
+Lapse, and I shall send her back to Olympus
+where they keep such nymphs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus smiled at Laodice, but the shock of
+their recent talk had shaken her too much to enter
+into this idle chaff on the lips of those upon whom
+the fortunes of Israel depended at that very hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John looked at her for a long time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Amaryllis veils thee in the enchantment of mystery.
+I think she is tired of me and would have me
+interested in another woman. She does all things
+well. Who art thou, in truth?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek lifted her head and gazed with overt
+anxiety at the girl; Philadelphus turned toward her
+uneasily. Here was an opportunity for Laodice
+either as a disappointed adventuress or as a supplanted
+wife, to take revenge by exposing this pair
+of conspirators pledged to undermine the Gischalan.
+But the girl had no such thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am Laodice," she said unreadily. "What history
+I have belongs to another. What future shall
+be mine depends on others. I wait."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If you mean to throw me off, Amaryllis, I shall
+not miss you," said John.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek smiled and plucking Philadelphus'
+sleeve led both men away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do not commit yourself," she said to John,
+"there is yet another woman under this roof. You
+shall have a choice."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They disappeared in the direction of her hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice, stunned, amazed and shaken, stood still.
+The stock of her troubles amounted to a sum of such
+magnitude that she could not grasp it clearly. The
+entire structure which her life training and all her
+purposes, the hope of her house and her husband's,
+the future of Judea and the King to come, had constituted,
+had been attacked and threatened to crumble
+and be swept away in a few hours' time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of the wreck she rescued one hope. Momus
+would return from the west with proofs in a few days'
+time&ndash;only a few days!
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch11">Chapter XI</h2>
+
+<h2>THE HOUSE OF OFFENSE</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+On his way to the oaken door that was for ever
+double-barred, in that small hall which led to the
+apartments of Amaryllis' corps of artists, Philadelphus
+met Salome, the actress. He would have passed
+her without a word, but the woman, armed with the
+nettle of a small triumph over the man who held her
+in contempt, could not forbear piercing him as he
+passed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hieing away to excite your disappointment further?"
+she said. "Has the forlorn lady convinced
+you, yet, that she is indeed your wife?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Had I that two hundred talents, I would confess
+her!" he declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Cruel obstacle! But that two hundred talents
+is locked away safely, out of your reach. Why do
+you not run away with this pretty creature?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus glowered at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have been known to make way with those who
+stood in my way," he declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I sleep with my door locked," she answered,
+"and I ever face you. I need never be afraid,
+therefore."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment he was silent, while she sensed that
+overweening hate and menace which charged the air
+about him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not all as it should be," he said finally.
+"You are not rid of me. I shall stay."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You should," she responded comfortably. "You
+are a show of domesticity which lends color to our
+claim of wedded state. But you may go or stay.
+As usual, you are not essential."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have been known to be superfluous. However
+it may be, I get much pleasure in the companionship
+of this lovely creature, the single flaw in the fine fabric
+of your villainy. Do not fear her convincing me.
+She might convince others."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no response; after a silence he said as
+he moved on:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall warn her to feed a morsel of her food to
+the parrots ere she tastes it, however."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was gone. The woman felt of the keys that
+swung under the folds of her robes. Then she, too,
+went on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The oaken door was still fast closed when Philadelphus
+reached it, but he knew that the girl, who lived
+within, came out to walk in the sunshine of Amaryllis'
+court at certain hours while the household was
+engaged within doors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had not long to wait. She came out in a little
+while, and glanced up and down the hall; but he had
+heard the turn of the bolt and had stepped into
+shadow in time. Reassured that no one was near, she
+emerged and passing down the hall entered the court.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there presently he joined her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat down on one of the stone seats and smiled
+at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do I appear excited?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She glanced at him indifferently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have this day seen destruction resolved for the
+city."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took his easy declaration with a frown. If it
+were true he should not show that flippancy; if it
+were not he should not have jested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I saw," he continued, "Titus and his beloved
+Nicanor ride around the walls. Though they were
+the full length of a bow-shot from me, I knew what
+they talked about. Now, this young Nicanor is a
+gad that tickles Titus when his soft heart would urge
+him into tendernesses toward the enemy. But for Nicanor,
+Titus would have withdrawn his legions long
+ago and left Jerusalem to die of its own violences.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On the day that you came into Jerusalem, Titus,
+as a display of amicable intentions, rode up to the
+walls without arms or armor, trusting to the Jews'
+soldierly honor in refusing to attack an unarmed
+man. But the Jews have never been instructed in the
+nice points of military courtesy, so they went out
+against him by thousands. And but for the fact that
+he is practised in dodging arrows and his horse is
+used to running away, Emperor Vespasian would
+have to leave the ęgis to the unlovely Domitian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Any Roman but Titus would remember this
+against the Jews until he had put the last one in
+bondage, but Titus is not a Roman. I think some-times
+that he is a Christian, since it is their boast to
+love their enemies. Whatever his feelings after that
+ignominious adventure of a few days ago, forth he
+rides this morning; beside him the Gad, Nicanor;
+behind him, that sweet traitor, Josephus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Darling of Mankind rode so meditatively,
+so dejectedly, that I knew by his attitude, he said:
+'Alack, it galls me to go against this goodly city!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By the swagger of the Gad I knew he said:
+'Dost gall thee, in truth? Then truly, alack!
+Withhold thy hand until the city comes out against
+thee, so thou canst hush thy conscience saying that
+they began it!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Saith the Darling, 'But there be babes and innocent
+men and women within those walls, who, deserving
+most of all, shall suffer the greatest!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"'By Hecate!' quoth the Gad, 'there is not a
+yearling within that city possessing the power to
+pucker its lips but would spit upon thee!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"'It would be sacred innocence!' declares Titus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"'Or an old man that would not burn thine ears
+with malediction!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"'That would be holy dotage!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"'Or a fine young man but would pale thee on
+a pike!'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"'Then let some one whom they hate less venomously,
+beseech them to their own salvation,' implores
+the Darling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whereupon the Gad beckons insinuatingly to
+Josephus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"'Josephus,' says he, 'let us, being more lovable
+men than Titus, go up unto these walls and give the
+Jews a chance to be kind.'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Josephus turns pale, but Nicanor rides upon
+Jerusalem. And at that what should a miscreant
+Jew do but string an arrow and plunge it nicely, like
+a bodkin in a pincushion, in the fat shoulder of the
+Gad! Alas! It was the ruin of the Holy City!
+When Titus, pale with concern, reaches his friend
+kicking on the ground, does the Gad curse the Jews
+and inveigh against the hardy walls that contain
+them? Not he! He struggles about so that he may
+look into the eyes of Titus and commands him to make
+war on them instantly under pain of the accusation
+of partiality to them against his friends! And behold,
+war is declared. I, with mine own eyes, saw
+siege laid effectively about our unhappy city!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gazed at him with alarmed, angry, accusing
+eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And yet you do nothing!" she said to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled and let his lazy glance slip over her, but
+he made no response.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O Philadelphus," she said to him, "how you
+affront opportunity!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There are more captivating things than such
+opportunity. I have known from the beginning that
+there was nothing here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him with unquiet eyes. Why, then,
+had he written so confidently to her father, if he had
+not believed in the hope for Judea?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"From the beginning?" she repeated with inquiry.
+"You wrote my father from Cęsarea&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Your father?" he repeated, smiling with insinuation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My father!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is your father?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned away from him and walked to the other
+end of the garden. He had never meant to aspire to
+the Judean throne! He had simply written so determinedly
+to Costobarus, that the merchant of Ascalon
+would have no hesitancy in giving him two hundred
+talents! In these past days, she had learned enough
+that was blameworthy in this Philadelphus to make
+him more than despicable in her eyes. Again, as
+hourly since the last interview in the depression in
+the hills beyond the well, the fine bigness of that lovable
+companion of his, that had vanished for all time
+from her life, rose in radiant contrast. She turned
+back to her husband, with the pallor of longing and
+homesickness in her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Does this other woman see no fault in this, your
+idleness?" she demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She! By the Shades, she sees nothing in me but
+fault! I would get me up like a sane man and go
+out of this mad place, but she hath locked up her
+dowry away from me, which was the simple cause
+that invited me to join her, and bids me go without
+her. And I might&ndash;but for one other attraction,
+dearer than the treasure, which also I would take
+with me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Even if she forces you into deeds, I shall forgive
+her," she declared at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled a baffling smile and she looked at him
+in despair. The very charm of his personal appearance
+awakened resentment in her; his deft and easy
+complaisance angered her because it could be effective.
+She hated the superficial excellence in him which
+made him a pleasant companion. He had refused to
+discuss her identity further, except to prevent her in
+her own attempts to identify herself. He did not
+refer to the incidents of their journey to Jerusalem,
+but she felt that he was conscious of all these things,
+and her resentment was so great that she put it out
+of sight, lest at the time when she should be proved
+she would have come to hate him to the further
+thwarting of their work for Israel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is sweet to have you concerned for me. Now
+you may understand how much I am troubled for
+your own welfare. Do not regard me with that unbending
+gaze. I am, first and before all else, your
+friend."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have changed," she said slowly. "I did not
+find in you this solicitude in the hills."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Unhappiness," he sighed, "makes most men law-less.
+I should be even now as bad, were I not sure
+of the sympathy you feel for me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him with large disdain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Does not this woman treat you well?" she asked
+with the first glimmer of sarcasm in her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Her displeasure in me is that I do not make her
+a queen; yours, however, that I can not save this
+doomed nation! Her ambitions are for herself; yours
+are for me. Which waketh the response in my heart,
+lady?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What have I lived for?" she burst out. "For
+what was I brought up and schooled? For what
+have I sacrificed all the light and desirable things of
+my youth, but for&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nay! Do not show me, yet, that you are only
+bent on being queen!" he exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I care for nothing but the rescue of Judea!"
+she cried passionately. "There is nothing left to
+me but that!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then your ambitions are still for me. Alas, that
+the Messiah has come and gone!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was his first reference to the great calamity he
+had told to her a short time before. Its recurrence
+after she had resolved to regard it as an impossible
+and blasphemous tale brought a chill to her heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If I can prove to you that there is no hope for
+Jerusalem, what then?" he asked suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She flung off the question with a gesture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Answer me. What then?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is unimaginable what shall come to pass when
+God deserts His own."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No need for imaginings. Look at Jerusalem and
+observe the fact. And if we be abandoned, what
+fealty do we owe to a God that deserts us? If you
+believe or not you are lost. Let us go out and live."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If God has deserted us," she said scornfully,
+"how shall we be happier elsewhere than here?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Every god to its own country. The Olympians
+are a jovial lot. I have seen Joy's very self in
+heathendom."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She moved away but he rose and followed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whoever you are," he said in another tone,
+"your heritage of innocence and earnestness is plain
+as an open scroll upon your face. Nothing in all
+the world so appeals to the generosity in the heart of
+a man as the purity of the woman who is pure. I
+have said that I am your friend. I do not hold it
+against you that you doubt that word. Nothing
+remains but the deed to confirm it. This place is lost&ndash;as
+good as a heap of ashes and splintered rock,
+this hour! Come away! I'll sacrifice the treasure
+to protect you!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Philadelphus," she said gravely, "we were sent
+hither to succeed or to suffer the penalty of our
+failure. My father died that we might have this
+opportunity. We must use it, or perish with it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head and walked away a step or two.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have not the true meaning of life," he said.
+"Indeed how few of us understand! Obstacles are
+not an incentive toward attaining impossible things.
+They are barriers set up by the kindly disposed gods
+to inform man that he is opposing destiny when he
+aspires to things he should not have. We were not
+made to fling ourselves against mighty opposition
+throughout the little daylight we have; to wound ourselves,
+to deny ourselves, to alienate that winsome
+sprite Pleasure, to attain something which was not
+intended for us by the signs of the obstructions
+placed in our paths. Who are we that we should
+achieve mightily! What are we when the gods have
+done with us, but a handful of dust! Who saves
+himself from age and unloveliness and ultimate imbecility,
+by all the superhuman efforts he may exert!
+A pest on the first morose man that made dismal
+endeavor a virtue!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him with amazement, though until
+that hour she believed that this man could astonish
+her no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Misfortune comes often enough without our
+knocking at her door," he continued. "Mankind is
+the only creature with conceit enough to seek to
+emulate the gods. It is wrong to think that to be
+moral is to be miserable. Nature's scheme for us,
+faithfully fulfilled, is always pleasurable. We have
+only to recognize it, and receive its benefits. Nothing
+on earth is luckier than man, if he but knew it.
+A murrain on ambition! Let us be glad!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How could she be glad with such a man! The
+time, the call of the hour, the need of her nation, the
+obligation to her dead father&ndash;all these things stood
+in her way. How had she felt, were this that engaging
+stranger who had called himself Hesper, urging
+her to be glad with him! She felt, then and there,
+the recurrence of guilt which the sight of the reproachful
+face of Momus had brought to her when
+she found herself forgetting her loyalty in the presence
+of that winsome man. The thought stopped the
+bitter speech that rose to her lips. She looked away
+and made no answer. He was close beside her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come away and let this woman who wishes the
+kingdom have it. She had liefer be rid of me than
+not."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gazed at him with a peculiar blankness stealing
+over her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, for the quintessence of all compounded oaths
+to charge my vow!" he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For what?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My love, Phryne!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the old pagan name with which he had affronted
+her that morning in the hills, Laodice drew back
+sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dost thou believe in me?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Believe what?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That I am thy wife."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tut! Back to the old quarrel! No! But by
+Heaven, thou art my sweetheart!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stopped at the edge of an exclamation and
+looked at him with widening eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come, let us get out of this place. I can get
+the dowry! Let her stay here and be queen over this
+place if she will. I had rather possess you than all
+the kingdoms!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Laodice flung him off while a flame of anger
+crimsoned her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou to insult me, thy lawful wife!" she
+brought out between clenched teeth. "Thou to offer
+affront to thine own marriage! I to live in shame
+with mine own husband!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The insult in his speech overwhelmed her and after
+a moment's lingering for words to express her rage,
+she turned and fled back to her room and barred her
+door upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After sunset the lights leaped up in the hall of
+Amaryllis the Greek. Presently there came a knock
+at Laodice's door. The girl, fearing that Philadelphus
+stood without, sat still and made no answer. A
+moment later the visitor spoke. It was the little girl
+who acted as page for the Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Open, lady; it is I, Myrrha."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice went to the windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Amaryllis sends thee greeting and would speak
+with thee, in her hall," the girl said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reluctantly Laodice, who feared the revelation
+which the light might have to make of her stunned
+and revolted face, followed the page.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek was standing, as if in evidence that the
+interview would not be long. She noted the intense
+change on the face of her young guest and watched
+her narrowly for any new light which her disclosure
+would bring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have sent for thee," the Greek began smoothly,
+"to tell thee somewhat that I should perhaps withhold,
+that thou shouldst sleep well, this night. But
+it is a perplexity perhaps thou wouldst face at once."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice bowed her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is this: Titus and his friend, Nicanor, approached
+too close the walls this day, and Nicanor
+was wounded by an arrow. In retaliation, perfect
+siege hath been laid about the walls. None may come
+into the city."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And&ndash;Momus, my servant," Laodice cried, waking
+for the first time to the calamity in this blockade,
+"he can not come back to me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. If he attempts it, he will be captured and
+put to death."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice clasped her hands, while drop by drop the
+color left her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In God's name," she whispered, "what will
+become of me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis made no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Can&ndash;can I not go out?" Laodice asked presently,
+depending entirely on the Greek as adviser.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You can&ndash;but to what fortune? Perhaps&ndash;"
+She stopped a moment. "No," she continued, "you
+have never been in a camp. No; you can not go out."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What, then, am I to do?" Laodice cried with
+increasing alarm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis shrugged her shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can advise with John," she said. "Doubtless
+he will allow you to remain here until you can provide
+yourself with other shelter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice heard this cold sentence with a chill of fear
+that was new to her. Faint pictures of hunger and
+violence, terrifying in the extreme, confronted her.
+Yet not any of them frightened her more than the
+offered favor of the Gischalan. Her indignation at
+the woman who had supplanted her swept over her
+with a reflexive flush of heat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"God of my fathers, judge her in her lies, and
+pour the fire of Thy wrath upon her!" she exclaimed
+vehemently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis gazed curiously at the girl. In her soul,
+she asked herself if there might not be unsounded
+depths of fierceness in this nature which she ought
+not to stir up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou hast hope," she said tactfully. "She hath
+no such beauty as thine!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing but my proofs!" Laodice broke in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And Philadelphus is a young man."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Rejecting her only because I am fairer than she!
+He is no just man!" Laodice cried hotly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Softly, child," the Greek said, smiling; "thou
+hast said that he is thy husband."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice turned away, her brain whirling with
+anger, fear and shame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well?" said the Greek coolly, after a silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where shall I go?" Laodice asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou hast been too tenderly nurtured to go into
+the streets. I shall ask John to shelter thee until
+thou canst care for thyself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice looked at her without understanding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou canst not stay here for long because the
+wife to Philadelphus is in a way a power in my house
+and she will not suffer it. But never fear; Jerusalem
+is not yet so far gone that it would not enjoy a pretty
+stranger."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The curious sense of indignation that possessed
+Laodice was purely instinctive. Her mind could not
+sense the actual insult in the Greek's words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would advise you to be kind to Philadelphus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But, but&ndash;" Laodice cried, struggling with
+tears and shame, "he has this day offered insult to
+his own marriage with me, by asking that I live in
+shame with him till it could be proved that I am his
+wife!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek's smile did not change.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If we weigh all the unpleasantness of wedded life
+in too delicate a balance, my friend, I fear there
+would be little, indeed, that would escape condemnation
+as humiliating."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice raised her scarlet face to look in wonder
+at the Greek. The cold smiling lips dismayed her
+for a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And thou seest no shame in this?" she faltered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou sayest he is thy husband; why resent it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dost thou not see&ndash;see that&ndash;what am I but a
+shameless woman, if I live with him, though I be
+married to him thrice over!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"After all," said the Greek, after a silence which
+said more than words, "it is the consciousness of
+your own integrity which must influence you; not
+what others think of you. It is not as if your husband
+thought better of you than you really are."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you believe that I&ndash;" Laodice began and
+stopped, bewildered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis, smiling, moved toward the inner corridor
+of her house. At the threshold of the arch she
+called back:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Please yourself, my friend," and was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice was, by this time, stunned and intensely
+repelled. The hand on which Amaryllis had laid hers
+in passing tingled under the touch. Unconsciously
+she shook off the sensation of contact. The whole
+clear white interior of the hall became instantly
+unclean. Her standards of right and wrong were
+shaken; the wholesale assaults on her ideals left her
+shocked and unconfident. She felt the panic that all
+innocent women feel when suddenly aroused to the
+unfitness of their surroundings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she turned to hurry to her room, a flood of
+scarlet rushed into her cheeks and she shrank back,
+shaken with surprise and delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before her stood a man, pale and thin, with his
+eyes upon her.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch12">Chapter XII</h2>
+
+<h2>THE PRINCE RETURNS</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Joseph, the shepherd, son of Thomas of Pella,
+moved out of the green marsh before sunset, as he
+had planned to do, but not for the original motive.
+The sheep, indeed, would not have flourished in that
+dampness, rich as it was in young grass, but, more
+than that, there was no shelter for the wounded man
+who lay by the roadside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherd, who knew the hills of Judea as far
+as the Plain of Esdraelon as well as he knew the
+stony streets of the Christian city, located the nearest
+roof as one which a fagot-maker had occupied two
+years before. It was some distance up in the hills to
+the west. Since the scourge of war had passed over
+Palestine, there were scores of such hovels, vacant
+and abandoned to the bats and the small wild life
+about the countryside, and the boy doubted seriously
+if the thatch that covered it were still whole. But he
+attracted the attention of a pair of robust young
+Galileans on the way to the Passover, and, by their
+help, carried the wounded man to shelter in this hut.
+Urge, the sheep-dog, rushed the sheep out of the
+sedge and hurried them after his master, and in an
+hour Joseph was once more settled, his sheep were once
+more nosing over the rocky slants of a hill, his dog
+once more flat on his belly, watching. But it was a
+different day, after all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hut of the fagot-maker was the four walls
+and a roof and the earth that floored it, but it was
+wealth because it was shelter. It had two doors
+which were merely openings in the sides and between
+them lay the man on sheep-pelts with a cotton abas,
+which one of the Galileans had left, over him. At
+one of these doors, sitting sidewise, so that he could
+watch in or out, sat Joseph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All night the man on the sheepskins spoke to the
+blackened thatch above him of the siege of Jerusalem
+and the treachery of Julian of Ephesus. He read
+letters from Costobarus and instructed Aquila over
+and over again. Then he tossed a coin and spent
+hours counting the hairs in the long locks that fell
+from the shining head of the moon down upon his
+breast, at midnight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At times the boy, with the exquisite beauty of
+sleep on his heavy lids, would creep over from his
+vigil at the door and lay his cool hand on the sick
+man's forehead. And the sick man would speak in a
+low controlled voice, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Naaman being a leper, my friend, why was not
+the law fulfilled against him?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the soothing influence of that touch did not
+endure. Again, he took census of the fighting-men
+of Judea, by the Roman statistics which he had from
+the decurion, and searched through his tunic for his
+wallet to write down the result. Failing to find it,
+he raised himself to shout for Julian to return his
+property.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the cool hands would stroke the fevered
+forehead and the sick man would say:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good my Lord, they fetched snow from the
+mountains to cool this wine."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But how white the hands of that fair girl in the
+hills! Why, these hands beside hers were as satyrs'
+hooves to anemones! Her lashes were so long, and
+he knew that her lips were as cool as the heart of a
+melon; but that husband of hers knew better than
+he!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he, grandson of the just Maccabee, allied by
+marriage to the noble line of Costobarus through his
+daughter, Laodice, the bride with the greatest dowry
+in Judea, had staked his soul on the toss of a coin
+and had lost it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this the shepherd boy straightened himself and
+gave attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he was wholly lost, the sick man would go on,
+rolling his head from side to side; he could not join
+Laodice because he had loved a woman of the wayside
+and could not cast out that love; he was not a Jew
+because he had rather linger with this strange beauty
+in the hills than hasten on the rescue of Jerusalem;
+he had not apostatized, though he was as wholly lost
+as if he had done so; he hated the heathen and would
+not be one of them. He would abide in the wilderness
+and perish, if this young spirit that abode by his
+side, with a face like Michael's and a form so like
+the shepherd David's, would only suffer the darkness
+to come at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Unless I mistake," the little shepherd said at such
+times, "there is more than a wound troubling this
+head."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus day in and day out the shepherd watched by
+the sick man who had no medicine but the recuperative
+powers of his strong young body. So there came
+a night when the boy, rousing from a doze into which
+he had dropped, saw the sick man stretched upon his
+pallet motionless as he had not been for days. The
+shepherd felt the forehead and the wrists and sank
+again into slumber. At dawn he rose from the earth
+which had been his bed throughout this time and went
+forth to attend his flocks, and when he was gone, the
+sick man opened his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked up at the blackened rafters; he looked
+out at either door and frowned perplexed, first at the
+hills, then at the valley. He raised his head and
+dropped it suddenly with great amazement and much
+weariness. Finally he ventured to lift a wilted and
+fragile hand and looked at it. It was not white;
+but it was unsteady as a laurel leaf beside a waterfall.
+After a moment's rest from the exertion he
+parted his lips to speak, but a whisper faint as the
+sound of the air in the shrubs issued from them. He
+listened but there was no answer. There was the
+activity of birds and insects, moving leaves and bleating
+sheep without, but it was all blithely indifferent
+to him. Finally he extended his arms and pressing
+them on his pallet tried to rise, but he could have
+lifted the earth as easily. Falling back and dazed
+with weakness, he lay still and slept again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he awoke rested sufficiently to think, he recalled
+that he had been twice stabbed by Julian of
+Ephesus by the marsh on the road to Jerusalem.
+He had probably been carried to this place and
+nursed back to life by the householder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he remembered. In his search after cause
+for his cousin's attack upon him, he readily fixed upon
+Julian's rage at the Maccabee's preėmption of the
+beautiful girl in the hills. Instantly, the disgrace of
+violence committed in a quarrel between himself and
+his cousin over the possession of a woman, appealed
+to him. And even as instantly, his defiant heart accepted
+its shame and persisted in its fault. It is an
+extreme of love, indeed, if no circumstance however
+impelling raises a regret in the heart of a man; for
+he flung off with a weak gesture any chiding of conscience
+against cherishing his dream, and abandoned
+himself wholly to his yearning for the girl in the
+tissue of moonbeams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a quiet step on the earth at the threshold.
+Joseph, the shepherd, stood there. The two
+looked at each other; one with inquiry and weakness
+in his face; the other with good-will and reassurance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Boy," said the Maccabee feebly, "I have been
+sick."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Friend, I am witness to that. I am your nurse,"
+the boy replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a little silence the Maccabee extended his
+hand. The boy took it with a sudden flush of emotion,
+but feeling its weakness, refrained from pressing
+it too hard, and laid it back with great care on his
+patient's breast. The Maccabee looked out at the
+door, away from the full eyes of his young host.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was touched presently, and a cup of milk was
+silently put to his lips. He drank and turning himself
+with effort fell asleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he awoke again, after many hours, it was
+night. In the door with his head dropped back
+between his shoulders gazing up at the sky overhead,
+sat the boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where," the Maccabee began, "are the rest of
+you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy turned around quickly, and answered with
+all seriousness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am all here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did you," the Maccabee began again, after silence,
+"care for me alone?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There has been no one here but us," the boy said,
+hesitating at the symptoms of gratitude in the
+Maccabee's voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Us?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You and me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After another silence, the Maccabee laughed
+weakly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It requires two to constitute 'us' and I am, by
+all signs, not a whole one!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But you will be in a few days," the boy declared
+admiringly. "You are an excellent sick
+man."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee looked at him meditatively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am merely perverse," he said darkly; "I knew
+it would be so much pleasure to my murderer to know
+that I died, duly."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherd repressed his curiosity, as the best
+thing for his patient's welfare, and suggested another
+subject rather disjointedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have been thinking," he said, "about Jerusalem.
+I was there once upon a time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Once!" the Maccabee said. "You are old
+enough to attend the Passover."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But our people do not attend the feast. We are
+Christians."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee moved so that he could look at the
+boy. He might have known it, he exclaimed to himself.
+It was just such an extreme act of mercy, this
+assuming the care of a stranger in a wilderness, as
+he had ever known Christians to do in that city of
+irrational faiths, Ephesus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well?" he said, hoping the boy would go on and
+spare him an expression on that announcement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can not forget Jerusalem."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No one forgets Jerusalem&ndash;except one that falls
+in love by the wayside," the man said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the boy detected a ring of unexplained
+melancholy in his patient's voice, and talked on as a
+preventive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Urban, the pastor, took me there. It was in the
+days of mine instruction for baptism. He went to
+Jerusalem to trial, but there was disorder in the city
+about the procurator, who was driven out that day,
+and Urban was not called. But he remained, lest he
+be accused of fleeing, and then it was he took me over
+the walks of Jesus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jesus&ndash;that is the name," the Maccabee said
+to himself. "They are born, given in marriage, fall
+or flourish, live and die in that name. Likewise they
+pick up a wounded stranger and care for him in that
+name. They are a strange people, a strange people!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They would not let us into the Temple," Joseph
+went on, "because I am an Arab, born a Christian.
+So I could not see where Jesus was presented, in infancy.
+But we went to the synagogues where He
+taught; we went out upon Olivet to Gethsemane where
+He suffered in the Garden; we climbed that hill to the
+south from which He looked upon the City and wept
+over it, and prophesied this hour. Then we sought
+the ravine where Judas betrayed Him with a kiss, and
+afterward Urban led me over the streets by which He
+was taken first to Annas and to Caiaphas and thence
+to Pilate and to Herod. After that, by the Way of
+the Cross to Golgotha; from there to His Tomb.
+And when we had seen the Guest-chamber and stood
+upon the Place of the Ascension, I needed no further
+instruction."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy had forgotten his guest. By the rapt
+light in his eyes, the Maccabee knew that the boy was
+once more journeying over the stones of the streets
+of the Holy City, or standing awed on the polished
+pavements of its lordly interiors, or on the topmost
+point of her hills with the broad-winged wind from
+the east flying his long locks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand
+forget her cunning. If I do not remember thee, let
+my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth; if I prefer
+not Jerusalem above my chief joy</i>," the Maccabee
+said, half to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy heard him, but his patient's words merged
+with the dream that held him entranced. The Maccabee
+went on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So said the Psalmist to himself," he said.
+"What had he to do for Jerusalem; what did he
+fear would win him away from that labor for Jerusalem,
+that he took that vow? It was easy enough to
+revile Babylon, the oppressor, that stood between him
+and Jerusalem; but what if he had been the captive
+of beauty, and chained by the bonds of lovely hair!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy turned now and looked at the Maccabee.
+The eyes of the two met fair. Then the Maccabee
+unburdened his soul and told of the girl to this child,
+who was a Christian and a humble shepherd in the
+starved hills of Judea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I met her," the boy said after a long silence.
+"And by what I learned of her spirit that night, she
+will not be happy to know that you have stepped
+aside for her sake."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You met her, also; and you loved her, too?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy assented gravely. The Maccabee slowly
+lifted his eyes from the young shepherd's face, till
+they rested on the slope of sky filled with stars
+visible through the open door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And she would have me go on to this city, to
+the one who awaits me there and whom I shall not be
+glad to see; take up the labor that will be robbed of
+its chief joy in its success and live the long, long
+days of life without her?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy made no answer to this; he knew that this
+white-faced man was wrestling with himself and comment
+from him was not expected. By the light of the
+failing fire without, he saw that face sober, take on
+shadow and grow immeasurably sad. The minutes
+passed and he knew that the Maccabee would not
+speak again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereafter followed three days of silence, except
+the essential communication or the mutterings of the
+Maccabee against his weakness and unsteadiness.
+On the fourth day the Maccabee declared that he was
+able to travel. Joseph protested, but not for long.
+He had learned in the sojourn of his guest that this
+man was in the habit of doing as he pleased. So the
+shepherd sighed and let him go reluctantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But," he insisted to the last moment, "remember
+that Pella is a City of Refuge. If Jerusalem
+ceases to be hospitable, come to Pella."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A thought struck him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She," he said in a low tone, "promised that she
+would come."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then expect me," the Maccabee said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shepherd boy smiled contentedly and blessed
+the Maccabee and let him go. As long as the man
+could see, his young host watched him, and at the
+summit of the hill the Maccabee turned to wave his
+final farewell. When the path dipped down the other
+side of the hill, the man felt that more than the sunshine
+had been cut off by its great shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not go forward with a light heart. The
+whole of his purpose had suddenly resolved itself
+into duty. There had been a certain nervous expectancy
+that was almost fear in the thought of
+meeting the grown woman he had married in her
+babyhood. He had lived in Ephesus with an unengaged
+heart in all the crowd of opportunities for
+love, good and bad. He had magnetism, strength,
+aloofness and a certain beauty&ndash;four qualifications
+which had made him over and over again immensely
+attractive to all classes of Ephesian women. But
+whatever his response to them, he had not loved. Love
+and marriage were things so apart from his activities
+as to be uninteresting. When finally he was called in
+full manhood to assume without preliminary both of
+these things, he was uncomfortable and apprehensive.
+But after he had met the girl in the hills, his sensations
+of reluctance became emphatic, became an actual
+dread, so that he thrust away all thought of the domestic
+side of the life that confronted him, and bitterly
+resigned all hope in the tender things that were
+the portion of all men. The villainy of Julian of
+Ephesus engaged him chiefly, and his punishment.
+After that, then the establishment of his kingdom,
+politics, conquest and power&ndash;but not love!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Late that afternoon, he stepped out of a wady
+west of Jerusalem and halted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ahead of him ran a road depressed between worn,
+hard, bare banks of earth, past a deserted pool,
+marged with stone, up shining surfaces of outcropping
+rock, through avenues of clustered tombs, pillars,
+pagan monuments which were tracks of the Herods,
+dead and abandoned, splendid pleasure gardens, suburban
+palaces lifeless and still, toward the looming
+Tower of Hippicus, brooding over a fast-closed gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee nodded. It was as he had expected.
+The city was besieged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was afternoon, a week-day at the busiest portal
+of Jerusalem; but save for the fixed and pygmy sentry
+upon the tower, there was no living thing to be
+seen, no single sound to be heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beyond the mounting hills of the City of David
+stood up, shouldering like mantles of snow their burden
+of sun-whitened houses. Above it all, supreme
+over the blackened masonry of Roman Antonia, stood
+a glittering vision in marble and gold&ndash;the Temple.
+At a distance it could not be seen that any of
+those inwalled splendors lacked; Jerusalem appeared
+intact, but the multitudes at the gate were absent and
+the voice of the city was stilled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For one expecting to find Jerusalem animated and
+beholding it still and lifeless, how quickly its white
+walls, its white houses and its sparkling Temple became
+haunted, dead crypts and sepulchers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But presently there came across the considerable distance
+that lay between him and Jerusalem, a sound
+remarkably distinct because of the utter stillness that
+prevailed. It was the jingle of harness and the ring
+of hoof-beats upon stones embedded in the gray earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Roman in armor polished like gold, with a floating
+mantle significantly bordered in purple, rode
+slowly into the open space, drew up his horse and
+stopped. The Maccabee looked at him sharply, then
+quitted his shelter and walked down toward the rider.
+At sight of him, the horseman clapped his hand to his
+short sword, but the Maccabee put up his empty
+hands and smiled at the man of all superior advantage.
+Then the light of recognition broke over the
+Roman's face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You!" he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I, Cęsar," the Maccabee responded. For a moment
+there was silence in which the Jew watched the
+flickering of amazement and perplexity on Titus'
+face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you here, away from Ephesus, and
+worse, attempting to run my lines?" he demanded finally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee signed toward the walls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My wife is there," he said briefly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Roman made an exclamation which showed the
+sudden change to enlightenment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Solicitous after these many years?" he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She has two hundred talents," the Maccabee replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus smiled and shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I ought to keep her there. Rome must get treasure
+enough out of that rebellious city to repay her
+for her pains in subjugating it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pay yourself out of another pocket than mine.
+It will take two hundred talents to repay me for all
+that I have suffered to get it. I want the countersign,
+Titus. You owe me it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Will you come out of there, at once?" the Roman
+demanded. "Not that I suspect you will make the
+city harder to take, but I should dislike to make war
+on an old comrade in my Ephesian revels."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee looked doubtful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can not promise," he said. "At least do not
+hold off the siege until you see me again without the
+walls. It might lose you prestige in Rome."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus swung his bridle while he gazed at the Maccabee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wish Nicanor were here," he said finally. "He
+might be able to see harm in you; but I never could.
+You will have to promise me something&ndash;anything
+so it is a promise&ndash;before I can let you in. Something
+to appease Nicanor, else I shall never hear the
+last of this."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee laughed, the sudden harsh laugh of
+one impelled to amusement unexpectedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Assure Nicanor, for me, that I shall come out of
+Jerusalem one day. Dead or alive, I shall do it!
+You need not add that I did not specify the date of
+my exodus. What is the word?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Berenice. And Jove help you! Farewell."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus rode on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little later, after a parley with the Roman sentries
+and again with the sentries at the Gate of Hippicus,
+the Maccabee was admitted to the Holy City.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About him as he passed through the gates were
+the soldiers of Simon. They were not such men
+as he expected to see defending the City of David.
+There was an extravagant, half-pastoral manner
+about them, a pose of which they should not have
+been conscious at this hour of peril for the nation
+and the hierarchy. He looked at their incomplete,
+meaningless uniform, at their arms, half
+savage, at their faces, half mad, and believed that he,
+with an army rationally organized and effectually
+equipped, would have little difficulty in subduing the
+unbalanced forces of Simon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since siege was laid, he did not expect to be met
+by Amaryllis' servant in the purple turban. He approached
+a citizen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eye of the Jew traveled over him, with some
+disapproval.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The mistress of the Gischalan?" was the returned
+inquiry. The Maccabee assented calmly. The
+young man indicated a broad street moving with people
+which led with tolerable directness toward the base
+of Moriah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hence to the Tyropean Bridge at the end of this
+street; thence down beside the bridge into Gihon.
+Cross to the wall supporting Moriah and builded
+against it thou wilt find a new house, of the fashion of
+the Greeks. If thou canst pass her sentries, thou
+wilt find her within."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee thanked his informant and turned
+through the Passover hosts to follow the directions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To a visitor recently familiar with the city, Jerusalem
+would have been strange; he would have
+been lost in its ruined and disordered streets. But
+this man came with only the four corners of the compass
+to direct him and the Temple as a landmark to
+guide him. Therefore though he entered upon territory
+which he had not traversed since childhood he
+went forward confidently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not simple; it was not readily done; but the
+darkness found him at his destination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was within a rod of the house, he was
+halted by a Jewish soldier. He whispered to the man
+the word which Amaryllis had sent to him, and the
+soldier stepped aside and let him pass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In another moment he was admitted to the house
+of Amaryllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A wick coated with aromatic wax burned in the
+brass bowl on a tripod and cast a crystal clear light
+down upon the exedra and the delicate lectern with
+its rolls of parchment and brass cylinders from which
+they had been withdrawn. Opposite, with her arms
+close down to her sides, her hands clenched, her shoulders
+drawn up, stood the girl he had played for and
+won in the hills of Judea!
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch13">Chapter XIII</h2>
+
+<h2>A NEW PRETENDER</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+A sudden wave of delight, a sudden rush of blood
+through his veins, swept before it and away for that
+time all memory of his struggle and his resolution to
+renounce her. All that was left was the irresistible
+storm of impulse upon his reserve and his self-control.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she recognized him, she started violently,
+smote her hands together and gazed at him with such
+overweening joy written on her face, that he would
+have swept her into his arms, but for her quick recovery
+and retreat. In shelter behind the exedra
+she halted, fended from him by the marble seat. He
+gazed across its back at her with all the love of his
+determined soul shining in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You! You!" she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But you!" he cried back at her across the exedra.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The preposterousness of their greetings appealed
+to them at that moment and they both laughed. He
+started around the exedra; she moved away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Stay!" he begged. "I want only to touch&ndash;your
+hand."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shyly, she let him take both of her hands, and he
+lifted them in spite of her little show of resistance
+and kissed them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We might have saved ourselves farewells and
+journeyed together," he said blithely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But I thought you had gone back to Ephesus,"
+she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What! After you had told me you were going to
+Jerusalem? No. I have been nursing a knife wound
+in a sheep hovel in the hills since an hour after I saw
+you last."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her lips parted and her face grew grave, deeply
+compassionate and grieved. If there remained any
+weakness in his frame before that moment, the spell
+of her pity enchanted him to strength again. He
+found himself searching for words to describe his pain,
+that he might elicit more of that curative sweet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I was very near to death," he added seriously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What&ndash;what happened?" she asked, noting the
+pallor on his face under the suffusion which his pleasure
+had made there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There was one more in the party than was needed;
+so my amiable companion reduced the number by stabbing
+me in the back," he explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was instant silence. Slowly she drew away
+from him. Entire pallor covered her face and in her
+eyes grew a horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did&ndash;do you say that Philadelphus stabbed&ndash;you&ndash;in
+the back?" she asked, speaking slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Phila&ndash;" he stopped on the brink of a puzzled
+inquiry, and for a space they regarded each other,
+each turning over his own perplexity for himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ask me that again," he commanded her suddenly.
+"I did not understand."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hesitated and closed her lips. Her husband
+had stabbed this man in the back! Because of her?
+No! Philadelphus had refused to believe her. Why
+then should he have committed such a deed?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So you are not ready to believe it of this&ndash;Philadelphus?"
+he asked, venturing his question on
+an immense surmise that was forcing itself upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him with beseeching eyes. How was
+she to regard herself in this matter? A partizan of
+the man she hated, or a sympathizer with this stranger
+who had already given her too much joy? Was
+she never to know any good of this man to whom she
+was wedded? For a moment losing sight of her concern
+for Judea and her resolution that her father
+should not have died in vain, she was rejoiced that another
+woman had taken her place by his side. The
+quasi liberty made her interest in this stranger at least
+not entirely sinful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who are you?" he demanded finally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How, then, could she tell him that she was the wife
+of the man who had treacherously attempted his life?
+How, also, since she was denied by every one in that
+house, expect him to believe her? The bitterness of
+her recent interview with Amaryllis rose to the surface
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am nothing; I have no name; I am nobody!"
+she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was startled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is this? Are you not welcome in this
+house?" he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes&ndash;and no! Amaryllis is good&ndash;but&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But what?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shook her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Surely, thou canst speak without fear to me," he
+said gently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is&ndash;only Amaryllis is kind," she essayed
+finally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laid his hand on her wrist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is it&ndash;the woman from Ascalon?" he asked, his
+suspicion lighting instantly upon the wife whom he
+had expected to meet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She flung up her head and gazed at him with
+startled eyes. He believed that he had touched upon
+the fact.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So!" he exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She has deceived Philadelphus&ndash;" she whispered
+defensively, but he broke in sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whom hath she deceived?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She closed her lips and looked at him perplexed.
+Certainly this was the companion of Philadelphus, who
+had told her freely half of her husband's ambitions,
+long before he had come to Jerusalem. She could not
+have betrayed her husband in thus mentioning his
+name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Your companion of the journey hither&ndash;whom
+you even now accused&ndash;Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a dead pause in which his fingers still
+held her wrist and his deep eyes were fixed on her face.
+He was recalling by immense mental bounds all the
+evidence that would tend to confirm the suspicion in
+his brain. He had told her his own story but had invested
+it in Julian of Ephesus. His wallet, with all
+its proofs, was gone; the Ephesian had examined him
+carefully to know if any one in Jerusalem would recognize
+him; and lastly, without cause, Julian had
+stabbed him in the back. Could it be possible that
+Julian of Ephesus, believing that he had made way
+with the Maccabee, had come to Jerusalem, masquerading
+under his name?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While he stood thus gazing, hardly seeing the face
+that looked up at him with such troubled wonder, he
+saw her turn her eyes quickly, shrink; and then
+wrenching her hands from his, she fled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked up. Two women were standing before
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid," he said, recovering
+himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am she," the Greek said, stepping forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou entertainest Laodice, daughter of Costobarus
+of Ascalon?" he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greek bowed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would see her," he said bluntly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis signed to the woman at her side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This is she," she said simply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee looked quickly at the woman. After
+his close communication with the beautiful girl
+for whom his heart warmed as it had never done before,
+he was instantly aware of an immense contrast
+between her and the woman who had been introduced
+to him at that moment. They were both Jewesses;
+both were beautiful, each in her own way; both appeared
+intelligent and winsome. But he loved the
+girl, and this woman stood in the way of that love.
+Therefore her charms were nullified; her latent faults
+intensified; all in all she repelled him because she was
+an obstacle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The injustice in his feelings toward her did not occur
+to him. He was angry because she had come; he
+hated her for her stateliness; he found himself looking
+for defects in her and belittling her undeniable graces.
+Confused and for the moment without plan, he looked
+at her frowning, and with cold astonishment the
+woman gazed back at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou art Laodice, daughter of Costobarus?" he
+asked, to gain time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She inclined her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"When&ndash;when dost thou expect Philadelphus?"
+he asked next.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why do you ask?" she parried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I&ndash;I have a message for him," he essayed finally.
+"Is he here?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell me, who art thou?" the woman asked pointedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A vision of the girl, flushed and trembling with
+pleasure at sight of him, flashed with poignant effect
+upon him at that moment. The warmth and softness
+of her hands under the pressure of his happy lips
+was still with him. It would be infidelity to his own
+feelings to renounce her then. It was becoming a
+physical impossibility for him to accept this other
+woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hesitated and reddened. An old subterfuge occurred
+to him at a desperate minute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I&ndash;I am Hesper&ndash;of Ephesus," he essayed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is thy business with Philadelphus?" the
+woman persisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the Maccabee floundered. It had been easy
+to invent a story to keep the woman he loved from
+discovering that he was a married man, but the point
+in question was different. Now, filled with dismay and
+indignation, apprehension and reluctance, his fertile
+mind failed him at the moment of its greatest
+need.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the eyes of the Greek, filling with suspicion and
+intense interest, rested upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I asked," the actress repeated calmly, "thy business
+with Philadelphus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that instant a tremendous shock shook the house
+to its foundations; the hanging lamps lurched; the
+exedra jarred and in an instant several of the servants
+appeared at various openings into passages. Before
+any of the group could stir, a second thunderous
+shock sent a tremor over the room, and a fragment of
+marble detached from a support overhead and dropped
+to the pavement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is an attack!" Amaryllis cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On this house?" Salome demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a clatter of arms and several men in
+Jewish armor rushed through the chamber from the
+passage that led in from the Temple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall see," said the Maccabee, and followed the
+men at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without he saw the night sky overhead crossed by
+dark stones flying over the wall to the east. Warfare
+had begun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the attack was simply preliminary and desultory.
+It ceased while he waited. Presently it began
+farther toward the north. The catapult had been
+moved. The Maccabee hesitated in the colonnade.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The beautiful girl in the house of Amaryllis was in
+no further danger. The interruption had saved him
+at a critical moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He walked down the steps and out into the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Liberty!" he whispered with a sigh of relief.
+"Now what to do?"
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch14">Chapter XIV</h2>
+
+<h2>THE PRIDE OF AMARYLLIS</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+The night following the wounding of Nicanor, John
+spent on his fortifications expecting an attack. It
+was one of the few nights when the Gischalan kept
+vigil, for he refused to contribute fatigue to the prospering
+of his cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sometime in mid-morning he appeared in the house
+of Amaryllis and sent a servant to her asking her to
+breakfast with him. The Greek sent him in return a
+wax tablet on which she had written that she was shut
+up in her chamber writing verse, but that she had
+provided him a companion as entertaining as she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he passed into the Greek's dining-room, the
+woman who called herself wife to Philadelphus
+awaited him at the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he sat she dropped into a chair beside him
+and laid before him a bunch of grapes from Crete,
+preserved throughout the winter in casks filled with
+ground cork.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is the last, Amaryllis says," she observed.
+"And siege is laid."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John looked ruefully at the fruit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps," he said after thought, "were I a
+thrifty man and a spiteful one, I would not eat them.
+Instead, I should have the same cluster served me
+every morning that I might say to mine enemies, with
+truth, that I have Cretan grapes for breakfast daily.
+They will keep," he added presently, "for it is tradition
+that stores laid up for siege never decay."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Obviously," said the woman, "they do not last
+long enough."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John plucked off one of the light green grapes and
+ate it with relish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Since thou doubtest the tradition, I shall not have
+these spoil."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But you destroy even a better boast over your
+enemy. Then you could say to him, 'We can not consume
+all our food. Behold the grapes rot in the
+lofts!'"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Half of the lies go to preserve another's opinion
+of us. How much we respect our fellows!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Be comforted; there are as many lying for our
+sakes! But how goes it without on the walls?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Against Rome or against Simon?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Both."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ill enough. But when Titus presses too close
+Simon will lay down his hostility toward me; and
+when Titus becomes too effective, we are to have a divine
+interference, so our prophets say."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I observe," the woman said, "we Jews at this
+time are relying much on the prophets to fight our
+battles. Behold, our stores will hold out, we say, because
+it is said; and we shall fight indifferently, because
+Daniel hath bespoken a Deliverer for us at this
+time!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John, with his wine-glass between thumb and finger,
+looked at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I should expect a heretic to be so critical for us,"
+he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman sat with her elbows on the table, her chin
+in her hands, gazing moodily at the sunlight falling
+through the brass grill over the windows on the court.
+She ignored his remark, but answered presently in another
+tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is nothing to employ a surfeited mind in
+this city."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No?" he said lightly, while interest began to
+awaken in his eyes. "The making of enjoyment is
+here. I have found it so."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perchance you have," but she halted and resumed
+her moody gaze at the flood of sunlight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you weary?" he asked. "What is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Idleness! Eating, sleeping&ndash;no; not even that;
+for idleness steals away my appetite and my repose."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Strange restiveness for one reared in the quiet
+inner chambers of a Jewish house," he observed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes dropped away to the floor; he saw that she
+was breathing quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I dreamed of a free life once," she said in a restrained
+way. "I have not since been satisfied. I
+dreamed of cities and kings, that were mine! of crises
+that I dared, of&ndash;of things that I did!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was indignation and pride in the words, too
+much recollection of an actuality to rise from the reminiscences
+of a dream. John watched her alertly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Enough will happen here in time to divert you,"
+he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She made a motion with her hand that swept the
+round of masonry about her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not until this falls."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come, then, up into my fortress and see my fellows
+from Gischala," he offered. "They fled with me from
+that city when Titus took it and together we came to
+this place. They are hardened to disaster; they and
+death are fellow-jesters."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Soldiers?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Everything! Better athletes than soldiers, better
+mummers than athletes; villains most engaging of
+all!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She showed no interest and, after a critical pause,
+he continued:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They robbed the booth of some costumer whom
+the Sadducees had made rich and captured a maid
+whom they held until she had taught them how to use
+henna and kohl. So I had a garrison of swearing
+girls until they wearied of the fatigue of stepping
+mincingly and untangling their garments. It was
+that which robbed the sport of its pleasure and
+changed my harem back to a fortress. But while it
+lasted they were kings over Jerusalem. And what
+dear mad dangerous wantons they were! What confusion
+to short-sighted citizens; what affrights to sociable
+maidens! Even I laughed at them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What antics indeed!" she murmured perfunctorily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now they want new entertainment; something immense
+and different," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked up at him; in her eyes he read, "Even
+as I do!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But they are not unique in that," he continued.
+"All the world seeks diversion. Observe the pretty
+stranger come here fresh from some lady's tiring-room,
+hunting adventure, bearding thee and wearing
+thy name!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes sparkled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She shall have adventure enough," she declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I hear," John pursued, "that she does not expect
+her servant to return, whom she sent to Ascalon for
+proofs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No?" the woman cried, sitting up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How can she, when the siege is laid?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a moment of silence. The woman drew
+in a deep breath that was wholly one of relief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now what will she do?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She expects," John answered, "the mediation of
+the Messiah. It is the talk among the slaves that He
+is in the city and she has heard it. She seems not to
+be overconfident, however."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is her end," the woman remarked with meaning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perchance not. She is a good Jew, it seems,
+whatever else she may be, and every good Jew may
+have his wishes come to pass if the Messiah come. So
+it has become the national habit to expect the Messiah
+in every individual difficulty. Now, according to
+prophecies, the time is of a surety ripe and the whole
+city is expectant. She may have her wish."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stared at him coolly. There was implied disbelief
+in this speech. She debated with herself if it
+would serve to resent his doubt. Whatever her conclusion
+she added no more to the discussion of Laodice's
+hopes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you expectant?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I see the need of a Messiah," he responded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Doubtless. You and Simon do not unite the
+city; nothing but an united, confident and supremely
+capable people can resist Rome in even this most majestic
+fortification in the world&ndash;unless miracle be
+performed, indeed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing but a divine visitor can achieve union
+here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What an event to behold!" she mused. "That
+would be an excitement! Surely that would be a new
+thing! No one really ever beheld a god before."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What learned things dreams are! What things
+of experience!" he remarked with a sly smile. She
+refused to observe his insisted disbelief in her claim,
+but went on as if to herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whatever Jove can do, man can do!" she declared.
+"I never heard that the gods do more than
+change maidens into trees or themselves into swans
+for an old mortal purpose that even man's a better
+adept at. Why can there not rise one who is greater
+than Alexander and of stouter heart than Julius Cęsar?
+There is no limit to the greatness of mankind.
+Behold, here is a city rich beyond even the wealth of
+Croesus; and a country which the emperor is longing
+to bestow upon some orderly king! Heavens, what
+an opportunity! I could pray, Jerusalem should
+pray, that the hour may bring forth the man!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes shone with an unnatural yearning. The
+immense scope of her desires suddenly brought a
+smile to his lips that he checked in time. He had
+remembered offering his Idumeans in women's clothing
+for her diversion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hunger for power, the next greatest hunger after
+hunger for love! He felt that he stood in the presence
+of a desire so immense that it belittled his own
+hopes. He was not too much of a Jew to have sympathy
+with the ambition that dwells in the breasts of
+women. Cleopatra had been an evil that he had admired
+profoundly, because she had attained that
+which his own soul yearned after but which had
+eluded him. Yet he was large enough not to be envious
+of a success. He was made of the stuff that
+seekers of excitement are made of. If he could not
+furnish the intoxication of activity he was a ready
+supporter of that one who could.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What disorder, then, in the world," she went on,
+as if she had followed a train of imagination through
+the triumph of the risen great man. "Rome, the
+ruler of nations humbled! Conquest from Germany
+to the First Cataract, from Gaul to the dry rocks
+of Ecbatana! A world in anarchy, for one greater
+than Alexander to subjugate! The ancient splendor
+of Asia, the wisdom of Africa and the virginity
+of Europe to be his, and the homage of the four corners
+of the earth to be to him!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John said nothing. Before him, the woman had
+entirely stripped off her disguise. Now for the purpose!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that moment one of Amaryllis' servants, who
+had stood guard without the door, dodged apprehensively
+into the room and fled across to the opposite
+arch. There he paused, ready for flight, and looked
+back with wide eyes. John turned hastily but with
+an impatient gesture fell again to his neglected meal.
+The actress looked to see what had annoyed him.
+There passed in from the outer corridor a young
+man, tall, magnificently formed, covered with a turban
+and draped in quaint garments, which to her who
+was familiar with all the guises of the theater seemed
+to be Buddhistic. He looked neither to the right nor
+left, but passed with a step infinitely soft and gliding
+across to the arch, from which the terrified servant
+vanished instantly. The stranger stayed only a
+dramatic instant on the threshold and then disappeared
+into the corridor which led up into the Temple.
+When he had gone the startled actress retained
+a picture of a face, fearless, beatified, mystic to the
+very edge of the supernatural.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who was that?" she asked of the Gischalan,
+who was gazing at the color of his wine, sitting in a
+shaft of sunlight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Seraiah! But more than that, no one knows.
+He appeared with the slaying of Zechariah the Just.
+He haunts the garrisons. Hence his name&ndash;Soldier
+of Jehovah!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He did not speak; why did he come?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He never speaks; he goes where he will; no one
+would dare to stop him!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then suddenly realizing that he was showing disinterest
+the Gischalan drew himself up and smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is mad; I believe he is mad. The city is full
+of demoniacs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is something great about him!" the woman
+declared. "He seems to be the instrument of miracle."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is it that?" John asked in an amused tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She studied him for a moment that was tense with
+meaning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you know," she began slowly, "that neither
+you nor Simon, nor any of these who aspire to the
+control of Jerusalem, have come upon the plan which
+will best appeal to your distracted subjects?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have we not?" he repeated. "We have bought
+them and bullied them; we are fighting the Romans
+for them; we are preaching patience in the will of
+the Lord. What more, lady?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What have you to offer them in their hope of
+a Messiah?" she said pointedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Messiah! What else is preached in the Temple
+but the Messiah, or in the proseuchę or the streets
+or on the walls? We eat, drink, sleep, fight, buy,
+sell, rob or restore in the name of the Messiah! They
+are surfeited with religion."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are they?" she asked sententiously. "But you
+haven't given them a Messiah."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her without comprehending.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have a mad city here; you can not reason
+with it; indulge it, then, as you indulge your lunatics,"
+she suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head, smiling that he did not understand
+her. She turned again to Seraiah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Watch him," she insisted. "He possesses me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a long silence in which John trifled with his
+wine, she prepared to rise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Send me the roll of the law," the woman said suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Posthumus shall bring it. He is another lunatic.
+Experiment with him and learn how I shall act
+toward the city."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well said," she averred; "and I will see your
+Idumeans. Is it proper for me to appear in the
+Temple?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Gischalan's eyes flashed a sudden elation and
+delight. He bent low and kissed her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I will fetch somewhat which will divert
+us," she added and was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When a few moments later John passed again into
+the Greek's apartment, Amaryllis entered from an
+inner corridor. Before she spoke to the master of
+the house she addressed a servant who had been a
+moment before summoned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Send hither my guest."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The stranger?" John asked. "Is she still with
+you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I mean to add her to my household, if you will,"
+she explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Keep her or dismiss her at your pleasure."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It shall be for my pleasure. She has a charm
+that besets me. It will be entertainment to discover
+her history."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I see no mystery in her. It is plain enough that
+there is between her and this married Philadelphus
+some cause for her coming. His wife is much more
+engaging."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sighed and dropped into her ivory chair,
+pushed back the locks of fair hair that had loosened
+from their fillet and waited languidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John studied her critically. In the last hour the
+slowly dissolving bond between them seemed to have
+vanished, wholly, at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O Queen of Kings," he said, "art thou lonely in
+this mad place?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have found diversion," she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"With these new guests?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"With these new guests. Observe them; there
+are a pair of lovers among them, mersed in difficulty,
+hampering themselves, multiplying sorrow and sure
+to accomplish the same end as if they had proceeded
+happily."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Interested no longer in thine own passion? Alas,
+my Amaryllis, that love is dead that is interested no
+longer in itself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O thou bearded warrior, are we then still in the
+self-centered period of our romance?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I fear not; I see the twilight."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis looked down and her face grew more
+weary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have maintained a long fidelity, John," she
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He gazed at her, waiting a further remark, and
+she went on at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wonder why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He flung out his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shall I be faithless to Sheba? Is the charm of
+the Queen of Kings faded? Shall I turn from Aphrodite
+or weary of the lips of Astarte?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing so stamps your love of me as wicked,
+in your own eyes, as the paganism you fall into when
+you speak of it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But it is not that I am lovely which made you
+a lover&ndash;until now," she went on. "I have seen men
+faithful to women unlovely as Hecate. It is not
+that. And I am still as I was, but&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked down on the triple bands of the ampyx
+that bound her gold-powdered hair and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is you who have grown weary; not I."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She astutely drew back from the ground upon
+which she had entered. It lay in the power of this
+Gischalan to refuse further protection to her out of
+sheer spite if she made her disaffection too patent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O leader of hosts, canst thou be mummer, languishing
+poet, pettish woman and spoiled princeling
+all in one? No! And I shall love the clanking of
+arms and thy mailed footsteps all the more if thou
+permittest me to look upon irresponsible folly while
+thou art absent."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have thy way. I have mine. Furthermore, I
+wish to thank thee for the companion thou sentest me
+at breakfast. He who dines alone with her, hath his
+table full. Farewell."
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch15">Chapter XV</h2>
+
+<h2>THE IMAGE OF JEALOUSY</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee resolved that in spite of his heart-hunger,
+he must not be a frequent visitor to the
+house of Amaryllis because of the imminent risk of
+confronting the impostor Julian and the danger of
+exposure. Not danger to his life, but danger to his
+freedom to court the beautiful girl, which an unmasking
+might accomplish. Besides, he had made an
+extraordinary entry into the Greek's house in the beginning,
+and he was not prepared to explain himself
+even now, if he returned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But his longing to look at her again was stronger
+than his caution. Much had happened since he
+had left the house of the Greek on the evening of his
+first day in Jerusalem, and he feared that his absorption
+in his own plans might result in the loss of her
+soon or late. So when the evening of the second week
+to a day of his sojourn in the city came round, unable
+to endure longer, he turned his steps with considerable
+apprehension toward the house of Amaryllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was led across the threshold of the Greek's
+hall, he saw Amaryllis sitting in her exedra, her
+slim white arms crossed back of her head, her tiring-woman,
+summoned for a casual attention, busy with a
+parted ribbon on the sandal of the lady's foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee awaited her invitation. Her eyes
+flashed a sudden pleasure when she looked up and saw
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Enter," she said, with an unwonted lightness
+in her voice that was usually low and grave; "and be
+welcome."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came to the place she indicated at her side and
+sat. In silence he waited until the tiring-woman had
+finished her service and departed. Then it was
+Amaryllis who spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You left us abruptly on occasion of your first
+visit."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The siege was of greater interest to you than I
+was. When I discovered the cause of the disturbance,
+you would have failed to remember me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yet I recall you readily after many days."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The city is in disorder; conventions can not always
+be observed in war-time. I returned when I
+could."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Our interest in you as our guest has not abated.
+Philadelphus is ready to see you, at any time," she
+said, watching his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And in time of war," he answered composedly,
+"we intend many things in the first place which we
+do not carry out in the second. I do not care to
+see&ndash;Philadelphus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She lifted her brows. He answered the implied
+question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I was a familiar to this Philadelphus; he is young
+and boastful, talkative as a woman. If he means to
+be king, as those who knew him in Ephesus were
+given to believe, it is not unnatural that some of us,
+without fortune or tie to keep us home, should follow
+him&ndash;as parasites, if you will&ndash;to share in the
+largess which he will surely give his friends if he succeeds."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not face her when he made this speech,
+and he did not observe the amusement that crept into
+her eyes. He could not sense his own greatness of
+presence sufficiently to know that his claim to be a
+parasite upon so incapable a creature as the false
+Philadelphus would awaken doubt in the mind of an
+intelligent woman like Amaryllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He felt that he was not covering his tracks well,
+and put his ingenuity to a test.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The boon-craver therefore should not sit like a
+dog, begging crumbs, till the table is laid. My hunger
+would appear as competition, if I showed it him,
+while he is yet unfed. Of a truth, I would not have
+him know I am here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I will keep thy secret," she promised, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I thank you," he said gravely. "I came, on this
+occasion, to ask after the young woman, whose name
+I have not learned&ndash;her whom you have sheltered."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis' smiling eyes darkened suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pouf!" she said. "I had begun to hope that
+you had come to see me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I had not John's permission," he objected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have you Philadelphus' permission to see her?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked his perplexity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What," she exclaimed, "has she not laid her
+claim before you yet?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Know, then, that this pretty nameless creature
+claims to be the wife of this same Philadelphus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat up in his earnestness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What!" he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Even so! Insists upon it in the face of the lady
+princess' proofs and Philadelphus' denial!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee's brows dropped while he gazed
+down at the Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Julian of Ephesus was then the husband that she
+was to join in Jerusalem! Small wonder she had
+been indignant when he, the Maccabee, in the spirit
+of mischief, had laid a wife to Julian's door and had
+described her as most unprepossessing. And that
+was why her terror of Julian had been so abject!
+That was why she had flown to him, a stranger, rather
+than be left alone with a husband who, it seemed,
+would be rid of her that he might pursue his ends the
+better!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What think you of it!" he exclaimed aloud, but
+to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I never saw in all my life such pretensions
+of probity!" the Greek continued. "She is outraged
+by any little word that questions her virtue;
+she holds herself aloof from me as if she were not
+certain that I am fit for her companionship; and she
+flies with fluffed feathers and cries of rage in the face
+of the least compliment that comes from any lips&ndash;even
+Philadelphus!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee continued to gaze at the Greek.
+He did not see the woman's search of his face for an
+assent to her speech. He was struggling with a desire
+to tell her that he was eager to exchange his wife
+for Julian's.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perchance she is right," he said instead. "What
+know we of this paganized young Jew? He has
+been separated from his lady from childhood. It is
+right easy to marry, once we fall into the way."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, no! Her claim is hopeless. She confesses
+it. But she maintains the assumption, nevertheless."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Absolutely? No little sign of lapse among thy
+handsome servants, here?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not see her when she is with the servants,"
+she said astutely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What will you do with her?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is beautiful, unique, and so eligible to my
+collection of arts and artists under this roof. She
+shall stay till fate shows its hand for all of us."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have housed Discord under your roof,
+then," he said. "Laodice, the wife to this Philadelphus,
+will not be a happy woman; and I&ndash;I shall
+not be a happy man. Let me return favor for your
+favor to me. I will take her away."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed, though it seemed that a hard note
+had entered her voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You will permit me, then, to surmise for myself
+why you came to Jerusalem. You seem to have
+known this girl before. I shall not ask you; in
+return for that promise that I may conclude what I
+will."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If you are too discerning, lady," he answered,
+while his eyes sought down the corridor for a glimpse
+of the one he had come to see, "you are dangerous."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what then?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I must devise a way to silence you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She lifted her brows. In that very speech was the
+portrait of the Maccabee that she had come to love
+through letters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is something familiar in your mood," she
+said thoughtfully. "It seems that I have known
+you&ndash;for many years."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made no answer. He had said all that he
+wished to say to this woman. She noted his silence
+and rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall send the girl to you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou art good," he answered and she withdrew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later Laodice came into the chamber.
+She was not startled. In her innocent soul she did
+not realize that this was a sign of the depth of her
+love for him. He rose and met her half-way across
+the hall; took her hand and held it while they walked
+back to the exedra, and gazed at her face for evidence
+that her sojourn in this house had been unhappy
+or otherwise; noted that she had let down her
+hair and braided it; observed every infinitesimal
+change that can attract only the lover's eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sit," he said, giving her a place beside him. "I
+came of habit to see you. Of habit, I was interrupted.
+Is there no way that I can talk to you without
+the resentment of some one who flourishes a better
+right to be with you than I can show?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where hast thou been," Laodice asked, "so
+long?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was it long," he demanded impulsively, "to
+you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"New places, new faces, uncertainty and other
+things make time seem long," she explained hastily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nay, then," he said, "I have been busy. I
+have been attending to that labor I had in mind for
+Judea, of which we spoke in the hills that morning."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice drew in a quick breath. Then some one,
+if not herself or the husband who had denied her,
+was at work for Judea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is no nation, here, for a king," he went
+on. "It is a great horde that needs organization.
+It wants a leader. I am ambitious and Judea will
+be the prize to the ablest man. Seest thou mine
+intent?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You&ndash;you aspire&ndash;" she began and halted,
+suddenly impressed with the complication his announcement
+had effected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go on," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You would take Judea?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But it belongs of descent to the Maccabees!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To Philadelphus Maccabaeus, yes; but what is he
+doing?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She dropped her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing," she said in a half-whisper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No? But let me tell you what I have done already.
+Three days ago Titus took revenge upon
+Coenopolis for her sortie against Nicanor by firing
+the suburbs. The citizens could not spare water to
+fight the fire, and after futile attempts they gathered
+up food and treasure and fled into Jerusalem. Now,
+a thousand householders in the streets of this oppressed
+city, with their gods and their goods in their
+arms, made the pillagers of Simon and John laugh
+aloud. They fell upon these wandering, bewildered,
+treasure-laden people and robbed them as readily and
+as joyously as a husbandman gathers olives in a
+fat year. Oh, it was a merry time for the men of
+Simon and the men of John! But I in my wanderings
+over the city came upon a party of Bezethans,
+reluctant to surrender their goods for the asking,
+and they were fighting with right good will a body
+of Idumeans twice their number. In fact they
+fought so well, so unanimously, so silently that I saw
+they lacked the essential part of the fight&ndash;the
+shouting. That I supplied. And when they had
+whipped the Idumeans and had a chance for flight
+before reinforcements came, they obeyed my voice
+in so far as they followed me into a subterranean
+chamber beneath a burned ruin on Zion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We were not followed and our hiding-place was
+not discovered. In fact, their resistance was a complete
+success. Whereupon, they were ready to unite
+and take Jerusalem! No&ndash;it was not strange! It
+is the nature of men. I never saw a wine-merchant
+in Ephesus, who, after clearing his shop of brawlers
+single-handed, was not ready thereupon to march
+upon Rome and besiege Cęsar on the Palatine! So
+it was with these Bezethans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I, with my voice, expressed the yearnings that
+they felt in their victorious breasts, and plotted for
+them. After council and organization we went forth
+by night and finding Idumean patrols by the score
+sleepy and inert from overfeeding we robbed them of
+that which was our own. Then we sought out hungry
+Bezethans and fed them when they promised to
+become of our party. Nothing was more simple! By
+dawn we had a hundred under our ruin, bound to us
+by oath and the enticements of our larder, and hungry
+only for fight! Will you believe me when I
+boast that I have an army in Jerusalem?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She heard him with a strange confusion of emotions.
+In her soul she was excited and eager for his
+success; but here was a strong and growing enemy to
+Philadelphus, who was reluctant to become a king!
+Her impulsive joy in a forceful man struggled with
+her sense of duty to the man she could not love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why do you tell me these things?" she said uneasily.
+"It is perilous for any one to know that
+you are constructing sedition against these ferocious
+powers in Jerusalem."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, but you fear for me; therefore you will
+not betray me. None else but those as deeply committed
+know of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had confided in her, and because of it his ambitions
+took stealthy hold upon her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But&ndash;but is there no other way to take Jerusalem,
+except&ndash;by predatory warfare?" she hesitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No," he laughed. "We are fighting thieves
+and murderers; they do not understand the open
+field; we must go into the dark to find them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then&ndash;then if your soldiers have the good of
+the city and the love of their fellows in their hearts,
+and if you feed them and shelter them&ndash;why shall
+you not succeed?" she asked, speaking slowly as the
+sum of his advantages occurred to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He dropped his hand on hers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It lacks one thing; if I have discouragement in
+my soul, it will weaken my arm, and so the arm of
+all my army."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Intuition bade her hesitate to ask for that essential
+thing; his eyes named it to her and she looked away
+from him quickly that he might not see the sudden
+flush which she could not repress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell me," she said, "more of that night&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That would be recounting the same incident
+many times. But one thing unusual happened; nay,
+two things. In the middle of the night, after we
+had brought in our second enlistment of patriots, we
+were feeding them and I was giving them instruction.
+At the entrance, I had posted a sentry; none of us
+believed that any one had seen us take refuge in that
+crypt. Indeed, we were all frank in our congratulations
+and defiant in our security. Suddenly, I saw
+half of my army scuttle to cover; the rest stood
+transfixed in their tracks. I looked up and there before
+me in the firelight stood a young man, whom
+I had not, I am convinced, brought in with me. He
+was tall, comely, dressed as I have seen the Hindu
+priests dress in Ephesus, but in garments that were
+fairly radiant for whiteness. But his face gave cause
+enough to make any man lose his tongue. Believe
+me, when I say he looked as if he had seen angels,
+and had talked with the dead. His eyes gazed
+through us as if we had been thin air. So dreadful
+they were in their unseeing look that every man asked
+himself what would happen if that gaze should light
+upon him. He stood a moment, walked as soft-footed
+and as swiftly as some shade through our
+burrow and vanished as he had come. In all the time
+he tarried, he made not one sound!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice was looking at him with awed, but understanding
+eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It was Seraiah," she said in a low voice. "He
+entered this place on a day last week. All the city
+is afraid of him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So my soldiers told me afterward, between chattering
+teeth. He almost damped our patriotism.
+We uttered our bombast, sealed our vows and made
+our sorties, thereafter, every man of us, with our
+chins over our shoulders! Spare me Seraiah! He
+has too much influence!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is he a madman?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Or else a supernatural man. Would I could
+manage men by the fall of my foot, as he does. I
+should have Jerusalem's fealty by to-morrow night.
+But it was near early morning that the other incident
+occurred. That was of another nature. We
+stumbled upon a pair huddled in the shadow of a
+building. We stumbled upon many figures in shadows,
+but one of these murmured a name that I heard
+once in the hills hereabout, and I had profited by
+that name, so I halted. It was an old man, starved
+and weary and ill; with him was a gray ghost of a
+creature with long white hair, that seemed to be
+struck with terror the instant it heard my voice. At
+first I thought it was a withered old woman, but it
+proved to be a man&ndash;somehow seeming young in
+spite of the snow-white hair and wasted frame. I
+had them taken up, the gray ghost resisting mightily,
+and carried to my burrow where they now lie. They
+eat; they take up space; they add nothing to my
+cause. But I can not turn them out. The old man
+disarms me by that name."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked down at her with softening eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And the shepherd held thy hand?" he said softly.
+She turned upon him in astonishment. How much
+of joy and surprise and hope he could bring in a
+single visit, she thought. Now, behold he had met
+that same delightsome child that had passed like a
+dash of sunlight across her dark day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did you meet the shepherd of Pella?" she asked.
+Instant deduction supplied her the name that had
+moved him to compassion. "And did he serve you
+in the name of his Prophet?" she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He saved my life in the name of his Christ, but
+was tender of me in thy name," he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"His is a sweet apostasy," she ventured bravely,
+"if it be his apostasy that made him kind. And
+I&ndash;I owe him much, that he repaired that for which
+I feel at fault."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled at her and stroked her hand once, soothingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let us not remember blames or injury. It damages
+my happiness. But of this apostasy that the
+shepherd preached me. I passed the stones of the
+Palace of Antipas to-day, a ruin, black and shapeless.
+Thought I, where is the majesty of order and the
+beauty of strength that was this place? And then,"
+his voice fell to a whisper, "beshrew the boy's tattle,
+I said, the footprints of his Prophet before the throne
+of Herod are erased."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Even then," she whispered when he paused, "you
+do not forget!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No! Why, these streets, that should ring for
+me with the footsteps of all the great from the days
+of David, are marked by the passage of that Prophet.
+I might forget that Felix and Florus and Gessius
+were legates in that Roman residence, but I do not
+fail to remember that they took that Prophet before
+Pilate there. By my soul, the street that leads north
+hath become the way of the Cross, and there are three
+crosses for me on the Hill of the Skull!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him gravely and with alarm. What
+was it in this history of the Nazarene which won aristocrats
+and shepherds alike? She would see from
+this man if there were indeed any truth in the story
+that Philadelphus had told her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have heard," she began, faltering, "I have
+heard that&ndash;" She stopped. Her tongue would
+not shape the story. But after a glance at her, he
+understood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And thou hast heard it, also?" he whispered.
+"Thou believest it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed that to acknowledge her fear that the
+King had come and gone would establish the fact.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No!" she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is enough," he said nervously. "We do not
+well to talk of it. I came for another reason. Tell
+me; hast thou other shelter than this house?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No," she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hast thou talked with this Philadelphus, here?"
+he asked after silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She assented with averted face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is he that one who was with me in the hills?"
+he persisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again she assented, with surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His hands clenched and for a moment he struggled
+with his rage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This house is no place for you!" he declared at
+last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What manner of house is this?" she asked pathetically.
+"It is so strange!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why did you come here?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Because there was nowhere else to go."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is this Amaryllis?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"John's mistress."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shrank away from him and looked at him
+with horror-stricken eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hast thou not yet seen him, who buys thy bread
+and meat and insures this safe roof?" he persisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And&ndash;and I eat bread&ndash;bought&ndash;bought
+by&ndash;" she stammered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Even so!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her hands dropped at her sides.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are the good all dead?" she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In Jerusalem, yes; for Virtue gets hungry, at
+times."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had risen and moved away from him, but he
+followed her with interested eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then&ndash;then&ndash;" she began, hesitating under a
+rush of convictions. "That is why&ndash;why I can
+not&ndash;why he&ndash;he&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knew she spoke of Philadelphus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go on," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why I can not live in safety near him!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, too, arose. Until that moment it had not occurred
+to him that Julian of Ephesus, as repugnant
+to her as she had shown him ever to be, might prove
+a peril to her life as he had been to the Maccabee who
+had stood in his way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What has he said to you?" he demanded
+fiercely. "How do you live, here in this house?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She threw up her head, seeing another meaning in
+his question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shut in! Locked!" she said between her teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But even then you are not safe!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew back hastily and looked at him with
+alarm. What did he mean?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was beside her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell me, in truth, who you are," he said
+tenderly, "and I shall reveal myself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, indeed, Amaryllis had told him her claim
+and had convinced him that it was fraudulent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And she told you?" she said wearily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell me," he insisted. "I have truly a revelation
+worth hearing!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She made no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You owe it me," he added presently. "Behold
+what damaging things I have intrusted to you.
+You can ruin me by the droop of an eyelash."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I should have told you at first who I am," she
+said finally. "I will not betray what you told me
+in ignorance&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But Amaryllis told me this before you came."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nevertheless, tell me no more; if I must be a
+partizan, I shall be a partizan to my husband."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is nothing for you here, clinging to this
+man," he continued persuasively. "This woman
+brought him a great dowry. She is ambitious and
+therefore jealous. You will win nothing but mistreatment,
+and worse, if you stay here for him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is my place," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a moment's helpless silence, he demanded
+bitterly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dost thou love that man?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The truth leaped to her lips with such wilful
+force that he read the reply on her face, though her
+eyes were down and by intense resolution she restrained
+the denial. He was close to her, speaking
+quickly under the pressure of his earnestness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have sacrificed name, birthright, fortune&ndash;even
+honor&ndash;that I might be free to love thee!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew back from him hurriedly, afraid that
+his very insistence would destroy her fortitude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let me not have bankrupted myself for a trust
+thou wilt not give!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It&ndash;it is not mine to give," she stammered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Otherwise&ndash;otherwise&ndash;" he prompted, leaning
+near her. But she put him back from her, desperately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go, go!" she whispered. "I hear&ndash;I hear
+Philadelphus!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned from her obediently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not my last hope," he said to himself.
+"Neither has she suffered her last perplexity in this
+house. I shall come again."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He passed out into the streets of Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch16">Chapter XVI</h2>
+
+<h2>THE SPREAD NET</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Beginning with the moment that the Maccabee first
+entered her hall, Amaryllis struggled with a perplexity.
+Certain discrepancies in the hastily concocted
+story which that stern compelling stranger
+who had called himself Hesper of Ephesus had told
+had started into life a doubt so feeble that it was
+little more than a sensation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Love and its signs had been a lifelong study to
+her; she knew its stubbornness; she was wise in the
+judgment of human nature to know that love in this
+stranger was no light thing to be dislodged. And
+to finish the sum of her perplexities, she felt in her
+own heart the kindling of a sorrowful longing to be
+preferred by a spirit strong, forceful and magnetic
+as was that of the man who had called himself Hesper
+of Ephesus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the egotism of the courtezan she summarized
+her charms. Even there were spirits in that fleshly
+land of Judea to whom the delicate refinement of her
+beauty, the reserve of her bearing and the power of
+her mentality had appealed more strongly than a
+mere opulence of physical attraction. She had her
+ambitions; not the least of these was to be loved by
+an understanding nature. The greater the congeniality,
+the greater the attraction, she argued; but
+behold, was this iron Hesper, the man of all force,
+to be dashed and shaken by the rich loveliness of
+Laodice, who was simply a woman?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Such attachments do not last," she argued hopefully.
+"Such attachments make unfaithful husbands.
+They are monotonous and wearisome. She
+is but a mirror giving back the blaze of the sun, one-surfaced
+and blinding. It is the many lights of the
+diamond that make it charming."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had arrived at no definite resolution when she
+met Laodice in the hall that led to the quarters of
+the artists, as the Greek went that way for her
+day's observation of their work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What an unrefreshed face!" the Greek said
+softly, as the light from the cancelli showed the weariness
+and distress that had begun to make inroads
+on the animation of the girl's beauty. "No woman
+who would preserve her loveliness should let her cares
+trouble her dreams."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How am I to do that?" Laodice asked with a
+flare of scorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do I perceive in that a desire for advice or an
+explanation of a situation?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Both."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis smiled thoughtfully at the girl, while
+the light of sudden intent appeared on her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are unhappy, my dear, through your prejudices,"
+she began. "We call convictions prejudices
+when they are other than our own beliefs. By that
+sign, you shall know that I am going to take issue
+with you. I am, perhaps, the ideal of that which
+you would not be. But no man will say that my lot
+is not enviable."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you happy?" Laodice asked in a low voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you?" the Greek returned. "No," she
+went on after a pause. "A woman has the less
+happy part in life, though the greater one, if she will
+permit herself to make it great. It was not her purpose
+on earth to be happy, but to make happy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You take issue with Philadelphus in that," Laodice
+interposed. "It is his preachment to me that all
+that is expected of all mankind is to be happy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is a man, arguing from the man's view. It
+is inevitable law that one must be gladder than
+another. Woman has the greater capacity for suffering,
+hence her feeling for the suffering of others is
+the quicker to respond. And some creature of the
+gods must be compassionate, else creation long since
+had perished from the earth."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice made no answer. This was new philosophy
+to her, who had been taught only to aspire at
+great sacrifice as long as God gave her strength.
+She could not know that this strange and purposeful
+creed might some day appeal to her beyond her
+strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yet," Amaryllis added presently in a brighter
+tone, "there is much that is sweet in the life of a
+woman."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice played with the tassels of her girdle and
+did not look up. What was all this to lead to?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have spoken to Philadelphus about you," the
+Greek continued. "He has no doubt of this woman
+who hath established her claim to his name by proofs
+but without the manner of the wife he expected.
+Yet he can not turn her out. The siege hath put
+an end to your efforts in your own behalf and it is
+time to face your condition and make the best of it.
+John feels restive; I dare not ask too much of him.
+My household was already full, before you came."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice was looking at her, now with enlightenment
+in her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Philadelphus," Amaryllis continued, following
+up her advantage, "is nothing more than a man and
+you are very lovely."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All this," Laodice said, rousing, "is to persuade
+me to&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There are two standards for women," the Greek
+interposed before Laodice finished her indignant sentence.
+"Yours and another's. As between yours,
+who would have love from him whom you have married,
+and hers, who hath love from him whom she
+hath not married, there is only the difference of a
+formula. Between her condition and yours, she is
+the freer; between her soul and yours, she is the more
+willingly faithful. If woman be born to a purpose,
+she fulfils it; if not she hath not consecrated her life
+to a mistake. You overrate the importance of marriage.
+It is your whole purpose to preserve yourself
+for a ceremony. It is too much pains for too trivial
+an end. At least, there are many things which are
+farther reaching and less selfish in intent. And who,
+by the way, holds the longest claim on history?
+Your kind or this other? The world does not perpetuate
+in its chronicles the continence of women; it is
+too small, too personal, too common to be noted.
+Cleopatra were lost among the horde of forgotten
+sovereigns, had she wedded duly and scorned Mark
+Antony; Aspasia would have been buried in a gynaeconitis
+had she wedded Pericles, and Sappho&ndash;but
+the list is too long; I will not bury you in testimony."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice raised her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You reason well," she said. "It never occurred
+to me how wickedness could justify itself by reason.
+But I observe now how serviceable a thing it is. It
+seems that you can reason away any truth, any fact,
+any ideal. Perhaps you can banish God by reason,
+or defend crime by reason; reason, I shall not be surprised
+to learn, can make all things possible or impossible.
+But&ndash;does reason hush that strange
+speaking voice in you, which we Jews call conscience?
+Tell me; have you reasoned till it ceases to rebuke
+you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, how hard you are to accommodate," Amaryllis
+smiled. "I mean to show you how you can
+abide here. I can ask no more of John. Philadelphus
+alone is master of your fate. I have not sought
+to change you before I sought to change Philadelphus.
+He will not change so long as you are beautiful.
+This is life, my dear. You may as well prepare
+for it now."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice gazed with wide, terrorized eyes at the
+Greek. She saw force gathering against her. Amaryllis
+shaped her device to its end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And if you do not accept this shelter," she concluded,
+"what else is there for you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hesper, many times her refuge, rose before the
+hard-pressed girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is another in Jerusalem who will help me,"
+she declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And that one?" Amaryllis asked coolly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is he who calls himself Hesper, the Ephesian,"
+Laodice answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why should you trust him?" the Greek asked
+pointedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He&ndash;when Philadelphus&ndash;you remember that
+Philadelphus told you what happened&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That he tossed a coin with a wayfarer in the
+hills for you?" the Greek asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice dropped her head painfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This Hesper let me go then, and afterward&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He has repented of that by this time. It is not
+safe to try him a second time. Besides, if you must
+risk yourself to the protection of men, why turn
+from him whom you call your husband for this
+stranger?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The question was deft and telling. Laodice started
+with the suddenness of the accusation embodied in it.
+And while she stood, wrestling with the intolerable
+alternative, the Greek smiled at her and went her way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice stood where Amaryllis had left her, at
+times motionless with helplessness, at others struck
+with panic. On no occasion did homelessness in the
+war-ridden city of Jerusalem appear half so terrible
+as shelter under the roof of that hateful house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little golden-haired girl from the chamber of
+artists beyond skipped by her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hast seen Demetrius?" she called back as she
+passed. "Demetrius, the athlete, stupid!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice turned away from her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nay, then," the girl declared; "if I have insulted
+you let me heal over the wound with the best jest,
+yet! John hath written a sonnet on Philadelphus'
+wife and our Lady Amaryllis is truing his meter for
+him. Ha! Gods! What a place this is for a child
+to be brought up! I would not give a denarius for
+my morals when I am grown. There's Demetrius!
+Now for a laugh!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where was that ancient rigor of atmosphere in
+which she had been reared? thought Laodice. Had it
+existed only in the shut house of Costobarus? Was
+all the world wicked except that which was confined
+within the four walls of her father's house? Could
+she survive long in this unanimously bad environment?
+But she remembered Joseph of Pella, the
+shepherd; even then his wholesomeness was not without
+its canker. He was a Christian!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus was at her side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She flinched from him and would have fled, but he
+stopped her with a sign.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My lady objects to your presence in this house,"
+he said. "You have not made it worth my while to
+insist on your shelter here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Your lady," she said hotly, "is two-fold evilly
+engaged, then. She has time to ruin you, while
+she furnishes John with all the inspiration he would
+have for sonnets."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So she refrains from furnishing John with my
+two hundred talents, I shall not quarrel with her.
+You have your own difficulties to adjust, and mine,
+only in so far as they concern you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice had lost none of its smoothness, but it
+had become hard and purposeful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have come to that point, Philadelphus, where
+my difficulties and not yours concern me," she replied.
+"I had nothing to give you but my good
+will. You have outraged even that. Hereafter, no
+tie binds us."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No? You cast off our ties as lightly as you assumed
+them. With a word you announce me wedded
+to you; with another you speak our divorcement.
+And I, poor clod, suffer it? The first, yes; but the
+last, no. You see, I have fallen in love with you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned her clear eyes away from him and
+waited calmly till she could escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have spent your greatest argument in persuading
+me to be a king. Kings, lady, are essentially
+tyrants, in these bad days. Wherefore, if I
+am to be one, I shall not fail to be the other. And
+you&ndash;ah, you! Will you endure the oppressor that
+you made?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was enough that was different in his manner
+and his words for her to believe that something
+worthy of attention was to follow. She looked at
+him, now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This roof, since the alienation of John to my
+wife, is mine empire. Within it, I am despot.
+From its lady mistress, the Greek, to the meanest
+slave, I have homage and subjection. Even thou wilt
+be submissive to me&ndash;for having lost one wife
+through indulgence, I shall be most tyrannical to the
+one yet in my power!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew herself up in splendid defiance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have not submitted!" she said. "I will not
+submit!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No? Nothing stands in your way now but
+yourself. Your supplanter hath removed herself.
+And I shall make your submission easy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned from him and would have hurried back
+into the Greek's andronitis, but he put himself in her
+way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Listen!" he said, suddenly lifting his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the stillness which she finally was able to observe
+over the tumultuous beating of her enraged
+heart, a profound moan of great volume as from immense
+but remote struggle came into the corridor.
+Through it at times cut a sharp accession of sound, as
+if violence heightened at intervals, and steadily over
+it pulsated the throb of tireless siege-engines. It
+was the groan of the City of Delight in mortal anguish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This," he said in a soft voice touching his breast,
+"or that," motioning toward the dying city.
+"Choose. And by midnight!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While she stood, gazing at him transfixed with the
+horror of her predicament, there was the sweeping of
+garments, the soft tinkle of pendants as they struck
+together, and Salome, the actress, was beside the pair.
+Close at hand was Amaryllis. The Greek showed
+for the first time discomfiture and an inability to rise
+to the demand of the occasion. The glance she shot
+at Laodice was full of cold anger that she had permitted
+herself to be surprised in company with Philadelphus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus drew back a step, but made no further
+movement toward withdrawing. Laodice would have
+retreated, but the actress stood in her way. With
+a motion full of stately indignation, Salome turned to
+Amaryllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It so occurs, madam, that I can point out to you
+the disease which saps my husband's ambition. You
+observe that he is diverted now, as all men are diverted
+six weeks after marriage&ndash;by another woman. I
+am not a jealous woman. I am only concerned for
+his welfare and the welfare of the city of our fathers.
+For it is not himself that his luxurious indolence
+affects; but all the unhappy city which is suffering
+while he is able to help it. He must be saved. And
+I shall go with him out of this house into want and
+peril, but he shall be saved."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice said nothing. She stood drawn up intensely;
+her brows knitted; her teeth on her lip; her
+insulted pride and growing resolution effecting a certain
+magnificence in her pose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can find her another house," Amaryllis said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Also my husband can find it," the woman broke
+in. "Let the streets do their will with the woman of
+the streets. Bread and shelter are too precious to
+waste on the iniquitous this hour."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis turned to Laodice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What wilt thou do?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The streets can offer me no more insult than is
+offered me in this house," she said slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was in her mind that there were certainly unprotected
+gates at which she could get out of the city and
+return to Ascalon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At least the peril for her in this house was already
+too imminent for her to remain longer. She continued
+to Amaryllis:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lady, you have been kind to me&ndash;in your way.
+You have been so in the face of your doubt that I
+am what I claim to be. How happy, then, you would
+have made my lot had I not been supplanted and
+denied! For all this I thank you. Mine would be a
+poor gratitude if I stay to make you regret your
+generosity. Wherefore I will go."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She slipped past the three and entered her room.
+Before Amaryllis could gather resolution to protest,
+she was out again, clothed in mantle and vitta and,
+walking swiftly, disappeared into the vestibule. As
+they sat in the darkening hall, the three heard the
+doors close behind her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She will return," said Philadelphus coolly, moving
+away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gathering her robes about her, Salome swept out of
+the corridor and away. Amaryllis stood alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Somewhere out in the city was Hesper the Ephesian.
+Amaryllis knew that Laodice would not return.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch17">Chapter XVII</h2>
+
+<h2>THE TANGLED WEB</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Jerusalem was in the fury of barbarous
+warfare. At this ravine and that debouching upon
+Golgotha, the Vale of Hinnom and the Valley of
+Tophet, whole legions of besiegers were stationed.
+Along the walls the men of Simon and the men of
+John tramped in armor. From the various gates
+furious sorties were made by swarms of unorganized
+Jews who fell upon the Romans unused to frantic
+warfare, and slaughtered, set fire to engines, destroyed
+banks and threw down fortifications and retreated
+within the gates before the demoralized Romans could
+rally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Catapult and ballista upon the eminences outside
+the walls kept up an unceasing rain of enormous
+stones which whistled and screamed in the air and
+shook Jerusalem to its foundations. The reverberating
+boom and the tremor of earth were varied from
+time to time by the splintering crash of houses crushing
+and the increase of uproar, as scores of luckless
+inhabitants went down under the falling rock. Giant
+cranes with huge, ludicrous awkward arms, heaved up
+pots of burning pitch and oil and flung them ponderously
+into the city to do whatever horror of fire and
+torture had not been done by the engines. Hourly
+the rattle of small stones increased, merely to attract
+the attention of the citizens to an activity to which
+they were so accustomed that it was almost unnoticed.
+At times citizens and soldiers rushed upon a threatened
+gate or segment of the wall and lent strength to
+keep the Romans out; at other times the defenses were
+forsaken while the besieged fell upon one another.
+Back from the broad summit of Olivet, which was
+the mountain of peace, the echoes gave all day long
+the shudder of the struggling city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun daily grew more heated; the cisterns and
+pools within the city began to shrink so rapidly that
+the inhabitants feared that the enemy had come at
+the source of the waters of Jerusalem and had cut
+them off. Hundreds of the wounded were allowed
+to die, simply as a defense of the wells and store-houses.
+Burial became too gigantic a labor, and John
+and Simon ordered the bodies thrown over the walls to
+prevent pestilence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus riding around the city on a day came upon
+a heap of this outcast dead and turned suddenly
+white. He rode back to his camp and within the hour
+there approached the walls under a flag of truce an
+imposing Jew of middle-age, with a superb beard and
+a veritable mantle of rich black hair escaping from
+his turban and falling heavy with life and strength
+upon a pair of great shoulders. He was simply
+dressed, but his stately carriage and splendid presence
+made a kingly garment out of his white gown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Those upon the wall knew him and though they
+were obliged to respect the banner under which he
+approached, they gnashed their teeth and greeted
+him with epithets, poisonous with hate. He was Flavius
+Josephus, one time patriot and enemy of Rome,
+but now secure under Titus' patronage, abettor of
+his patron against his fellow-countrymen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee, among the fighting-men on the
+wall, saw his approach and discreetly stepped behind
+a soldier that he might not be singled out as a
+familiar toward which the approaching mediator
+would logically direct his appeal. He had no desire
+to be addressed by his name before this precarious
+mob already mad with rage at a turncoat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus concealed the Maccabee heard Josephus
+appeal to the Jews with apparent sincerity and affection,
+promise amnesty, protection and justice in his
+patron's name; heard his overtures greeted with fury
+and finally saw the Jews swarm over the walls and
+drive him to fly for his life up Gareb to the camp of
+Titus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not the first incident he had seen which
+showed him his own fate if it became known that he
+intended to treat with Rome. He put aside his calculations
+in that direction as a detail not yet in order,
+and turned to the organization of his army. Here
+again he met obstacle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among his council of Bezethans he found an enthusiasm
+for some intangible purpose, objection to
+his own plans and a certain hauteur that he could not
+understand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it you hope for, brethren?" he asked
+one night as he stood in the gloom of the crypt under
+the ruin with fifty of his ablest thinkers and soldiers
+about him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The days of Samuel before Israel cursed itself
+with a king," one man declared. The others were
+suddenly silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Those days will not come to you," he answered
+patiently. "You must fight for them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We will fight."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good! Let us unite and I will lead you," the
+Maccabee offered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But after you have led us, perhaps to victory,
+then what?" they asked pointedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee saw that they were sounding him for
+his ambitions, and discreetly effaced them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do with me what you will; or if you doubt me,
+choose a leader among yourselves."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They shook their heads.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then enlist under Simon and John and fight
+with them," he cried, losing patience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Murmurs and angry looks greeted this suggestion,
+and the Maccabee put out his hands toward them
+hopelessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then what will you do?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It shall be shown us," they replied; and with this
+answer, with his organization yet uneffected, his plans
+more than ever chaotic, the Maccabee began another
+day. Shrewd and resourceful as he believed himself
+to be, he beheld plan after plan reveal its inefficiency.
+Forced by some act of the city to abandon one idea,
+the next that followed found a new intractability. It
+seemed that there were no two heads in Jerusalem
+of a similar thought. Whoever was not demoralized
+by panic was fatally stubborn or mad. The single
+purpose that seemed to prevail was to hold out against
+reason.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally he determined to pick the most rational of
+his men and shape an army that would be distinctly
+Jewish and enviable. Nothing Roman should mar
+its organization. He would have again the six hundred
+Gibborim of David, and after he had formed
+them into a body he would trust to the existing circumstances
+to direct him how to proceed to the assistance
+of Jerusalem with them. He should be the sole
+captain, the sole authority, the single commander of
+them all. He would not have an unwieldy army, but
+one perfectly devoted. He would lead by his own
+genius, attract and command by his own personality.
+With six hundred absolutely subject to his will,
+trained in endurance and steadfastness, he could
+achieve more surely than with an undisciplined horde
+which first of all must be fed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout those days of predatory warfare he
+made careful selection of material for his army. As
+yet, while famine had not reduced Jerusalem to a
+skeleton, he could select for bodily strength and
+mental balance. He worked swiftly, sparing his
+men daily to the defense of the city against the
+Roman and daily sacrificing precious numbers of
+them to the pit of the dead just over the wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were weary days&ndash;days of increasing storm
+and multiplying calamity. Famine in some quarters
+of the city reached appalling proportions. Insurrections
+in these regions were so vigorously suppressed
+that the victims chose to starve and live rather than
+to revolt and perish. Pestilence broke out among the
+inhabitants near the eastern wall, against the other
+side of which the dead had been cast by hundreds;
+and a general flight from the city was stopped in full
+flood by the spectacle of some scores of unfortunates
+crucified by the Roman soldiers and set up in sight
+of the walls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Simon and John had a disastrous quarrel and during
+the interval, when the sentries and the fighting-men
+were killing each other, the Romans possessed
+the first fortification around Jerusalem, the Wall of
+Agrippa. The following day Titus pitched his camp
+within the limits of the Holy City, upon the site of
+Sennacherib's Assyrian bivouac.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At sight of this signal advance, tumult broke out
+afresh in the city and for days Titus lay calmly by,
+merely harassing the Jews while he watched Jerusalem
+weaken itself by internal combat. The Maccabee,
+steadily training his picked Gibborim, saw these
+lulls as signs that Titus was still in the hope that the
+city would submit to occupation and spare him the
+repugnant task of slaughtering half a nation. In
+his soul he knew that at no time would Titus be
+unwilling to receive the voluntary capitulation of the
+city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, composed and intent through struggle and terror,
+he continued to prepare for the day when an
+organized army could take the unhappy inhabitants
+out of the bloody hands of the two factionists, Simon
+and John.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During one of the casual attacks on the Second
+Wall, a lean, lash-scarred maniac that had not ceased
+to cry night or day for seven years, "Woe unto
+Jerusalem!" mounted the Old Second Wall, and there
+pointed to his breast and added, "Woe unto me
+also!" At that instant a great stone struck him
+and tumbling with it to the ground, he was crushed
+into the earth and left so buried for all time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the hushing of that embodiment of doom,
+silence fell upon the city and after that, panic; and
+during that Titus heaved his four legions against the
+Second Wall and took it. Simon was seized with
+frenzy, and with a body of crazed Idumeans rushed
+out upon the banks of the Romans and in one
+hour's time overthrew the army's work of days and
+so thoroughly set back the advance of the besieger
+that Titus resolved that no more insane sorties should
+be made from the gates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He retired to his camp and in a short time soldiers
+appeared with tape, stakes, sledges and spades and
+laid out an immense circle, all but compassing the
+great city of Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee saw all this. He stood on the wall
+above the roar and frenzy and looked across bleached
+stretches of sunny, rocky earth toward the orderly
+ranks of soldiers, the simple business, the tranquil
+speed of Rome making war, and understood that
+peaceful despatch as deadly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He saw the young general ride down to this circle,
+dismount and, catching a spade from the nearest
+legionary, drive it into the earth. When he tossed
+out the first clay, each of the men in the visible segment
+of that great cordon struck his implement into
+the ground. And even as the Maccabee watched, he
+saw grow up under his eyes a wall!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He understood. Titus was walling against a wall;
+turning upon the Jews that same thing which they
+had reared against him. As the Maccabee stood
+gazing transfixed at this grim work, he heard beside
+him an old voice say, with terrible conviction:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the
+prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee,
+how often would I have gathered thy children together,
+even as a hen gathereth her chickens under
+her wings, and ye would not!... For the days
+shall come upon thee, that thine enemies shall cast a
+trench about thee, and compass thee round, and keep
+thee in on every side, and shall lay thee even with the
+ground, and thy children within thee; and they shall
+not leave in thee one stone upon another; because
+thou knewest not the time of thy visitation.</i>"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee, shaken with the culmination of
+Rome's resolution and afraid in spite of himself,
+whirled angrily upon that voice speaking doom at
+his side. There in the old ragged tunic bound about
+him with rope, stood the old man he had rescued and
+had sheltered persistently for many days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man faced the young man's rage with
+supernatural composure and strength. With clenched
+hands, the Maccabee stood away from him and felt
+that he threatened with his fists a hoary citadel that
+armies had beaten themselves against in vain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee did not speak to his old pensioner.
+He felt the futility of words against this thing which
+seemed to be a revelation, denying absolutely all of
+his ambitions. He dropped from his position and,
+pushing his way through the distress upon the city,
+turned toward the house of Amaryllis. It was a
+climacteric hour, when men should look well to the
+protection of all that was near and dear to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was gone a strange, bent figure with long
+white hair and a gray distorted face came from the
+shadow of one of the towers and plucked the old
+Christian's tunic. The Christian turned and seeing
+who stood beside him said with intense surety in his
+tones:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is proven. Accept the Lord Jesus while it is
+time, my son, for behold the hour of the last day of
+this city is fulfilled!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The apparition lifted a palsied hand on which the
+skin was yet fair and young and pointed after the
+Maccabee, losing himself in the groaning mass in the
+city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If I believe, I must tell him!" he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whatever thou hast done against that man must
+be amended," the Christian declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The palsied figure shrank and wringing his hands
+about each other said in a whisper that sounded like
+wind among dried leaves:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I, who saw the candor of perfect trust in his
+eyes, once, I can not behold their reproach&ndash;I, who
+love him, and sold him&ndash;for a handful of gold!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old Christian laid his hand on the other's arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Another Judas?" he said. The apparition made
+no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nay, then; tell it me," the Christian urged. But
+the other shrank away from him, while distrust collected
+in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I fear thee; the evil man fears the good one, even
+more than the good man fears the evil one. I will
+not tell thee."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But thou hast thy bread from this Hesper; thou
+hast thy shelter from him. He will not injure thee."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Injure me! Not with his hands, perhaps. But
+he would look at me, he would kill me with his eyes!
+Thou canst not dream what evil I have done him!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old Christian looked at him for a time, but
+with the hopefulness of the spiritually confident.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Christ spare thee, till thou hast the strength to
+do right!" he exclaimed. But the palsied man covered
+his face with his hands and groaned. The old
+Christian took him by the arm and led him down from
+the wall and back to the cavern under the ruins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In thy good time, O Lord," he said to himself,
+beginning with that incident a ministry that should
+not end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was dark when the Maccabee came down into
+the ravine in which the Greek's house was builded.
+In the shadow the house cast before it he saw some
+one pass the sentry lines. The soldiers looked after
+that figure. Presently, emerging into the lesser darkness
+of the open streets, it proved to be a woman.
+The Maccabee stopped. By the movements, now hurried,
+now slow, he believed that the night was full of
+apprehension for this unknown faring into the disordered
+city. She was coming in his direction. He
+stepped into shadow to see who would come forth
+from shelter at such an hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next instant she hurried by his hiding-place
+and the Maccabee saw with amazement that it was the
+girl he loved. He sprang out to speak to her, but
+the sound of his footsteps frightened her and she ran.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The whole hilly foreground of Jerusalem was lifted
+like a black and impending cloud over her, a-throb
+with violence and strife. Here and there were lights
+on the bosom of the looming blackness, but they only
+emphasized the darkness pressing on the outskirts of
+the radiance. Every area way and alley had its
+sound. The air was full of footsteps; behind her a
+voice called to her. She dashed by yawning darkness
+that was an open alley, hurried toward lights, halted
+precipitately at signals of danger and veered aside
+at unexpected sounds. Once she stumbled upon the
+body of a sleeper who had come down into the darkness
+of the ravine to pass the night. At her suppressed
+cry the Maccabee sprang forward, but she
+caught herself and ran faster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ceased then to attempt to stop her. Curiosity
+to know what brought her out into danger at night
+impelled him to follow near enough to protect her,
+but unsuspected until she had revealed her mission
+to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A hungry dog, probably the last one to escape the
+execution which had been meted out to all useless
+consumers of food, barked at her heels and brought
+her up sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The beast in his siege of her circled in the dark
+around near enough to the Maccabee hidden in the
+darkness for him to deliver a vindictive kick in the
+staring ribs of the brute. When the howl of the
+surprised dog faded up the black ravine, Laodice
+ran on. The Maccabee, silently pursuing, heard with
+a contracting heart that she was crying softly from
+terror and bewilderment. Not yet, however, had she
+approached the danger of Jerusalem, which John had
+kept far removed from the precincts of Amaryllis'
+house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was entering Akra. The heap of grain, yet
+burning, showed a dull black-red mound over which
+towered a column of strong incense. Here, for the
+night was cool, lay in circles many of the unhoused
+Passover guests. Here, also, was wakefulness and
+the hatchment of evil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The running girl was upon them before she knew
+it. One of the figures that sat with its back to the
+dull glow saw her approaching. Instantly he rose
+upon one knee and snatched her dress as she ran.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jerked from her balance, she screamed and threw
+out her hands to keep from falling upon the shoulders
+of her assailant. One or two others with unintelligible
+sounds struggled up, and as she fell, the Maccabee
+leaped from the darkness, wrenched her from the
+grasp of her captor, and warding off attack with
+his knife, fled with her into the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The transfer of control over her had been made so
+swiftly that in her stupor of terror she hardly realized
+it. She was struggling silently and strongly in
+his hold, when he clasped her to him with a firmer
+impulsive embrace and whispered to her:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Comfort thee, dear heart! It is I, Hesper!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She ceased to resist so suddenly and was so tensely
+still that he knew the shock of immense reaction was
+having its way with her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knew without asking that she had been forced
+to leave the shelter of the Greek's roof, and though
+his rage threatened to rise up and blind him he was
+not entirely unaware of the benefit the inhospitality
+of others had given him. At last she was with him;
+entirely in his care.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a safe shelter into which she was brought,
+but no luxurious one. There was light enough from
+the single torch stuck in a crevice in the ancient rock
+to show that it was habitable. The immense floor was
+packed hard by the trampling of many feet; overhead,
+lost in gloom, there must have been a rocky
+roof, but it was invisible. On the ledges of rocks
+were belongings by heaps and collections, showing that
+this was an abiding-place for great numbers. In the
+far shadows she distinguished long, silent, mummied
+windrows of men wrapped in blankets, sleeping.
+Huge gloomy piles of provisions filled up shadowy
+corners; about under the light was the litter left in
+the wake of human counsel; over all was the air of
+repose and occupancy that made a home out of the
+burrow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though the place held a great number of refugees,
+the footstep of the Maccabee wakened resounding
+emptiness. At the threshold he slackened his step
+and looked with pathetic anxiety at whatever light on
+Laodice's face would show her opinion of her refuge.
+But the uncertain torch revealed nothing and he led
+her in and across to a solitary place where rugs from
+some looted house had been folded up for a pallet
+and spread about for carpets. She sat down and
+awaited his speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He motioned to the spacious barrenness about him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Canst thou content thyself in this place?" he
+asked, hesitating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She nodded, but feeling that her reply had not
+shown all that words might, she lifted her face that
+he might see therein that which she could not trust
+her lips to say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was her undoing. Her weakness overwhelmed
+her and burying her face in the folds of her mantle,
+she wept.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a dismayed silence, he bent over her and said
+with a quiver of distress in his voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I&ndash;I have work, here, to do, but I shall take
+thee out of the city for better refuge&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That she should seem to be grieving over the
+nature of the shelter given her, stirred her deeply.
+She half rose and with the light shining on her face,
+filled with gratitude in spite of her tears, took his
+hand in both of hers and pressed it with pathetic
+insistence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He understood her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laid a hand unsteady with its tremor of delight
+and young eagerness upon the vitta and it slipped
+off her hair. As it dropped, the subtle warm fragrance
+of the heavy locks, now braided in maidenly
+style, reached him; the liveliness of her relaxed young
+figure communicated itself to him without his touch;
+all the invitation of her helplessness swept him to the
+very edge of abandoning his restraint. On his dark
+face a transformation occurred. All the hardness,
+even his years and his experience vanished from him
+and a soft recovering flush faintly colored his cheeks.
+In that sudden bloom of beauty in his face was
+stamped a realization of the far progress of his
+triumph. She was in his house and dependent on
+him, within the very reach of his arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she looked up at him again, she read all this
+in his face, and instantly there returned to her, with
+warning intensity, the fear of her love of him. The
+last obstacle but her own conscience that stood between
+her and his perfect supremacy over her life had suddenly
+been swept away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She started away from him, and put up her hands
+to ward off his touch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If you do that," she said in a tone sharp with
+distress, "it is sin and I shall be cursed! I shall have
+to go back to him!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she had voluntarily left Julian, perhaps to
+seek him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You shall not go back to him!" he exclaimed.
+"After I have given up everything but my life to
+have you for myself!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You must not think of me in that way!" she
+commanded him vehemently. "I am a married
+woman! You shall remember that! If you forget
+it, I will go out into the streets and ask the Idumeans
+to kill me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nay, peace, peace! I shall do you no harm!
+You are frightened! I will do nothing that you
+would not have me do! Be comforted. Not any one
+in all the world has your happiness at heart so much
+as I. Believe me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Believe <i>me</i>!" she insisted. "I am weary of
+doubt and denial. I am only safe if you recognize
+me as that which I claim to be. Answer me! You do
+believe I am the wife of Philadelphus?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I believed it, at once," he said frankly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then&ndash;then&ndash;" but she flung her hands over
+her face and slipped down on the rugs. For a
+moment he hesitated, restraining the impulse to break
+over the limits she had laid down for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he rose and, summoning one of the women
+who had taken refuge in the crypt, sent her to remain
+with the girl, and departed, shaken and uncertain, to
+his own place.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch18">Chapter XVIII</h2>
+
+<h2>IN THE SUNLESS CRYPT</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+The twilight of the cavern rarely revealed enough
+of the features of her fellows to Laodice for her to
+identify them or for them to identify her. She lived
+among them a dusky shadow among shadows. And
+because of her fear that Philadelphus might be
+searching for her, she stayed in the sunless crypt day
+by day until the Maccabee, noting with affectionate
+distress that she was growing white and weak, bade
+her take one of the women and venture up to the
+light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were, besides the women, two men who took
+no part in the preparation for war which went on
+about them in the cavern day and night. While
+weapons and armor were made and tramping ranks
+formed and broke before the commands of the lithe
+dark commander of that fortress and subdued but
+fierce councils took place around torches&ndash;while all
+this went on, they kept back, even apart from the
+women, and said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice saw that they were physically unfit; that
+one was very old and the other very feeble and her
+heart warmed again to that stern master who saw
+them fed as abundantly as his most valued men.
+These, then, were those Christians whom he had taken
+into his protection because of the Name which had
+inspired a shepherd boy to save his life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he commanded Laodice to go up into the
+sunlight, he approached the corner in which the two
+useless men hid and bade them, too, to go up into
+the air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let us have no sickness in this place," he said
+bluntly and turned on his heel and left them to obey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice took one of the older women and timidly
+climbing the steps from which the rubbish had been
+pushed away by the climbing hundreds, went through
+the dusk of the passage that terminated in a brilliancy
+that dazzled her. And as she walked she
+heard the footsteps of the two men behind her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up in the chaos of fallen columns, she stood a
+moment with her hands pressed over her eyes.
+Only little by little was she able to permit the full
+blaze of the Judean sun to reach them. The uproar
+on Jerusalem after the muffled silence of the underground
+cavern filled her with terror, and she pressed
+close to the shelter of the entrance until the woman
+at her side reassured her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is nothing," the woman said, with a dreary
+patience. "It is as it was yesterday. I come here
+every day. I know."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a while Laodice looked about her. The entrance
+to their refuge was about the middle of the
+ruin and therefore a great many paces back from the
+streets, so that she did not see Jerusalem's agonies
+face to face. But she saw enough to make her cold
+and to turn her shivering and panic-stricken into the
+darkness of the crypt below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw the ascending streets of Zion and the tall
+fortifications mounting the heights within the city's
+limits. There she saw the flash of swords, swung
+afar off, spears brandished and the running hither
+and thither of defenders on the wall. Below she saw
+the remote constricted passages between rows of desolate
+houses, moving with people, sounding with
+clamor. There she saw combats, terrible scenes of
+frenzy, deaths and unnamable horrors; starvelings
+gnawing their nails; shadows of infants pressed to
+hollow bosoms; old men too weak to walk that went
+on hands and knees; young men and young women
+in rags that failed to cover them, and wandering
+skeletons screaming, "Woe!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile huge stones mounted over the walls and
+fell within the city; three great towers planted beyond
+the walls, out of range of the Jewish engines
+and equipped with superior machines, were steadily
+devastating the entire quarter near which they were
+erected. Here two-thirds of the forces of Jerusalem
+were concentrated in a vain effort to resist the dire
+inroads of these effective engines. Here, the Maccabee
+and his Gibborim stood shoulder to shoulder
+with the Idumeans and fanatics of Simon and John,
+and here the half-mad defenders awakened at last to
+the fact that only divine interference could save the
+city against Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the south and the east conflagrations roared
+and crackled, where burning oil had been scattered
+over some remaining structures near the walls. When
+a great ram began its thunder somewhere near the
+Sheep Gate, there came a hollow booming noise of
+deafening volume from the charnel pits outside the
+walls and a black cloud of incredible depth soared up
+into the skies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice, dumb with horror, looked at the prodigy
+without understanding, but the woman at her side
+shuddered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"God help us!" she exclaimed. "They are vultures!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice turned to rush back into the cavern and
+so faced the two men who stood behind her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One, at sight of her, shrank with a gasp, and,
+averting his shaggy head till the long white locks
+covered his face, fled back into the crypt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other was gazing with unseeing eyes across
+groaning Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>I am the man</i>," he was saying aloud, but to himself,
+"<i>that hath seen affliction by the rod of His
+wrath.</i>"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sight of him had a paralyzing effect upon
+Laodice. She saw, before her, Nathan, the Christian,
+who had buried her father, who had blessed her, who
+would know and could testify to a surety that she was
+the wife of Philadelphus!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She slipped by him without a sound and hurried
+down into the darkest corner of the cavern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Circumstance had found her in her refuge and
+would drive her away from this sweet home back to
+that hateful house, to the man she did not love!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For many days, with increasing distress, Laodice
+avoided Nathan, the Christian. With that fascinated
+terror which at times forces human creatures to examine
+a peril, she felt irresistibly impelled to try his
+memory of events, that she might know if indeed he
+would recognize her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though she turned cold and flashed white when he
+came upon her one day in the darkness of their
+shelter, she felt nevertheless the relief of approaching
+a solution to her perplexity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They tell me," he said with the deliberate speech
+of the old, "that Titus is once more permitting citizens
+to depart from Jerusalem unharmed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then," she said, grasping at this hope, "why
+do you stay here in this peril?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why should I leave it? Even with the singers
+who wept by the waters of Babylon, I prefer Jerusalem
+above my chief joy. Except for the time when
+we of the Way were warned to depart, I have been
+in Jerusalem all my life. Then, though I had gone
+as far as Cęsarea on my way to Antioch to join the
+brethren there, homesickness overtook me and I
+turned in my tracks, saying no man farewell, and
+came back."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A weary journey for one so old," she said gently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Would he remember also that it had been dangerous?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nay, but a journey full of works and reward.
+And I discovered at the end of it that I had lived in
+error forty years; that Christ never ceases to prove
+Himself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Already the forbidden tenets of the Nazarene faith
+had entered into his words. But feeling somehow
+that her deflection from uprightness covered her whole
+life, there was no reason why she should not hear
+what these people believed and have done with it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Art thou a Christian?" she asked timidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am a believer in Christ, but whether I may call
+myself one of the blessed I do not know, for they
+have had faith. But I demanded a sign. Behold it!
+The ruin of the City of David!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes widened with alarm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is there no hope?" she exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her, even in his old age impressed
+with the immense importance life and love must have
+to so beautiful and beloved a woman. Presently he
+said, as if to himself:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yea, be thou blessed, O thou Redeemer, that givest
+life to them to whom life is dear and death approacheth."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her concern for concealment vanished entirely in
+her rising terror for the future of the Holy City.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I pray thee, Rabbi," she said in a low voice, drawing
+close to him, "tell me what thy people believe
+about the city. I have heard&ndash;but it can not be
+true!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do not be troubled about the city," he answered.
+"Ask me rather how to become safeguarded against
+any disaster, greater even than the fall of cities."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not for myself," she protested earnestly,
+"but for the world. Is there not a King to come to
+Israel?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is, but not yet, my daughter. Of that
+day and hour no man knoweth. Now is Daniel's
+abomination of desolation; the generation passeth
+and the prophecy is fulfilled. Jerusalem is perishing."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seeing the wave of panic sweep over her, he put
+out a soothing hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yet, do not fear. For such as you the Redeemer
+died; for your kind the Kingdom of Heaven is built,
+and the King whom the earth did not receive is for
+ever Lord of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The veiled reference to the tragedy which Philadelphus
+had recounted stood out with more prominence
+than the promise in his words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whom the earth did not receive?" she repeated.
+"O prophet, as thou boasteth truthful lips and a
+hoary head, tell me what hath befallen us."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hear it not as a calamity," he said reassuringly.
+"Thou canst make it of all things the most profitable,
+if thou wilt. Forget the city. I, who would
+forget it but can not, bid thee do this. Behold, there
+is another Jerusalem which shall not fall. Look to
+that and be not afraid."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her lips, parted to protest against the vague
+answer, closed at the final sentence and the Christian
+pressed his advantage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Of that Jerusalem there is no like on earth.
+Against its walls no enemy ever comes; neither warfare
+nor hunger nor thirst nor suffering nor death.
+This which David builded is a poor city, a humble
+city compared to that New Jerusalem. There the
+King is already come; there the citizens are at peace
+and in love with one another. There thou shalt have
+all that thy heart yearneth after, and all that thy
+heart yearneth after shall be right."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In that city would it be right that she love Hesper
+instead of Philadelphus, and that she should have her
+lover instead of her lawful husband?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While she turned these things over in her mind,
+he wisely went on with his story. Shrewdly sensing
+the young woman's anxiety, the old Christian guessed
+the interest to her of the Messiah's history before
+His teaching and began with prophecy to support
+the authenticity of the wonderful Galilean's claim to
+divinity. It was no fisherman or weaver of tent-cloth
+who brought forth the declarations of the comforter
+of Hezekiah, the captive prophet and the priest in
+the land of the Chaldeans. His was no barbarous
+manner or slipshod tongue of the market-place and
+the wheat-fields, but the polish and the clean-cut flawless
+language of the synagogues and the colleges.
+Laodice saw in the gesture and phrase the refinement
+of her father, Costobarus, of the gentlest Judean
+blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I saw Him," he went on in a low voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice with her intent gaze on the beatified face
+put her hand to her heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Forty years ago," the old voice continued, "I
+saw Him first in Galilee. There He was disbelieved
+and cast out. He came then unto Jerusalem and I
+saw Him there heal lepers, cast out evil spirits, cure
+the blind and the sick and the palsied. And in the
+house of Jairus and at Nain, I saw Him raise the
+dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I saw Him come to Jerusalem. Multitudes followed
+Him and accompanied Him, casting their mantles
+and palm-branches in the way that His mule
+might tread upon them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man pointed south toward the single summit
+from which Christ approaching could overlook
+Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On that hill," he said, "while the multitudes
+hailed Him and the sound of Alleluia shook the air,
+He reined in His meek beast and looked upon this
+city, and wept over it. When He spoke, He said, <i>If
+thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day,
+the things which belong unto thy peace! but now
+they are hid from thine eyes. For the days shall
+come upon thee, that thine enemies shall cast a trench
+about thee, and compass thee round, and keep thee in
+on every side, and shall lay thee even with the ground,
+and thy children within thee; and they shall not leave
+in thee one stone upon another; because thou knewest
+not the time of thy visitation.</i>
+</p>
+
+<div class="ctr">
+ <a href="images/image06l.jpg">
+ <img src="images/image06.jpg"
+ alt='"And there His enemies crucified Him."'
+ title='"And there His enemies crucified Him."' />
+</a> <p class="caption">"And there His enemies crucified Him."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+"And three days later, I saw the Rock of David
+and all that multitude follow Him unto the Hill of the
+Skull and there His enemies crucified Him!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a paralyzed silence, Laodice whispered with
+frozen lips,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In God's name, why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he wisely did not pause with the calamity. He
+had the whole of the beginnings of Christianity to
+tell, a long narrative that contained as yet no dogma.
+Paul had seen the great light on the road to Damascus,
+and accepting apostleship to all the world had
+fought a good fight and had come unto his crown
+of righteousness; Peter had established the Church
+and had fed the sheep and had been offered up by
+the Beast who was Nero; John the Divine was seeing
+visions of the Apocalypse in the Island of Patmos;
+Herod Antipas, "that fox," had passed to his own
+place, prisoner and exile, sacrifice to a mad Cęsar's
+imaginings; Judas had hanged himself; Pilate had
+drowned himself; thousands of the saints had died
+for the faith by fire and sword and wild beasts; kings
+had been converted and of the believers in Rome it
+was said, <i>Your faith is spoken of throughout the
+whole world</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice sat with clasped hands, intent on each word
+as it fell from the lips of the aged teacher, seeing
+at one and the same time the Kingdom of Heaven
+constructed and her dream of an earthly empire
+falling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He said," the Christian continued, "<i>They that
+are whole need not a physician; but they that are sick.
+I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.</i>"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Repentance was a rite for Laodice, a payment of
+offering, a process to the righteously inclined, a
+thing that could in no wise purify the sinner as to
+make him worthy of association with the upright.
+The old Christian's use of the word was different;
+he had said that the Messiah came to the sinner,
+and not to the righteous. Had the young Jewess
+been less in need of comfort in her own consciousness
+of spiritual delinquency she would have set down the
+old teacher as one of the idlest dealers in contradiction.
+But now she listened with keener zest; perchance
+in this doctrine there was balm for her hurt.
+She made some answer which showed the awakening
+of this new interest and then with infinite poetry and
+earnestness he began to unfold the teachings of
+Christ.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A woman came to them with wine and food, for the
+midday had come, but neither noticed it. In his fervor
+to enlighten this tender soul, the old man forgot
+his weariness; in her wonder at the strangely gentle
+doctrine which had contradicted all the world's previous
+usage, the girl forgot her prejudice. She listened;
+and with such signs as change of expression,
+flushes of emotion, movements of surprise and brightenings
+of interest to encourage him, the old Christian
+talked. When he had progressed sufficiently to round
+out the theory of Christianity, she had grasped a new
+standard. The contrast between the old and the new
+made itself instantly felt. On one hand was the simple
+and logical; on the other the complex and dogmatic.
+The Christian was able to measure proportionately
+how much should be laid upon her mind for
+study at once and while she still waited, he rose from
+his place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is more; yet there are other days," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she caught his hand as he rose and with a
+sudden yearning in her eyes whispered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O Rabbi, what said He of love?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Love?" he repeated, with a softening about his
+lips. "The Master blessed love between man and
+woman."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But, but&ndash;" she faltered, "if one love another
+than one's wedded spouse, then what?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His face grew grave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is not lawful even among you, who are still
+of the old faith."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But suppose&ndash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laid a kindly hand on the one that held his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Suffer but sin not. He that endureth unto the
+end shall be saved."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What end?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Death."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was silent while she gazed at him with change
+showing on her gradually paling face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then&ndash;then what is in thy faith for the forlorn
+in love?" she exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Peace, and the consciousness of the joy of Christ
+in your steadfastness," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose. How much longer had she to live?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And thou sayest we die?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>Fear not them which kill the body, but are not
+able to kill the soul</i>," he said gently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fear Hesper, then, but not the Roman. While
+she stood in the immense debate of heart and conscience
+he laid a tender hand on her head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perchance in His mercy thou shalt be welcomed
+there first by thy father, whom I buried, and by thy
+mother."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sudden recurrence to that past tragedy and the
+unfolding of his recognition fairly swept Laodice
+off her feet with shock and alarm. If he noted her
+feeling, he was sorry he had not succeeded in comforting
+her with a promise of reunion with her beloved
+in that other land. He took away his tremulous
+hand from her hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leaving her transfixed with all he had said, he
+moved painfully away, stiffened by long sitting while
+he discoursed.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch19">Chapter XIX</h2>
+
+<h2>THE FALSE PROPHET</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+It was a different Amaryllis that the pretended
+Philadelphus faced now, from the one who had welcomed
+him on his arrival in Jerusalem months ago.
+Then she had been so cold and self-contained that
+it would have been effrontery to discuss her hopes with
+her. Now, with the avarice of love in her eyes, with
+wishfulness and defeat making their sorry signs on
+her face, she was a creature that even the humblest
+would have longed to help.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus sat opposite her in the ivory chair
+which was hers by right. She sat in the exedra and
+listened eagerly to the things he said with her finger-tips
+on her lips and her eyes gazing from under her
+brow as her head drooped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had ceased long ago to debate idly on the actual
+identity of the man who had called himself Hesper
+of Ephesus. There was another question that
+absorbed her. Of late, it had been brought home to
+her that the charm of Laodice for the stranger from
+Ephesus, to whom the Greek knew the girl had fled,
+had been her purity. Why should it matter so much
+about virtue? she had asked herself. Why should
+it weigh so immeasurably more than the noble gifts
+of wit and beauty and strength and charm? Behold,
+she was wise enough to educate a barbarous nation,
+beautiful enough to bewitch potentates&ndash;for
+a time&ndash;strong enough to take a city; yet Hesper,
+who best of all could appreciate the value of these
+things, had turned from her to Laodice, who was
+merely chaste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The greater part of the jealous and bitter passion
+that had shaken her then was dumb regret that
+the measure of charm was so irrational&ndash;and that
+she had not believed in it, in time, in time!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, however, since she had become convinced
+that Laodice had gone to Hesper for refuge, hope
+had awakened in her, but so filled with uncertainty
+and lack of confidence in another's weakness that it
+was little more than a torture to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If Laodice had gone to this winsome stranger,
+either claiming to be the wife of Philadelphus or acknowledging
+the imposture, there was now no difference
+between Laodice and herself!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, she asked herself, was it not possible that this
+lovely girl who had shown signs of illimitable fortitude,
+could live in the shelter of the captivating Hesper
+as uprightly as she had lived under the roof of
+the man she called her husband?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In one exigency, the hopes of Amaryllis budded;
+in the other, her intuitive belief in the strength of
+Laodice discouraged her. And while she alternately
+hoped and doubted, Philadelphus, in the chair opposite
+her, talked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It follows that you and I must work together to
+gain diverse ends. If our fortunes are to be tragic,
+we are undoing each other in this conjunction. Since
+I in all frankness prefer it to turn out comedy, let
+us make no error. Are you weary of John? Do
+you seek a new diversion?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him, at first puzzled, then with a
+frown. It leaped to her lips, grown impatient with
+suffering, to tell him all that she had evolved of the
+histories of himself, his lady and of Hesper; but
+there seemed to be an element of recklessness in that
+which threatened to do away with a means for her success.
+He did not wait for her answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I," he said with mock intensity, "am done
+to death with weariness&ndash;with my moneyer, this
+lady of mine. Let us be diverted while we live, for
+by the signs we shall all die soon."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where," he began when her mind wandered entirely
+from him, "dost thou think the mysterious man
+hath taken my other wife?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would I knew," he continued, conducting his
+inquiry alone. "It will be right simple to have her
+beauty spoiled in this hungry town, unless he takes
+tenderest care of her."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was still no comment, but the lively sparkle
+in the Greek's eye showed that he had touched upon a
+jealous spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And by the by," he pursued, "what does this
+stranger, whom I can not remember having known,
+look like? A villain?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She answered now in a voice filled with rancor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Win away the girl from him and thou wilt know
+thyself to be the better man; but study how much
+he hath outstripped thee and thou shalt decide for
+thyself, then, that he is handsomer, more winsome,
+stronger and more profitable. Describe him for thyself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Out upon you! How irritable misfortune makes
+most of us! Now, here is my lady. She would fail
+to see the humor in my fetching back this pretty impostor.
+Alas! Were I Deucalion or Pyrrha or whoever
+else it was that repeopled the world, I should
+have left jealousy out of the make-up of wives. It
+is a needless element. It gives them no pleasure, and
+Jove! how inconvenient it is for husbands! Now, I
+am not jealous of my wife. In fact, had any man
+the hardihood to supplant me, I should not discourage
+him; I should not, by my soul!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why," she burst out again, irritated beyond control
+at his manner, "do you not leave this place?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He swung his foot idly and smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall when I can take with me this dear pretty
+impostor who is so determined to have me," he answered
+lightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Will you?" she asked eagerly. "Is that why
+you remain?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And for my lady's dowry. She keeps the key.
+But had I the girl cloaked and hooded for flight, I
+might go, even without the treasure. The times are
+precarious, you observe."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose almost precipitately and hurried over to
+the swaying curtain of some heavy white material
+like samite, covering that which appeared to be
+a blind arch in the wall. She drew the hanging
+aside. It had hidden the black mouth of a tunnel,
+closed by a brass wicket which was locked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here," she said rapidly, "is what strengthens
+John in his folly. This is a passage that leads under
+the Temple through Moriah into Tophet. The whole
+city is underlaid with these galleries, but this is the
+only one which leads to safety."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She dropped the curtain and approached him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But thou canst not go out of that passage alone!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled, and then with that boyish impulsiveness
+that he had cultivated to cover the evil in his
+nature, he thrust out his hand to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here is my hand on it!" he exclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go, then, and cease not till you have found her.
+Then, by any or all the gods, I shall see that you do
+not go out of that passage empty-handed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled at her radiantly and went at once to his
+chambers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he reached the apartments, he found them silent
+and deserted. He seized upon the opportunity
+as most propitious for a search for the possible hiding-place
+of the dowry of two hundred talents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he opened first the great press in which his
+lady kept her raiment he was confronted by emptiness.
+Dismayed, he turned to look into the room and
+found the chests for the most part open and rifled.
+On the brazier, now cold, lay a wax tablet. He
+snatched it up and read:
+</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>
+Received of Julian of Ephesus the appended salvage in
+good repair. Items: One wife, Two hundred talents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+JOHN, KING OF JERUSALEM.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+He went back to the andronitis of Amaryllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have lost interest in the treasure," he said whimsically.
+"But I'll go out and look for the girl. I&ndash;I
+should like to discover of a truth if the passage
+leads out of Jerusalem."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis closed her lips firmly. Philadelphus read
+in the look that he could not escape without Laodice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without further speech, he went to the vestibule,
+took his cloak and kerchief from the porter and went
+out into the city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was nearly midnight when he passed into the
+streets. The tumult of assault on the walls had
+ceased. The long lines of beacon-fires on the walls
+showed only a few men in arms posted there. Without
+there came no sound of activity in the camp of the
+Roman. The streets below, lighted up by the ever-burning
+beacons, showed its usual restless tramping
+of houseless, hungry ones. But there was no talk;
+each one who walked the passages went wrapped in
+his own dismal thoughts; the thousands took no notice
+of one another. Jerusalem was as silent as a city
+stricken with plague.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the summit of Zion, which Philadelphus
+mounted, he could see three Roman war-towers,
+planted along the outer works, dimly lighted, and
+manned by a vigilant garrison of legionaries. These
+had been a dread and a destruction which the Jews had
+been unable to overthrow; coigns of vantage from
+which the enemy had been able to deal the sturdiest
+blows of the campaign. They had permitted no rest
+to the defenders on the wall; they had spread ruin
+by fire and carnage, by arrow and sling for days.
+Sorties against them had resulted in the death of their
+assailants, only. Jewish engines accomplished nothing
+against them. The three, alone, were taking Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus looked at their tall shapes, black
+against the remote illumination of the Roman camp,
+and inwardly hoped that they would hold off complete
+destruction of the city, until he had found the
+desirable woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one noticed him; men passed him like shadows
+with their eyes ever on the ground; no one spoke;
+nothing disturbed the deadly quiet of the falling
+city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the next minute, Philadelphus, who walked
+alertly, saw people step out into gutters or press
+against walls, as if to allow some one to pass. Awakening
+interest ran abroad over the street ahead of
+him. A lane between the wandering multitude
+opened almost by magic. Through it, walking
+swiftly, his head up, his mystic eyes ignited, came
+Seraiah, soldier of Jehovah. There was no sound of
+his footfall. His garments flashed in the light of
+the beacons, but there was not even a whisper of their
+motion. But he had changed. There was fierce,
+superhuman intent in the despatch of his gait and in
+the uplift of his superb head. After him, as he
+passed, ran whispers. Each one stopped and looked.
+He went down the uneven slope of Zion as some great
+shade borne on a swift air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two or three bold ones began to move after him.
+Others followed. The little nucleus grew. Philadelphus
+was caught in it. Numbers were added as
+courage grew with numbers. From intersecting
+streets people came. Some, although oppressed by
+the silence, asked what it was and were silenced
+quickly. Others began to mutter unintelligible predictions,
+and their neighbors shook their heads without
+understanding that which was said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The news of Seraiah's mysterious progress communicated
+itself to rank and rank and spread abroad.
+Faces appeared against a background of lights at
+barred windows, along the balustrades of house-tops,
+from areas and ruins. Philadelphus, fascinated and
+astonished at this curious demonstration, was contented
+to pass with it. Silence, except for the rustling
+of garments and the multitudinous footfall, fell
+about the vicinity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ahead of them, Seraiah moved. His steps, finely
+balanced, passed over obstructions where most of his
+followers stumbled, and when he turned across Akra
+and faced the Old Wall, the excitement became painful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His pace was flying; many of his followers were
+running. It seemed that he was going against the
+Wall. Dozens anticipated that course and skirting
+through short ways clambered up on the fortifications
+and clung there though menaced by the sentries until
+Seraiah appeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At a narrow point in the street that ended against
+the wall, Seraiah met that Jew who had become a
+maniac on the day Jerusalem attacked Titus. Without
+warning the maniac leaped up into an intensely
+rigid posture; his legs spread, his lean arms upstretched
+at painful tension, his mouth wide, his eyes
+dilated immensely in their hollow depths.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seraiah passed him as if no man stood in his way.
+Instantly the maniac wheeled, as a huge spread-eagle
+wind-vane on its staff, and stood at gaze, the broad
+uninterrupted light of the beacon shining down on
+him and the mysterious man. The street ended short
+of the wall. About the base of the fortification was
+an open space, in which was planted a scaling-ladder.
+Seraiah climbed this, an infinitesimal detail on the
+great blank of blackened stone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hundreds, rushing upon the wall, though a goodly
+distance from the point at which the strange man had
+mounted, climbed it and beat off the sentries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the foremost who reached the top saw the
+Roman Tower directly opposite Seraiah shudder suddenly
+and sink in a roaring cloud of dust upon itself
+to the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly the maniac below broke the tense silence
+with a scream that was heard in the paralyzed Roman
+camp:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is He, the Deliverer! Come!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the thousands of Jews that heard the madman's
+cry, every heart credited it. Hundreds melted away
+suddenly, as if stricken with terror at what they might
+see; other hundreds scrambled down from their places
+to run purposelessly, crying aimless things to the
+night over the city; yet others covered their faces with
+their arms and fell in their places, expecting the end
+of the world; and of the rest, the less imaginative, the
+more composed and the more curious, remained on
+the walls to see enacted a further miracle. Uproar
+had broken out instantly among the four stolid legions
+of Titus on the Assyrian bivouac. Lights
+flashed out everywhere; great running to and fro
+could be distinguished; rapid trumpet-calls and
+the prolonged roll of drums from company quarters
+to quarters were echoed back from Antonia and from
+Hippicus. The startled shouts of commanders; the
+nervous dropping of arms; the sharp excited response
+to roll-call; the sound of sentries challenging, the curt
+response by countersign, showed everywhere irregularities
+and the symptoms of panic in the immovable
+ranks of Titus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seraiah meanwhile had disappeared from his place
+as mysteriously as he had come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many of the Jews who remained on the wall believed
+that he had passed into the Roman camp and
+was troubling it. The fall of the tower, and the confusion
+it had wrought in the Roman camp, never occurred
+to them to have been fortuitous incidents with
+which Seraiah had nothing to do. Of the thousands
+that witnessed that miracle, most of them were convinced
+that the hour had come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Jerusalem was roaring with excitement.
+The city was ready for a Messiah. Seraiah had
+arisen at the psychological moment. Earlier the
+Jews would have been too critical to accept him readily;
+later they would have reviled him for coming too
+late. Whatever his advent lacked in thunders, in
+darkness, voices, and shaking of the earth, had been
+passed by his miraculous work against the Romans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus, who had seen the fall of the tower,
+and had dropped down from the wall as soon as he
+had explained it all to himself, came upon new disorders.
+Great concourses of awakened Jews were
+hurrying to the walls to see what had happened, or
+to behold the Roman army wiped out by the Angel
+of Death as the army of Sennacherib had perished.
+Others collected at the end of the Tyropean Bridge
+and watched the pinnacle of the Temple for the miracle
+which should restore the city. But the burned
+ruin where the Herodian palace had stood was the
+center of the most characteristic frenzy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There thousands were congregated. A great bonfire
+had been kindled and above the multitude, on a
+colossal architrave fallen at one end from the giant
+columns that had supported it, stood a figure,
+redly illuminated by the fire, tiny as compared to
+the immense ruin of its high place, but Titan in its
+control over the wild mob below it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a woman, a Jewess, dressed in faithful imitation
+of the archaic garb of the prophetesses, mantled
+with a storm of flying black hair, stripped of
+veil or cloak, and splendidly defiant of the restrictions
+laid upon woman long after the days of Deborah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Over the heads of the panting multitude she shook
+a pair of arms that glistened for whiteness, and bewitched
+by the spell of their motion. From under her
+half-fallen lids shot gleams of fire that transfixed any
+upon whom they fell; from her supple body shaken
+at times with the power of its own dynamic force
+her hearers caught the grosser infection of physical
+excitement; they swayed with her as blown by the
+wind; they ceased to breathe in her periods; they
+groaned as the intensity of her fervor pressed upon
+them for response that they could not shape in words;
+they wept, they shouted, they prophesied, and over
+them swept ever the witchery of her wonderful voice,
+preaching impiety&ndash;the worship of Seraiah!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus looked at this frantic work with a
+creeping chill. He knew the sorceress. Salome of
+Ephesus, who could send the sated theaters wild with
+her appeal to their senses, had found enchantment of
+a half-mad city not hard. Aside from the impiety,
+in fear of which his own irreligious spirit stood, he
+saw suddenly opened to him the immense scope of
+her influence. Not Simon, not John, not Titus, had
+discovered the logical appeal to the city's unbalanced
+impulses. But the reckless woman, robing herself in
+the ancient garb of the days to which the citizens
+would revert, assuming the pose of a woman they had
+sanctified, preaching the dogma they would hear,
+showing them the sign that helped them most, held
+Jerusalem, at least for that hour, in her hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He realized at once that to attempt to denounce
+her would expose him to destruction at the wolfish
+hands of the frenzied mob. There were not soldiers
+enough in the city to destroy her influence, for she
+had achieved in her followers that infatuation that
+goes down to death before it relinquishes its conviction.
+Her control was complete. Seraiah was the
+anointed one, but the prophetess, the instigator, the
+founder of the worship, as follows in all apostasies,
+was the final recipient of the benefits of that devotion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus walked away from the sight of Salome's
+triumph. He had surrendered instantly his
+hope of regaining the treasure. The whole of mad
+Jerusalem had ranged itself with her to protect it.
+And Laodice was not yet found.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch20">Chapter XX</h2>
+
+<h2>AS THE FOAM UPON WATER</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+The madness on Jerusalem poured like an overwhelming
+flood into the cavern under the ruin of the
+Herodian palaces. There was Hesper, with most of
+his Gibborim gathered, preparing to proceed to the
+defense of the First Wall in Akra against which the
+Roman would hurl himself in the morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For days he had controlled his men only by the
+force of his fierce will. Restlessness, little short of
+turbulence, had changed his six hundred from earnest
+recruits to bright-eyed, contentious, irresponsible enthusiasts
+whom only intimidation could manage.
+They seemed to be balanced, prepared, ready at the
+least whisper in the wind to scatter madly, each in
+his own direction, after a vagary, albeit the end were
+destruction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout these latter days the Maccabee had
+become strained and unnatural in his manner. There
+was a vehemence in all he did which seemed to be a
+final resolution against despair. His decisions were
+arbitrary; his methods extreme. Laodice, sensing
+something climacteric in his atmosphere, kept aloof
+from him, and regarded him from the dusk of her
+corner with wonder and a pity that she could not
+explain. The Christian on the other hand seemed
+always in an unobtrusive way to be at the Maccabee's
+elbow. The apparition with the long white hair,
+however, ran away and was found on the streets by
+the Christian and brought back to the cavern, where
+he hid in a dark shadow in the remote end of the
+crypt and was not seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of late the cavern was always full of suppressed
+excitement; unpremeditated conferences among the
+Gibborim, which Hesper harshly forbade; and general
+sharp resentment against imposed regulations
+and military drill. On several occasions the six hundred
+were sent in defense of the walls only by sheer
+force of their leader's will-power. And there they
+fell in at once with the irregular methods of the Idumeans
+and fanatics that fought each after his own
+liking, and the careful instruction of the Maccabee
+was disregarded. Only so long as he cowed them,
+they obeyed him; and he seemed to feel, as they seemed
+to indicate, that when that thing happened which all
+Jerusalem indefinitely expected and could not name,
+his control over them would be lost beyond restoration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the night of the fall of the Roman tower, the
+Maccabee's forces had been withdrawn for rest to their
+retreat and at midnight were formed again for return
+to the fortifications.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the strange inscrutable spread of rumor, sweeping
+with the air, the tidings of the miracle and the
+rise of Seraiah poured in upon the restive hundreds
+that the Maccabee was attempting to form in his
+fortress. It came like the gradual velocity of a
+burning star across the sky. From the ranks nearest
+the exit from the burrow the murmur issued, growing
+into intelligible sound, mounting to the wildness of
+hysteria and prevailing wholly over the Gibborim in
+the space between heart-beats. Everywhere they
+cast down their spears and their weapons, everywhere
+they gazed at him with brilliant threatening eyes
+and cried in loud voices so that the things each mad
+mind put into expression were lost in a great unintelligible
+raving.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice, the Christian and that white-haired trembler
+in his refuge, saw the Maccabee raise himself to
+his full height and lifting his sword confront in one
+grand effort at command a mob of six hundred madmen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps that manifestation of iron courage and
+strength, which the crazy lot somehow realized, saved
+him from death. Instead of falling upon him they
+turned away from the scene of the last vain effort for
+their own salvation and rushed, trampling one another,
+into the mad city of Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From without, the hoarse uproar of their desertion
+was heard to merge with the great tumult over the
+Holy City. Tense silence fell in the crypt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light of the torch wavered up and down the
+tall figure of the Maccabee as he stood transfixed in
+the attitude of command that had achieved nothing.
+It seemed the final inclination beyond the perpendicular
+that precedes the fall. The Christian started
+from his place and hurried toward the tense figure in
+the torch-light. Laodice, unconscious of what she
+did, approached him with an agony of distress for
+him written in her face. The white-haired apparition
+crept out a little way on his knees and putting
+aside his tangled locks gazed with burning eyes at the
+defeated man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice, in her anxiety, moved into the range of
+the Maccabee's vision. The next instant he had
+thrown away his sword and had caught her in a crushing
+embrace to him. His voice, blunted and repressed
+as if something had him by the throat, was stunning
+her ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And thou!" he was saying. "What from thee,
+now? Hate! Curses! Ingratitude! Hast thou
+poison for me, or a knife? Or worse, yet, scorn?
+Speak! It is a day of enlightenment! I'll brook
+anything but deceit!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stopped him in the midst of his vehement despair,
+by laying her hands on his hair. There surged
+to her lips all the eloquence of her love and sympathy,
+but beside her old Nathan stood&ndash;an embodiment of
+her conscience, watching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Twice she essayed to put into words the comfort
+of her submission to his love. Twice her lips failed
+her; but the third time she turned to the Christian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Rabbi, what shall I do?" she implored. "Tell
+me out of thy wisdom!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it?" he asked, feeling that there was
+more than sympathy for the defeated man in her
+heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What would thy Christ have me to do?" she insisted.
+"This stranger, here, is the joy of my heart;
+I am like to die if I can not give him the love that
+I feel for him this hour!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The startled Christian looked at her with suspicion
+growing in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Art thou a wife? Wedded to another than this
+man?" he asked gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wedded," she whispered, "to one who hath denied
+me, affronted me and cast me out of his house!
+In this man I have found favor from the beginning.
+He has been tender of me, he has sheltered me, and he
+has strengthened me against himself to this hour.
+There has been nothing sinful between us!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old Christian's face grew immeasurably sad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is but one thing for you to do," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She wrenched herself away from the Maccabee,
+who had been angrily protesting against her carrying
+his case to another for decision, and confronted
+Nathan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But he rejected me!" she cried with earnestness.
+"That alone is enough among our people for divorcement!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Christian shook his head sadly. He was not
+happy to lay down this prohibition before them who
+suffered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is no help in thy faith for such as I am.
+In that thy religion fails!" she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Love, now, is all in all to thee, daughter. It is
+but the speech of thy young blood running through
+thy veins, the claim of thy youth to thy use upon
+earth. Resist it; for when thy years are as many as
+mine thou wilt lose thy rebellious spirit and the fervor
+will have died out of thy heart. Then, if thou
+hast fallen in this hour, how vain and worthless it will
+seem to thee! Divine fires in the heart of men never
+become changed in value. Love purely and thou wilt
+never repent; but I say unto thee thou fashionest
+for thyself humbled and shamed old age if thou
+transgressest the Law!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What mercy, then, since thou preachest mercy,
+in filling me with this weakness if my life must be
+darkened resisting it, and my future show no relief
+for it?" she insisted passionately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the cry old as the world. He looked at her
+sadly, hopelessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"As for God, His way is perfect," he said. "<i>How
+unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past
+finding out!</i> Thou shalt struggle with the truth, my
+daughter, but without fail and most readily thou
+shalt know when thou hast sinned!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was past the influence of argument. Impulse
+controlled her now entirely. She would see if there
+were not an intelligence, even a religion which would
+see her sorrow from her own heart's position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She listened now to the words of her lover.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is an exclaimer, a prophet of doom!" he was
+crying. "Love me and let us die!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without in the entrance of the crypt some great-lunged
+fanatic was calling the multitude to harken
+to the prophetess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee's lips were against her cheek as he
+continued to speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is the end! There is no help for us. Love
+me, and let me be happy an hour before we perish!
+The Nazarene is right! The city is cursed! God's
+wrath is upon us. The hour is still ours. Love me
+and let us die!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without the great voice, like an unwearying bell,
+was calling:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A sign! A sign! Behold the Deliverer! Come
+all ye who would share his triumph and hear! Hear!
+Come ye and be fed, ye hungry; be drunken, ye
+thirsty; love and be loved, ye forlorn!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice stiffened in the Maccabee's clasp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dost thou hear?" she whispered. "It may be
+true!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head that he had bowed upon her
+shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let us go," she urged. "Perchance he has
+comfort for us. Come, Hesper; let us see what he
+has for the forlorn."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who?" he asked dully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They say the Deliverer has come."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head again, but with her two hands
+she lifted his face from its refuge, and urging with
+her eyes and her hands and her lips she led him toward
+the stairs. The Christian looked after them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>For there shall arise false Christs; and false
+prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders;
+insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive
+the very elect</i>," he said sorrowfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The horror of the city augmented hour by hour.
+The Jerusalem Laodice locked upon now was infinitely
+more afflicted than the one she had seen in the daylight
+days before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The walls were now outlined by fire which illuminated
+all the city that lay directly beneath the beacons.
+To the north gnomish outlines by hundreds
+against the flames showed where the soldiers of the
+factionists were placing the topmost stones upon an
+inner wall or curtain erected just within the Old
+Wall, which was by this time shaking and cracking
+under the assaults of a great siege-engine without.
+Titus, awakened by the fall of his tower, had immediately
+renewed the attack, although the morning
+was still some hours distant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the citizens were no longer disinterested, no
+longer wrapped in hopelessness and dull misery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hungry, sleepless, houseless, diseased and mad
+though they were, their hollow eyes gleamed now
+with hope that was almost defiant. Around the Maccabee
+and Laodice roared the comment of the multitude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They say he climbed to the summit of the outer
+wall overlooking Tophet and remains there a target
+for the Roman arrows, which rebound from him!"
+cried one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"One of John's men says that the heads of the
+arrows are blunted and the most of them snapped
+in two when they are picked up."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Romans have ceased to shoot at him!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They say that his footprints in the dust on the
+Tyropean Bridge are Hebrew letters writing 'Elia'
+in gold!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is said that the inner Temple is rocking with
+trumpet blasts and that John is struck dead!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They say that those who believe in him shall ask
+for whatever they would have and have it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The breaches in the First Wall have been healed;
+the old rock is back in its place!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They say that the dead beyond the wall in Tophet
+are prophesying!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is a bolt of lightning fixed in the sky over
+Titus' camp. We are called to go forth and see it
+fall!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A voice swept by distantly crying that a woman
+had eaten her child. Crazed Posthumus, self-elected
+guardian of the Law, with the sacred roll under his
+arm, declaimed, without any of his audience attending,
+that prophecy which this horror fulfilled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All Jerusalem was in the streets; all Jerusalem
+poured into the immense open space where some palatial
+ruin stood, and melted in the giant concourse
+that gathered to hear the prophetess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice and the Maccabee were unable to see the
+woman; only her voice, mystic, musical, pitched at a
+singing monotone, intoning rather than speaking,
+reached them from the distance. The long harangue,
+delivered as a chant, had long ago had
+a mesmerizing effect on her audience. Absolutely
+she controlled them; along the dead level of her
+preaching they maintained a low continuous murmur,
+accompanied by a slight slow swaying of the
+body; in the climaxes of the appeal they responded
+with cries and wild gestures, flinging themselves about
+in attitudes characteristic of their frenzy. In their
+faces was the reflection of a peculiar light that
+proved that derangement had settled over Jerusalem.
+It was the end of the reign of reason.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is the abomination of desolation. Even so, it
+is finished! It is the time, it is full time, and
+Michael hath come. There are seventy weeks; behold
+them. The transgression is finished and the end
+hereto of all sins. Approacheth the hour for the
+reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in everlasting
+righteousness and to seal up the vision and prophecy
+and to anoint the most Holy! Prepare ye!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Somewhere in the city a voice that was heard even by
+the fighting-men on the wall in Akra cried:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Sacrifice has failed! The Oblation is
+ceased! There is no Offering for the Altar; none is
+left to offer it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The vast gathering heard it, and immediately from
+the high place of the prophetess came back the words,
+prompt and effective:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>And he shall confirm the covenant with many for
+one week: and in the midst of the week he shall cause
+the sacrifice and the oblation to cease!</i>"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Posthumus, buried in the midst of the crowd, was
+shouting, but over him the splendid mesmerism of the
+prophetess' voice soared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"<i>The hands of the pitiful women have sodden
+their own children; they were their meat in the destruction
+of the daughter of my people ...
+The punishment of thine iniquity is accomplished, O
+daughter of Zion; ... and for the overspreading
+of abominations he shall make it desolate, even
+until the consummation, and that determined shall be
+poured upon the desolate</i>!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the crowd now growing frantic, people began
+to cry:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A sign! A sign!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Others shouted:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lead us!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Persecute and destroy them in anger from under
+the Heaven of the Lord!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lead us!" they still shouted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were hungry; they had been abstinent; they
+had surrendered their riches and their comforts. It
+was not independence but necessities that they wanted
+now. The primal wants were at the surface.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come up and be filled!" she cried. "Ask and it
+shall be given unto you! Eat of the grapes and the
+honey; drink of wine and warm milk; sleep as kings;
+be housed in mansions; be rulers; command potentates!
+Let kings bow at your footstools! Be replenished;
+be great! Suffering hath been your
+portion since the earth was; but the end is come.
+Draw nigh and have your recompense. Laugh, you
+whose eyes have trickled down with the waters of affliction!
+You in the low dungeon come forth and range
+all the free boundaries of the world. Whosoever hath
+gravel between his teeth, let them be grapes! He
+who sitteth alone, gather company and revel unto
+him! Feast, ye hungry; be drunken, ye thirsty; love
+and be loved, ye forlorn!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice leaned forward suddenly and hung on
+the woman's words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The time for sacrifice and humiliation is paid
+out! It was a long time! Now, behold in the generosity
+of his repentance, ye shall ask and nothing shall
+be denied. Speak! Ask! The whole world, Heaven
+and earth and the delights of all the years are yours,
+now and for all time!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Laodice's side was Amaryllis. The Greek's
+face was pale but lighted with a certain enlightenment
+that was almost threatening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Startled and frightened Laodice moved back from
+the Greek, who moved with her, without a glance at
+the Maccabee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The voice of the prophetess swept on:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ye have bowed to tyrants and bent your necks to
+murderers; ye have waged wars for pillagers and
+shared not in the spoils. Why are ye hungry now?
+Who is full-fed in these days of want, yourselves or
+your masters? A sword, a sword is drawn; uphold
+the arm that wields it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sedition!" Amaryllis whispered, as the mob began
+to murmur and stir at this new doctrine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For behold, he shall go forth with great fury to
+destroy and utterly to make away many!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis bent so she could whisper in Laodice's
+ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"John hath taken him a new woman to keep him
+cheerful this hour. I was not daring enough. Philadelphus'
+wife hath supplanted me. Your place with
+him is vacant. Go back and possess it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why was appetite and desire and thirst of power
+and the love of riches lighted in you, but to be satisfied?"
+The prophetess' words swept in after Laodice's
+sudden fear of returning to Philadelphus.
+"We have expiated the sin of Adam, the greed of
+Jacob and the fault of David. The judgment is
+run out; ye have come to your own! Verily, I say
+unto you, if ye follow me in the name of him who
+hath come unto you, the world shall be yours!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis still continued to whisper, and Laodice,
+fearing that the Maccabee might hear, drew farther
+away. He stood where she had left him, with his
+head lowered, waiting&ndash;at last a creature dependent
+on another's will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Listen!" Amaryllis said. "I have been seeking
+you since midnight! Philadelphus' doubt was awakened
+in this woman. He questioned her, so minutely
+that she betrayed ignorance of many things she
+should have known had she been the real daughter of
+Costobarus. And when finally he taxed her with imposture,
+she robbed him of the dowry and fled to John.
+Convinced that you are his wife, he set forth and
+hath since searched for you without ceasing! See,
+over there! He seeks you, now!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice looked the way the Greek pointed and saw
+Philadelphus, standing with lifted head and stretched
+to his full height, as if searching over the crowd for
+her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Panic seized her. She wrenched herself from the
+Greek's hold and, forgetting even the protection of
+Hesper who was within touch of her, she threw herself
+into the crowd behind her and struggled out of
+the press.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nathan, the Christian, saw her turn and followed
+instantly in the path she made.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once out, she turned in a bewildered manner this
+way and that. What refuge, now, for her, indeed, but
+the cavern under the ruin and the care of Hesper,
+until the end which should swallow them all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A trembling hand was laid on her arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She whirled, expecting to find Philadelphus. Beside
+her, his old face radiant with emotion, stood
+Momus!
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch21">Chapter XXI</h2>
+
+<h2>THE FAITHFUL SERVANT</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Within the Roman lines was a bent and deformed
+figure of an old waif that the soldiers had picked up
+attempting to run the lines into Jerusalem the second
+day after the siege had been laid about the Holy
+City.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man, though wrinkled and twisted and
+bowed, had fought with such terrible savagery and
+had incontinently laid in the dust in succession three
+of the camp's best fighting-men, that the Roman soldiers,
+for ever partizan to the strong man, had
+finally with great difficulty succeeded in trussing the
+old belligerent and had brought him before Titus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There they laid the twisted old burden before the
+young general and shamelessly told how he, thrice
+the age of the vanquished men, had finished them
+with despatch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was evident that the old man was a Jew; it
+became also apparent that he was dumb and partly
+deaf, and further to their amazement and admiration,
+they discovered that his right leg and arm were too
+stiff for ordinary use and that he had done his wonderful
+execution with terrific left limbs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This saved his life and gave him a partial liberty.
+Titus, however, admitted to Carus that the old man's
+distress at being kept out of Jerusalem was pitiable
+enough to urge the young general to deport him and
+get him out of sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For it was manifest that the old minotaur was in
+deep trouble. But his paralyzed tongue would not
+serve him, and his menial ignorance had not provided
+him with the means of telling his desire by writing.
+Titus was unable to understand from his signs anything
+further than that he wished to get into the city.
+The young general in one of his outbursts of generosity
+would have permitted this, but that Nicanor happened
+in at an evil moment and drew such pictures of
+calamitous effect in passing the old servant into Jerusalem
+that Titus was forced reluctantly and irritably
+to be convinced of the folly of his kindness. So here,
+through the terrible days of the siege, old Momus
+at times desperate and savage, at others piteously suppliant,
+wore on the sentries' peace of mind and stood
+like a shadow, for ever watching the white walls of
+the besieged city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Romans were now within the city. Only Zion
+and the Temple held against them. A wall built with
+the thoroughness of David, the ancient, and solidified
+by the mortising of Time, ran directly from Hippicus
+to the Tyropean Valley, joining the tremendous
+fortifications of Moriah and so cut off Zion from the
+advance of the army. Securely intrenched within
+that quarter and the Temple, Simon and John began
+the last resistance which should tax Roman endurance
+and Roman patience as it had not been taxed before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus no longer lagged. Famine had long since
+become a powerful ally and the honor of the Flavian
+house rested upon his immediate subjugation of the
+rebellious city. He no longer expected capitulation;
+yet he did not neglect to be prepared for it and to
+encourage it. Though the heart of the historian
+Josephus broke, he did not fail to serve his patron
+as mediator, though without hope. Titus himself,
+as from time to time the horror of his work impressed
+itself upon him, made overtures to the factionists,
+neglecting no art or inducement which should convince
+the seditious that their resistance was foolhardy,
+even mad. At such times, Nicanor's face became
+contemptuous and Carus himself frowned at
+the young general's attitude. But the spirit of a
+Roman and the traditions of a soldier even could not
+prevent the young man from weakening at times before
+the charnel pit in Tophet where countless thousands
+of vultures fattened with roaring of wings and
+hissing of combat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But under an ever-thickening veil of horrid airs,
+the struggle went on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Roman Ides of July arrived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus had erected banks upon which his engines
+were raised to batter the walls of the Temple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From Titus' camp, the Romans on sick leave, the
+commissaries, those attached to the army who were not
+fighting-men, and old Momus, saw first, before the
+attack on the Temple began, a soft increasing dun-colored
+vapor rise between the Temple and Antonia.
+It issued from the cloister at the northwest which
+joined the Roman tower. As they watched, they
+saw that vapor grow into a pale but intensely luminous
+smoke, as if fine woods and burning metals were
+consumed together. In a moment the whole north-west
+section was embraced in a sublime pall of fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John was burning away the connection between
+the Temple and the tower and was making the sacred
+edifice four-square.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as it became confirmed, in the minds of
+the watchers in the Roman camp, that the Temple
+had been fired, the old mute among them seemed to
+become wholly unbalanced. Without warning, he
+leaped upon the nearest sentry who, not expecting
+the attack, went down with a clatter of armor and
+a shout of astonishment. The next instant the old
+man was making across the intervening space between
+the camp and Jerusalem as fast as his stiff legs could
+carry him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The purple sentry sprang to his feet and strung an
+arrow, but before he could send it singing, the old
+minotaur was mixed with a second soldier in such confusion
+that the first sentry hesitated to shoot lest he
+should kill his fellow. Another moment and a second
+soldier was struggling in the impediment of his
+armor in the dust and the old mute was again hobbling
+straight away toward the walls of Jerusalem.
+He was now a fair mark for the first sentry, but that
+Roman's rancor died after he had seen his own disgrace
+covered by the overthrow of his fellow. Two
+of Titus' scouts next stood in the path of the running
+old man. One went to the ground so suddenly and so
+violently that the watchers, now breaking into howls
+of delight, knew that he had been tripped. The
+other stood but a moment longer, than he, too, rolled
+into the dust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man might have gone no farther at this
+juncture, for at every latest triumph he left a crimson
+soldier murderous with shame. But before the
+arrow next strung to overtake him could fly, Titus,
+Carus and Nicanor, accompanied by their escort, rode
+between the fugitive and the men he had defeated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There goes our minotaur," Carus said quietly.
+Titus drew up his horse and looked. Nicanor with a
+sidelong glance awaited the young Roman's command
+to his escort to ride down the fugitive. But he
+waited, and continued to wait, while Titus with lifted
+head and with indecision in his eyes watched the deformed
+old shape hobble on toward the Wall of Circumvallation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shall we let him go?" Nicanor inquired coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If some of my legionaries or those erratic Jews
+fail to get him between here and Jerusalem, he shall
+get into Jerusalem. But by Hector, he will earn his
+entry!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They saw the old man mount by the causeway of
+earth which the Romans had built over the siege
+wall for the passage of the troops, saw him an instant
+outlined against the sky on the summit, and
+the next instant he disappeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Titus touched his horse and rode at a trot toward
+the causeway himself. He would see the end of this
+mad venture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the hour of sunrise the sentinel above the North
+Gate in the Old Wall saw among the ruins of the
+houses of Coenopolis a figure dodging painfully
+hither and thither. It was not habited in the brasses
+of the Roman armor. Also, it hobbled as if lame and
+ran toward the gate fast closed below the sentry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Jew, too intensely interested in the great climax
+enacting in the city below, ceased to remark on
+this figure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, however, he looked again into ruined
+Coenopolis. He saw there this un-uniformed figure
+wrapped in fierce embrace with a young legionary.
+Almost before the sentry's astonishment shaped itself
+into exclamation, the legionary was tumbled aside as
+if crushed and the old figure hobbled on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly there appeared in the path of the wayfarer
+a galloping horseman, who drew his mount back
+on his haunches, then spurred him to ride down the
+old man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sentry on the Old Wall made a choked sound,
+unslung his bow and sent an arrow singing. There
+was a shout and the figure of the horseman plunged
+from his saddle face down on the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wayfarer flung himself away and rushed toward
+the wall, only a little distance away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But all Coenopolis seemed to swarm now with legionaries,
+afoot or horseback.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Jewish sentry rushed to the edge of the tower
+overhanging the gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Open!" he shouted below. "One cometh!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a rattle and clang of falling bars and chains
+the gate of the Old Wall swung.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Disregarding the known wishes of Titus, two of
+the legionaries simultaneously let fly their javelins.
+But the mute, hobbling uncertainly, was not
+a steady mark and under the whistle of arrows received
+and sent, he blundered up the causeway leading
+to the Gate of the Old Wall, and the portal slowly
+and ponderously closed behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wild howls of derision and exultation went up from
+the Jews. Many of the soldiers clambered down to
+satisfy their curiosity about the latest addition to
+the starving garrison. But he proved to be a deformed
+old man, mute and weary, who was distressed
+for fear he would be detained by them and who hobbled
+out into the besieged city and posted as fast as
+his legs could carry him toward the house of Amaryllis,
+the Seleucid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But at the edge of a great open space where the
+Herodian palaces had stood he came upon a concourse
+which seemed to be all Jerusalem. It was a gaunt
+horde, shouting, raging, prophesying and drowning
+the roar of battle at the Temple fortifications with
+the sound of religious frenzy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus, fresh from the orderly camp of Titus,
+was struck with terror. He would have retreated
+and followed some side street toward his destination,
+when he caught sight of a girl on the very outskirts
+of this mob. Momus laid a trembling hand on her
+arm. She threw up her head with a start.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch22">Chapter XXII</h2>
+
+<h2>VANISHED HOPES</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+The tremulous old man, weakened from his long
+and superhuman struggle to enter the doomed city,
+held Laodice to his breast while she stroked his rough
+cheeks and murmured things that he did not hear and
+which she did not realize in the rush of her helplessness
+and dismay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the corner of Moriah and the Old Wall, the
+tumult was infernal. Out of the suffocating sallow
+smoke from the tuns of burning tar heaved over the
+fortification upon the engines and their managers,
+the stones from the catapults soared into view and
+fell upon the sun-colored marbles that paved the
+Court of the Gentiles. Clouded by the vapor, targets
+for the immense missiles, the Jews heaving and writhing
+in personal encounters appeared black and inhuman.
+Every combatant shouted; the great stones
+screamed; the boiling pitch hissed and roared, and
+the thunder of the conflict shook the Temple to its
+very foundations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without, the Romans planted scaling ladders,
+mounted them and were pitched backward into the
+moat regularly. Regularly, the ladders were set up
+again after struggle, mounted without hesitation and
+thrown down again, with an inevitability which furnished
+a grim travesty to the struggle. The two
+remaining towers were set in position against the
+base of Moriah and resumed execution. One after
+another the engines of the Romans were hauled into
+position, and worked unceasingly until covered with
+burning oil from the battlements above and consumed.
+Others were hauled into place; fresh detachments
+of Romans seized upon the scaling-ladders or
+mounted to the towers, and the roar of the conflict
+never abated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile on the slopes of Zion the whole of
+Jerusalem, gaunt, dying and demoniacal, was packed
+in the ruins of the palace of Herod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Old Momus with triumph and tearful exultation
+was holding out to Laodice a heavy roll of writings,
+dangling important seals, ancient papers showing
+yellow beside the fresh parchment, and an old record
+dark with long handling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here were the proofs of her identity!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice shrank from him with a gasp that was
+almost a cry. Behold, the faithful old servant had
+suffered she knew not what to bring such evidence
+as would force her to do that which she believed she
+could not do and survive!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus sought to put the papers in her hands,
+but she thrust them away and he stood looking at
+her in amazement and sorrow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nathan, the Christian, stood close to her. From
+the opposite side, Philadelphus rounded the outskirts
+of the mob, searching. He did not see her. She
+flung herself between Momus and Nathan and cowered
+down until Philadelphus had passed from sight.
+When she lifted her head, Momus was gazing at her
+with the light of shocked comprehension growing in
+his eyes. Nathan, the Christian, touched her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who was that man?" he asked gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose and laid her hands on the Christian's
+shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My husband," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something had happened at the Temple. She
+saw the Jews at the wall recoil from the dust of battle,
+rally, plunge in and disappear. From out that
+presently shone now and again, then with increasing
+frequency and finally in great numbers, the brass
+mail of Roman legionaries. Titus' forces had scaled
+the wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From her position, she saw running toward them
+John of Gischala, with his long garments whipping
+about him, wrapping his tall figure in live cerements.
+He was disarmed and bleeding. She saw next
+Amaryllis, with compassionate uplifted hands stop in
+his way; saw next the Gischalan thrust her aside
+with a blow and the next instant disappear as if the
+earth had swallowed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nathan was speaking to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How often, O my daughter, we recognize truth
+and deny it because it does not give us our way!
+God put a sense of the right in us. We transgress
+it oftener than we mistake it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The roar of the turning battle and the mob about
+her drowned his next words, except,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You can not be happy in iniquity; neither
+blessed; but you are sure to be afraid. Right has
+its own terror, but there is at least courage in being
+right, against your desires."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was talking continuously, but only at times
+did the wind from the uproar sweep his fervent words
+to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Christ had His own conflict with Himself. What
+had become of us had He listened to the tempter
+in the wilderness, or failed to accept the cup in the
+Garden of Gethsemane! How much we have the happiness
+of Christ in our hands! Alas! that His should
+be a sorrowful countenance in Heaven!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The love of a man for a woman was near to the
+Master's heart! How can you feel that you must
+love and be loved in spite of Him! Pity yourself
+all you may you can not then be pitied so much as
+He pities you!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Love as long and as wilfully as you will, and
+then it is only a little space. The time of the supremacy
+of Christ cometh surely, and that is all eternity!
+Which will you do&ndash;please yourself for an
+hour, or be pleased by the will of God through all
+time? Love is in the hands of the Lord; you can
+not consign it longer than the little span of your life
+to the hands of the devil."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus, in whose mind had passed an immense
+surmise, was again at her side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O daughter of a noble father," his dumb gaze
+said, "wilt thou put away that virtue which was
+born in thee and let my labor come to naught?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the preaching of Nathan and the reproach of
+Momus were feeble, compared to the great tumult
+that went on in her soul. She had seen John of
+Gischala cast Amaryllis aside. Even the Greek's
+sympathy was hateful to him. Yet when Laodice
+had first entered the house of Amaryllis, the woman
+had been obliged to dismiss John from her presence
+for his own welfare and the welfare of the city.
+Why this change?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis was no less beautiful, no less brilliant,
+no less attractive than she had once been; but the
+Gischalan had wearied of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice recalled that she had not been surprised
+to see the man throw Amaryllis aside. It seemed
+to be the logical outcome of love such as theirs.
+How, then, was she to escape that which no other
+woman escaped who loved without law? In the soul
+of that stranger who had called himself Hesper, were
+lofty ideals, which had not been the least charm
+which had attracted her to him. Was she, then, to
+dislodge these holy convictions, to take her place in
+his heart as one falling short of them, or were they
+still to exist as standards which he loved and which
+she could not reach? In either event, how long would
+he love&ndash;what was the length of her probation before
+she, too, would encounter the inevitable weariness?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It occurred to her, then, how nearly the natural
+law of such love paralleled the religious prohibition
+that the Christian had shown to her. However harsh
+and unjust the sentence seemed, it was rational. With
+her own eyes she had seen its predictions borne out.
+Already the relief of the sorrowing righteous possessed
+her. She turned to the Christian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Take me to my husband," she said. "Now!
+While I have strength."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Momus caught the old Christian by the arm and,
+signing eagerly that he would lead, hurried away in
+advance of the two down into the ravine and crossed
+to the house of Amaryllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were no soldiers to stop them about the
+house. When no response was made to her knock,
+Laodice opened the door and passed in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her old conductors followed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis sat in her ivory chair; opposite her in
+the exedra was Philadelphus. At sight of him, the
+last of the soft color went out of Laodice's face. A
+curve of despair marked the corners of her mouth
+and she seemed to grow old before those that looked
+at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Philadelphus and the Greek sprang to their feet,
+the instant the group entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice waited for no preliminary. Amaryllis'
+design was patent to her; it was part of her sorrow
+that now Hesper would be free to the devices of this
+deceitful woman. So she did not look at the Greek.
+She addressed Philadelphus in a voice from which all
+hope and vivacity had gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have brought proofs. Behold them!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nathan, the Christian, stood forth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I, Nathan of Jerusalem, met and talked with
+this Laodice, daughter of Costobarus, in company
+with Aquila, the Ephesian, three men-servants in all
+the panoply and state of a coming princess three
+leagues out of Ascalon, her native city. I buried by
+the roadside her father, who died of pestilence on their
+journey hither. I bear witness that she is the daughter
+of Costobarus and thy wedded wife."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A great light sprang into the face of the Greek.
+Philadelphus, nervous, albeit the news he heard filled
+him with pleasure, stood and waited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Christian stepped back and Momus, bowing,
+approached and handed the leather roll into the none
+too steady hands of the Ephesian. He opened it and
+drew forth parchments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aloud he read a minute description of Laodice
+from the rabbi of the synagogue in Ascalon; under
+the great seals of the Roman state, he found and read
+the oath of the prefect, that such a maiden as the
+rabbi had described had been married before him to
+Philadelphus Maccabaeus fourteen years before.
+Then followed the depositions of forty Jews and Gentiles
+who were nurses, tradesmen and other people like
+to have daily contact with the young woman in her
+house, setting entirely at naught any claim that Laodice
+was other than the wife who had been supplanted
+by an adventuress. Philadelphus did not
+read them all. Before he made an end he dropped
+the documents and flung wide his arms. But Laodice
+with a countenance frozen with suffering held him off
+for a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go," she said to the old Christian, "unto Hesper
+and lead him into the belief of the Lord Jesus
+Christ which is mine."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old Christian approached the fountain in the
+center of the andronitis and taking up water in his
+palm sprinkled a few drops on her hair while she
+knelt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In the name of the Father and the Son and the
+Holy Ghost, I baptize thee, Laodice. Amen!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While she knelt, he said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall search for him also. Christ have mercy
+on thee now and for ever. Farewell."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was gone.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch23">Chapter XXIII</h2>
+
+<h2>THE FULFILMENT</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+When Nathan, the Christian, stepped into the
+streets once more there was an immense accession of
+tumult about him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned to look toward the corner of the Old
+Wall in time to behold Jews in armor and Romans
+in blazing brass rush together in a great cloud of
+dust as the Old Wall went in and Titus swept down
+upon Jerusalem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the same instant from the ruined high place
+upon Zion came a roar of stupendous menace. The
+Christian, with sublime indifference to danger, kept
+his path toward the concourse from which he had
+taken Laodice. As he ascended the opposite slope of
+the ravine, he saw, descending toward the battle, the
+front of a rushing multitude, as irresistible and as
+destructive as a great sea in a storm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He saw that the mob was turning toward Akra,
+and to avoid it, the Christian climbed up to the Tyropean
+Bridge, and from that point viewed the whole
+of Jerusalem sweeping down upon the heathen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the head of the inundation passed a melodious
+voice crying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"An end, an end is come upon the four corners of
+the land! Draw near every man with his destroying
+weapon in his hands for the glory of the Lord! For
+His house is filled with cloud and the Court is full
+of the brightness of the Lord's glory! A sword!
+A sword is sharpened! The way is appointed that
+the sword may come! For the time for favor to
+Zion is here; yea, the set time is come!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this poured a gaunt horde numbering tens
+of thousands. They bore paving-stones, stakes,
+posts, railings, garden implements, weapons from
+kitchens, from hardware booths and from armories;
+anything that one man or a body of men could wield;
+torches and kettles of tar; chains and ropes; knotted
+whips, and bundles of fagots; iron spikes, instruments
+of torture, anything and everything which
+could be turned as a weapon or to inflict pain upon
+the Roman, who believed at this moment that Jerusalem
+was his!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Christian overlooked this ferocious inundation
+and shook his head. On a mound near him stood the
+spirit of the mob concentrated and personified. It
+was crazed Posthumus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was screaming: "It is finished; the law is run
+out! All prophecy is fulfilled!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And over his head he was swinging a parchment
+fiercely burning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the Scroll of the Law!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After uncounted minutes, vibrating with roar, the
+terrible flood rushed by. Feeble arms clasped the
+Christian about the knees and he looked down on the
+tangled white locks of the palsied man, who had
+searched for him until he had found him. The Christian
+laid his hand on the man's head but did not
+speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the breach in the Old Wall, the watchers on that
+almost deserted street saw the brazen wave of four
+legions gather and sweep forward to gain ground
+in the city before the mob swept down on them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Between the two warring bodies, one orderly, prepared
+but apprehensive, the other mad and perishing,
+was a considerable space. Fighting still went
+on at the breach in the walls, but the supreme conflict
+of a comparatively small body of soldiers and
+an uncounted horde was not yet precipitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ordinarily, the Roman army could have reduced
+any popular insurrection with half that number of
+men. But at present the legionaries confronted desperate
+citizens who were simply choosing their own
+way to die. Reason and human fear long since had
+ceased to inspire them. They were believing now
+and following a prophet because it was the final respite
+before despair. There was no alternative. It
+was death whatever they did, unless, in truth, this
+splendid sorceress was indeed the Voice of the Risen
+Prince. Force would be of no avail against them.
+Madness had flung them against Rome; only some
+other madness would turn them back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Christian, from his commanding position, expected
+anything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the moment which would show if the false
+prophet would triumph. If the four legions went
+down before the multitude, it would mean the ascendancy
+of a strange woman over Israel, and the obliteration
+of the faith in Jesus Christ in the Holy Land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It can not be said that the Christian watched the
+crisis with a calm spirit. He did not wish to see the
+heathen overthrow the ancient people of God, nor
+could he behold the triumph of a false Christ. He
+put his hands together and prayed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A figure appeared between the two bodies of combatants,
+rushing on intensely, to grapple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a tall commanding form, clothed in garments
+that glittered for whiteness. By the step, by
+the poise of the head, the Christian recognized Seraiah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The front of the multitude fell on their faces at
+that moment as if he had struck them down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of the forefront, the prophetess appeared.
+The Christian heard her splendid voice out of the
+uproar, and while he gazed, he saw mad Seraiah
+turn away from her, with the front of the mob turning
+after him, as a needle turns to the pole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In that fatal moment of pause, out of which the
+warning cry of the prophetess rang wildly, the Roman
+tribune, in view for a moment under the blowing
+veils of smoke, flung up his sword, the Roman bugle
+sang, and the brassy legions of Titus hurled themselves
+upon the halted mob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Christian dropped his head into the bend of
+his elbow and strove to shut out the sound. The nervous
+arms of the palsied man at his feet gripped him
+frantically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up from the corner of the Old Wall, came the prolonged
+"A-a-a-a!" of dying thousands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jerusalem had fallen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foremost of the mob, turning with Seraiah,
+escaped the onslaught of the Romans, and as the mad
+Pretender strode toward the broad street from which
+the Tyropean Bridge crossed to the demesnes of the
+Temple, they followed him fatuously, blind to
+the death behind them and the oncoming slaughter
+in which they might fall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seraiah passed above the spot where the sorrowful
+Christian stood, crossed the great causeway leading
+toward the Royal Portico and after him six thousand
+blind and insane enthusiasts followed, expecting imminent
+miracle. Above them towered the heights of
+Moriah, now veiled in smoke. Up the great white
+bank of stairs they rushed after him, facing an ordeal
+which must mean a baptism in fire, and on through
+a curtain of luminous smoke into a gate pillared in
+flame, up into the Royal Portico, resounding with
+the tread of the advancing Destroyer, out into the
+great Court of Gentiles wrapped in cloud through
+which the Temple showed, a stupendous cube of heat,
+through the Gate Beautiful where the Keeper no
+longer stood, thence into the Women's Court, raftered
+with red coals, up smoking stones tier upon tier
+till the roof of the Royal Portico was reached.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the brink of the pinnacle, they saw through
+tumbling clouds Seraiah towering. He was looking
+down through masses of smoke upon the City of
+Delight, perishing. They who had followed watched,
+uplifted with terror and frenzy, and while they
+waited for the miracle which should save, the roof
+crumbled under them and a grave of thrice heated
+rock received them and covered them up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Below, Nathan, the Christian, seized upon the
+shoulders of the Maccabee as he was dashing after
+the thousands. His face was black with terror for
+Laodice. He struggled to throw off Nathan, crying
+futilely against the uproar that Laodice was perishing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Comfort thee!" the Christian shouted in his
+ear. "She is saved. She sent me to thee."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee stopped, as if he realized that he
+need not go on, but had not comprehended what was
+said to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nathan dragged him out of the way, still choked
+with people struggling to pass on to the Temple or
+to flee from it. Half-way down the Vale of Gihon,
+where speech was a little more possible, the Maccabee,
+who had been crying questions, made the old
+man hear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where is she? Where is she?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She has returned to her husband. In love with
+thee, she has done that only which she could do and
+escape sin. She has gone to shelter with him whom
+she does not love!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee seized his head in his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is like her&ndash;like her!" he groaned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the Christian's heart he knew how narrowly
+Laodice had made her lover's mark for her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is her wish," Nathan continued, "that I teach
+thee Christ whom she hath received."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How can I receive Him, when He sent her from
+me?" the unhappy man groaned, unconscious of his
+contradictions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How canst thou reject Him when His teaching
+led thy love to do that which thine own lips have
+confessed to be the better thing?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then what of myself, when I love where I should
+not love?" the Maccabee insisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You may suffer and sin not," the Christian said
+kindly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The unhappy man dropped to his knees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"O Christ, why should I resist Thee!" he groaned.
+"Thou hast stripped me and made me see that my
+loss is good!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Christian laid his hands on the Maccabee's
+head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Dost thou believe?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Will Christ accept me, coming because I must?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not laid down how we shall baptize in the
+thirst of a famine," Nathan said, "yet He who sees
+fit to deny water never yet hath denied grace."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the Christian's hand extended over the kneeling
+man was caught in a grip steadied with intense
+emotion. The unknown had seized him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But for his feeling that this interruption was necessary
+to the welfare of another soul, the Christian
+would not have paused in his ministry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The phantom straightened himself with a superb
+reinvestment of manhood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thou, son of the Maccabee, Philadelphus!" he
+exclaimed to the kneeling man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Ephesian's arms sank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who art thou that knoweth me?" he asked in a
+dead voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am all that plague and sin hath left of thy
+servant Aquila," the phantom declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee lifted his face for what should follow
+this revelation. It was only a manifestation of
+his subjection to another will than his own. He was
+not interested&ndash;he who was hoping to die.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hear me, and curse me!" Aquila went on. "But
+save thy wife yet. I say unto thee, master, that she
+whom thou hast sheltered in the cavern is thy wife,
+Laodice!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee struggled up to his feet and gazed
+with stunned and unbelieving eyes at this wreck of
+his pagan servant, who went on precipitately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Her I plotted against at the instigation of
+Julian of Ephesus. Her, my mistress, Salome the
+Cyprian, robbed and hath impersonated thus long to
+her safety in the house of the Greek. This hour,
+through ignorance of thine own identity, through my
+fault, she hath gone reluctantly to his arms. Curse
+me and let me die!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee seized the hair at his temples. For
+a moment the awful gaze he bent upon Aquila seemed
+to show that the gentler spirit had been dislodged
+from his heart. Then he cried:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"God help us both, Aquila! My fault was greater
+than thine!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned and fled toward the house of the Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The four legions of Titus swept after him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aquila lifted his eyes for the first time and gazed
+at Nathan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I cursed thee for sparing me to such an existence
+as was mine! Behold, father, thou didst bless me,
+instead. I am ready to die."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wait," the Christian said peacefully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later, the Maccabee dashed into the
+andronitis of Amaryllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After him sprang a terrified servant crying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Roman! The Roman is upon us!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A roar of such magnitude that it penetrated the
+stone walls of Amaryllis' house, swept in after the
+servant. Quaking menials began to pour into the
+hall. Among them came the blue-eyed girl, the
+athlete and Juventius the Swan. These three joined
+their mistress who stood under a hanging lamp.
+Into the passage from the court, left open by the
+frightened servants, swept the prolonged outcry of
+perishing Jerusalem. Over it all thundered the boom
+of the siege-engines shaking the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The slaves slipped down upon their knees and
+began to groan together. The silver coins on the
+lamp began to swing; the brass cyanthus which
+Amaryllis had recently drained of her last drink of
+wine moved gradually to the edge of the pedestal
+upon which she had placed it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dual nature of the uproar was now distinct;
+organized warfare and popular disaster at the same
+time. The Roman was sweeping up the ancient
+ravine. Jerusalem had fallen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gradual crescendo now attained deafening
+proportions; the hanging lamp increased its swing;
+the silver coins began to strike together with keen
+and exquisitely fine music. Juventius the Swan,
+with his dim eyes filled with horror, was looking at
+them. The peculiar desperate indifference of the
+wholly hopeless seized him. His long white hands
+began to move with the motion of the lamp; the
+music of the meeting coins became regular; he caught
+the note, and mounting, with a bound, the rostrum
+that had been his Olympus all his life, began to sing.
+The melody of his glorious voice struggled only a
+moment for supremacy with the uproar of imminent
+death and then his increasing exaltation gave him
+triumph. The great hall shook with the magnificent
+power of his only song!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee confronted Amaryllis, with fierce
+question in his eyes. She pointed calmly at the heavy
+white curtain pulled to one side and caught on a
+bracket. The brass wicket over the black mouth of
+the tunnel was wide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without a word, the Maccabee plunged into it and
+was swallowed up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amaryllis looked after him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And no farewell?" she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thunder of assault began at her door. Juventius
+sang it down. The athlete and the girl crept
+toward the mouth of the black passage, wavered a
+moment and plunged in. After them tumbled a confusion
+of artists and servants who were swallowed up,
+and the hall was filled only with music.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman by the lectern and the singer on the
+rostrum had chosen. To live without beauty and to
+live without love were not possible to the one who
+had known beauty all his life, to the one who had
+learned love so late&ndash;after she had been beggared
+of her dowry of purity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was hardly an appreciable interval between
+the time of the desertion of her artists and the thunder
+of assault at her door, but in that space there
+passed before Amaryllis that useless retrospect which
+is death's recapitulation of the life it means to take.
+And out of that long procession, she singled one conviction
+which made the step of the Roman on her
+threshold welcome. It was an old, old moral, so old
+that it had never had weight with her, who believed
+it was time to reconstruct the whole artistic attitude
+of the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And that was why she waited impatiently at her
+doorway for death, which was a kinder thing than
+life.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 id="ch24">Chapter XXIV</h2>
+
+<h2>THE ROAD TO PELLA</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+There was no incident in the Maccabee's long
+struggle through the inky blackness of the tunnel
+leading under Moriah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was night when the first new air from the outside
+world reached him. So he rushed into great
+open darkness, lighted with stars, before he knew that
+he had emerged from the underground passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Entire silence after the turmoil which had shaken
+Jerusalem for many months fell almost like a blow
+upon his unaccustomed ears. The air was sweet. He
+had not breathed sweet air since May. The hills
+were solitary. Week in and week out, he had never
+been away from the sound of groaning thousands.
+Not since he had assumed his disguise to Laodice in
+the wilderness had he been close to the immemorial
+repose of nature. All his primitive manhood rushed
+back to him, now infuriated with a fear that his love
+was the spoil of another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All instinct became alert; all his intelligence and
+resource assembled to his aid. It came to him as
+inspiration always occurs at such times, that if the
+pair proceeded rationally, they would move toward a
+secure place at once. Pella occurred to him in a
+happy moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took his bearings by the stars and hurried
+north and east.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came upon a road presently, almost obliterated
+by a summer's drift of dust and sand. It had been
+long since any one had gone up that way to Jerusalem.
+There was no moon to show him whether there
+were any recent marks of fugitives fleeing that way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not expect that Julian of Ephesus would
+have courage to halt within sight of the glow on the
+western horizon which was the burning from the
+Temple. He expected the Ephesian to flee far and
+long, and in that consciousness of the cowardice of
+his enemy he based his hope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he ran tirelessly, seeking right and left,
+led on by instinct toward the Christian city in the
+north.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At times, his terror for Laodice made him cry out;
+again, he made violent pictures of his revenge upon
+Julian; and at other moments, he believed, while
+drops stood on his forehead from the effort of faith,
+that his new Christ would save her yet. There were
+moments when he was ready to die of despair, when
+he wondered at himself attempting to trace Julian
+with all the directions of wild Judea to invite the
+fugitives. Why might they not have fled toward
+Arabia as well, or even toward the sea? Perhaps
+they had not gone far, but had hidden in the rock,
+and had been left behind. Conflicting argument
+strove to turn him from his path, but the old instinct,
+final resource after the mind gives up the puzzle,
+kept him straight on the road to Pella.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came upon the rear of a flock of sheep, heading
+away from him. A Natolian sheep-dog, galloping
+hither and thither in his labor at keeping them
+moving, scented the new-comer. There was a quick
+savage bark that heightened at the end in an excited
+yelp of welcome. The shepherd, a dim figure at the
+head of the flock, turned in time to see his dog leaping
+upon the Maccabee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Down, Urge," the shepherd cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Joseph, in the name of God," the Maccabee cried,
+"where is Laodice?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He threw off the excited dog and rushed toward
+the boy, who turned back at the cry with extended
+hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"True to thy promise, friend, friend!" the boy
+cried. "She is here!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee stiffened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is there one with her?" he demanded fiercely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A man and her servant."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee threw off the boy's hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where?" he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ahead of the sheep," the boy said a little uncertainly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee dashed through the flock and rounding
+a turn in the road came upon Laodice walking;
+behind her Momus; at her side was Julian of Ephesus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immense strain had sharpened their sense of fear
+until it was as acute as an instinct. Before the
+sound of the Maccabee's furious approach reached
+Julian, the Ephesian whirled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Towering over him, the very picture of retribution,
+was the man he had left, apparently dead by
+his hand, by the roadside in the hills of Judea months
+and months before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For an instant, Julian stood petrified. Over his
+lips came a faint, frozen whisper that Laodice heard&ndash;that
+was proof enough to her, the moment after.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Philadelphus&ndash;Maccabaeus!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When his outraged kinsman put out vengeful
+hands to seize him, the Maccabee grasped the air.
+Julian of Ephesus had vanished!
+</p>
+
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Among the rocks at the base of the cliff that sheltered
+Christian Pella from the rude winds of the
+Perean mountains, the procurator of the city, Philadelphus
+Maccabaeus, and his wife, Laodice, sat side
+by side in the morning sun. There was a path little
+wider than a man's hand wandering along below them
+toward a well in the hollow of the rocks. Along this
+way, in early morning, Joseph, the shepherd, was
+in the habit of driving his sheep to drink. And
+hither the procurator and his wife came to visit the
+boy from time to time. Within their hall, there was
+too much state. Something in the wild open of
+Judea with its winds gave them all an ease whenever
+they wished to talk with Joseph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the shepherd was not in sight. The pair sat
+down and waited for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Laodice rested against her husband's arm, laid
+along the rock behind her. Presently he freed that
+arm and with the ease of much usage withdrew the
+bodkins from her hair. The heavy coil dropped over
+his breast down to his knee. With delicate touches
+he began to free from the splendid tangle a single
+strand of glistening white hair. When she saw it
+shining like spun silver across the back of his hand,
+she looked up at him. With infinite care he searched
+her face, while she waited with questioning in her
+tender eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This," he said, lifting the hand that supported
+the silver threads, "is the sole evidence that thou
+hast seen the abomination of desolation."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And that came the night I journeyed away from
+Jerusalem, without you," she declared. "But, my
+Philadelphus," she said, turning herself a little that
+she might hide her face away from him, "had I
+stayed with you against my conscience, I had been
+by this time wholly white."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He kissed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I did not expect you to stay," he said. "I knew
+from the beginning that you would not. Ask Joseph.
+He will bear me out."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Low on the slope of the hill, the shepherd approached,
+calling his sheep that trailed after him contentedly
+by the hundreds. The excited bark of Urge,
+the sheep-dog, came up faintly to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While they leaned watching them, old Momus, bent
+and broken, stood before them. Laodice hurriedly
+drew away from her husband's clasp. It was a habit
+she had never entirely shaken off, whenever the mute
+appeared, in spite of the old man's pathetic dumb
+protest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He handed a linen scroll to his master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It read:
+</p>
+
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>
+The captives whom thou hast asked for freedom at Cęsar's
+hand are this day sent to thee, Philadelphus, under escort.
+They should reach thee a little later than this messenger.
+However, it is Cęsar's pain to inform thee that the Greek
+Amaryllis as well as the actress Salome were not to be found.
+Julian of Ephesus, who named the woman for us, is here at
+Cęsarea, but being a Roman citizen, is not a captive. However
+it shall be seen to that his liberty is sufficiently curtailed
+for the welfare of the public. Also, I send herewith a shittim-wood
+casket found with John of Gischala when he was captured
+in a cavern under Jerusalem. It contains treasure and
+certain writings which identify it as property of thy wife.
+There were other features in it which, coming to my hand
+first, made it advisable that the State should not know of its
+existence. And privately, it will be wise in thee to destroy
+them.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee stopped at this point and looked at
+Laodice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What does he mean?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My father put your last letter in the case," she
+said, with a little panic in her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maccabee laughed, and went on,
+</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>
+Those that go forward to thee are Nathan of Jerusalem
+and Aquila of Ephesus. To thy wife my obeisances. To
+thyself, greeting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+CARUS, TRIBUNE.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p>
+THE END
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The City of Delight, by Elizabeth Miller
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The City of Delight, by Elizabeth Miller
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The City of Delight
+ A Love Drama of the Siege and Fall of Jerusalem
+
+Author: Elizabeth Miller
+
+Illustrator: F. X. Leyendecker
+
+Release Date: May 31, 2005 [EBook #15953]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF DELIGHT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Stefan Cramme and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CITY OF DELIGHT
+
+A Love Drama of the Siege and Fall of Jerusalem
+
+by
+
+Elizabeth Miller
+
+Author of
+_The Yoke_ and _Saul of Tarsus_
+
+With Illustrations by
+F.X. Leyendecker
+
+Indianapolis
+The Bobbs-Merrill Company
+Publishers
+1908
+March
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+To
+My Elder Brother
+Otto Miller
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Chapter Page
+
+ I A Prince's Bride 1
+
+ II On the Road to Jerusalem 31
+
+ III The Shepherd of Pella 56
+
+ IV The Travelers 85
+
+ V By the Wayside 108
+
+ VI Dawn in the Hills 124
+
+ VII Imperial Caesar 148
+
+ VIII Greek and Jew 169
+
+ IX The Young Titus 189
+
+ X The Story of a Divine Tragedy 212
+
+ XI The House of Offense 233
+
+ XII The Prince Returns 253
+
+ XIII A New Pretender 274
+
+ XIV The Pride of Amaryllis 284
+
+ XV The Image of Jealousy 300
+
+ XVI The Spread Net 322
+
+ XVII The Tangled Web 337
+
+ XVIII In the Sunless Crypt 358
+
+ XIX The False Prophet 374
+
+ XX As the Foam upon Water 390
+
+ XXI The Faithful Servant 408
+
+ XXII Vanished Hopes 417
+
+ XXIII The Fulfilment 427
+
+ XXIV The Road to Pella 441
+
+
+
+
+THE CITY OF DELIGHT
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I
+
+A PRINCE'S BRIDE
+
+
+The chief merchant of Ascalon stood in the guest-chamber of his house.
+
+Although it was a late winter day the old man was clad in the free
+white garments of a midsummer afternoon, for to the sorrow of
+Philistia the cold season of the year sixty-nine had been warm, wet
+and miasmic. An old woman entering presently glanced at the closed
+windows of the apartment when she noted the flushed face of the
+merchant but she made no movement to have them opened. More than the
+warmth of the day was engaging the attention of the grave old man, and
+the woman, by dress and manner of equal rank with him, stood aside
+until he could give her a moment.
+
+His porter bowed at his side.
+
+"The servants of Philip of Tyre are without," he said. "Shall they
+enter?"
+
+"They have come for the furnishings," Costobarus answered. "Take thou
+all the household but Momus and Hiram, and dismantle the rooms for
+them. Begin in the library; then the sleeping-rooms; this chamber
+next; the kitchen last of all. Send Hiram to the stables to except
+three good camels from the herd for our use. Let Momus look to the
+baggage. Where is Keturah?"
+
+A woman servant hastening after a line of men bearing a great divan,
+picking up the draperies and pillows that had dropped, stopped and
+salaamed to her master.
+
+"Is our apparel ready?" he asked.
+
+"Prepared, master," was the response.
+
+"Then send hither--" But at that moment a man-servant dressed in the
+garb of a physician hastened into the chamber. Without awaiting the
+notice of his master he hurried up and whispered in his ear.
+Costobarus' face grew instantly grave.
+
+"How near?" he asked anxiously.
+
+"In the next house--but a moment since. The household hath fled," was
+the low answer.
+
+"Haste, haste!" Costobarus cried to the rush of servants about him.
+"Lose no time. We must be gone from this place before mid-afternoon.
+Laodice! Where is Laodice?" he inquired.
+
+Then his wife who had stood aside spoke.
+
+"She is not yet prepared," she explained unreadily. "She needs a
+frieze cloak--"
+
+Costobarus broke in by beckoning his wife to one side, where the
+servants could not hear him say compassionately,
+
+"Let there be no delay for small things, Hannah. Let us haste, for
+Laodice is going on the Lord's business."
+
+"A matter of a day only," Hannah urged. "A delay that is further
+necessary, for Aquila's horse is lame."
+
+The old man shook his head and looked away to see a man-servant
+stagger out under a load of splendid carpets. The old woman came
+close.
+
+"The wayside is ambushed and the wilderness is patrolled with danger,
+Costobarus," she said. "Of a certainty you will not take Laodice out
+into a country perilous for caravans and armies!"
+
+"These very perils are the signs of the call of the hour," he
+maintained. "She dare not fail to respond. The Deliverer cometh; every
+prophecy is fulfilled. Rather rejoice that you have prepared your
+daughter for this great use. Be glad that you have borne her."
+
+But in Hannah's face wavered signs of another interpretation of these
+things. She broke in on him without the patience to wait until he had
+completed his sentence.
+
+"Are they prophecies of hope which are fulfilled, or the words of the
+prophet of despair?" she insisted. "What saith Daniel of this hour?
+Did he not name it the abomination of desolation? Said he not that the
+city and the sanctuary should be destroyed, that there should be a
+flood and that unto the end of the war desolations shall be
+determined? Desolations, Costobarus! And Laodice is but a child and
+delicately reared!"
+
+"All these things may come to pass and not a hair of the heads of the
+chosen people be harmed," he assured her.
+
+"But Laodice is too young to have part in the conflict of nations, the
+business of Heaven and earth and the end of all things!"
+
+A courier strode into the hall and approached Costobarus, saw that he
+was engaged in conversation and stopped. The merchant noted him and
+withdrew to read the message which the man carried.
+
+"A letter from Philadelphus," he said over his shoulder, as he moved
+away from Hannah. "He hath landed in Caesarea with his cousin Julian of
+Ephesus. He will proceed at once to Jerusalem. We have no time to
+lose. Ah, Momus?"
+
+He spoke to a servant who had limped into the hall and stood waiting
+for his notice. He was the ruin of a man, physically powerful but as a
+tree wrecked by storm and grown strong again in spite of its
+mutilation. Pestilence in years long past had attacked him and had
+left him dumb, distorted of feature, wry-necked and stiffened in the
+right leg and arm. His left arm, forced to double duty, had become
+tremendously muscular, his left hand unusually dexterous. Much of his
+facial distortion was the result of his efforts to convey his ideas by
+expression and by his attempts to overcome the interference of his wry
+neck with the sweep of his vision.
+
+"Whom have we in our party, Momus?" Costobarus asked. As the man made
+rapid, uncouth signs, the master interpreted.
+
+"Keturah, Hiram and Aquila--and thou and I, Momus. Three camels, one
+of which is the beast of burden. Good! Aquila will ride a horse; ha! a
+horse in a party of camels--well, perhaps--if he were bought in
+Ascalon. How? What? St--t! The physician told me even now. Let none of
+the household know it--above all things not thy mistress!" The last
+sentence was delivered in a whisper in response to certain uneasy
+gestures the mute had made. The man bowed and withdrew.
+
+A second servitor now approached with papers which the merchant
+inspected and signed hastily with ink and stylus which the clerk bore.
+When this last item was disposed of, Hannah was again at her husband's
+side.
+
+"Costobarus," she whispered, "it is known that the East Gate of the
+Temple, which twenty Levites can close only with effort, opened of
+itself in the sixth hour of the night!"
+
+"A sign that God reentereth His house," the merchant explained.
+
+"A sign, O my husband, that the security of the Holy House is
+dissolved of its own accord for the advantage of its enemies!"
+
+Costobarus observed two huge Ethiopians who appeared bewildered at the
+threshold of the unfamiliar interior, looking for the master of the
+house to tell them what to do. The merchant motioned toward a tall
+ebony case that stood against one of the walls and showed them that
+they were to carry it out. Hannah continued:
+
+"And thou hast not forgotten that night when the priests at the
+Pentecost, entering the inner court, were thrown down by the trembling
+of the Temple and that a vast multitude, which they could not see,
+cried: 'Let us go hence!' And that dreadful sunset which we watched
+and which all Israel saw when armies were seen fighting in the skies
+and cities with toppling towers and rocking walls fell into red clouds
+and vanished!"
+
+"What of thyself, Hannah?" he broke in. "Art thou ready to depart for
+Tyre? Philip will leave to-morrow. Do not delay him. Go and prepare."
+
+But the woman rushed on to indiscretion, in her desperate intent to
+stop the journey to Jerusalem at any cost.
+
+"But there are those of good repute here in Ascalon, sober men and
+excellent women, who say that our hope for the Branch of David is too
+late--that Israel is come to judgment, this hour--for He is come and
+gone and we received Him not!"
+
+Costobarus turned upon her sharply.
+
+"What is this?" he demanded.
+
+"O my husband," she insisted hopefully, "it measures up with prophecy!
+And they who speak thus confidently say that He prophesied the end of
+the Holy City, and that this is not the Advent, but doom!"
+
+"It is the Nazarene apostasy," he exclaimed in alarm, "alive though
+the power of Rome and the diligence of the Sanhedrim have striven to
+destroy it these forty years! Now the poison hath entered mine own
+house!"
+
+A servant bowed within earshot. Costobarus turned to him hastily.
+
+"Philip of Tyre," the attendant announced.
+
+"Let him enter," Costobarus said. "Go, Hannah; make Laodice
+ready--preparations are almost complete; be not her obstacle."
+
+"But--but," she insisted with whitening lips, "I have not said that I
+believe all this. I only urge that, in view of this time of war, of
+contending prophecies and of all known peril, that we should keep her,
+who is our one ewe lamb, our tender flower, our Rose of Sharon, yet
+within shelter until the signs are manifest and the purpose of the
+Lord God is made clear."
+
+He turned to her slowly. There was pain on his face, suffering that
+she knew her words had evoked and, more than that, a yearning to
+relent. She was ashamed and not hopeful, but her mother-love was
+stronger than her wifely pity.
+
+"Must I command you, Hannah?" he asked.
+
+Her figure, drawn up with the intensity of her wishfulness, relaxed.
+Her head drooped and slowly she turned away. Costobarus looked after
+her and struggled with rising emotion. But the curtain dropped behind
+her and left him alone.
+
+A moment later the curtains over the arch parted and a middle-aged
+Jew, richly habited, stood there. He raised his hand for the blessing
+of the threshold, then embraced Costobarus with more warmth than
+ceremony.
+
+"What is this I hear?" he demanded with affectionate concern. "Thou
+leavest Ascalon for the peril of Jerusalem?"
+
+"Can Jerusalem be more perilous than Ascalon this hour?" Costobarus
+asked.
+
+"Yes, by our fathers!" Philip declared. "Nothing can be so bad as the
+condition of the Holy City. But what has happened? Three days ago thou
+wast as securely settled here as a barnacle on a shore-rock! To-day
+thou sendest me word: 'Lo! the time long expected hath come; I go
+hence to Jerusalem.' What is it, my brother?"
+
+"Sit and listen."
+
+Philip looked about him. The divan was there, stripped of its covering
+of fine rugs, but the room otherwise was without furniture. Prepared
+for surprise, the Tyrian let no sign of his curiosity escape him, and,
+sitting, leaned on his knees and waited.
+
+"Philadelphus Maccabaeus hath sent to me, bidding me send Laodice to
+him--in Jerusalem," Costobarus said in a low voice.
+
+Philip's eyes widened with sudden comprehension.
+
+"He hath returned!" he exclaimed in a whisper.
+
+For a time there was silence between the two old men, while they gazed
+at each other. Then Philip's manner became intensely confident.
+
+"I see!" he exclaimed again, in the same whisper. "The throne is
+empty! He means to possess it, now that Agrippa hath abandoned it!"
+
+Costobarus pressed his lips together and bowed his head emphatically.
+Again there was silence.
+
+"Think of it!" Philip exclaimed presently.
+
+"I have done nothing else since his messenger arrived at daybreak.
+Little, little, did I think when I married Laodice to him, fourteen
+years ago, that the lad of ten and the little child of four might one
+day be king and queen over Judea!"
+
+Philip shook his head slowly and his gaze settled to the pavement.
+Presently he drew in a long breath.
+
+"He is twenty-four," he began thoughtfully. "He has all the learning
+of the pagans, both of letters and of war; he--Ah! But is he capable?"
+
+"He is the great-grandson of Judas Maccabaeus! That is enough! I have
+not seen him since the day he wedded Laodice and left her to go to
+Ephesus, but no man can change the blood of his fathers in him. And
+Philip--he shall have no excuse to fail. He shall be moneyed; he shall
+be moneyed!"
+
+Costobarus leaned toward his friend and with a sweep of his hand
+indicated the stripped room. It was a noble chamber. The stamp of the
+elegant simplicity of Cyrus, the Persian, was upon it. The ancient
+blue and white mosaics that had been laid by the Parsee builder and
+the fretwork and twisted pillars were there, but the silky carpets,
+the censers and the chairs of fine woods were gone. Costobarus looked
+steadily at the perplexed countenance of Philip.
+
+"Seest thou how much I believe in this youth?" he asked.
+
+A shade of uneasiness crossed Philip's forehead.
+
+"Thou art no longer young, Costobarus," he said, "and disappointments
+go hard with us, at our age--especially, especially."
+
+"I shall not be disappointed," Costobarus declared.
+
+The friendly Jew looked doubtful.
+
+"The nation is in a sad state," he observed. "We have cause. The
+procurators have been of a nature with their patrons, the emperors. It
+is enough but to say that! But Vespasian Caesar is another kind of man.
+He is tractable. Young Titus, who will succeed him, is well-named the
+Darling of Mankind. We could get much redress from these if we would
+be content with redress. But no! We must revert to the days of Saul!"
+
+"Yes; but they declare they will have no king but God; no commander
+but the Messiah to come; no order but primitive impulse! But the
+Maccabee will change all that! It is but the far swing of the first
+revolt. Jerusalem is ready for reason at this hour, it is said."
+
+"Yes," Philip assented with a little more spirit. "It hath reached us,
+who have dealings with the East, that there is a better feeling in the
+city. Such slaughter has been done there among the Sadducees, such
+hordes of rebels from outlying subjugated towns have poured their
+license and violence in upon the safe City of Delight, that the
+citizens of Jerusalem actually look forward to the coming of Titus as
+a deliverance from the afflictions which their own people have visited
+upon them."
+
+"The hour for the Maccabee, indeed," Costobarus ruminated.
+
+"And the hour for Him whom we all expect," Philip added in a low tone.
+Costobarus bowed his head. Presently he drew a scroll from the folds
+of his ample robe.
+
+"Hear what Philadelphus writes me:
+
+ Caesarea, II Kal. Jul. XX.
+
+ To Costobarus, greetings and these by messenger;
+
+ I learn on arriving in this city that Judea is in truth no man's
+ country. Wherefore it can be mine by cession or conquest. It is
+ mine, however, by right. I shall possess it.
+
+ I go hence to Jerusalem.
+
+ Fail not to send my wife thither and her dowry. Aquila, my
+ emissary, will safely conduct her. Trust him.
+
+ Proceed with despatch and husband the dowry of your daughter,
+ since it is to be the corner-stone of a new Israel.
+
+ Peace to you and yours. To my wife my affection and my loyalty.
+
+ PHILADELPHUS MACCABAEUS.
+
+ Nota Bene. Julian of Ephesus accompanies me. He is my cousin. He
+ will in all probability meet your daughter at the Gate.
+
+ MACCABAEUS."
+
+Slowly the old man rolled the writing.
+
+"He wastes no words," Philip mused. "He writes as a siege-engine
+talks--without quarter."
+
+Costobarus nodded.
+
+"So I am giving him two hundred talents," he said deliberately.
+
+"Two hundred talents!" Philip echoed.
+
+"And I summoned thee, Philip, to say that in addition to my house and
+its goods, thou canst have my shipping, my trade, my caravans, which
+thou hast coveted so long at a price--at that price. I shall give
+Laodice two hundred talents."
+
+"Two hundred talents!" Philip echoed again, somewhat taken aback.
+
+Costobarus went to a cabinet on the wall and drew forth a shittim-wood
+case which he unlocked. Therefrom he took a small casket and opened
+it. He then held it so that the sun, falling into it, set fire to a
+bed of loose gems mingled without care for kind or value--a heap of
+glowing color emitting sparks.
+
+"Here are one hundred of the talents," Costobarus said.
+
+A flash of understanding lighted Philip's face not unmingled with the
+satisfaction of a shrewd Jew who has pleased himself at business. One
+hundred talents, then, for the best establishment in five cities, in
+all the Philistine country. But why? Costobarus supplied the answer at
+that instant.
+
+"I would depart with my daughter by mid-afternoon," he said.
+
+"I doubt the counting houses; if I had known sooner--" Philip began.
+
+"Aquila arrived only this morning. I sent a messenger to you at once."
+
+Philip rose.
+
+"We waste time in talk. I shall inform thee by messenger presently.
+God speed thee! My blessings on thy son-in-law and on thy daughter!"
+
+Costobarus rose and took his friend's hand.
+
+"Thou shalt have the portion of the wise-hearted man in this kingdom.
+And this yet further, my friend. If perchance the uncertainties of
+travel in this distressed land should prove disastrous and I should
+not return, I shall leave a widow here--"
+
+"And in that instance, be at peace. I am thy brother."
+
+Costobarus pressed Philip's hand.
+
+"Farewell," he said; and Philip embraced him and went forth.
+
+Costobarus turned to one of his closed windows and thrust it open, for
+the influence of the spring sun had made itself felt in the past
+important hour for Costobarus.
+
+Noon stood beautiful and golden over the city. The sky was
+clean-washed and blue, and the surface of the Mediterranean, glimpsed
+over white house-tops that dropped away toward the sea-front, was a
+wandering sheet of flashing silver. Here and there were the ruins of
+the last year's warfare, but over the fallen walls of gray earth the
+charity of running vines and the new growth of the spring spread a
+beauty, both tender and compassionate.
+
+In such open spaces inner gardens were exposed and almond trees tossed
+their crowns of white bloom over pleached arbors of old grape-vines.
+Here the Mediterranean birds sang with poignant sweetness while the
+new-budded limbs of the oleanders tilted suddenly under their weight
+as they circled from covert to covert.
+
+But the energy of the young spring was alive only in the birds and the
+blossoming orchards. Wherever the solid houses fronted in unbroken
+rows the passages between, there were no open windows, no carpets
+swung from latticed balconies; no buyers moved up the roofed-over
+Street of Bazaars. Not in all the range of the old man's vision was to
+be seen a living human being. For the chief city of the Philistine
+country Ascalon was nerveless and still. At times immense and
+ponderous creaking sounded in the distance, as if a great rusted crane
+swung in the wind. Again there were distant, voluminous flutterings,
+as if neglected and loosened sails flapped. Idle roaming donkeys
+brayed and a dog shut up and forgotten in a compound barked
+incessantly. Presently there came faint, far-off, failing cries that
+faded into silence. The Jew's brow contracted but he did not move.
+
+From his position, he could see the port to the east packed with
+lifeless vessels. The stretches of stone wharf and the mole were
+vacant and littered with rubbish. The yard-arms of abandoned
+freighters were peculiarly beaded with tiny black shapes that moved
+from time to time. Far out at sea, so far that a blue mist embraced
+its base and set its sails mysteriously afloat in air, a great galley,
+with all canvas crowded on, sped like a frightened bird past the port
+that had once been its haven.
+
+A strange compelling odor stole up from the city. Costobarus glanced
+down into his garden below him. It was a terraced court, with
+vine-covered earthen retaining walls supporting each successive tier
+and terminating against a domed gate flanked on either side by a tall
+conical cypress.
+
+He noted, on the flagging of the walk leading by flights of steps down
+to the gate, a heap of garments with broad brown and yellow stripes.
+Wondering at the untidiness of his gardener in leaving his tunic here
+while he worked, Costobarus looked away toward the large stones that
+lay here and there in gutters and on grass-plots, remnants of the work
+of the Roman catapults the previous summer. In the walls of houses
+were unrepaired breaches, where the wounds of the missiles showed. On
+a slight eminence overlooking the city from the west center-poles of
+native cedar which had supported Roman tents were still standing. But
+no garrison was there now, though the signs of the savage Roman
+obsession still lay on the remnants of the prostrate western wall. So
+as Costobarus' gaze wandered he did not see far above that heap of
+striped garments in his garden walk, fixed like an enchanted thing,
+moveless, dead-calm, a great desert vulture poised in air. Presently
+another and yet another materialized out of the blue, growing larger
+as they fell down to the level of their fellow. Slowly the three
+swooped down over the heap on the garden walk. The tiny black shapes
+that beaded the yard-arms in port spread great wings and soared
+solemnly into Ascalon. The three vultures dropped noiselessly on the
+pavement.
+
+Cries began suddenly somewhere nearer and instantly the tremendous
+booming of a great oriental gong from the heathen quarters swept heavy
+floods of sound over the outcry and drowned it. The vultures flew up
+hastily and Costobarus saw them for the first time. A chill rushed
+over him; revulsion of feeling showed vividly on his face. He shut the
+window.
+
+Noon was high over Ascalon and Pestilence was Caesar within its walls.
+
+It was the penalty of warfare, the long black shadow that the passage
+of a great army casts upon a battling nation. Physicians could not
+give it a name. It seized upon healthy victims, rent them, blasted
+them and cast them dead and distorted in their tracks, before help
+could reach them. It passed like fire on a high wind through whole
+countries and left behind it silence and feeding vultures.
+
+As Costobarus turned from his window to pace up and down his chamber,
+Hannah's argument came back to him with new energy. He felt with a
+kind of panic that his confident answer to her might have been wrong.
+When a girl appeared in the archway, he moved impulsively toward her,
+as if to retract the command that would send her out into this land
+that the Lord had spoken against, but the strength and repose in her
+face communicated itself to him.
+
+Above all other suggestions in her presence was that overpowering
+richness of oriental beauty which no other kind in the world may
+surpass in its appeal to the loves of men. Enough of the Roman stock
+in her line had given structural firmness and stature to a type which
+at her age would have developed weight and duskiness, but she was
+taller and more slender than the women of her race, and supple and
+alive and splendid. About her hips was knotted a silken scarf of red
+and white and green with long undulant fringes that added to the lithe
+grace in her movements. Under it was a glistening garment of silver
+tissue that reached to the small ankles laced about by the ribbons of
+white sandals. For sleeves there were netted fringes through which the
+fine luster of her arms was visible. About her wrists, her throat and
+in her hair, heavy and shining black, were golden coins that marked
+her steps with stealthy tinkling.
+
+Costobarus, in spite of the shock of doubt and fear in his brain,
+looked at her as if with the happy eyes of the astonished Maccabee. In
+those full tender lips, in the slope of those black, silken brows, in
+the sparkling behind the dusky slumbrous eyes, there was all the fire
+and generosity and limitless charm that should make her lover's world
+a place of delight and perfume and music.
+
+"How is it with you, Laodice?" he asked, faltering a little.
+
+"I am prepared, my father," she answered.
+
+"I commend your despatch. I would be gone within an hour."
+
+She bowed and Costobarus regarded her with growing wistfulness. At
+this last moment his love was to become his obstacle, his fear for his
+child his one cowardice.
+
+"Dost thou remember him?" he asked without preliminary.
+
+Laodice answered as if the thought were first in her mind.
+
+"Not at all; and yet, if I could remember him, I may not discover in
+the man of four-and-twenty anything of the lad of ten."
+
+"He may not have changed. There are such natures, and, as I recall
+him, his may well be one of these. His disposition from childhood to
+boyhood did not change. When I knew him in Jerusalem, he was worthy
+the notice of a man. The manner he had there he bore with him to this,
+a smaller city, and hence to Ephesus, a city of another kind. It was
+good to see him examine the world, reject this and that and look upon
+his choice proudly. He made the schools observe him, consider him. He
+did not enter them for alteration, nor was he shut up in a shell of
+self-satisfaction. He entered them as a citizen of the world and as an
+examiner of all philosophy. Yet the world taught him nothing. It gave
+him merely the open school where regulation and atmosphere helped him
+to teach himself. O wife of a child, thou shalt not be ashamed of thy
+husband, man-grown!"
+
+"How is he favored?" she asked with the first maiden hesitation
+showing in the question.
+
+"He was slender and dark and promised to be tall. He was quick in
+movement, quick in temper, resourceful, aye, even shifty, I should
+say; stubborn, cold in heart, hard to please."
+
+"Fit attributes for a king," she said, half to herself, "yet he will
+be no soft husband."
+
+Costobarus looked away from her and was silent for a time.
+
+"Daughter," he said finally, "thou hast learned indeed that thine is
+to be no luxurious life. In thy restrained heart there are no dreams.
+Let not thy youth, when thou seest him, put obstacle in the way of thy
+duty. Whether thou lovest him or lovest him not, he is thy husband,
+thy fellow in a great labor for God and for Israel. Remember the times
+and the portents and shut thine ears against selfish desire. Thou
+seest Judea. That which the Lord hath uttered against it through the
+prophets has come to pass. Abandon thy hopes in all save the Son of
+God; forget thyself; prepare to give all and expect nothing but the
+coming of the King! For verily thou lookest over the edge of the world
+past the very end of time!"
+
+The solemn announcement of the Advent by this white-bearded prophet
+should have discovered in her a very human and terrified girl. But it
+was no new tidings to her. Since her earliest recollection she had
+heard it, expected it, contemplated it, till the magnitude and terror
+of it had been lost in its familiarity. She clasped her hands and
+dropped her eyes and her lips moved in a silent prayer.
+
+Costobarus remained for a space sunk in glorified meditation. But
+presently he raised himself, with signs of his recent feeling showing
+on his face.
+
+"Send hither thy mother; bid Aquila and our servants stand here before
+me a little later."
+
+She bowed and withdrew. As she passed out a servant stepped aside to
+give her room and at a sign from his master approached.
+
+"A messenger from Philip of Tyre," he said.
+
+A moment later an old courier carrying a sheepskin wallet came into
+the chamber. He salaamed and produced a tablet which he handed to
+Costobarus.
+
+ Herewith, O my brother, I send thee one hundred talents. May it
+ prove part of the corner-stone of a new Israel. Peace to thee and
+ thine!
+
+ PHILIP OF TYRE.
+
+Costobarus looked up at the old courier.
+
+"Take my blessings to thy master. May he come to a high seat in that
+new Israel which he hath helped to build! Farewell."
+
+The courier withdrew. When his footsteps died away the old merchant
+reached under the divan and drew forth the shittim-wood box. Producing
+a key he unlocked and opened it. From his bosom he drew forth the
+letter from Philadelphus and laid it within.
+
+"Let her take it with her," he said, speaking aloud. "Here," lifting a
+cylinder of old silver exquisitely chased, "are her marriage papers;
+this," lifting delicately embroidered squares of linen, "her marriage
+tokens, and here, her dowry."
+
+He opened the inner box and laid the sheepskin wallet in upon the
+gems. He closed the lid, and, locking the case, lifted it and set it
+beside him on the divan.
+
+When he looked up, he saw a man standing within a few paces of him and
+perfunctorily gazing at anything but the display of Laodice's fortune.
+
+He was lean, muscular, somewhat younger than forty but already gray at
+the temples, of nervous temperament, direct of gaze and of attractive
+presence. He wore a tunic of gray wool bordered with red, and a gray
+mantle hung negligently from his shoulders. Limbs and arms were bare
+and his head-covering of red wool hung from his arm.
+
+Costobarus, a little discomfited that he had been surprised with
+Laodice's dowry exposed, spoke briskly.
+
+"Well, Aquila? Prepared?"
+
+"Everything is in order. I am ready to proceed at once."
+
+"How many in your party?"
+
+"But myself."
+
+"Have you ever been to Jerusalem?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"How, then," Costobarus asked, with a keen look, "came Philadelphus to
+appoint you to conduct Laodice to the city?"
+
+"His retinue is small; he could not come himself, and he chose me as
+safer than the other member of his party," was the direct reply.
+
+Costobarus studied this reply before he questioned his son-in-law's
+courier further.
+
+"Jerusalem, they say, is in disorder. How will you get my daughter to
+shelter when you have reached the city?"
+
+"Philadelphus hath instructed me that there will be a Greek at the Sun
+Gate daily, awaiting us. He will wear a purple turban embroidered with
+a golden star. He will conduct us to the house of Amaryllis the
+Seleucid, who is pledged to the Maccabee's cause. Philadelphus will be
+in her house."
+
+"Why hers?" Costobarus persisted.
+
+"Because it is the only secure house in Jerusalem. She stands in the
+good graces of John of Gischala and she is safe."
+
+Costobarus ruminated.
+
+"There is too much detail; too many people to depend upon and
+therefore too many who may fail you. Aquila!"
+
+"Sir?"
+
+"I am going to Jerusalem with you."
+
+He turned without waiting to see the effect of this speech upon the
+Maccabee's courier and clapped his hands for an attendant. To the
+servitor who responded he said:
+
+"Send hither our party. It is time. Bring me my cloak."
+
+He looked then suddenly at Aquila. The Roman's face had cleared of its
+astonishment and discomfiture.
+
+"Well enough," the courier said bluntly and closed his lips. The
+servitor reappeared with his master's cloak and kerchief. After him
+came Keturah, the handmaiden, and Hiram, a camel-driver, prepared for
+a journey. The mute Momus presently appeared. Costobarus got into his
+cloak without help, made inquiry for this detail and that of his
+business and of his journey, gave instruction to his attendants, and
+then asked for Laodice.
+
+There was a moment of silence more distressed than embarrassed. Momus
+dropped his eyes; Keturah looked at her master with moving lips and
+sudden flushing of color, as if she were on the point of tears. Aquila
+stared absently out of the arch beyond.
+
+Costobarus glanced from one to the other of his company and then went
+toward the corridor to call his daughter. As he lifted the curtain, he
+started and stopped.
+
+[Illustration: At her feet Hannah knelt.]
+
+The lifted curtain had revealed Laodice. At her feet Hannah knelt, as
+if she had flung herself in her daughter's path, her arms clasping the
+young figure close to her and an agony of appeal stamped on her
+upraised face. The last of the rich color had died out of the girl's
+face and with pitiful eyes and quivering lips she was stroking the
+desperate hands that meant to keep her for ever.
+
+Except for the sudden sobbing of the woman servant, tense and
+anguished silence prevailed. The old merchant was confronted with a
+perplexity that found him without fortitude to solve. He felt his
+strength slip from him. He, too, covered his face with his hands.
+
+At the opposite arch another house servant appeared, lifted a
+distorted, blackening face and, doubling like a wounded snake, fell
+upon the floor.
+
+A moment of stupefied silence in which Hannah, with her mother
+instincts never so acutely alive, turned her strained vision upon the
+writhing figure. Then shrieks broke from the lips of the
+serving-woman; the hall filled with panic. Hannah leaped to her feet
+and thrust Laodice toward her father.
+
+"Away!" she cried. "The pestilence! The pestilence is upon us!"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+ON THE ROAD TO JERUSALEM
+
+
+News of the appearance of the plague in the house of Costobarus
+traveled fast after the death of the gardener, who had fallen in the
+open and in sight of the watchful inhabitants of Ascalon. So by the
+time the house servants of the merchant were made aware of their peril
+by the death of one of their own number, Philip of Tyre with the
+courage of affection and loyalty stood on the threshold of the
+guest-chamber informed of the situation and prepared to help. Hannah,
+supported by the Tyrian's assurance of her rescue and protection,
+succeeded in urging Costobarus and Laodice not to delay for her to the
+peril of the thrice precious daughter.
+
+So with his house yet ringing with the first convulsion of terror
+Costobarus ordered his party with all haste to the camels.
+
+Keturah, Laodice's handmaiden, had fainted with terror and was carried
+parcel-wise over the great arm of Momus, the mute, out into the street
+and deposited summarily on the floor of Laodice's bamboo howdah. The
+camel-driver, Hiram, seemed only a little less stupefied than she. The
+mute, with a face as determined and threatening as an uplifted gad,
+drove him from the shelter of a dark corner out to his place on the
+neck of his master's camel. Aquila, the emissary, showed the
+immemorial composure in the face of disaster that was the badge of the
+Roman in the days of the degenerate Caesars, and, mounting his horse
+when the rest of the party were in their places, headed the procession
+toward the northeast.
+
+From an upper window behind a lattice, Hannah cried her farewells and
+fluttered her scarf. She was smiling the drawn, white smile of a
+mother who is forcing herself to be cheerful in the face of danger,
+for the peace of those she loves. Laodice understood the tender
+deception and when a sharp turn of the street cut off the sight of the
+plumy trees of the garden, she covered her face and wept inconsolably.
+
+On either side of the passage there came muffled sounds from houses;
+out of open alleys leading into interior courts stole the fetor of
+death that even the spice of burning unguents could not smother. The
+whole air shuddered with the drumming of heathen physicians in the
+pagan quarters, through which the silence of long stretches of
+ominously quiet houses shouted its meaning. At times frantic barefoot
+flights could be glimpsed as households deserted stricken houses, but
+whatever outcry arose came from bedsides. Ascalon fled as a frightened
+animal flees, silently and under cover.
+
+They rode now through a shrieking wind, burdened with sallow smoke and
+dreadful odors. Denser and denser the cloud grew till the streets
+ahead were hidden in yellow vapor and near-by houses loomed with dim
+outlines as if far off, and even the sounds of death and disaster
+became choked in the immense prevalence of smell. Blinded, with scarf
+and kerchief wrapped over mouth and nostril, the fleeing party swept
+down upon the very heart of that stifling mystery. Through it
+presently, as the houses thinned out, they saw cores of great heat
+surmounted by black-tipped flames that crackled savagely. Momus, now
+in the lead, turned sharply to his right and the next instant had the
+wind behind him. Almost involuntarily each member of the party looked
+back. Outside the breach of the broken wall, standing clear to view
+with the wind from the hills sweeping townward from them, were
+diabolical figures, naked and black, feeding immense pyres with
+hideous fuel.
+
+Past this grisly line, a camel with a single rider swept in from
+seaward. The traveler lifted an arm and signaled to the party. Aquila
+seemed not to see this hail, and rode on; but Costobarus, after the
+traveler motioned to them once more, spoke:
+
+"Does not this person make signs to us, Aquila?"
+
+The pagan looked back.
+
+"Why should he?" he asked.
+
+"He can tell us," the master observed and spoke to Momus and Hiram,
+who drew up their camels. The traveler raced alongside.
+
+It was a woman, veiled and wrapped with all the jealous care of the
+East against the curious eyes of strangers. Aquila took in her
+featureless presence with a single irritated look and apparently lost
+interest.
+
+"Greeting, lady," Costobarus said.
+
+"Peace, sir, and greeting," she replied respectfully. Her tones were
+marked with the deference of the serving-class and Costobarus gave her
+permission to speak.
+
+"Art thou a Jew and master of this train?" she asked.
+
+Costobarus assented.
+
+"I was journeying to Jerusalem with a caravan of which my master was
+owner, but the Romans came upon us and took every one prisoner, except
+myself. I escaped, but I am without protection and without friends. In
+Jerusalem, I have relatives who will care for me, yet I fear to make
+the journey alone. I pray thee, with the generosity of a Jew and the
+authority of a master, permit me to go in the protection of thy
+company!"
+
+Costobarus reflected and while he hesitated he became aware that Momus
+was looking at him with warning in his eyes. But Laodice, so filled
+with loneliness and apprehension, was moved to sympathy for the
+solitary and friendless woman. She leaned toward her father and said
+in a low voice:
+
+"Let her come with us, father; she is a woman and afraid."
+
+Aquila heard that low petition and he flashed a look at the stranger
+that seemed reproachful. But Costobarus was speaking.
+
+"Ride with us, then, and be welcome," he said.
+
+The woman bowed her shawled head and murmured with emotion after a
+silence:
+
+"The blessings of a servant be upon you and yours; may the God of
+Israel be with you for evermore."
+
+She dropped back to the rear of the party and the train moved on.
+
+Meanwhile, Keturah, who sat huddled on the floor of Laodice's howdah,
+had not moved since they had left the doorway of Costobarus' house.
+Momus, on the neck of Laodice's camel, had observed her once or twice,
+and now he reached back and touched her. He jerked his hand away and
+brought up his camel with a wrench. Hiram, following close behind, by
+dint of main strength managed to avoid a collision with Momus' beast
+so suddenly halted. The mute leaped down from his place and in an
+instant Costobarus joined him. Alarmed without understanding, Laodice
+had risen and was drawn as far as she might from the serving-woman.
+Momus, lifting himself by the stirrup, seized the stiff figure and
+laid it down upon the sands. Aquila dismounted and the three men bent
+over the woman. Then Costobarus glanced up quickly at Laodice, made a
+sign to Momus, who, with a face devoid of expression, climbed back
+into his place on the neck of the camel.
+
+The strange woman who had stood her ground was heard to say in a low
+voice, half lost in the muffling of her wrappings:
+
+"One!"
+
+Momus drove on leisurely and Laodice, knowing that she must not look,
+slipped down in her place and wrapped her vitta over her face.
+
+Pestilence was riding with them.
+
+After a long time, Costobarus' camel ambled up beside hers, and she
+ventured to uncover her eyes. Her father smiled at her with that same
+heart-breaking smile which her mother had for her in face of trouble.
+
+"The frosts! The frosts!" he whispered to Momus, and the mute laid
+goad about his camel.
+
+Aquila, seeing this haste, checked his horse's gait and fell back
+beside the strange woman. Together they permitted the rest of the
+party to ride ahead, while they talked in voices too restrained to be
+heard.
+
+"There is pestilence in this company," Aquila said angrily; "will that
+not persuade you to abandon this plan?"
+
+"No. When all of you are like to die and leave this great treasure
+sitting out in the wilderness without a guardian?" she said lightly.
+There was no trace of a servant's humility in her tone.
+
+"Hast had the plague that thou seem'st to feel secure from it?" he
+demanded.
+
+"O no; then there would be no risk in this game. There is no sport in
+an unfair advantage over conditions. No! But how comes this Costobarus
+with you?"
+
+"He would not trust his daughter and a dowry to me, alone."
+
+"How shall we get to Emmaus, then?" she asked.
+
+"We shall not get to Emmaus; so you must inform Julian, who will
+expect us there," he declared.
+
+The woman played with the silken reins of her camel. Behind her veil a
+sarcastic smile played about the corners of her mouth. Aquila watched
+her resentfully, waiting with an immense reserve of caustic words for
+her refusal to accept the charge.
+
+"So, my Mars of the gray temples, thou meanest in all faith to deliver
+up this lady and her treasure to Julian?"
+
+"By those same gray temples, I do! And hold thy peace about my white
+hairs. Nothing made them so but thyself--and this evil plot in which I
+am tangled. What does Julian mean to do with this poor creature?"
+
+"He has not got her yet and by the complication thou seest now,
+wearing its turban over one ear in yonder howdah, it may come to pass
+that he will never have her--and her dowry."
+
+"Pfui! How little you know this Julian! Besides, I am pledged to
+deliver him--at least the treasure."
+
+"And thou meanest to line his purse with this great treasure because
+he paid thee to do it?"
+
+"I shall; and be rid of it!"
+
+The woman smiled sarcastically.
+
+"And scorn it for thyself?"
+
+Aquila made no answer, but rode on in sulky silence.
+
+"Perpol, it must be pleasant to be a queen," the woman observed with
+an assumption of childishness in her voice.
+
+"Peril's own habit!" Aquila declared.
+
+"Peril! Fie! That is half the pleasure of this game of life. It is
+tiresome to live any other way than hazardously."
+
+"Thou shalt have pleasure enough in this journey thou art to take,"
+Aquila declared a little threateningly.
+
+The woman laughed. When Aquila spoke again, his voice was full of
+concern.
+
+"I was a fool for not forcing you to stay in Ascalon. You are
+reckless--reckless!"
+
+"It was that which made me attractive," the woman broke in, "to Nero,
+to Vitellius and to you."
+
+"Reckless and useless!" Aquila went on decisively. "Hear me, now; I
+trifle no longer. Sometime to-night thou'lt leave us and journey to
+Emmaus and inform Julian what has wrecked his plans, and send him with
+despatch to Zorah. This thou wilt do, by all the Furies, or when I do
+catch thee as I shall, since there is no other fool in Judea who will
+undertake to feed thee, I shall leave the print of my displeasure on
+thee from thy head to thy heel! Mark me!"
+
+The woman laughed aloud, with such peculiar insolence and amusement
+that one of the servants heard her and turned his head that way.
+
+"Pah! What a timid villain thou art," the woman said, when the servant
+looked away again. "How much better it would have been had Julian
+fixed upon _me_ as his confederate!"
+
+"Not for Julian! You plot against him even now. But say what you will,
+you go to Emmaus to-night, without fail. I have spoken!"
+
+Aquila touched his horse and riding away from the woman came up beside
+Costobarus who was gazing over the country through which they were
+passing.
+
+It was a great plain, advancing by benches and slopes to the edge of a
+rocky shore. Without forests, spotted only with verdure, vast, barren,
+exhausted with the constant production of fourteen centuries, it was a
+cheerless sea-front at its best. To the west the wash of the tideless
+Mediterranean tumbled along an unindented coast; to the east the
+sallow stony earth went up and up, toward an ever receding sallow
+horizon. Between lay humbled towns, wholly abandoned to the bats and
+to the ignoble wild life of the Judean wilderness. There were no sheep
+or cattle. Vespasian had passed that way and required the flocks of
+the nation for the subsistence of his four legions. There were no
+olive or fig groves. They had been the first to fall under the Roman
+ax, for the policy of Roman warfare was that the first step in
+subduing a rebellious province was to starve it. The vineyards had
+suffered the same end. The enriched soil of these inclosures, made one
+now with the wild at the leveling of their hedges, produced acres of
+profitless weeds, green against the rising brown bosom of the
+hill-fronts. Here and there were the fallen walls of isolated
+homes--wastes of masonry already losing all domestic signs. There were
+no gardens; it had been two seasons since the wheat and the barley had
+been reaped last, and the seaboard of southern Judea, in the path of
+Rome the destroyer, was a wilderness.
+
+Over all this immense slope the eyes of Costobarus wandered. However
+he had felt in the preceding days when he looked upon this ruin of the
+land of milk and honey, he realized now suddenly and in all its
+fearful actuality the predicament of Judea, its despair and the
+gigantic travail before those who would save it from the united
+sentence passed upon it by God and the powers. Immense dejection
+seized him. He looked from the face of the country, upon which not a
+single thing of profit showed, toward the bowed head and oppressed
+figure of his young and inexperienced daughter who was to put her
+tender self between Ruin and its victim. Chills, succeeded by flashes
+of fever, swept over him. He raised himself as if to give command to
+Aquila but settled back under the canopy, grown immeasurably older and
+feebler in that moment of helpless surrender to conditions of which he
+had been part an artificer. It was not as if he had made an incautious
+move in a political game; it was, as it seemed to him undeniably then,
+that he had advanced against the Lord God of Hosts, and there was no
+turning back!
+
+He settled slowly into a stunned anguish that seemed to rise
+gradually, like a filling tide, shutting out the sunset and the
+seaboard, the bald earth and the streaming wind, and engulfing him in
+roaring darkness and intense cold.
+
+They were in sight of a cluster of Syrian huts, the first inhabited
+village they had come upon since leaving Ascalon, but he was not aware
+of it. The sudden halting of his camel and a hoarse strained cry at
+hand seemed to bear some relation to his condition, but he did not
+care. He felt his howdah lurch to one side as some one leaped up
+beside him; he felt remotely the great grasp of hands on him, which
+must have been Momus'; the quick military voice of Aquila he heard and
+then, keen and distinct as a call upon him, the sound of Laodice's
+tones made sharp with terror.
+
+He opened his eyes and saw her, holding him in her arms. Somewhere in
+the background were the faces of Momus and Aquila. Between the pagan
+and the old servant passed a look that the old man caught. Then he
+heard Aquila say:
+
+"The village--his sole chance, if there is a physician there."
+
+Laodice held him fast only for a moment, when it seemed that she was
+wrenched away. The dying man was glad. If this were pestilence, she
+should not come near. The hiss of the lash and the bound of the stung
+camel disturbed him but he lapsed into the immense cold again as they
+raced down the slight declivity toward the Syrian village. But
+Pestilence was riding with them and the odds were with it.
+
+But the dwellers of that little huddle of huts had nothing to do but
+to sit in their doorways and suspect. Whatever came their way from the
+sea for many months had brought them disaster and long since they had
+learned to defend themselves. So now, when a party riding at breakneck
+speed, bearing with them an old man on whom the inertia of death was
+plain, came across the frontiers of their little town, they met them
+with the convenient stones of their rocky streets, with their savage,
+stark-ribbed dogs, with offal from kitchen heap and donkey stall and
+with insults and curses.
+
+"Away, ye bringers of plague! Out, lepers; be gone, ye unclean!"
+
+Laodice and Aquila who rode in the open were fair targets for half the
+hail that fell about them. The girl groaned as the missiles fell into
+the howdah upon the helpless shape of Costobarus, who did not lift a
+hand to fend off the stones. The pagan, bruised and raging, drew his
+weapon and spurred his horse to ride down his assailants, but they
+scattered before him and from safe refuge continued their assault with
+redoubled determination.
+
+Momus, seeing only injury in attempting to enforce hospitality, turned
+his camel and, swinging around the outermost limits of the settlement,
+fled. Aquila followed him, and a moment later the rest of the party
+joined them.
+
+Without the range of the village, the party halted. Momus and Aquila
+lifted Costobarus down and laid him on a rug that Laodice had spread
+for him. But when she would have knelt by him, he motioned to Aquila
+not to permit her to approach. The mute stood by his master. In that
+countenance fast passing under shade was written charge and injunction
+as solemn as the darkness that approached him.
+
+"Here, O faithful servant, is the wife of a prince, the daughter of
+thy master, the joy of thine own declining days. Shield her against
+wrong and misfortune by all the strength that in thee lies, as thou
+hopest in the King to come and the reward of the steadfast. Promise!"
+
+They were silent lips that once knew the art and the sound of speech.
+The old habit never entirely fell away from them. Under this anguish
+they moved--fruitlessly; over the deformed face flitted the keen
+agony of regret; then he lifted his great left arm and bent it upward
+at the elbow; the huge, even monstrous muscles, knotted and kinked
+from shoulder to elbow, sank down under the broad barbarian bracelet
+of bronze and rippled under and rose again from elbow to wrist,
+ferocious, superhuman! In that movement the dying man read the mute's
+consecration of his one great strength to the protection of the
+tenderly loved Laodice. Costobarus motioned to the shittim-wood casket
+and Momus undid it and strapped it on his own belt.
+
+"The frosts! The frosts!" the dying man whispered. The mute
+understood. Then the father's eyes wandered toward the figure of his
+daughter fended away from him by the pagan. The agony of her suffering
+and the agony of his distress for her bridged the space between them.
+And while they yearned toward each other in a silence that quivered
+with pain, the light darkened in Costobarus' eyes.
+
+When Laodice came to herself, she was laid upon a spot of rough grass,
+in the shelter of an overhanging bluff. It was not the scene upon
+which her sorrow-stunned eyes had closed a while before. The village
+was nowhere in sight; the plain had been left behind; any further view
+was shut off by Aquila's horse, and the two camels whose bridles were
+in the hands of Hiram. Beside the stricken girl knelt Momus and
+Aquila; standing at her feet was a new-comer, on whom her wandering and
+half-conscious gaze rested.
+
+He was an old man, clad in a short tunic, ragged of hem and girt about
+him with a rope. Barefoot, bareheaded and provided only with a staff
+and a small wallet, he was to outward appearances little more than one
+of the legion of mendicants that infested the poverty-stricken land of
+Judea. But his large eyes, under the tangle of wind-blown white hair
+and white shelving brows, were infinitely intelligent and refined.
+Now, they beamed with pity and concern on the bereaved girl.
+
+But she forgot him the next instant, for returning consciousness
+brought back like a blow the memory of the death of her father.
+
+From time to time she caught snatches of conversation between the old
+wayfarer and Aquila. They were spoken in low tones and only from time
+to time did they reach her.
+
+"He was Costobarus, principal merchant of this coast," she heard
+Aquila explain shortly.
+
+"I shall go on to Ascalon; I do not fear," the old man said next. "I
+shall bring his people to fetch his body. I marked the spot. Comfort
+her with that, when she can bear to talk of it."
+
+"We go to Jerusalem," Aquila went on, some time later, "else we should
+turn back with him ourselves. But we dare not risk the pestilence on
+her account, for it seems that she is very necessary to the Jews at
+this hour--very necessary."
+
+"I follow to the Holy City," the old wayfarer added at last. "The
+Passover is celebrated there within two weeks. But I shall not fail;
+nothing will harm me."
+
+"What talisman do you carry to protect you?" the pagan asked a little
+irritably.
+
+"No talisman, but the love of Jesus Christ, the Saviour!"
+
+"A Christian!" Aquila exclaimed.
+
+Even through her stupor of grief and hopelessness, Laodice heard this
+exclamation. Here, then, was one of the Nazarenes, that mysterious
+sect whose tenets she had never been permitted to hear; But also, she
+knew that the old apostate had braved the plague and had buried her
+father. She turned to look at him in time to see him extend his hands
+in blessing over her.
+
+"_The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and his comfort be with you, for
+ever; amen_. Farewell."
+
+He was gone. Momus raised her in his arms and, lifting her into her
+howdah, laid her tenderly on the improvised reclining seat that had
+been made of the chair therein. In a twinkling the whole party had
+mounted, and passed swiftly on toward Jerusalem. As they moved
+forward, the strange woman murmured softly:
+
+"Two!"
+
+Laodice's camel mounted the slope toward the east and stretched away
+on a comparative level toward an immense white moon. Aquila's horse
+kept up with the matchless speed of the tall camel only at times, and
+Laodice, dully sensing that they were going at hot haste, realized
+that a race was on between them and the pestilence. Momus was wielding
+the goad for a run to the frosts.
+
+A camel raced up beside Aquila.
+
+"Look!" the woman said to him in a lowered tone, showing back over the
+road by which they had come. Aquila turned in his saddle and looked.
+Momus rose in his seat and looked. Behind them only one camel rocked
+along in their wake. The other and its driver had disappeared.
+
+"Deserted!" Aquila exclaimed under his breath.
+
+"Three!" the woman said.
+
+"A pest on your counting for a Charon's toll-taker!" Aquila whispered
+savagely. "We will have no more of it!"
+
+"No?" the woman said with a meaning that made the pagan shiver.
+
+Momus laid goad about his camel.
+
+The way continually ascended toward the east; the soil was no longer
+sandy, but rocky; no longer given up to desolate gardens, but black
+with groves of cedars and highland shrubs. They swung off a plateau
+that would have ended in a cliff, down a shaly sheep-path into a wady.
+Under the moonlight, the bottom was seen to be scarred with marks of
+hoof and wheel. It debouched suddenly into a Roman road, straight,
+level, magnificently built and running as a bird flies on to
+Jerusalem.
+
+The camel's gait increased. Momus settled himself in a securer
+position and Laodice, careless of the outcome of this breathless
+hurry, yielded herself to the careen of her howdah. At times, her
+indifferent vision caught, through moonlit notches and gaps, glimpses
+of great blue vapors, crowned with pale fire and piled in glorious
+disorder low on the eastern horizon. They were the hills encompassing
+Jerusalem. The stream of wind on her face cooled and drove stronger.
+
+Aquila rode closer to her, his horse panting under the effort. His
+face looked strange and distressed.
+
+"Lady," he said in low tones, "necessity forces me to speak to you in
+your grief; do not blame me for indifference to your desire to be
+alone. But we must care for you, though in your heart this moment you
+may resent a wish to live. But your father commanded me!"
+
+She gave him attention.
+
+"Let us not carry peril with us," he added in a half-whisper. "Let us
+not carry food for pestilence with us."
+
+"I do not understand," she answered, adopting his low tone.
+
+"The more we are, the more of us to die. You must live; I must live,"
+he explained, nodding toward Momus.
+
+After a little silence, she asked:
+
+"Do we not ride toward the frosts?"
+
+"Yes; but even now pestilence may ride on beside us--your servant and
+this woman. Let us save ourselves."
+
+"Abandon them?" she questioned.
+
+"Lest they go on without us," he added.
+
+Momus turned suddenly and gazed at Aquila. Then he imperiously signed
+the pagan to fall back.
+
+They rode on.
+
+The pagan slackened his horse's gallop and reined in beside the woman.
+They talked together, argumentatively, for a single tense minute and
+then Aquila, with a bitter word, put spurs to his animal and dashed up
+beside Laodice's camel. In his one uplifted hand a knife gleamed. The
+other reached toward the casket bound to Momus' hip. Laodice, raised
+to an upright attitude in her fresh fright, saw that his face was
+black and twisted and that he wavered stiffly in his saddle.
+
+But the mute did not await the attack. He seized the pagan's
+outstretched hands with that monstrous left and flung him backward.
+Without an effort to save himself, falling rigidly and with a strange
+cry, Aquila dropped back over his horse's crupper into the dust of the
+road.
+
+"Momus!" Laodice screamed.
+
+Back of her the woman cried out:
+
+"On! On! It is the pestilence!"
+
+Momus wielded his goad. Laodice, shaking and crying aloud, looked back
+to see the strange woman swerve her camel past the dark shape lying
+with out-flung arms in the road and sweep quickly on after them.
+
+The scourge had overtaken Aquila.
+
+All night the camels fled east, all night the soft footfall of the
+woman's beast pursued them; all night the wind freshened until
+Laodice's bared face stiffened with the cold and the breath of the
+mute that sat upon her camel's neck steamed in the moonlight. Up and
+up, by steep and winding wadies they mounted; under overhanging cliffs
+and past bald towers of hill-rock staring white in the moon, along
+black passes between brooding eminences of solid night, crowned with
+ghost-light; over high plateaus darkened with groves, down dales with
+singing, invisible streams running seaward and up again and on until
+the hills engulfed them wholly and those before were higher than any
+they had seen. Then their flying beasts, leaving the Roman road over
+which they had sped for some distance, followed a sheep-path and burst
+into an open immersed in moonlight. Below in the distance was a
+cluster of huts, white and lifeless. But abroad, over the crisp grass
+and misty white on all the exposed slopes, sparkled the deep hoar
+frost!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+THE SHEPHERD OF PELLA
+
+
+Momus drew up his camel. The woman who had followed halted. Except for
+the hurried breathing of their beasts, a critical silence brooded over
+the moon-silvered wilderness. The moment was tense with the agony of
+human bitterness against the immitigable despatch of death. There
+could be no thanksgiving for their own safety from those who were not
+glad to be given life. Laodice resented her preservation; old Momus,
+aside from the wound of personal loss sore in his heart, was stricken
+with the realization of the grief of his young mistress, which he
+could not help. He did not raise his eyes to her face when he turned
+toward her; there was no speech. In the young woman's heart the pain
+was too great for her to venture expression safely. The silence was
+poignant with unnatural restraint.
+
+Presently Momus inquired of her by signs if she wished to go on to the
+lifeless village below the camp. She did not observe his gestures, and
+Momus decided for her. He drove on and the woman, who had wrapped her
+cloak about her as the biting wind of the hills heightened through the
+narrow defiles to the north, followed.
+
+But almost the next instant Momus drew up his mount so suddenly that
+Laodice was roused. He turned and began to make rapid signs. Laodice
+half rose as she read them and pressed her hands together.
+
+"Seven days!" she exclaimed in dismay. There was silence.
+
+Momus made the camel kneel. He dismounted slowly, and began to undo
+the tent-cloth in a roll beside the howdah. The woman rode up and
+instantly the mute stepped between her and his young mistress and went
+on with his work.
+
+Laodice understood the question in the woman's attitude although, with
+true sense of an inferior's place, the stranger did not speak.
+
+"We are unclean," Laodice said with effort. "We have come from a
+pestilential city and we have touched the dead. We can not enter a
+town with these defilements upon us, except to present ourselves to a
+priest for examination and separation. Furthermore, we must burn our
+unessential belongings. If you are a Jewess all these things are known
+to you."
+
+The woman extended her hands, palms upward, with a grace that was
+almost dainty.
+
+"Lady," she said behind her unlifted veil, "I am an unlettered woman
+and have been accustomed to the instruction of my masters. I am
+obedient to the laws of our people."
+
+"You would have been in less peril to have ridden alone," Laodice
+sighed. "Our company has been no help to you."
+
+"We can not say that confidently. There are worse things than
+pestilence in the wilderness," the woman replied.
+
+Momus seemed to observe more confidence than was natural in the ready
+answers of this professed servant, and before he would leave Laodice
+to pitch camp, he helped her to alight and drew her with him. The
+woman remained on her mount.
+
+Gathering up sticks, dead needles of cedar and last year's leaves, he
+made a fire upon which he heaped fuel till it lighted up the near-by
+slopes of the hills and roared jovially in the broad wind.
+
+It was a pocket in the heart of high hills into which they had fled.
+The bold, sure line of a Roman road divided it, cutting tyrannically
+through the cowed hovels of the town as an arrow drives through a
+flock of pigeons. On either side were the dim shapes of great rocks
+and semi-recumbent cedars. Retiring into shadow were the darker
+outlines of the surrounding circle of hills, rived by intervals of
+black night where wadies entered. From their summits the flying arch
+of the heavens sprang, printed with a few faint stars, but all
+silvered with the flood-light of a moon cold and pure as the frost
+itself. It was unsympathetic, aloof and wild--a cold place into which
+to bring broken hearts to assume banishment from the comfort and
+companionship of mankind.
+
+Laodice slowly and with effort began to separate those belongings
+which were to be laid upon the fire from those which were too
+necessary to be burned. The woman alighted but, on offering to assist,
+was warned away from the girl with a menacing gesture of Momus' great
+arm. The stranger drew herself up suddenly with a wrath that she
+hardly controlled but came no nearer Laodice. When the girl finally
+finished her selection, the woman begged permission to attend to the
+camels and getting the beasts on their feet led them together to be
+tethered.
+
+Laodice, assisted by Momus, took up the condemned supplies and flung
+them one at a time upon the roaring fire. Little by little, with
+growing reluctance, the heap of spare belongings was examined and
+condemned, until finally only the garments they wore, the tents that
+were to shelter them and the essential harness of the camels were
+left. Then Momus drew from his wallet a fragment of aromatic gum and
+cast it on the blaze. While it ignited and burned with great vapors of
+penetrating incense, he unstrapped the precious casket, set it down
+between his feet, stripped off his comfortable woolen tunic and passed
+it through the volumes of white smoke piling up from the fire.
+
+And while he stood thus a deft hand seized the casket from behind.
+There was a sharp, warning cry from Laodice. The old man staggered
+only a moment from the tripping that the wrench gave him, but in that
+instant of hesitation the pillager vanished.
+
+The old mute shouted the infuriated, half-animal yell of the dumb and
+started in pursuit, but at his second step he saw the fleeter camel
+swing down the declivity, at top-speed, with the other trailing with
+difficulty at full length of its bridle behind. The next instant the
+muffled beat of the padded hooves drummed the solid bed of the Roman
+road, and the shapes of camels and fugitive were lost in blue darkness
+beyond the town.
+
+There was no need for the pair left behind to await a realization of
+all that the loss meant to them. One running swiftly as a fine young
+creature can run when spurred by desperation, and the other, lamely
+but doggedly, as an old determined man, rushed down the rough side of
+the slope, leaped into the roadway and ran irrationally after the
+fugitive mounted upon a camel, fleeter than the fastest horse.
+
+Momus saw with fear that Laodice on this straight inviting road would
+out-distance him to her peril. He shouted inarticulately after her,
+but her reply came back, high with desperation and terror.
+
+"The corner-stone of Israel! All his treasure! God's portion, lost,
+lost!"
+
+She was out of his sight. The sudden barking of dogs told him that she
+had crossed the outskirts of the village, and groaning with alarm for
+her the old man stumbled on after her. He saw lights flash out; heard
+shouts, and out of the confusion distinguished Laodice's, vehement and
+urging. The yapping of the town curs became less threatening and, by
+the time Momus reached the settlement, half-dressed Jews were hurrying
+east out of the village after the flying feet of the girl, in pursuit
+of the robber.
+
+For unmeasured time, while the moon crossed its meridian and sloped
+down the west, the search continued. Momus did not overtake the
+fleet-footed party that preceded him. Stragglers that lost interest
+dropped back with him from time to time; but finding him dumb and
+immensely distressed, they disappeared eventually and returned to the
+town. One by one, at times by twos and threes the party dropped off.
+The three or four who remained helpful continued against hope, for
+simple pity for the girl. But when she dropped suddenly by the
+wayside, exhausted with the strain of many troubles, they stopped to
+tell her that the chase was fruitless and to offer their rough
+condolences.
+
+Then Momus hobbled up to them. Laodice refused to raise her head to
+listen to them and they turned to the old man. But by signs, he showed
+them that his tongue was dead, and finally, with suppressed remarks
+upon the exceeding misfortune of the pair, they, too, disappeared. A
+thoughtful one invited them to return to the village. Laodice,
+careless now of what he should think of his exposure to pestilence,
+told him bluntly that they were unclean. Hastily he exclaimed at the
+sum of their troubles, hastily blessed them, and hastily departed.
+
+There was a pallor along the under-rim of the east; the wind freshened
+with the sweet vigor of early morning.
+
+Over the stunned silence came the sound of the infinite trotting of
+tiny hooves and a high, wild, youthful yell. Laodice, too worn to
+observe, sat still; but Momus, with a rush of old fairy-tales in mind,
+sprang to her side and seized her arm. His alarmed eyes searched the
+dark landscape for whatever visitation it had to reveal.
+
+There was the rush of countless hoof-beats and a low cloud of dust
+obscured the crest of the hill just above them. The soft tremolo of
+multitudinous bleating came out of it. The quick excited bark of a
+fresh Natolian sheep-dog wakened an echo in one of the ravines through
+a hill on the opposite side of the road, while strong and insistent
+and happy the young cry preceded this sudden animation in the
+wilderness.
+
+There was a fall of gravel on the slope over their heads and the next
+instant a fourteen-year-old boy descended upon the pair in a fall of
+earth, his sandaled feet planted one ahead of the other, his bare arms
+thrown above his head as he balanced himself, his long, stiff,
+crinkled black locks blowing backward, his face bright with the eager
+enjoyment of his simple feat.
+
+After him came a veritable avalanche of Syrian sheep, scrambling to
+right and left as they parted behind Momus and Laodice and eddying
+around the young shepherd who stopped at seeing the pair. His yell
+died away at once, though the effort of sliding down a frozen, rocky
+slope had not interfered with a single note.
+
+He might well have been a young satyr, fresh from the groves of
+Achaia, with his big, serious mouth and its range of glittering teeth,
+his shining deer-like eyes, wide apart, his faun curls low on his
+forehead, his big head set on a short neck, his shoulders yet
+childish, his slim brown body half smothered in skins, half bare as he
+was born, his large hard hand gripping a crook of horn and wood. His
+gaze at Momus was frank with boyish curiosity. His bright eyes plainly
+remarked on the oddity of the old servant's appearance. Having
+catalogued old Momus as worthy of further inspection, he looked then
+at Laodice. Under the lowering moon and the listless effort of coming
+day, her unmantled dress of silver tissue made of her a moon-spirit,
+banished out of her world of pallor and solitude. Before her splendid
+young beauty, pale with distress and weariness, he was not abashed.
+His simple eyes studied her with equal frankness, but with an
+admiration beyond words.
+
+Feeling somehow that his sudden appearance might have distressed her,
+he said finally:
+
+"Go on, lady, or stay as it pleases you. I will not hurt you."
+
+Momus' shoulders submerged his ears in an indignant shrug. That this
+young calf of the pastures should insure him safe passage!
+
+But Laodice was still filled with the calamity of her loss.
+
+"Hast seen a robber, here, along this road?" she asked.
+
+"Many of them," was the prompt answer.
+
+"With a chest of jewels?"
+
+The boy shook his head.
+
+"I never examined their booty," he said with perfect respect.
+
+"Or then a woman riding one camel and leading another?"
+
+"Never anything like that."
+
+Laodice, with this hope gone, let her face fall into her hands.
+
+"His fortune given freely to Israel," she groaned. "His whole life's
+ambition reduced to material form for the help of his brethren--gone,
+gone!"
+
+The shepherd grew instantly distressed. He looked at Momus and asked
+in a whisper what had happened. But the old servant signed to his lips
+irritably, and stroked his young mistress' hair in a dumb effort to
+comfort her. The silence grew painful. In his anxiety to relieve them,
+he bethought him of their uncovered heads and houseless state.
+
+"Do you live in the village; or do you camp near by?"
+
+Momus shook his head. Laodice appreciated the boy's concern for them
+but could not make an attempt to explain.
+
+"Then," he offered promptly, "come have my fire and my rock. It is the
+best rock in all these hills; and my tent," he added, showing the
+skins that wrapped him. "I wear my tent; it saves my carrying it.
+Indeed I do not need it; you may have it. Come!"
+
+He spoke hurriedly, as if he would thrust his desire to comfort
+between her and the wave of disconsolation that he felt was about to
+cover her.
+
+Old Momus, sensibly accepting the boy's suggestion as the wisest
+course, raised Laodice and motioning the shepherd to lead on, led his
+young mistress up the hill as the boy retraced his steps. The flood of
+Syrian sheep turned back with him and followed bleating between the
+urging of the sheep-dog, as the boy climbed.
+
+On a slope to the west as a wady bent upon itself abruptly before it
+debouched upon the hillside, there was a deep glow illuminating a
+space in the depression. The shepherd dropped down out of sight. His
+voice came over the shuffle and bleat of the sheep.
+
+"Follow me; this is my house."
+
+Momus led his mistress over to the wady. There the shepherd with
+uplifted hands helped her down with the superior courtesy of a
+householder offering hospitality. There was a red circle of fire in
+the sandy bottom of the dry wady, and beside it was a flat boulder at
+the foot of which were prints of the shepherd's sandals and, on the
+bank behind it, the mark where his shoulders had comfortably rested.
+He made no apology for the poverty of his entertainment; he had never
+known anything better.
+
+"Now, brother," he said busily to Momus, "if thou'lt lend me of thy
+height, thou shalt have of my agility and we will set up a douar for
+the lady."
+
+With frank composure he stripped off the burden of skins that covered
+him until he stood forth in a single hide of wool, with a tumble of
+sheep pelts at his feet. In each one was a thorn preserved for use and
+with these he pinned them all together, scrambled out on the bank,
+emitting his startling cry at the sheep that obstructed his path. From
+above he shouted down to Momus.
+
+"Stretch it, brother, over thy head. I shall pin it down with stones
+on either side. Now, unless some jackal dislodges these weights before
+morning, ye will be safe covered from the cold. There! God never made
+a man till He prepared him a cave to sleep under! I've never slept in
+the open, yet. How is it with thee now, lady?"
+
+He was down again before her with the red light of the great bed of
+coals illuminating him with a glow that was almost an expression of
+his charity.
+
+She saw that he had the straight serious features of the Ishmaelite,
+but lacked the fierce yet wondering gaze of the Arab. Aside from these
+superior indications in his face there was nothing to separate him
+from any other shepherd that ranged the mountainous pastures of
+Palestine.
+
+She, who all her life had never known anything but to expect the
+tenderest of ministrations, was humbly surprised and grateful at the
+free-handed generosity of the young stranger. Momus looked at him with
+grudging approval.
+
+"It is kindly shelter," she said finally with effort, "and it is warm.
+You are very good to us!"
+
+"But you have not eaten of my salt," he declared.
+
+Momus showed interest. It had been long since the last meal in the
+luxurious house of Costobarus. The boy in the meantime produced
+unleavened loaves from the carry-all of sheepskin that hung over his
+shoulders, and without explanation disappeared among his flock.
+Presently he returned with a small skin of milk.
+
+"We have goats in the flock," he said. "A shepherd can not live
+without a goat. You do not know about shepherds," he added.
+
+Laodice thought that she detected tactful inquiry in his last remark
+and roused herself painfully to make due explanations to her host. But
+he waved his hands at her, with the desert-man's courtesy which covers
+fine points better than the greater ones.
+
+"Eat my fare; I do not purchase thy history with salt and shelter," he
+said, with a certain sublimity of honor.
+
+Momus ate, and looked with growing grace at his young host. But
+Laodice succeeded only in drinking the goat's milk and lapsed into
+benumbed gazing at the red glow of fire that cast its warmth about
+her. The shepherd talked on, attempting to interest her in something
+other than her consuming sorrow.
+
+"These be Christian sheep about you, friends," he said, "and I am a
+Christian shepherd."
+
+Momus sat up suddenly with a bit of the boy's bread arrested on its
+way to his lips. He was eating the fare of an apostate, of a despised
+Nazarene. The boy went on composedly.
+
+"We are from Pella, the Christian city. We are, my sheep, my city and
+I, the only secure people in all Judea. We, I and the sheep, have been
+in the hills since the first new grass in February. We are many
+leagues from home."
+
+"So am I," Laodice said wearily.
+
+"Jerusalem?" the shepherd asked, glad he had brought out a response.
+"No? Yet all Judea is going to Jerusalem at this time. Are you
+fugitives?"
+
+Momus nodded.
+
+"Come then to Pella," the shepherd urged. "You will be fed there;
+Titus will not come there. We are poor but we are happy--and we are
+safe."
+
+Laodice thanked him so inertly that he sensed her disinterest, and
+while he sat looking at her, searching his heart for something kind to
+say, she put out her hand impulsively and took his.
+
+"God keep thee and forget thy heresy," she said. "If thou livest in
+Pella, Pella is indeed happy."
+
+He laughed with a flush stealing up under the brown of his cheeks. A
+faint light came into Laodice's eyes as she looked at him; he returned
+her gaze with a gradual softening that was intensely complimentary.
+Between the two was effected instant and lasting fellowship. Before
+Momus' indignant eyes the shepherd was blushing happily.
+
+"Who art thou?" Laodice asked.
+
+"They call me Joseph, son of Thomas."
+
+After a silence she said softly,
+
+"I am not at liberty to tell my name." She remembered the secrecy of
+Philadelphus' mission. "Yet perchance if the God of my fathers prosper
+me and my husband, I may come to Pella--as thy queen."
+
+The boy's eyes brightened and he drew in a sharp breath, but almost
+instantly the animation died and he looked at her sorrowfully. It
+seemed that she read dissent and sympathy commingled in his gaze. But
+he was a Christian; he could not believe and hope as she hoped.
+
+"Can I do aught for you?" he asked disjointedly.
+
+"Our duty is rather toward you, child," she answered, suddenly
+arousing to the peril they might bring their free-handed host. "We
+have newly come from a country where there is pestilence."
+
+But he smiled down on her uplifted face, with immense confidence.
+
+"I am not afraid. Besides, if I perish giving you comfort, I have done
+only as Jesus would have me do."
+
+"Who is Jesus?" Laodice asked.
+
+The shepherd made a little sign and bent his knee.
+
+"The Christ!" he responded.
+
+Momus plucked quickly at Laodice's sleeve and shook his head at her in
+an admonitory manner. He had laid down his bread unfinished. But the
+shepherd looked at him sympathetically.
+
+"Never fear," he said. "It will not hurt her to hear about Him. He
+makes Pella safe from armies. Let her come there and see for herself."
+
+Laodice pressed his hand.
+
+"I shall come," she said.
+
+He heaved a contented sigh--contented with himself, contented with her
+promise to come. Then he drew his hands away.
+
+"The sheep are noisy; they will not let you sleep. We shall go." Then
+as if afraid of her thanks he drew away, and halted at the threshold
+of the shelter. Then the boy extended his hands with a gesture so
+solemn that both of his guests bowed their heads instinctively.
+
+"_The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you for evermore_.
+Farewell," he said in a half-whisper.
+
+He was gone.
+
+Presently the rush of little feet swept after him and his high, wild,
+youthful yell rang faintly in the distance. The delicate crackling
+from the heated bed of coals was all that was heard in the sheltered
+wady roofed with skins.
+
+For the second time within the past few hours, Laodice had met a
+Christian. Both had helped her; both had blessed her. And one was an
+old man and one was a child.
+
+The interest of the recent interview and the excitement of the night
+slowly died away, leaving Laodice in the dead hopelessness of weary
+despair. She lay down suddenly with her face against the warmed sand
+and wept. Momus sat down beside her, covered her with a leopard skin
+taken from his own swarthy shoulders, and soothed her with awkward
+touches on cheek and hair, till her tears exhausted her and she slept.
+
+Stealthily then the old man rolled up her own mantle and put it under
+her head and prepared to watch. And then as he sat with his knee drawn
+up, his head bowed upon it, the weakness of slumber gradually stole
+away his watchfulness and his concern.
+
+Some time later, before the deliberate dawn of a March day had put out
+the last of the greater stars, two men on horses descended the
+declivity just above the shelter of sheepskins and attracted by the
+dull glow of the fire drew up cautiously.
+
+At a word from one of the men, the other alighted and, peering from
+the shelter of a prostrate cedar, inspected the pair. After assuring
+himself that there were but two about the camp, one a woman and both
+asleep, he tiptoed back to his fellow.
+
+"Only a man and a woman," he said. "Jews on their way to the Passover.
+Their fire is almost out. Let us ride on."
+
+"What haste!" the one who had kept his saddle said. "One would think
+it were you going forward to meet a bride and her dowry! I am hungry.
+Let us borrow of this fire and get breakfast."
+
+"Emmaus is only a little farther on," the first man protested. "I am
+tired of wayside meals, Philadelphus. I would eat at a khan again
+before I forget the custom."
+
+"How is the pair favored?" the other said provokingly.
+
+"I did not approach near enough," the other retorted. "It seemed to be
+an old man and a girl."
+
+"Pretty?" the one called Philadelphus asked.
+
+"I did not see."
+
+"Married, Julian?"
+
+"How could I tell?" Julian flared.
+
+Philadelphus laughed, and dismounted.
+
+"I shall see for myself," he declared, walking over to the sheltering
+cedar to look.
+
+Julian followed him nervously, saying under his breath:
+
+"You waste time deliberately!"
+
+"Tut! You merely wish to keep me from seeing this girl," Philadelphus
+retorted.
+
+He, too, stopped at the prostrate cedar and gazed under the sagging
+shelter of skins.
+
+"Shade of Helen!" he exclaimed under his breath as the firelight gave
+him perfect view of the sleeping girl. "What have we here?"
+
+Julian made no response. He drew nearer and looked in silence.
+
+"Now what are they to each other?" Philadelphus continued. "Father and
+daughter; lady and servant or--a courtezan and her manager?"
+
+At the continued silence of his companion, he argued his question
+himself.
+
+"No such ill-fashioned peasant loins as his ever begat such sweet
+patrician perfection as that!" he declared. "And a lady rich enough to
+have one servant would travel with more than one or not at all--"
+
+Julian broke in with sudden avid interest.
+
+"Look at that deal of feminine flummery--that dress of silver tissue,
+the ends of that silken scarf you see below the covering--all those
+jewels and trinkets! Odd garb for travel afoot, is it not? It is a
+badge not to be put off even in as barren a market as this. She is
+going to Jerusalem for the Passover. He will carry the purse, however,
+mark me."
+
+"How well you know the marks of delinquency!" Philadelphus said with a
+glimmer of resentment in his eyes.
+
+"Who does not? What do the Jewish psalmists and proverbialists and
+purists depict so minutely as that migrating iniquity, the strange
+woman?"
+
+"But look at her!" Philadelphus insisted. "I have not seen anything so
+bewitching since I left Ephesus!"
+
+"No; nor a long time before!" Julian declared. "I must have a nearer
+look."
+
+"Careful! You will wake her!"
+
+Julian's face showed a sneer at his companion's concern.
+
+"I'll have a care not to wake the old Boeotian," he said.
+
+He stepped between Laodice and her sleeping servant. The mute with the
+stupor of slumber further to disable his dulled hearing, did not move.
+
+"Young!" Philadelphus exclaimed in a whisper. "And new to the life!"
+
+"Pfui!" Julian scoffed. "Sleep makes even Venus look innocent!"
+
+"Then this is the most innocent wickedness I have seen in months!"
+
+"So you catalogue innocence as a charm! It's not here. But if she had
+no beauty but that eyelash I'd be speared upon it!"
+
+Philadelphus turned toward the old servant plunged in the exhausted
+sleep of weary age.
+
+"Thou grizzled nightmare!" he exclaimed vindictively.
+
+He glanced again at the girl. Julian had knelt beside her. Between the
+two men passed a look that was mutually understood.
+
+"Remember," Julian whispered, "you are a married man."
+
+Philadelphus paled suddenly with anger as the intent of his companion
+dawned upon him, but he put off his temper shrewdly.
+
+"And so approaching a time when wayside beauties will no longer be
+free to me," he said, cutting off his fellow in the beginning of his
+preemption. "And you have a long freedom before you."
+
+There was so much challenge in his manner that Julian accepted it. He
+reached into his tunic and drew forth a pair of dice.
+
+"We will play for her," he said.
+
+The Maccabee put the tesserae aside.
+
+"We will not use them," he said. "I know them to be cogged. Let us
+have the judgment of a coin."
+
+A bronze coin of Agrippa was produced. Julian in getting at his purse
+brushed against the sleeping girl and as the pair glanced at her
+before they tossed, her large eyes opened full in Julian's face. A
+moment, almost breathless for the two, and terror flared up in her
+eyes. She started up, but Julian's hand dropped on her.
+
+"Peace, Phryne!" he said.
+
+She shrank from his touch, literally into the arms upon which
+Philadelphus rested his weight. She looked up into his eyes, and saw
+them soften with a smile, and moved no farther. Philadelphus took the
+coin.
+
+"Let Vespasian decide for me," he said.
+
+"For me Fortunatus," said Julian.
+
+Philadelphus filliped the coin and flung out a strong and fending hand
+against his fellow covering it. Under the brightening day, the
+lowering profile of the old plebeian emperor Vespasian showed
+distinctly on the newly minted bronze.
+
+Julian made a sharp menacing sound, and with clenched hands rose on
+his knees. But Philadelphus looked at him steadily, half-amused at the
+implied threat, half-inviting its fulfilment, and under his gaze,
+Julian rose slowly and drew away. Philadelphus tossed the coin after
+him. His cousin picked it up and put it in his purse.
+
+[Illustration: Philadelphus looked down upon his prize.]
+
+Philadelphus looked down at his prize.
+
+She had not flinched from him when she had found him beside her, with
+Julian threatening her. But now her wide open eyes fixed upon his
+brimmed with an agony of appeal. Innocent of the world's wickedness,
+she could only sense supreme peril in this mysterious game without
+understanding the stake. Momus was not in sight--dead for all she
+knew--and the desert was an ally against her. Over her, now, bent a
+face characteristic of a great spirit, yet one which was coeval with
+the times--times of violence and the supremacy of force. His lips were
+thin, the contour of his face angular at the jaw, the nose straight
+and long, his brows black and low over dark blue eyes of a fathomless
+depth, the forehead strongly molded, and marked with deep
+perpendicular lines between the eyes. He was dark, heavy-haired,
+young, lean, broad and of fine height even as he knelt beside her.
+Laodice did not note any of these things. She was only conscious of
+the immense power her terror and her helplessness had to combat. Back
+of all this iron selfishness, she hoped that somewhere was a
+gentleness, even if inert and useless. All her strength was
+concentrated in the effort to bring it to life.
+
+He gazed at her, apparently unconscious of the desperation in the face
+lifted to him. The slow smile that presently grew again in his eyes
+was none the less unthoughted. He slipped his hand under a strand of
+her rich hair that had fallen and drew it out, slowly, at full length.
+Slowly his eyes followed it as inch by inch it slipped through his
+fingers. Old memories seemed to struggle to the surface; old
+tendernesses; recollection of pure hours and holy things; paganism
+dropped from him like a husk and the spiritual hauteur of a Jew
+brought the expression of the unhumbled house of Judah into his face.
+Through a notch in the hills a golden beam shot from the sun and
+penetrating this inwalled valley lay like an illuminating fire on the
+man's face and glorified it. Laodice's breath stopped.
+
+Slowly his fingers slipped along the fine silken length of that
+shining strand until his arm extended to the full; and the end of the
+lock yet rested on her breast. Thus might have been the hair of that
+Rahab, who was no less a patriot because she was frail; thus, the hair
+of Bathsheba, who was the mother of the wisest Israelite though she
+sinned; thus the hair of that mother of Samson, who slew armies
+single-handed! Badge of Judah, mark of the haughty strength of the
+oldest enlightenment in the world! He would not initiate his succor of
+Israel with violence against its purest type.
+
+He smiled slowly; slowly let the strand fall through his fingers. He
+looked into her eyes and she saw a sudden light immeasurably
+compassionate and tender grow there. A weakness swept over her; she
+felt that she had been longing for that light. Then he rose quickly
+and moved away.
+
+Old Momus, the mute, with his head on his knees slept on.
+
+Julian, who had been halted involuntarily by the attitude of his
+companion and had been an amazed witness of this extraordinary end of
+the incident, looked at Philadelphus' face in frank stupefaction. But
+Philadelphus laid a hand so forceful and compelling on his companion's
+shoulder that it left the pink print of his fingers on the flesh,
+turned him toward the horses and led him away.
+
+"We will breakfast farther on," he said.
+
+A moment and they were swinging down the stony side of the hill toward
+the east, and Laodice, with her hand clutching her excited heart, had
+not thought of flinging herself upon Momus. She raised herself
+gradually to watch them as far as she could see, and her fixed and
+stunned gaze rested with immense homesickness and longing on the
+taller man radiant against the background of a risen sun.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+THE TRAVELERS
+
+
+The Maccabee rode on, unconscious of Julian's critical gaze. The smile
+on his lips flickered now brightly, now very faint. The incident in
+the hills had not made him entirely happy, but it had awakened in him
+something which was latent in him, something which he had never felt
+before, but which held a sweet familiarity that the blood of his
+fathers in him had recognized.
+
+Julian was intensely disgusted and disappointed. But there was still a
+sensation of shock on his shoulder where the Maccabee's iron hand had
+rested and his famous caution stood him in stead at this moment when a
+quarrel with such intense and executive earnestness in his companion's
+manner might prove disastrous. If quarrel they must before they
+reached Emmaus, now but a few leagues east of them, he must insure
+himself against defeat much less likely to be suffered from a man
+reluctant to quarrel. He had been hunting for a pretext ever since
+they had left Caesarea, but this one, suddenly opened to him, startled
+him. He admitted now that it would not be wise to force a fight.
+Whatever must be done should be done with least danger to himself. It
+were better, he believed, to allay suspicion.
+
+He spoke.
+
+"How far is it to Jerusalem?"
+
+"About eighty furlongs."
+
+"Then if we continue, we shall approach the gates after nightfall."
+
+"We shall not continue," Philadelphus remarked. "We shall halt at
+Emmaus."
+
+"Do you think it would be better for us to camp here in the hills
+rather than to stop without the walls of Jerusalem between the city
+forces and the winter garrison of Titus and await the opening of the
+Gates?" Julian asked after thought.
+
+"We shall wait in Emmaus," the Maccabee repeated, his soul too filled
+with dream to note the change in his companion's manner.
+
+"You have already lost three days," Julian charged him irritably.
+
+"Jerusalem may be besieged; it may be long before I can ride in the
+wilderness again," the Maccabee answered.
+
+"Right; your next journey through this place may be afoot--at the end
+of a chain," Julian averred.
+
+The Maccabee raised his brows.
+
+"Losing courage at the last end of the journey?" he inquired.
+
+"No! I never have believed in this project," Julian declared.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Who believes in the prospects of a man determined to leap into
+Hades?"
+
+But the Maccabee was already riding on with his head lifted, his eyes
+set upon the blue shadows on the western slopes of hills, lifted
+against the early morning sun. Julian went on.
+
+"You go, cousin, on a mission mad enough to measure up with the antics
+of the frantic citizens of Jerusalem. It will not be even a glorious
+defeat. You will be swallowed up in an immense calamity too tremendous
+to offer publicity to so infinitesimal a detail as the death of one
+Philadelphus Maccabaeus. Agrippa has deserted the city and when a
+Herod lets go of his own, his own is not worth the holding. The city
+is torn between factions as implacable as the sea and the land. The
+conservatives are either dead or fled; pillage and disorder are the
+main motives of all that are left. And Titus advances with four
+legions. What can you hope for this mob of crazed Jews?"
+
+Julian's words had been more lively than the Maccabee had expected. He
+was obliged to give attention before his kinsman made an end.
+
+"You are fond of summaries, Julian," he said, "dealt in your own coin.
+Look you, now, at my hope. You confess that these Jews lack a leader.
+They have lacked him so long that they hunger and thirst for one. Also
+they have suffered the distresses of disorder so intensely that peace
+in any form is most welcome to them. Titus approacheth reluctantly. He
+had rather deliver Jerusalem than besiege it. I am of the loved and
+dethroned Maccabaean line--acceptable to every faction of Jewry, from
+the Essenes to the Sicarii. Titus is my friend, unless he suspects me
+as coming to undermine his better friend, the pretty Herod. I shall
+help Jerusalem help herself; I shall make peace with Rome; I shall be
+King of the Jews!--Behold, is not my summary as practical as yours?"
+
+Julian laughed with an amusement that had a ring of contempt in it.
+
+"There is naught to keep an astronomer from planning a rearrangement
+of the stars," he said.
+
+But the Maccabee rode on calmly. Julian sighed. After a while he
+spoke.
+
+"Well, how do you proceed? You tell me that these very visionaries
+whom you would succor have never laid eyes on you. What marks you as
+royal--as a sprig of the great, just and dead Maccabee?"
+
+"I bear proofs, Roman documents of my family and of my birth. Certain
+of my party are already organized in Jerusalem and are expecting me,
+and I wear the Maccabaean signet. Is not that enough?"
+
+"Nothing of it worth the security of private citizenship and a whole
+head!"
+
+"No? Not when there is a dowry of two hundred talents awaiting my
+courage to come and get it?"
+
+"Ha! That wife! But will you enter that sure death for a woman you do
+not know?"
+
+"And for a fortune I have not possessed and for a kingdom that I never
+owned."
+
+"She will not be there! Old Costobarus is not so mired in folly as to
+send his daughter into the Pit to provide you with money to--pay
+Charon."
+
+"Aquila sent me a messenger at Caesarea," Philadelphus continued
+calmly, "saying that Costobarus was transfigured when he had my
+summons. He feels that his God has been good to him to choose his
+daughter to share the throne of Judea. Hence, by this time my lady
+awaits me in Jerusalem."
+
+Again Julian sighed.
+
+"And there is none in Jerusalem who knows your face?" he asked after a
+silence.
+
+"None, except Amaryllis, and she has not seen me since I was sixteen
+years old."
+
+"And there also is an obstacle which I had forgotten to enumerate,"
+Julian said argumentatively. "You have put your trust in a frail
+woman."
+
+"Amaryllis may be frail," the Maccabee admitted, "but she is
+sufficiently manly to have all that you and I demand of a man to put
+faith in him. She is a good companion and she will not lie."
+
+"Impossible! She is a woman!" Julian exclaimed.
+
+"Even then," the Maccabee returned patiently, "her own ambition
+safeguards me. She can not succeed except as I am successful, and her
+purposes are of another kind than mine. She helps herself when she
+helps me. Therefore I am depending on her selfishness. It is usually a
+dependable thing."
+
+"What does she want?"
+
+"The old classic times of the _heterae_ in Greece. She wants to be the
+pioneer of art in Jerusalem. It is a fertile and a neglected field.
+She had rather be known as the mother of refinement in Judea than as
+the queen of kings over the world."
+
+"A modest ambition!"
+
+"A great one. How many monarchs are forgotten while Aspasia is
+remembered! Who were the reigning kings during Sappho's time?"
+
+"But go on. You repose much on her influence. Perhaps she has the will
+but not the power to help you."
+
+"Power! She is the mistress of John of Gischala and actual potentate
+over Jerusalem at this hour."
+
+"Unless Simon bar Gioras hath taken the upper hand within the last few
+days. Remember the fortunes of factionists are ephemeral."
+
+Philadelphus jingled his harness. He was sorry that he had permitted
+this discussion. Now its continuance was particularly irritating, when
+he had rather think of something else. He was near Jerusalem; but he
+was not going forward, now, with the same eagerness, nor with the same
+enthusiasm for his cause. The incident in the hills had marked the
+change in him. It was not, then, with a patient tongue that he
+defended his intentions, which had grown less inviting in the last
+hour.
+
+"How little your wife will enjoy her," Julian's smooth voice broke in
+once more, "seeing that the frail one is lovely."
+
+"I do not know that she is lovely."
+
+"What!" Julian exclaimed in genuine amazement. "You do not know that
+she is lovely! Years of correspondence with a woman whom you do not
+know to be lovely! Reposing kingdoms on a woman's influence whom you
+do not know to be beautiful!"
+
+"Beauty is no tie," the Maccabee retorted. "Have you forgotten Salome,
+the Jewish actress who could play Aphrodite in the theaters of
+Ephesus, to the confusion of the goddess herself? They said she snared
+three procurators and an emperor at one performance and lost them in a
+day!"
+
+"Have you seen her?" Julian asked with a sidelong glance. "Till your
+own eyes prove it, you should not accept that she is so bewitching."
+
+"There is no need that I should see her; Aquila swears it! And I would
+take his word against the testimony of even mine own eyes."
+
+Julian looked up in a startled manner and hurriedly looked away again.
+A half-frightened, half-amused smile played about his lips.
+
+"Aquila is no judge of woman," he said finally. "And furthermore, they
+say she got to trifling with magic and prowling about the temples to
+see if the gods came true. They were afraid she would get them blasted
+along with her sometime for her sacrilege. I know all this because
+Aquila declared she attached herself to him in sheer poverty in
+Ephesus and swore to follow him to the ends of the earth."
+
+The Maccabee smiled.
+
+"Nevertheless, he told me that he was afraid of her, but that she was
+a woman and in need and he could not reject her."
+
+Julian's eyes grew insinuating.
+
+"How much then your behavior this morning would have shocked him!" he
+murmured.
+
+The smile died on the Maccabee's face. Reference to the girl in the
+hills seemed blasphemy on this man's lips.
+
+"And you do not recall your wife's face?" Julian persisted.
+
+The Maccabee's face hardened more. But he shook his head.
+
+"Fourteen years can change a woman from a beauty to--a--a Christian,
+ugly and old and cold," Julian augured.
+
+The Maccabee turned his head away from his tormentor and Julian's
+laughter trailed off into a half-jocular groan.
+
+"How much you harp on beauty!" the Maccabee said deliberately. "Are
+you then going to regret the actresses you left behind when I tore you
+from your exalted calling as the forelegs of the elephant in the
+theaters at Ephesus?"
+
+Julian's face blackened. A foolhardy daring born of rage resolved him
+at that instant. He flung himself out from his saddle and raised his
+hand with a knife clenched in it. But the Maccabee with a composed
+laugh caught the hand and wrenching it about, dropped it, red and
+contracting with pain, at his companion's side.
+
+"Tut! Julian, you are a bad combatant. If you must make way with a
+man," the Maccabee advised, "stab him in the back. It is sure--for
+you. Ha! Is this Emmaus we see?"
+
+They had ridden up a slight eminence and below them was a disorder of
+fallen or decrepit Syrian huts in the hollow place in the hills.
+
+It had been the history of Emmaus for centuries to be known. The feet
+of the Crucified One had pressed its ruined streets and His devoted
+chroniclers had not failed to set it down in their illuminated
+gospels. Army after army in endless procession had thundered through
+it since the first invader humbled the glory of Canaan, and few of the
+historians had forgotten to record the unimportant incident. Warfare
+had hurtled about it for centuries; the Roman army had come upon it
+and would continue to come. It had not the spirit to resist; it was
+not worthy of conquest. It simply stood in the path of events.
+
+A single citizen appeared at the doorway of the most habitable house
+and looked absently over the heads of the new-comers. As they
+approached, the villager did not observe them. Instead, he looked at
+the near horizon lifted on the shoulder of the hills and meditated on
+the signs of the weather. It was Emmaus' habit to find strangers at
+its door.
+
+Julian, with natural desire to be first on this perilous ground and
+away from the side of the man who had defeated him and laughed at him,
+rode up to the door. The villager, seeing the traveler stop, gazed at
+him.
+
+Julian had about him an air of blood and breeding first to be remarked
+even before his features. The grace of his bearing and the excellence
+of his bodily condition were highly aristocratic. His height was good,
+his figure modestly athletic as an observance of fine form rather than
+a preparation for the arena. He was simply dressed in a light blue
+woolen tunic. A handkerchief was bound about his head. His forehead
+was very white and half hidden by loose, curling black locks that
+escaped with boyish negligence from his head-dress. His eyes were
+black, his cheeks tanned but colorless, his mouth mirthful and red but
+hard in its outlines. Clean-shaven, lithe, supple, he did not appear
+to be more than twenty-two. But there was an even-tempered cynicism
+and sophistication in the half-droop of his level lids, indifference,
+hauteur and self-reliance in the uplift of his chin. His soul was
+therefore older, more seasoned and set than the frame that housed it.
+Now there was considerable agitation in his manner, enough to make him
+sharp in his speech to the villager.
+
+"Is there a khan in Emmaus?" he demanded.
+
+"There is," the villager responded calmly.
+
+"Where?"
+
+The citizen motioned toward a low-roofed rambling structure of stone
+picked up on the native hills.
+
+"Ask there," he said and passing out of his door went his way.
+
+Julian touched his horse and rode through the worn passage and into
+the court of the decrepit khan of Emmaus. The Maccabee followed.
+
+The Syrian host who was both waiter and hostler met Julian entering
+first.
+
+"Quick!" Julian said, leaning from his horse. "Is there a young man
+here with gray temples? A pagan?"
+
+The Syrian, attracted by the anxiety in the demand, followed a train
+of surmise before his answer.
+
+"No pagans, here. Naught but Jews," he observed finally.
+
+"Or a young woman of wealth? Quick!"
+
+"No wealth at all; but plenty of women. The Passover pilgrims."
+
+Julian heaved a sigh of relief and dismounted. The Maccabee rode into
+the court of the khan at that instant.
+
+The khan-keeper took their horses and a little later the two men were
+led into the single cobwebby chamber, low-ceiled, gloomy, cold and
+cheerless as a cave. There they were given food and afterward a corner
+of the hall where a straw pallet had been laid and a stone trough
+filled with water for a bath. After refreshing himself the Maccabee
+lay down and slept with supreme indifference to the rancor of the man
+who had attempted to kill him.
+
+But Julian had another idea than pressing his vengeful advantage at
+that time. He went out into Emmaus and engaging the unemployed of the
+thriftless town sent them broadcast into the hills in search of a
+pagan who was young, yet gray at the temples.
+
+Some of them went--and they were chiefly boys who were not old enough
+to know that these strangers who come in pagan guise to Emmaus are
+full of guile. But none returned to him. They had neither seen nor
+heard of a pagan who was young though the white hair of an old man
+snowed on his temples.
+
+So Julian storming within went out into the hills himself, to search.
+
+Meanwhile the Maccabee, a light sleeper and readily restored, awoke
+and found himself alone. The khan-keeper informed him on inquiry that
+Julian had ridden away.
+
+"Too fair a hope to think that he has deserted me," the Maccabee
+observed. "I shall await him a decent time. He will return."
+
+He tramped about the chamber waiting for something that was not
+Julian, intending to do something but unable to define that thing.
+There was a vague admission that this last pause before his entry into
+Jerusalem where he must accomplish so much was an opportunity for some
+sort of preparation, but he lacked direction and resource. He was
+irritable and purposeless.
+
+Out of the low door that opened into the lewen of the khan he caught
+glimpses of the town spread over the tilt of the hill before him. It
+had become active since he had looked upon it in the very early hours
+of the day. Over the gate he could see the toss of canopies and the
+heads of camels passing; he could hear the ring of mule-hooves on the
+stones and the tramp of wayfarers. There were shoutings and debate;
+the cries of servants and the gossip of parties. All this moved on
+always in the direction of Jerusalem. Few paused. The single shop in
+Emmaus became active; the khan caught a little of the drift, but the
+great body of what seemed to be an unending stream of pilgrims passed
+on. The Maccabee spoke to his host.
+
+"What is this?" he asked.
+
+The publican raised his brows.
+
+"Hast never heard of the Passover?" he asked.
+
+The Maccabee started. How far he had drifted from the customs of his
+people, to fail to remember its vital feast--he who meant to be king
+over the Jews!
+
+He turned away a little abashed. The train of thought awakened by the
+khan-keeper's answer led him back to the hieratic customs of his race.
+What was his status as a Jew after all these years of delinquency?
+What atonement did he owe, what offering should he make?
+
+He went out over the cobbled pavement of the lewen to the gate. Here
+he should see part of his people and learn from simple observation
+what material he would have in his work for Israel.
+
+From his memories of the old Passovers of his boyhood, he saw
+instantly that there had come a change over Judea and the worshiping
+sons of Abraham.
+
+They went in bodies, in numbers from a handful from some remote but
+pious hamlet to great armies from the leveled cities of Joppa,
+Ptolemais and Anthedon, from Caesarea and Tyre and Sidon, from the
+enthusiastic towns in Galilee, and even from far-off Antioch and
+Ephesus. They were not fewer in number, because of a year of warfare
+and the menace of an approaching army upon the city in which they were
+to take refuge. But there were more--double, even triple the number
+that usually went up to Jerusalem at this time. For of the millions of
+inhabitants in Judea in the unhappy year of 70 A.D., a third of them
+were plundered and homeless refugees from ruined cities. Therefore,
+instead of the armies of men, happy, hopeful and enthusiastic, who had
+journeyed in former years to Jerusalem, there passed before the
+Maccabee a mixed multitude of men and women and children. Thousands
+carried with them all that warfare had left to them--pitiful parcels
+of treasure or household goods, or extra clothing; other thousands
+bore nothing in their hands, and by the wear in their garments and the
+hunger in their faces, it seemed that they owned nothing to carry.
+
+The Maccabee noted finally the entire absence of the travelers who
+fared in state. Not in all that long procession that wound up the
+stony passage from the west, did he see a single Sadducee. There went
+mobs of laborers and farmers, tradesmen, servants and small merchants,
+but the Jewish friends of Rome that had once made part of the Passover
+pilgrimage a royal progress were nowhere to be seen. Under the vast,
+vivid blue of the mountain skies they moved, indifferent to the
+splendid benevolence of the untroubled day. The pure wind swept in
+from the radiance in the east, flinging out multi-colored garments and
+scarves, rushing with its bracing chill without obstruction through
+even the compactest mass of wayfarers. The cedars on the hills about
+the little town whistled continuously and at times some extremely
+narrow defile with an uninterrupted draft would take voice and cry
+humanly. But there was no responsive exhilaration to the vigor of
+morning on a mountain-top. The great ever-growing migration was dark,
+dangerous and moody.
+
+Somewhere beyond the highest of the blue hills to the east, the white
+walls of the city of David were receiving all this. Somewhere to the
+west the four brassy legions of Titus were marching down upon all
+this. About the Maccabee were assembling all the circumstances that
+govern a tremendous struggle. Eagerness, earnestness, all the strength
+and resolution of his strong and resolute nature surged into his soul.
+It was his hour. It should find him prepared.
+
+He turned out of the gate and crowding along by the stone wall to pass
+in the opposite direction from the flood of pilgrims pouring through
+Emmaus, he searched for the synagogue of the little town.
+
+He came upon it, a solid square building of stone with an Egyptic
+facade and an architrave carved with a great stone flower set in an
+olive wreath. Without was the proseuchae, paved with boulders now worn
+smooth by the summer sittings of the congregation who gathered around
+the reader's stone. The Maccabee stopped at the gate and unlacing his
+pagan sandals set them outside the threshold.
+
+Once over the stone sill with the imminent gloom covering him, he felt
+the old sanctity envelop him with a reproach in its forgotten
+familiarity. Old incense, old litanies, old rites rushed back to him
+with the smell of the stagnant fragrance. He heard again from the
+farther depths of the dark interior the musical monotone of a rabbi
+reciting a ritual. The voice was young and low. Presently he heard the
+responses spoken in a woman's voice, so tender, so soft and so sad
+that he sensed instantly the meaning of the sympathy in the young
+priest's voice. Out of the incense-laden dusk he found old custom
+stealing back upon him. His lips anticipated words unreadily; gladly
+he realized that he could say these formulas, also; he had not
+forgotten; he had not forgotten!
+
+In this little synagogue in a poor town there were no privacies;
+communicants had to depend on the courtesy of their fellows for
+uninterrupted devotion. The wanderer had not forgotten this. So he
+effaced himself in the darkness and awaited his own turn.
+
+He hardly knew why he had come. For what should he ask--forgiveness or
+for the hope of the King who was to come? What should he do--make
+atonement or promises; give an offering or ask encouragement? He did
+not doubt for an instant that he had done wisely in seeking the
+synagogue, but what had he for it, or what had it for him?
+
+Meanwhile the voice of the priest, disembodied in the gloom, had put
+off its ritualistic tone and was delivering a charge:
+
+"Since you are in haste to reach Jerusalem, you may depart, so that
+you will give me your word that you will in all faith abide upon the
+road seven days; and that at the end of the separation you will
+present yourselves for examination and cleansing at Jerusalem, and
+that you will in nowise transgress the law of separation on the
+journey hence."
+
+The Maccabee heard the woman give her word. After a little further
+communication, he heard them move toward the entrance.
+
+The white light from the day without revealed to him in a few steps, a
+veiled woman, a deformed old man and a young rabbi. He did not need to
+take the evidence of her dress or of her companion to recognize under
+this veil the girl whom he had won from Julian of Ephesus, in the
+hills, that very morning.
+
+As if in response to his inner hope that she would see him, she raised
+her eyes at the moment she passed, and started quickly. Even under the
+shelter of her veil he saw her flush.
+
+The next instant she was out of the synagogue and gone.
+
+The Maccabee hesitated restlessly, forgot his mission to the synagogue
+and then, with no definite purpose, followed.
+
+At the edge of town, where the huddle of huts left off and the gravel
+and rock and cedar began, he saw the priest dismiss the pair with his
+blessing and turn back.
+
+Undecided, restless and regretful, the Maccabee lingered, looking
+after her as she went into the hills, unattended, except for an
+anomalous old man. The sun of noon shone on her silver dress that the
+dust of the wayside had not tarnished. He was gloomy and wistful
+without understanding his discomfort, and afraid for the beautiful
+unknown going out for seven days into the unfriendly wilderness.
+
+There was the click of a horse's hoof beside him. He glanced up with a
+nervous start to see Julian of Ephesus, scowling, at hand.
+
+"It is time," he said, "for us to be off."
+
+The Maccabee instantly determined that Julian of Ephesus should not
+come up with this defenseless girl again.
+
+"I am not ready," he returned promptly.
+
+"It was three days, this morning, that you have lost. To-morrow it
+will be four."
+
+"And Sabbath, it will be seven. A long time, a long time!"
+
+The Maccabee turned and went back to the khan. A gap in the hills had
+hidden the girl in the silver tissue, and the blitheness of the
+Maccabee's spirit had gone with her.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V
+
+BY THE WAYSIDE
+
+
+By sunset, the Maccabee and Julian of Ephesus had taken the road to
+Jerusalem again.
+
+As they reached the crest of a series of ridges there lay before them
+a long gentle slope smooth and dun-colored as some soft pelt, dropping
+down into a tender vale with levels of purple vapor hanging over it.
+At the end of this declivity, leagues in length, was a faint blue
+shape, cloudlike and almost merged with the cold color of the eastern
+horizon, but suddenly developing at its summit a delicate white peak.
+The sunset reaching it as they rode changed the point to a pinnacle of
+ruby before their eyes. Their shadows that had ridden before them
+merged with the shade over the world. Then with a soft, whispery,
+ghost-like intaking of the breath, a quantity of sand on the straight
+road before them got up under their horses' feet and moved away to
+another spot and dropped again with a peppering sound and was dead
+moveless earth again. The little breath of wind from under the edge of
+the sky had fallen.
+
+In the silence between the muffled beat of hooves the Maccabee heard
+at his ears the quick lively throb of a busy pump. With it went the
+firm rush of a subdued stream. He was hearing his own heart-beat, his
+own life flowing through his veins. Since nature in him had hurried
+him out of the synagogue after its own desire, he seemed to have
+become primitive, conscious of the human creature in him. Now, though
+he rode through a bewitching air through an enchanted land, he did not
+ride in a dream. All his being was alert and sagacious. Though the
+confusion of footprints in the dust showed plainly where men had
+passed by thousands, he did not follow their lead. Over the tangle of
+marks lay a slim paw-printed, confident, careless trail of a jackal,
+following the scent to a well. The Maccabee was obedient to the
+instinct of the animal instead of the reason of man. At the end of
+that trail, surer than Ariadne's scarlet thread in the labyrinth, he
+knew that thirst had taken the girl in the dress of silver tissue. So
+as he rode along this faultless highway that fared level and
+undeviating by arches, causeways and bridges across mountains, over
+black marshes and profound valleys, he kept his eyes on the jackal's
+trail.
+
+Long after moonrise they came to a spot in the road where the human
+marks passed on, by hundreds, by other hundreds deserted the road and
+clambered up the side of the hill. Over this deviation the jackal had
+trotted. The Maccabee, tall on his horse, raised his fine head and
+searched all the brooding shapes of the hills about.
+
+The road at this point ran through a defile. On either side the slopes
+crowded upon the pass. Above them were bold summits with groves of
+cedars, and in one of these the Maccabee made out a thin curl of smoke
+dimly illuminated by a moon-drowned fire. Up there in the covert of
+the trees the girl in the silver tissue was resting from her perilous
+and outlawed journey.
+
+"We will eat here," the Maccabee said abruptly to Julian.
+
+"Eat!" Julian exclaimed. "What?"
+
+The Maccabee signed to the pack on Julian's horse. Julian dismounted,
+shaking his head.
+
+"What a savage appetite this travel in the untaught wilds of Judea
+hath bred in you, my cousin! You, whom once a crust of bread and a cup
+of wine would satisfy!"
+
+But the Maccabee climbed out of the roadway and, finding a sheltered
+spot behind a boulder, kicked together some of the dead weeds and
+twigs and set fire to the heap with flint and steel. Then he lost
+interest in the preparation of his comforts. He turned to look up at
+the faint column of illumination in the little copse of cedars and
+presently, stealthily, went that way.
+
+It was a poor encampment that he came upon.
+
+From the low-growing limbs of a couple of gnarly cedars, old Momus had
+stretched the sheepskins which Joseph, the shepherd, had given them.
+Three sides of the shelter were protected thus, and the fourth side
+opened down-hill, with a low fire screening them from the mountain
+wind. Within this inclosure, wrapped in the coarse mantle of her
+servant, sat Laodice. She had raised her veil and its misty texture
+flowed like a web of frost over her brilliant hair and framed her face
+in cold vapor. In spite of the marks of grief that had exhausted her
+tears, the fatigue and discomfort, she seemed, to the Maccabee's eyes,
+more than ever lovely. He was angry with the hieratic banishment that
+sent her out to subsist by the roadside for seven days in early
+spring; angry with the harsh inhospitality of the hills; and angrier
+that he could not change it all. He looked at the old mute to see that
+he was carefully putting away the remnants of a meal of durra bread
+and curds. The primitive gallantry of the original man stirred in the
+Maccabee. He had come unseen; with silent step he departed.
+
+A little later he stepped boldly into the circle of light from their
+camp-fire. To Laodice, in her lowly position, he seemed superhumanly
+big and splendid. Without mantle or any of the accessories that would
+show preparation against the cold, his bare arms and limbs and dark
+face, tanned, hardy and resolute, seemed to be those of a strong
+aborigine, sturdy friend of all of nature's rougher moods.
+
+He did not look at Momus, who got up as quickly as he might at the
+intrusion of the big stranger. His dark eyes rested on Laodice, who
+sat transfixed with her sudden recognition of the visitor.
+
+He held in one hand a brace of fowls, in the other a skin of wine.
+
+When he spoke the polish of the Ephesian andronitis in his voice and
+manner destroyed the primitive illusion.
+
+"Lady, I heard in the synagogue at Emmaus to-day the exclusion that is
+laid upon you for seven days. This is a hungry country and no man
+should waste food. I shall enter Jerusalem to-morrow by daybreak; we,
+my companion and I, have no further use for these. They are Milesian
+ducks, fattened on nuts. And this is Falernian--Roman. I pray you,
+allow me to leave them with your servant with my obeisances."
+
+Without waiting for her reply the Maccabee passed fowls and skin into
+the hands of Momus who stood near.
+
+"Sir," she answered unreadily, with her small hands gripping each
+other before her and her eyes veiled, "I thank you. It was not the
+least of my anxieties how we should provide ourselves with food under
+prohibition and in a country perilous with war. You have made
+to-morrow easy for us. I thank you."
+
+"To-morrow; yes," he argued, seizing upon a discussion for an excuse
+to remain, "but the next day, and the next five days, what shall you
+do?"
+
+"Perchance," she said gravely, "God will send us another stranger of a
+generous heart, with more than he needs for himself."
+
+Not likely, indeed, he thought, would such beauty as hers go hungry as
+long as there were hearts in the wilderness as impressionable as his.
+But the thought of another than himself providing for her did not make
+him happy.
+
+There was nothing more to be said, but he did not go. In his face
+gathered signs of his interest in her identity.
+
+"Is there more that I can do for you?" he asked. "Have you friends in
+Jerusalem? I will bear your messages gladly."
+
+But it was a grateful privilege which she had to refuse with
+reluctance. If her husband awaited her in Jerusalem, he must wait,
+rather than be informed of the cause of her delay at peril of exposing
+his presence in the city. She shook her head.
+
+"There is nothing more," she added. "I thank you."
+
+Dismissal was so evident in her voice that he prepared to depart.
+
+"Shall you move on, then, in the morning?" he asked.
+
+"We have seven days in the wilderness," she explained. "We can not
+hasten. It is only a little way to Jerusalem."
+
+"But it is a long road and a weary one for tender feet," he answered;
+"and it is a time of warfare and much uncertainty."
+
+She lifted her eyes now with trouble in them.
+
+"Is there any less dangerous way than this?" she asked.
+
+The Maccabee sat down and clasped his hands about his knees. This
+grasping at the slightest excuse to remain exasperated the perplexed
+Momus, who could not understand the stranger's assurance. But the
+Maccabee failed to see him.
+
+"There is," he said to Laodice. "One can journey with you. I am under
+no restriction, and the rabbis do not bind you against me. I can
+secure you comforts along the way, and give you protection. There in
+no such dire need that I enter Jerusalem under seven days."
+
+Laodice was confused by this sudden offer of help from a stranger in
+whom her confidence was not entirely settled. Nevertheless a warmth
+and pleasure crept into her heart benumbed with sorrow. She did not
+look at Momus, fearing instinctively that the command in her old
+servant's eyes would not be of a kind with the grateful response she
+meant to give this stranger.
+
+"I have no right to expect so much--from a stranger," she said.
+
+"Then I shall not be a stranger," he declared promptly. "Call
+me--Hesper--of Ephesus."
+
+"Ephesus!" she echoed, looking up quickly.
+
+"The maddest city in the world," he replied. "Dost know it?"
+
+She hesitated. Could she say with entire truth that she did not know
+Ephesus? Had she not read those letters that Philadelphus had written
+to her father, which were glowing with praise of the proud city of
+Diana? Was it not as if she had seen the Odeum and the great Theater,
+the Temple with its golden cows, the mount and the plain and the broad
+wandering of the Rivers Hermus, Cayster and Maenander? Had she not
+made maps of it from her young husband's accounts and then with
+enthusiasm traced his steps by its stony, hilly streets from forum to
+stadium and from school to museum? Had she not dreamed of its shallow
+port, its rugged highways and its skyey marshes? It had been her pride
+to know Ephesus, although she had never laid eyes upon it. Even she
+had come to believe that she would know an Ephesian by his aggressive
+joy in life! It went hard with her to deny that she knew that city
+which she had all but seen.
+
+The Maccabee observed her hesitation and when she looked up to answer,
+his eyes full of question were resting upon her.
+
+"I do not know Ephesus," she said quickly. "Are--are you a native?"
+
+"No."
+
+She wanted mightily to know if he had met the young Philadelphus in
+that city, but she feared to ask further lest she betray him.
+
+"A great city," he went on, "but there are greater pagan cities. It is
+not like Jerusalem, which has no counterpart in the world. Even the
+most intolerant pagan is curious about Jerusalem."
+
+She looked again at his face. It was not Greek or Roman, neither more
+indicative of her own blood.
+
+"Are you a Jew?" she asked.
+
+He remembered that she had seen him in a synagogue.
+
+"I was," he said after a silence.
+
+She looked at him a moment before she made comment.
+
+"I never heard a Jew say it that way before."
+
+He acknowledged the rebuke with the flash of a smile that appeared
+only in his eyes.
+
+"A Jew entirely Jewish wears the mark on him. You have had to ask if I
+were a Jew. Would I be consistent to claim to be that which in no wise
+shows to be in me?"
+
+"It is time to be a Jew or against the Jews," she said gravely. "There
+is no middle ground concerning Judea at this hour."
+
+Serious words from the lips of a woman in whom a man expects to find
+entertainment are obtrusive, a paradox. Still the new generosity in
+his heart for this girl made any manner she chose, engaging, so that
+it showed him the sight of her face and gave him the sound of her
+voice.
+
+"Seeing," he said, "that it is the hour of the Jewish hope, is it
+politic for us to declare ourselves for its benefits?"
+
+"The call at this hour," she exclaimed reproachfully, "is to be great
+in sacrifice--not for reward. It is the word of the prophets that we
+shall not attain glory until we have suffered for it. We have not yet
+made the beginning."
+
+She touched so familiarly on his own thoughts which had haunted him
+since ambition had awakened in him in his boyhood, that his interest
+in his own hope surged to the fore.
+
+"How goes it in Jerusalem?" he asked earnestly.
+
+"Evilly, they say," she answered, "but I have not been in the city.
+Yet you see Judea. That which has destroyed it threatens the city.
+Jews have no friends abroad over the world. We need then our own, our
+own!"
+
+"Trust me, lady, for a good Jew. I have said that I had been one,
+because I admit how far I have drifted from my people. But I am going
+back!"
+
+Somehow that strong avowal touched the deep springs of her grief. She
+knew the pleasure that her father would have felt in it. With the
+greatness of his sacrifice in mind, she filled with the determination
+that his work should not have been in vain.
+
+She rose and flung back the cumbrous striped mantle on her shoulders
+and put out her hands to the Maccabee.
+
+"Hast seen these pilgrims going to the Passover?" she exclaimed, with
+color rising as her emotion grew. "All day they have passed; army
+after army of Jews, not only strong, but filled with the spirit that
+makes men die for a cause! Hast seen Judea, which was once the land of
+milk and honey? Wasted! a sight to make Jews gnash their teeth and die
+of hate and rage! What hast thou said of Jerusalem? 'The perfection of
+beauty and the joy of the whole earth!' threatened with this same
+blight that hath made a wilderness of Canaan! If the hour and the
+circumstance and the cause will but unite us, this unweaponed host
+will stretch away at once in majestic orders of tens of
+thousands--legions upon legions that would shame Xerxes for numbers
+and that first Caesar for strength. Then--oh, I can see that calm
+battle-line pass like the ocean tide over the stony Roman front, and
+forget as the sea forgets the pebbles that opposed it!"
+
+She halted suddenly on the edge of tears. The Maccabee, astonished and
+moved, looked at her in silence. This, then, was what even the women
+of the shut chambers of Palestine expected of him--if he freed Judea!
+If such spirit prevailed over the armies of men assembling in the Holy
+City, what might he not achieve with their help! The Maccabee felt
+confidence and enthusiasm fill his heart to the full. He rose.
+
+"Our blows will never weaken nor our hearts grow faint," he said, "if
+we have such eloquence and such beauty to inspire us."
+
+She drew back a little. His persistent happiness of mood fell cruelly
+on her flinching heart at that moment. He noted her sudden relapse
+into dejection, with disappointment.
+
+"Do not be sad," he said. "Discomforts do not last for ever."
+
+"It is not that," she said in a low voice. "I have buried beloved dead
+on this journey and I have surrendered all my substance to a
+pillager."
+
+There was the silence of arrested thought. The Maccabee was taken
+aback and embarrassed. He felt that he was an intruder. But even the
+flush on her face in restraining emotion made her loveliness more than
+ever winsome. He let his hand drop softly on hers. But in the
+genuineness of his sympathy he was not too moved to feel that her hand
+warmed under his clasp.
+
+"The difference between a fool and a blunderer," he said contritely,
+"is that the blunderer is always sorry for his mistakes. I will go.
+None has a right to refuse another his hour to weep."
+
+He hesitated a moment, as if he would have kissed her hand. She
+glanced up at him with eyes too filled with the darkness of grief for
+words.
+
+The slow unconscious smile that had worked such perfect transformation
+that first morning grew in his eyes. It was comfort, compliment and
+protection all in one. Then he went away into the moonlight.
+
+Within a few feet he came upon Julian of Ephesus with immense rancor
+written on his face. The Maccabee was disturbed. It was not well that
+this conscienceless man should have discovered that they were
+traveling near this girl and her old servant. Much as the young man
+wished to loiter along the road to Jerusalem to keep her in sight
+while he could, he saw plainly that to defend her from Julian he must
+ride on and leave her.
+
+"Your meal," said Julian, "is as cold as Jugurtha's bath."
+
+"I have lost my appetite," the Maccabee said carelessly. "Saddle and
+let us ride on."
+
+At his words, a picture of his own comfortable progress to Jerusalem
+compared to her long foot-weary tramp for days over the inhospitable
+hills appeared to him. The instant impulse did not permit himself to
+argue the immoderation of his care of her. Julian clung to his side
+until they were ready to depart. Then the Maccabee, using subterfuge
+to give him opportunity to escape the vigilant eyes of the Ephesian,
+suddenly clapped his hand to his hip, exclaiming that he had left his
+weapon at the camp.
+
+Before Julian's sneer reached him, he mounted quickly and rode up the
+hill, meaning to offer his horse to the girl.
+
+The bed of coals still glowed cheerily, but the shelter of sheepskins,
+the old servant and the girl in the tissue of woven moonbeams were
+gone.
+
+He stood still, vexed, disappointed and resentful.
+
+"The old incubus has made her go on, purposely, to get rid of me!" he
+decided finally. "Perpol! He won't!"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI
+
+DAWN IN THE HILLS
+
+
+It was a night that the Maccabee did not readily forget. Since the
+girl had moved on to avoid him, he had become alive to a delinquency
+that was more of a sensation than an admission. His thought of her,
+that had been a diversion before, now seemed to be a transgression. An
+incident of this nature during the fourteen years of his life in
+Ephesus would have engaged his conscience only a moment if at all, but
+at this last hour it amounted to a deflection from his newly resolved
+uprightness.
+
+Julian rode in a constant air of expectancy and increasing irritation.
+The slightest sound from the haunted hills elicited a start from him
+and his intense attention until the origin of the sound proved itself.
+Many Passover pilgrims who had proceeded by night passed under his
+close scrutiny and from time to time he stopped the Maccabee in a
+speech with a peremptory command to listen. All this engaged the
+Maccabee's interest, but he made no comment until, on occasion of his
+casual word in praise of the fidelity of Aquila, Julian flew into a
+rage and reviled the emissary until the Maccabee brought him up with a
+sharp word.
+
+"Enough of that!" he exclaimed. "What ails you, man?"
+
+Julian caught his breath and after a silence replied in a voice
+considerably sweetened that Aquila was a conscienceless pagan and not
+to be praised till he was dead. But the Maccabee, with the girl
+uppermost in his mind, believed that his cousin was inwardly resenting
+his preemption of the pretty stranger. The fact that Julian had
+changed the pace of their advance confirmed him in this suspicion.
+From the smart trot that they had maintained from the time they had
+left Caesarea, they had declined to a walk. Julian next showed
+inclination to loiter. He spent an unusual length of time at every
+spring at which they watered their horses; an unseen break in his
+harness engaged a prolonged halt on the road; he stopped at an
+unroofed hut to rouse sleeping Passover pilgrims who had taken refuge
+within to ask how far they were from Jerusalem, and wrangled with the
+sleepy Jew for many minutes over the hazy estimate the man had given
+him. With each of these pretenses the Maccabee's conviction grew that
+the girl had something to do with the altered behavior of his cousin.
+And with that growing conviction, he became the more convinced that he
+ought to maintain an espionage of Julian.
+
+At midnight they were both tired, exasperated, moody, and determined
+against each other. They had not journeyed thirty furlongs.
+
+In one of the high valleys in the hills a great well bubbled up from a
+hollow by the road, overflowed the stone basin that the ancients had
+built for it and wasted itself in the undrained soil about. Here,
+then, was one of the few marshes in Judea. The road by a series of
+arches crossed it and continued up the shoulder of the hills toward
+the east. All about it flourished the young growth of the rough sedge
+grass, green as emerald. The spot was treeless and marked with broad
+low hummocks of new sod.
+
+Julian halted.
+
+"Shall we camp here?" he asked.
+
+"It hath the recommendation of variety," the Maccabee said wearily.
+"Eheu! How I shall miss the greensward of Ephesus! Yes, we'll camp!"
+
+They dismounted and while Julian unpacked their blankets, the Maccabee
+collected dead reeds and cedar twigs and built a fire. Then he
+stretched himself by the sweet-smelling flame.
+
+"She can not have kept up with our horses; indeed it is unlikely that
+they moved far," he thought, and thus assured that there was no danger
+to the girl for whom he had become a self-constituted guardian, he ate
+a piece of bread, drank a cup of wine and fell asleep.
+
+His slumber was not entirely unconscious. So long as the movements of
+his cousin continued regular about him, he lay still, but once, when
+Julian approached too near, his eyes opened full in the face of the
+man about to lean over him. The Ephesian raised himself hastily and
+the Maccabee's eyes closed again.
+
+"A pest on an eye that only half sleeps!" Julian said to himself. "He
+hasn't lost count on the minutes since he left Caesarea!"
+
+The morning broke, the sun mounted, the deserted road became populous
+with all the previous day's host of pilgrims, and the silence in the
+hills failed before the procession that should not cease till night
+fell again. Through all the shouting at camel and mule, the talk of
+parties and the dogged trudging of lonely and uncompanionable
+solitaries, the Maccabee slept. From time to time Julian, who had
+wakened early, gazed with smoldering eyes at the insolent composure of
+his enemy sleeping. But slumber with so little control over the senses
+of a man was not to be depended upon for any work that demanded
+stealth. At times the gaze he bent upon the long lazy shape half
+buried in the raw-edged grass was malevolent with uneasiness and hate.
+Again, some one of the passing travelers that bore a resemblance to
+the expected Aquila would bring the Ephesian to his feet, only to sink
+back again with a muttered imprecation at his disappointment.
+
+"A pest on the waxen-hearted satyr!" he said to himself finally. "Why
+should he have been more faithful to me than to his first employer! I
+am old enough to have learned by this time not to trust my success to
+any man but myself. Now where am I to look for him--Ephesus, Syene,
+Gaul, Medea? Jerusalem first! By Hecate, the fellow is handsome! And
+these Jewesses are impressionable!"
+
+The rumination was broken off suddenly by a glimpse of an old deformed
+man bearing a burden on his shoulders, followed by a slender figure,
+jealously wrapped in a plebeian mantle that left only a hem of silver
+tissue under its border. They were skirting along the brow of the hill
+opposite, away from the rest of the pilgrims on the road. Both were
+walking slowly and the old man seemed to be examining the farther
+slope, as if meditating a halt. Julian got upon his feet and watched.
+He saw the old man sign to the girl presently and they moved down the
+farther side of the hill and were lost to view.
+
+Julian cast a look at the sleeper and hesitated. Then he scanned the
+road; he might miss Aquila. He seemed to relinquish the intent that
+had risen in him, and sat down again.
+
+After a while as his constant gaze at the passers-by led him again
+toward the overflowing well, he saw there, standing in a long line,
+awaiting turn to dip a vessel in the water, the old bowed servant,
+with a skin in his hand. The girl was nowhere to be seen.
+
+Julian sprang to his feet and, hastening across the road, considerably
+below the well, climbed the hill in the direction in which he had seen
+the girl disappear.
+
+That watchful alarm in the brain which, at moments of demand, is
+instantly alive in certain sleepers, aroused the Maccabee almost as
+soon as the stealthy, receding footsteps of Julian died away. He
+stirred, sat up and looked about him. Julian was nowhere to be seen.
+Both horses were feeding a little distance away. The Maccabee sprang
+up and looked toward the well. There patiently but apprehensively
+waiting was old Momus. The girl was not with him. Suspicion grew vivid
+in the Maccabee's brain. The tender rank grass about him showed the
+print of his cousin's steps as they led away toward the road. He
+followed intently. The slim marks of the well-shod feet led him across
+the dust of the road up into gravel on the slope and finally eluded
+him on the escarpment that soared away above him.
+
+The Maccabee hurried to the top of the declivity to gain whatever aid
+that point of vantage might offer and from that height saw below him
+to the west a single nook shaped of rock and hummock and a tree out of
+which rose a blue thread of smoke. He dropped down the farther slope
+at a pace little short of a run.
+
+He mounted the slight ridge that overlooked the depression in time to
+see Julian of Ephesus appear over the opposite side. Within, with her
+mantle laid off, her veil thrown back, the girl knelt over a bed of
+coals, baking one of the Maccabee's Milesian ducks. Julian had made a
+sound; the Maccabee had come silently. She looked up and saw the less
+kindly man first, flashed white with terror, sprang to her feet with a
+cry, and whirled to flee up the other side. There she confronted the
+Maccabee with hands extended to ward off the encroachment of his
+cousin. Without an instant's hesitation she flew into the Maccabee's
+arms. His clasp closed around her and she shrank against him, clinging
+to the folds of his tunic over his breast with hands that were
+tremulous.
+
+Her flight to him for refuge achieved an instant change in the
+Maccabee. The fear of defeat, the primal hate of a rival, died in him.
+All that remained was big wrath at the presumption and effrontery of
+Julian of Ephesus. He had no definite memory of what followed, because
+of the rush of blood in his veins, the whirl of pleasurable sensation
+in his brain and the weight of a sweet frightened figure pressed to
+him. The Ephesian went, leaving an impression of a most vindictive
+threat in the glittering smile and the motion of his shapely hand
+clenched at the victorious Maccabee. The girl drew away hastily. The
+veil was over her face and through its silken meshes he saw the glow
+on her cheeks and the sweep of her lowered lashes down upon that
+bloom.
+
+She was faltering her thanks and her apologies.
+
+"It is mine to ask pardon," he exclaimed, still smoldering with wrath.
+"I had no part in this, except to interfere with this bad companion of
+mine. I did not follow you; believe me."
+
+It confused her to know that he had guessed why she had moved from
+their encampment the night before. As necessary as old Momus had made
+it seem to her then, it seemed now to have been ungrateful. She could
+make no reply to that portion of his speech.
+
+"My servant went to the well," she said. "He will return presently. I
+am not afraid now."
+
+"I am; you ought to be. I shall wait till your extraordinary servant
+returns."
+
+At this decided speech Laodice showed a little panic.
+
+"No, no! I am not afraid. He--"
+
+But the Maccabee ignored the implied dismissal.
+
+"I owe him both a reproof and thanks for leaving you here alone for
+any wayfarer to approach--and for me to discover. I wish," gazing
+abroad over the broken horizon, "there were no well between here and
+Jerusalem, and that he were as thirsty as Tantalus."
+
+She made no reply to this remark, but her whole presence expressed
+discomfort in his determination to remain.
+
+"Heathen Hecate ought to get him in these wilds for forcing that cruel
+journey on you last night, when you were so weary and sad! There was
+no good in it. He wanted simply to get you away from me! Let us hope
+that Titus has got him for his museum by this time, and be at ease!"
+
+She raised her head and reproach flashed through the meshes of her
+veil.
+
+"Momus is a good man," she said.
+
+"He can not be," he insisted. "Have I not set forth his iniquities
+even now?"
+
+"It was a short task," she maintained. "But time is not long enough to
+count his virtues."
+
+"I can spend time better," he declared.
+
+He saw her silken brows lower in a spirited frown and he was glad. She
+was showing some other feeling than that dead level of unhappiness
+that had possessed her from the first moment he had seen her. His was
+not the heart contented to go astray after a tear. Men fall in search
+of joy.
+
+"Momus is carrying a burden under which more brilliant men would
+falter," she averred. "I am beyond reckoning his debtor!"
+
+"Since he has shifted that sweet burden for a time on my shoulders, I
+will forgive him for his looks. If he will stay away, I'll be his
+debtor further. But enough of Momus! I came to ask after your health,
+when your long journey by night is done."
+
+"I am well; we did not journey all night."
+
+"Sit, I pray you. There is no need for you to stand with that air of
+finality. I am not going, yet. I went back to your camp last night
+within a short time after I left you and found the camp broken and
+your fire lonely. I wanted to offer you my horse."
+
+"We did not walk all night. We camped a little farther on, and moved
+at daybreak this morning," she explained.
+
+He cast a reflective look at the sun and considered how much time
+Julian of Ephesus had lost for him upon the road, or else how long he
+had slept, that this pair, who had camped all night and had journeyed
+afoot by day, had caught up with him.
+
+"Still it was a cruel journey--for those little feet," he said.
+
+She glanced involuntarily at her sandals, worn and dusty.
+
+"Yes," he said compassionately, following her eyes. "But let me see no
+more, else I meet this good and burdened Momus with the flat of my
+hand when he comes! What is he to you?"
+
+"My servant--now almost my father!" she insisted, trying to cover the
+tacit accusation that she had made in admitting by a glance that she
+was weary. "He orders all things for my good. Do you think that each
+of the stones over which I stumbled to-day did not hurt him worse
+because they hurt me? Do you think he would have me go on, unless the
+stake were worth the pain I had to endure? Say no more against him!"
+
+The Maccabee shrugged his shoulders; then noting that she still stood,
+he smoothed down a spot of the sand with his foot, tossed upon it one
+of the sheepskins that Momus had unrolled, and extending his hand
+politely pressed her down on the place he had made. Then he dropped
+down beside her, lounging on his elbow.
+
+"What is the stake?" he asked after he had composed himself.
+
+She hesitated, regretting that her defense of Momus had led her to
+hint her mission and touch upon her husband's ambition.
+
+"The welfare of hosts!" she replied finally.
+
+"Heavens! What a menace I was!" the Maccabee smiled.
+
+She colored quickly and he resented the veil that was shutting away so
+much that was fine and fleeting by way of expression under its folds.
+
+"But you are just as dangerous," he declared. "Now, we should be in
+Jerusalem this hour. Our welfare and the welfare of others depend upon
+us--I mean my companion and me. But there is no devoted prodigy to
+bear me away--thank fortune! I have come out of a great turmoil; I
+must plunge into a greater one before many days. Let me rest between
+them. It will be a long time before I shall possess anything so sweet
+as the smell of this cedar fire and the picture of you against this
+fair sky!"
+
+She looked down quickly.
+
+"Was Ephesus in turmoil?" she asked disconnectedly.
+
+"Ephesus was never in any other state! A fit preparation for the
+disorder in Jerusalem! I was met at Caesarea with such tales as
+depressed me until it required such delight as you are to bring back
+my spirits again! What takes you to Jerusalem?" he asked earnestly.
+"The Passover? God will forgive you if you neglect it one year.
+Nothing but the sternest necessity should send any one there at this
+hour."
+
+"My necessity is stern--it is Judea's necessity," she answered.
+
+"More similarity!" he exclaimed. "That is why I go! Certainly Judea's
+fortunes have bettered with you and me both hastening to her rescue.
+Come, let us compare further. I am going to crown a king over Judea!"
+
+She raised her veil to look at him with startled eyes. The glimpse of
+her face, for ever a delight and an astonishment to him because of its
+extraordinary loveliness, swept him out of the half-serious air into
+which he had fallen. He stopped and looked at her with pleased,
+boyish, happy eyes.
+
+"Aurora!" he said softly. "I see now why day comes gradually. Mankind
+would die of excitement if the dawn were unveiled to them like this
+suddenly every morning!"
+
+She released the veil hurriedly, but before it fell he put out a hand,
+caught it and tossed it back over her head.
+
+"Be consistent with your part," he said, still smiling. "No man ever
+saw day cancel her dawn and live."
+
+It was pleasant, this sweet possession and command. How much like an
+overgrown boy he had become, since she had wakened to find herself in
+his power that morning in the hills! The harshness and inflexibility
+had left his atmosphere entirely. She was only afraid of him now
+because he had refused to be dismissed. But she drew down the veil.
+
+"I, too, expect a king," she said in a lowered tone. "A conqueror and
+a redeemer."
+
+"The Messiah?" he said, and she knew by the inflection that he had not
+meant that King when he had spoken.
+
+He noted that her hair was coiled upon her head when he threw back her
+veil and he turned to that at once.
+
+"You wear your hair in a fashion," he said, "that once meant that
+which men dislike to discover of a woman whom they greatly admire. I
+hope it is no longer significant."
+
+"I go," she said after a silence, "to join my husband in Jerusalem."
+
+The Maccabee's lips parted and an expression of disappointment with an
+admixture of surprise and vexation came over his face. But what did it
+matter? Were she as free as air, he was a married man. The humor of
+the situation appealed to him. He dropped his head into the bend of
+his elbow and laughed.
+
+"Welladay, this is a respite for us both, then," he said. But
+realizing that an admission that he was married might hopelessly
+reduce their hour to a formal basis, he took refuge in a falsehood.
+
+"My companion expects to meet a wife in Jerusalem," he continued. "A
+royal creature, daughter of an ancient and haughty family, with all
+her life purpose congealed in lofty and serious intent, her coffers
+lined with gold and her face as determined and unbending as Juno's
+with her jealousy stirred. He is not delighted, poor lad!"
+
+Laodice sat very still and listened. There was enough similarity in
+this story to interest her.
+
+The Maccabee, seeing that he had made an impression with this
+deception and feeling somehow a relief in making it, went on,
+delighted with his deceit.
+
+"He has not seen her since he married her in his childhood, but he
+knows full well how she will look when he meets her."
+
+Surprise paralyzed Laodice. Was the smiling and dangerous companion of
+this man, her husband?
+
+The Maccabee, meanwhile, deliberately remarked her charms and
+recounted their antithesis in making up a picture of the woman he
+expected to meet as his wife.
+
+"She will, according to his expectations, be meager and thin, not
+plump! Thoughtful women and women with a purpose are never plump! And
+she will be black and pale, all eyes, with a nose which is not the
+noble nose of our race. She will be religious and it will not make her
+happy. She will realize her value to her husband and he will not be
+permitted to forget it. She will be ambitious and full of schemes. She
+will be the larger part of his family, though by the balance she will
+weigh not so much as an omer of barley."
+
+Laodice got upon her feet in her agitation and raised her veil to
+stare at this slander. Was this a picture of herself she heard? The
+Maccabee was enjoying himself uncommonly.
+
+"She will wear the garments of a queen, but--how little a slip of
+silver tissue will become her!"
+
+Laodice looked down in alarm at her gleaming garment, and reached for
+her mantle. The Maccabee had no idea how much pleasure he was to
+derive in making his own story, Julian's. He continued, almost
+recklessly, now.
+
+"Small wonder that he is so delinquent in the wilderness, with such
+square-shouldered righteousness awaiting him in town! Forgive him,
+lady, for his iniquities now, for he will be a good man after he
+reaches Jerusalem; by my soul, you may be sure he will be good!"
+
+Laodice gasped under the pressure of astonishment and indignation. It
+was bad enough to be pictured thus unprepossessing, but to be suddenly
+made aware of her husband in a man whom she feared, was desperate. She
+stared with frank and horrified eyes at her tormentor.
+
+"But--but--" she stammered.
+
+"True," he sighed. "One can not know what calamity forces another into
+misdeeds. Now were I my unfortunate friend, perhaps I should afflict
+you with my hunger for sweetness also."
+
+And that smooth, insinuating, violent pagan was Philadelphus
+Maccabaeus! But what had her father said of him, as a child? "Quick in
+temper, resourceful, aye, even shifty, stubborn, cold in heart, hard
+to please!" And to this man she must present herself, late, penniless
+and unhelpful. Panic seized her! How could she go on to Jerusalem!
+
+That long graceful figure stretched on the sand was speaking. What was
+it in his voice that drew her so mightily from any terror that
+possessed her at any time?
+
+"Sit down, sit down! I have more to say," he was urging her.
+
+She obeyed him numbly.
+
+"He gets worse as he approaches the city. I think I ought to leave
+him. It will not be safe to be near him when his moneyed lady claims
+him for her own!"
+
+"She--she--" Laodice burst out, "is--may be such a woman!"
+
+"Such a woman as you! No; she will not be. That is what makes him bad.
+And now that I bethink me, perhaps it is just as well that you proceed
+to Jerusalem. He may comfort himself with a sight of you, now and
+then."
+
+"I? I comfort him?" she exclaimed.
+
+"By my soul I know it! What blunders Fortune makes in bestowing wives!
+Perchance your husband could have got on as well without so radiant a
+spouse, while my poor beauty-loving friend must needs be paired with
+a--Alas! there is too much marrying in this world!"
+
+There was a ring of genuine dejection in his voice and when she looked
+down at him, she saw that his eyes were larger and more sorrowful than
+she believed they could be. He was hurting himself with his own
+deceit. She looked away hastily, frightened at the sudden tenderness
+that his pathetic gaze had wakened in her.
+
+"Alas!" he went on. "The greatest sacrifice and the frequentest in
+this world of cross-purposes never gets into poetry. I--" he halted a
+moment and looked away, "I ought to be sorry for her, too. She is not
+getting the best of men."
+
+"Verily!" she exclaimed impulsively.
+
+He whirled his head toward her, stared; then with a flash of intense
+expression in his eyes burst into a ringing laugh that shook him from
+head to foot. He flung out his hand and catching hers passed it across
+his lips without kissing it, and let it go before he regained
+composure enough to speak.
+
+"No! Not a good man! Verily! But hath he no cause to be delinquent?"
+
+"No!" she said stubbornly. "He has judged her without seeing her,
+when, by your own words, he expects her to bring him fortune and
+position. What is he bringing her?"
+
+The Maccabee looked at her thoughtfully before he answered.
+
+"Nothing! Not even his heart!" he vowed.
+
+Laodice caught her breath in an agony of indignation and distress.
+
+"He does not in any way deserve--" she stopped precipitately. She was
+about to add "the great fortune he is to get," when she realized that
+she was taking this husband nothing--not even her own heart. She went
+on, for the first time a little glad that she was penniless.
+
+"He may find--neither fortune, nor position, nor heart awaiting him!"
+she finished pointedly.
+
+The Maccabee pulled one of his stubborn locks that had fallen over his
+eyes. The smile grew less vivid.
+
+He had no comment to make to this. Meanwhile Laodice looked at him.
+
+"Shall--you be with--your friend in Jerusalem?" she asked.
+
+"It depends on his wife," he retorted with a grimace.
+
+She would be glad if this tall, comely trifler, with a voice as
+musical as some grave-toned viol, were to be seen from time to time to
+relieve the tedium of life with the offensive Philadelphus. This
+admission instantly brought a shock to her. She had learned to study
+herself in these last few days since she had become aware of the ways
+of the world. Life was to be no longer a period of obedience to laws
+which the Torah had laid down; it was to be a long resistance against
+desirable things that she yearned for but which she dared not have.
+She learned at this moment that she could be her own chief
+stumbling-block, and that love, the most precious illumination in
+every life, might be a destruction and a consuming fire. She looked at
+this man, who lounged beside her, with a new sensation. He was
+winsome, and therefore the more perilous. That smooth insulting
+stranger whom this man had revealed as her husband with all his
+violence and license was a humble and harmless thing compared to this
+one, who had snared her by his care of her and by his charming self.
+
+She felt a desire to cry out for Momus to take her back to the inner
+chamber of the shut house in Ascalon, away from her danger to herself
+and from the sight of the man who had done her no harm--yet.
+
+She did not know how plainly all this wrote itself on her candid face.
+Wise pupil of that unbridled school, the city of Diana, he could read
+in that slight frown on her forehead and the pathetic curve of her
+lips, that she was contented with him--that she was not glad to go on
+to that husband in Jerusalem. He was near to her before she knew he
+had moved.
+
+"After all," he was saying in a low voice, "I am glad you are going to
+Jerusalem. You shall not be lost from me again. Whose house shall I
+ask for when I can not endure separation longer?"
+
+She moved away from him. There was a step behind her and Laodice,
+coloring shamedly, looked straight into the accusing eyes of Momus who
+stood there. The stranger rose.
+
+"I shall see you again," he said to her.
+
+He took her hand and lifted it to his lips. The next instant he was
+gone.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII
+
+IMPERIAL CAESAR
+
+
+When the Maccabee had returned to the spot in the sedgy valley where
+he and Julian had halted, he found the Ephesian white to the lips and
+with ignited eyes awaiting him.
+
+"How much longer?" the Ephesian demanded.
+
+"What! Fast and slow!" the Maccabee said calmly. "Last night you
+wasted hours to spite me. To-day you begrudge me a moment's talk with
+a lovely wayfarer. Or is it because she prefers me? You have ordered
+our progress long enough. I shall move when it pleases me."
+
+He sat down by the fire, clasping his hands back of his head, and
+half-closed his eyes. The Ephesian rose and tramped restlessly about.
+As he glanced down at the reposeful attitude of the man whom he could
+not exasperate he saw the sun glitter on the Maccabaean signet on the
+hand clasped back of Philadelphus' head. The sight of it in a way
+collected Julian's purposes. He knew that by some misadventure he had
+missed Aquila whom he had hoped to meet in Emmaus, bearing treasure
+stolen from the daughter of Costobarus. By this time, then, the
+Maccabee's emissary had doubtless arrived in Jerusalem--the last
+possible point for the two conspirators to meet. To proceed to
+Jerusalem without the Maccabee, with whatever excuse he could invent,
+would not deliver the dowry of the bride into his hands, in the event
+that Aquila had not succeeded in his instructions to make way with
+Laodice before he reached Jerusalem. Nothing occurred to Julian at
+that moment but to impersonate the Maccabee until it was possible to
+get possession of the two hundred talents from those friends in
+Jerusalem who were interested in his cousin's welfare. No one in
+Jerusalem knew Philadelphus Maccabaeus. Aquila, as fellow-conspirator,
+would not dare to expose him if Julian appeared as his cousin.
+Perilous at best, it seemed the only plan by which he was to get
+possession of a fortune which even Caesar would be glad to have.
+
+The resolution formed itself in a brain turbulent with passion and
+desperation. He halted silently back of his cousin and with a sudden
+flare of intent on his dead white face snatched a dagger from his
+girdle and drove it between the shoulders of the Maccabee. Without a
+word, Philadelphus turned upon his assailant and started to his feet.
+But Julian, catching a glimpse of the dire purpose in his cousin's
+darkened eyes, struck again. The knife, blindly wielded, glanced on
+the Maccabee's head with wild force. Under a veil of scarlet
+Philadelphus sank to the earth.
+
+Julian with a sob of terror sprang out of range of his victim's gaze.
+After a time he took courage and looked. The lids were fallen and the
+breast was still.
+
+Julian bent hastily and snatched the signet from the nerveless hand
+and fumbling in the bosom drew forth the wallet there. He opened it,
+finding within ancient parchments with heavy seals, new writings,
+rolls of notes and a packet of letters. He rose, trembling violently,
+and backed away. After a moment's fascinated gaze at the roadway to
+see if the pilgrims passing had seen what he had done, he whirled
+about, mounted his horse and galloped frantically toward Jerusalem.
+
+Meanwhile the midday activity on the Roman roadway swept by the
+smoldering fire and the motionless figure lying in the grass some
+distance back from the highway. Along the splendid causeway the
+Passover pilgrims fared, men afoot, men on camels, families and
+solitary travelers; the poor, the once rich, the humble and the
+haughty; figures in burnooses, gabardines, gowns and tunics; striped
+and checkered woolens, linens or rags; noisy or silent, angry or sad,
+hour in and hour out, until the hills were a-throb with the human
+atmosphere. Time and again the sweet invitation of the rare grass
+along the marsh invited the way-weary to halt to tie a sandal, to bind
+up a wound, to eat a crust spread with curds or simply to rest. No one
+approached the silent man who had fallen beside a dying fire. They
+were tired enough to refrain from disturbing a man who slept. So,
+though they looked at him from where they sat and two or three asked
+each other if he were asleep or merely weary, he was left alone. One
+by one they who halted took up their journey again and the figure in
+the grass lay still.
+
+Finally near the noon hour there came from the summit of a hill
+overhanging the road, a high, wild, youthful yell that cut with
+startling distinctness through the dead level of human communication
+on the highway. Each of the travelers below looked up to see a young
+shepherd in sheepskins with long-blowing stiff crinkled locks flying
+back from a dusky face, with eyes soft and shining as those of some
+wild thing. Around him eddied a mob of sheep as wild as he, and a
+Natolian dog raced hither and thither in a cloud of dust, rounding the
+edge of the flock and shaping it to the advance of the young faun that
+mastered it.
+
+"Sheep! by the prophets!" one of the sedate Jews exclaimed.
+
+"The only flock in existence in Judea, I venture!" his companion
+declared.
+
+"And so hopelessly doomed to Roman possession that it can not be
+called in existence."
+
+"Heigh! Hello! Young David!" one of the younger men called up to the
+shepherd. "Does Titus pay you for minding his mutton?"
+
+"Salute, neighbors!" another shouted. "Here is the Roman commissary!"
+
+"Ill-fathered son of an Ishmaelite!" a Tyrian said to this jester.
+"That you should make sport of Judea's humiliation!"
+
+The shepherd who had paused amid his whirlpool of sheep wisely held
+his peace. There was a division of sentiment here that were better not
+aggravated. He halted long enough for the road to clear below him and
+then descended into the valley and crossed to the low meadow on the
+opposite side.
+
+His scamper of sheep flocked into the sedge, parting around the
+prostrate figure by a circle of coals now dead, and plunged into the
+pasture. The boy inspected the earth and shook his head. It was too
+wet for a long stay, inviting as it seemed. But here his flock might
+pasture for a day without injury.
+
+He glanced at the sleeper as he passed and continued to the farther
+side where the opposite hill sloped down into the depression. Here he
+found for himself a comfortable spot and lay down, prepared to watch
+all day. From time to time he looked across at the motionless figure
+in the grass and commented to himself that it was a weary man who
+slept so soundly, and then lost interest in the maze of dreams that
+can entangle the wits of a shepherd who is a boy.
+
+The march of the Passover pilgrims continued to Jerusalem.
+
+In mid-afternoon there came interruption. Along the level highway came
+the rapid beat of hooves and the musical jingle of harness. Every soul
+within sound of that un-Jewish mode of travel turned apprehensively
+and looked back. Bearing down upon them from the west came a stampede
+of Roman cavalry scouting. The sunshine on their brass armor
+transformed them into shapes of gold, and the recklessness of their
+advance swept the pilgrims out of their path as far as could be seen.
+Right and left the Jews scattered; some ran into the hills and hid
+themselves; others merely stepped aside and with darkening faces
+waited defiantly for the approach of the oppressor. The young shepherd
+full of excitement sprang to his feet.
+
+Neither the fleeing Jews nor the Jews that had stood their ground
+attracted the attention of the approaching legionaries. It was the
+close-packed, avid-feeding sheep, deep in the grass, that won their
+instant and enthusiastic notice. The decurion in charge of the squad
+brought up his gray horse with such suddenness that the animal's feet
+slid in the gravel.
+
+"Sheep, by the wings of Mercury!" he shouted. "Dismount, fellows!
+Here's for a feast this night and an offering to Mars to-morrow!"
+
+The ten in brazen armor threw themselves from their horses with the
+enthusiasm of boys and spread a panic of whooping and of waving arms
+about the startled flock. The young shepherd, too long a fugitive from
+the encroachments of this same army to misunderstand the nature of the
+attack, ran into the thick of the shouting Romans. His valiant dog
+with exposed teeth flew straight at the nearest legionary.
+
+"Cerberus!" the soldier howled, dodging. "Your pike, Paulus! Quick! By
+Hector, it is a wolf!"
+
+But the quickest soldier would not have been quick enough to elude the
+enraged beast had not the shepherd with a spring and a warning cry
+seized his dog by the ears and stopped him mid-bound.
+
+"Down, Urge!" he cried. "Take away your men!" he shouted to the
+decurion. "I can not hold him long."
+
+"Only so long," Paulus growled, raising his pike over the snarling
+dog.
+
+"Drop it!" the decurion ordered him peremptorily. "We are ten to one
+and a dog. No blood-letting this day. It is Titus' order. Boy, get you
+gone; these sheep are confiscate."
+
+"I have been told they are only common stock," the boy remonstrated
+gravely, "but you may be right. Howbeit, they are not mine and I can
+not leave them."
+
+"You have been misinformed," the decurion said gravely, while his men,
+circling around the growling dog, went on with their work. "These are
+Roman sheep, with the Flavian coat of arms and the mark of the army in
+black on their hides--if you shear them. But if you make away as fast
+as you can I shall not tell Titus which way you went."
+
+The sheep had started pell-mell toward the Roman road. The decurion
+turned back to his horse. The shepherd released his dog, which ran
+after the flock, and stepped into the decurion's way.
+
+"However these sheep look when they are sheared," he said, "this seems
+to be robbery to me."
+
+"Robbery!" the good-natured decurion exclaimed. "This is but a
+religious rite that Mercury got out of the cradle at two days to
+establish. Only he took Apollo's cattle while we are contenting
+ourselves with the sheep of mortal ownership. Robbery! What an
+inelegant word!"
+
+Meanwhile the stampeded sheep were making in a cloud of dust back over
+the road toward the west from which the Romans had come.
+
+"What shall I say to the citizens of Pella?" the little shepherd
+shouted, pursuing the decurion who was making back to his horse as
+fast as he could go.
+
+"Salute them for me," the decurion shouted back, "and make them my
+obeisances, and say that I shall report on the flavor of the sheep by
+messenger from Jerusalem."
+
+In a moment the boy sprang into the decurion's way so suddenly that
+the soldier almost fell over him.
+
+"Be fair!" the boy exclaimed. "At least leave me half!"
+
+The decurion was losing patience and the shepherd had grown more than
+ever serious.
+
+"Fair!" the Roman echoed. "Why, I have been indulgent! This is war! It
+is almost a breach of discipline to argue with you. Out of the way!"
+
+"The Roman army has all the world to feed it; Pella has only its
+sheep. We, then, must face hunger and cold because your appetites
+crave mutton this day!" the boy returned resentfully.
+
+The decurion pointed down the road.
+
+"Why waste your breath! There go the sheep."
+
+The boy's dark eyes filled with tears. The decurion swung around him
+and went back to the horses that waited in the road. He knotted their
+bridles together and, leading one of the number, remounted and rode
+west after the receding cloud of dust which hid the flock.
+
+The shepherd's head sank on his heaving breast and he stood still.
+
+"Lord Jesus, I pray Thee, give me my sheep again!" he prayed.
+
+A deep prolonged thunder that had been filling the hills with sound
+began to multiply as the nearest slopes caught it and tossed it from
+echo to echo. It was not loud but immensely prevalent. Those wayfarers
+who had fled came back to the brink of the hill and those who had
+stood their ground walked out into the grass to look back. Around the
+curve of a buttress of rock that stood out at the line of the road,
+the head of a column of Roman cavalry appeared. The superb
+color-bearer bore on his hip the staff supporting the Imperial
+standard.
+
+At the forefront rode a young general; on either side a tribune.
+Behind came a detachment of six hundred horse.
+
+The sheep huddling in the way were swept like a scurry of leaves out
+into the meadow alongside the road, and one of the tribunes and the
+general turned in their saddles to look at the confiscated flock. The
+second tribune observed their interest in this trivial incident with
+disgust. The young general, whose military cloak flaunted a purple
+border, called the decurion boyishly:
+
+"Well done, Sergius! A samnos of wine for your company to-night for
+this."
+
+The decurion saluted.
+
+"Where did you get them?" the tribune demanded.
+
+The shepherd who had withdrawn to the side of the road on the approach
+of the column looked at the questioner with resentful eyes from which
+the moisture had not vanished.
+
+"From me!" he said.
+
+Both the purple-wearing young general and his tribune looked at him
+amusedly.
+
+"How many killed and wounded, Sergius?" the tribune asked.
+
+The silent and disapproving tribune, observing that the commanding
+officer had not given an order to halt, brought the six hundred to,
+lest they ride their general down.
+
+"You!" the general exclaimed with his eyes on the young shepherd.
+
+The boy looked up into the face of the Roman who sat above him on a
+snow-white horse.
+
+It was a young face, tanned by the sun of Alexandria, but bright with
+an emanation of light that somehow was made tangible by the flash of
+his teeth as he talked and the sparkle of his lively eyes. For a
+soldier exposed to the open air and the ruffian life of the camp and
+burdened with the grave task of subduing a desperate nation, he was
+free of disfigurements. His brows were knitted as if to give his full
+soft eyes protection and the frown, with the laughing cut of his
+youthful lips, gave his face a quizzical expression that was entirely
+winning. In countenance and figure he was handsome, refined and
+thoroughly Roman. The little shepherd was won to him instantly.
+Without knowing that the world from one border to the other had
+already named this charming young Roman the Darling of Mankind, the
+little shepherd, had his lips been shaped to poetry, would have called
+him that.
+
+So Joseph, the shepherd, son of Thomas, the Christian, and Titus, son
+of Vespasian, Emperor of the World, looked at each other with perfect
+fellowship.
+
+"Those are sheep from Pella," Joseph said soberly, "in my care. They
+were taken from me because," he paused till a more tactful statement
+should suggest itself, but, lacking it, drove ahead with spirit,
+"there was not more of me to stop your soldiers."
+
+"I believe you," Titus replied heartily. "But that is the fortune of
+war. Still, you Jews have a habit of refusing to accept defeat
+rationally."
+
+"I am not a Jew," Joseph explained. "I am born of Arab blood, and I am
+a Christian."
+
+"Worse and worse," said Titus.
+
+Joseph shifted his position argumentatively.
+
+"Is it?" he asked. "Are you making war on Pella or Jerusalem? Was it
+Pella or the hundred Jewish towns that cost Rome so much of late?
+Pella is not exactly your friend, though neither are most of your
+provinces; but are you going to pillage Egypt or Persia because Judea
+is in rebellion?"
+
+Titus threw his plump leg over the horn of his saddle and sat
+sidewise. One of his tribunes looked at the other with a flickering
+smile that was not entirely free of contempt. But his fellow returned
+a stare that for immobility would have done credit to the Memnon.
+
+"Now," Titus began, "I have heard of this fault in the Christians.
+They don't understand warfare."
+
+"We don't," Joseph declared bluntly. "We do not see why you should
+take my sheep to feed your army, when we have had nothing to do with
+bringing your army over here. We haven't cost you one drop of Roman
+blood or one denarius of Roman money, and yet you are taking at one
+act the whole of our substance and punishing us for the misdeeds of
+others--others whom you haven't succeeded in punishing yet."
+
+"That is bad judgment," Titus said, frowning at the last sentence.
+
+"Unpleasant truth always is," Joseph retorted.
+
+One of the tribunes laughed impulsively and Titus looked around at him
+reproachfully.
+
+"Come, come, Carus," he said.
+
+"Thy pardon, Caesar," the tribune replied, "but we'll be whipped in
+this wordy battle. And even a small defeat were an unpropitious sign
+on this expedition."
+
+"To Hades with your signs! If I am whipped with six hundred back of
+me, I ought to be! Boy, we have your sheep by conquest; you will have
+to take them back the same way."
+
+Joseph's face fell.
+
+"I have had them since I was nine years old. I've tended them since
+they were lambs and their mothers before them. It is like surrendering
+so many children," he said dejectedly. "In truth I can fight for them
+even if it be but to lose, and I am bidden not to fight at that."
+
+"By Hector, that is not a Jewish tenet!" Titus exclaimed.
+
+Joseph said nothing. He stood still in the path of the Roman six
+hundred with his curly head sunk on his breast. There was silence.
+
+"Is it?" Titus demanded uncomfortably.
+
+"No; and for that reason you are still fighting them and will fight
+and lose and lose and lose, before you win. Still, it is no safeguard
+not to fight you; you take our substance anyhow. Be we peace-lovers or
+not, there is warfare; if we do not fight we are fought against."
+
+Titus thrust his helmet back from his full front of intensely black
+curls and wiped his forehead.
+
+"The sun is hot in these hills," he said disjointedly to the tribune
+he had called Carus, "and the wind is cold. Uncomfortable climate."
+
+Carus said nothing.
+
+"Is it not?" Titus demanded irritably.
+
+"Very," Carus observed hastily.
+
+The little shepherd stood in the road and the six hundred were silent.
+
+"Well," said Titus with a tone of finality, "you never remember the
+wrongs the strong man endured--wrongs that the weak man did him
+because of his weakness."
+
+"It never hurts the strong man," Joseph said softly, "to give the weak
+one another chance."
+
+Titus closed his lips at that, and the tribune who had smiled
+sarcastically looked with sudden intent at Carus. Carus silently moved
+his horse to the sarcastic tribune's side with such threatening
+expression on his face that the other discreetly held his peace.
+
+"Perhaps," Titus said thoughtfully, but the boy failed to see more in
+that word than the simple expression. In his search for some further
+plea that would give him his sheep again, the presence of the young
+Roman appealed to him with hope. Surely one so young and laughing, so
+ready to stop an army to argue with a child, could not be beyond reach
+of persuasion. With the simple frankness so innocent of guile as to
+make charming that which upon other lips would have been the broadest
+insincerity, he put that moment's thought into words.
+
+"I thought," he said slowly, "because your horse is so white and your
+dress so golden and your face so beautiful that I would have but to
+ask--and I would have my sheep again."
+
+Titus looked at him, not with the idea that his compliment was
+effective, but with the thought that the boy was yet too young to have
+lost faith in attractive things; that another than himself would have
+to teach the shepherd that lesson in disappointment.
+
+"Have you examined these sheep for disease, Sergius?" he demanded,
+with a show of severity. "I never saw a flock in this country that was
+not full of peril for the cavalry."
+
+Sergius, wisely catching excuse in this demand, saluted.
+
+"I did not," he replied.
+
+"So? Well, do it hereafter. Go stop those legionaries and turn loose
+that flock. We lost five hundred horse in Caesarea for just such
+negligence."
+
+Joseph flung up his head, his eyes sparkling, his cheeks aglow, his
+whole figure alive with a gratitude so potent that it was painful.
+Titus, with the deep tide of a blush crawling over his forehead,
+scowled down at this joy.
+
+"Look well," he continued severely to Sergius, "and if they are
+healthy--"
+
+But Joseph laughed and stepped out of the young general's path.
+
+"And," said Titus, his face clearing before that laugh as he directed
+his words to the little shepherd, "Jerusalem shall have another
+chance."
+
+Transfiguration brightened the small dusky face. He put up his hands
+for that blessing that was a part of his farewell.
+
+"_May my God supply all thy need according to his riches in glory, by
+Jesus Christ. Amen!_"
+
+Titus, with a bowed head, touched his horse, and in response to a
+silent flash of an uplifted sword the picked six hundred of Caesar's
+army rode on in the subdued thunder of hoof and the music of jingling
+harness toward Jerusalem.
+
+After a long time there came the quick patter of a running flock and
+the multitudinous complaint of lambs, and up from the east rushed the
+mob of sheep. Behind them trotting comfortably were the mounted
+scouts. The ten privates wore scornful countenances highly expressive
+of their contempt for the unwarlike restitution they had been forced
+to make, but as they rode past when the sheep swept out of the road to
+their tender, Sergius, the decurion, dropped back and with his tongue
+in his cheek made such jovial threatening signs that the little
+shepherd laughed again.
+
+The squad galloped after the main body and were lost to view. Many of
+the Jews called to the little shepherd, but after a time travel was
+resumed on the road and deep monotonous composure settled upon the
+valley again.
+
+But Joseph, the Christian, turned into the high grass of the meadow
+with bowed head and clasped hands.
+
+"Lord Jesus, what may I do for Thee?" he asked impulsively.
+
+He stopped suddenly. At his feet lay the silent sleeper in the grass.
+On the tall growth upstanding about the prostrate form were clear
+shining scarlet drops. The little shepherd turned white and threw
+himself down on his knees beside the still figure and put his hand
+over the heart. Then he lifted his face to the skies.
+
+"_I was sick and ye visited me_," he whispered radiantly.
+
+[Illustration: He threw himself down by the still figure.]
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII
+
+GREEK AND JEW
+
+
+Julian of Ephesus, now the presumptive Philadelphus Maccabaeus, rode
+up the broad brown bosom of a hill that had confronted him for miles
+to the south, and the sun had sloped until its early spring rays
+struck level from the west. At the summit, he drew up his horse
+suddenly with a quick intaking of the breath.
+
+Below him lay Jerusalem.
+
+South and east the barren summits of brown hills shaped a depression
+in which the city lay. North, clean-white and regular, the wall of
+Agrippa was printed against the cold blue of the sky. Below on three
+lesser mounts and overflowing the vales between was the goodliest city
+in all Asia.
+
+About it and through it climbed such walls, planted on such bold
+natural escarpment, that made it the most inaccessible fortification
+in the world. On its highest hill stood a vision of marble and gold--a
+fortress in gemstone--the Temple. Behind it towered Roman Antonia.
+Westward the Tyropean Bridge spanned a deep, populous ravine. The high
+broad street upon which the giant causeway terminated was marked by
+the solemn cenotaphs of Mariamne and Phaselis and ended against the
+Tower of Hippicus--a vast and unflinching citadel of stone. Under the
+shadow of this pile was the high place of the Herods; in sight was a
+second Herodian palace. South was the open space of the great markets;
+near the southernmost segment of the outer wall was the semicircular
+Hippodrome. Cut off from its neighbor by ancient walls were Ophlas,
+overlooking Tophet and under the shadow of the Temple; Mount Zion
+which the Lord had established, Akra of the valley, Moriah, the Holy
+Hill, and Coenopolis or Bezetha which Agrippa I had walled. About the
+immense outer fortifications crawled the shadowy valleys of Tophet, of
+Brook Kedron and of Hinnom. Thickly scattered like fallen patches of
+skies the pools of Siloam, Gihon, Shiloh, En-Rogel, the Great Pool,
+the Serpent's Pool and the Dragon's Well reflected the color of the
+mountain heavens. Between them wandered the blue threads of certain
+aqueducts that supplied them. Everywhere rose the shafts of monuments
+and memorials, old as the pride of Absalom, new as the folly of the
+Herods; everywhere the aggressive paganism of Rome and Greece, which
+would have paganized this monotheistic race out of very rancor against
+its uprightness, violated with insolent beauty the hieratic severity
+of the city's face. Rich, bold, strong, beautiful, Jerusalem was at
+that hour, as viewed from the hill to the north, the perfection of
+beauty and the joy of the whole earth.
+
+For a moment ambition struggled nobly in the breast of the man that
+overlooked it. Except for the obstacles he had placed in his own way
+by his misdeeds, Julian of Ephesus at that moment might have become
+great. But he had struck down his kinsman on the way, and such deeds
+were remembered even in war-ridden Judea; he had come to Jerusalem
+wearing his kinsman's name that he might despoil that kinsman's bride
+of her dowry; a hundred other crimes of his commission stood in the
+way to peace and success.
+
+But about him the Passover pilgrims, catching their first glimpse of
+the Holy City, gave way to the storm of emotion that had gradually
+gathered as they drew near to the threatened City of Delight.
+
+It had moved him to look upon this most majestic fortification,
+embattled and begirt for resistance against the most majestic nation
+in the world. But he who came as a stranger could not feel within him
+the tenderness of old love, the sanctity of old tradition, and the
+desperation of kin in his blood as he gazed upon Jerusalem. Yonder was
+a roof-garden; to him, no more than that. But the inspired Jews beside
+him knew that in that place the sun of noon had shone upon Bathsheba,
+the beautiful; and in that neighboring high place the heart of the
+Singing King had melted; to the north was a stretch of monotonous
+ground overgrown with a new suburb; but that was the camp of
+Sennacherib, the Assyrian whom the Angel of the Lord smote and his
+army of one hundred and four score and five thousand, before the
+morning. Yonder were squalid streets, older than any others. But the
+Kings had walked them; the Prophets had helped wear trenches in their
+stones; the heroes and the strong-hearted women of the ancient days
+had gone that way. No house but was holy with tradition; no street but
+was sanctified by event. Small wonder, then, that these who came to
+this Passover, the most momentous one since that calamity which had
+occurred forty years ago on Golgotha, wept, cried aloud to Heaven;
+became beatified and made prophecies; railed; anathematized
+Jerusalem's enemies; assumed vows and were threatening. Julian of
+Ephesus was shaken. He looked about him on the tempestuous host, then
+touched his horse and rode down to the city.
+
+On the Hill Scopus over which he approached an inferior number of
+Romans were camped, and these had maintained a semblance of siege only
+sufficiently effective to close all the gates on three sides. The Sun
+Gate to the south of the city was therefore the most accessible point
+of entry for the pilgrims. Following the people who had preceded him,
+Julian approached this portal, left his horse with the stable-keeper
+without and prepared to enter Jerusalem.
+
+Collecting at the causeway of the Sun Gate the pilgrims came with such
+impetus that the foremost were rushed struggling and protesting
+through the tunnel under the wall and forced well into Jerusalem
+before they could control their own motion. Once within, the host
+spread out so that one looking at the immense space they instantly
+covered wondered how so great a mass ever passed through the
+circumscribed limits of a fifty-foot gate. At times stopping was
+impossible. Again there were momentary lulls, as when the sea recoils
+upon itself and is stilled for an instant. They who stood to watch,
+wearied of days of such invasion, unconsciously wished that the
+interval might endure till they could rest their number-wearied
+brains. But, as if the stagnation were the result of congestion
+somewhere without the walls, when the wave returned it came with
+redoubled height and power and the Sun Gate would roar with the noise
+of their entry.
+
+After the Ephesian had been swept in with his own company of pilgrims,
+he saw that which even few of the new-comers had expected to see. The
+immediate vicinity of the gate was laid waste. Up Mount Zion opposite
+Hippicus and along the margin of the Tyropean Valley where the
+Herodian and Sadducean palaces had seemed so fair from the north were
+great blackened shells of walls and leaning pillars, partly buried in
+ruin and rubbish. Far and wide the streets were littered with debris
+and charred fragments of burned timbers. At another place on the
+breast of Zion was a chaos of rock where a mansion had been literally
+pulled down. Somewhere near Akra pale columns of pungent, wind-blown
+smoke still rose from a colossal heap of fused matter that the
+Ephesian could not identify. About it were neglected houses; not a
+sign of festivity was apparent; windows hung open carelessly; the
+hangings in colonnades were stripped away entirely or whipped loose
+from the fastenings and abandoned to the winds. Numbers of dwellings
+appeared to have been sacked; others were so closely barred and
+fortified that their exteriors appeared as inhospitable as jails.
+
+Confusion prevailed on the smoked and untidy marble Walk of the
+Purified leading down from the Temple. Here those who held fast to the
+Law met and contested for their old exclusiveness with wild heathen
+Idumean soldiers, starvelings, ruffians and strange women from
+out-lying towns. Far and wide were wandering crowds, surly, defiant,
+discourteous, exacting. Manifestly it was the visitors who were the
+aggressors. They had been overthrown and driven from their own into an
+unsubjugated city which was secure. They felt the rage of the defeated
+which are not subdued, and the resentment against another's unearned
+immunity. The citizens of Jerusalem had not welcomed them and they
+were enraged. Half a dozen fights of more or less seriousness were in
+sight at once. A column of black wiry men in some semblance of uniform
+pushed across the open space toward the Essene Gate. They took no heed
+for any in their path. Those who could not escape were overturned and
+trampled on. Meeting a rush at the gate they drew swords and coolly
+hacked their way through screams of fear and pain and amazement. After
+them went a wave of curses and complaint. Citizens against the
+visitors; visitors against the citizens; soldiers against them all!
+
+"And this cousin of mine meant to pacify all this!" the Ephesian
+exclaimed to himself.
+
+Jerusalem, that had for fifteen hundred years adorned herself at this
+time with tabrets and had gone forth in the dance of them that make
+merry, was drunken with wormwood and covered with ashes.
+
+All at once the Ephesian saw four soldiers standing together and with
+them, manifestly under their protection, was a Greek of striking
+beauty. He wore on his fine head a purple turban embroidered with a
+golden star.
+
+Without a moment's hesitation, the Ephesian approached. The spears of
+the four soldiers fell and formed a barrier around the Greek. The
+new-comer smiled confidently.
+
+"Greeting, servant of Amaryllis," he said. "I am your lady's expected
+guest."
+
+The Greek came forth from the square formed by his guard.
+
+"I am that servant of Amaryllis," he said courteously. "But show me
+yet another sign."
+
+The Ephesian drew from his bosom the Maccabaean signet and flashed its
+blue fires at the Greek. The servant stepped hastily between the
+soldiers and the new-comer.
+
+"Thy name?" he asked in a whisper.
+
+"I am Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+
+The servant bent and taking the hem of the woolen tunic pressed it to
+his lips.
+
+"Happy hour!" he exclaimed. "I pray you follow me."
+
+The pretender breathed a relieved sigh and joined his protector.
+
+They passed down into Akra and approached the straight column of
+pungent smoke towering up from a charred heap that the Ephesian in
+spite of his haste inspected curiously.
+
+"What is that?" he asked of the Greek.
+
+"That, master, is the city granaries."
+
+"The granaries!" the Ephesian cried, aghast.
+
+The Greek inclined his head.
+
+"What--what--fired them?" the Ephesian asked.
+
+"John and Simon differed on the point of its control and each fired it
+to keep the other from possessing it!"
+
+For a moment the Ephesian was thunderstruck. Then he quickened his
+pace.
+
+"By the horns of Capricornus!" he avowed. "The sooner one gets out of
+this, the wiser he must be counted!"
+
+The Greek looked at him with lifted brows and led on.
+
+They crossed the Tyropean Valley and approached a small new house of
+stone, abutting the vast retaining wall that was built against Moriah.
+A line of soldiers was thrown out from the entrance to the house and
+his conductor, after whispering a word to the captain, led the way up
+to a double-barred door. A long time after he had rapped, there was
+the sound of falling chains and the door swung open. A second Greek
+servant of no less beauty bowed the new-comer and his companion
+within. The noise of the streets was suddenly cut off. Soft dusk and
+quiet proved that the doors of Amaryllis had been shut upon unhappy
+Jerusalem.
+
+The second servant drew a cord and a roller of matting lifted and
+showed a skylight. Philadelphus the pretender was in the andronitis of
+a Greek house.
+
+It was typical. None but a Greek with the purest taste had planned it.
+Walls and pavement were of unpolished marble, lusterless white. A
+marble exedra built in a semicircle sat in the farther end, facing a
+chair wholly of ivory set beside a lectern of dull brass. At either
+end of the exedra on a pedestal formed by the arms, a brass staff
+upheld a flat lamp that cast its luster down on the seat by night.
+Against an opposite wall built at full length of the hall, was a
+pigeonholed case, which was stacked with brass cylinders. This was the
+library of the Greek. At a third side was a compound arch concealed by
+a heavy white curtain. There were low couches spread with costly white
+material which were used when Amaryllis set her table in her
+andronitis, and at the arches leading into the interior of the house
+there were draperies. But the chamber, with all its richness, had a
+splendid emptiness that made it imposing, not luxurious.
+
+After a single admiring survey of the hall in which he had been left
+alone, the pretended Philadelphus fortified himself against his most
+critical test.
+
+Without a sound, without even so much as the rustling of a garment to
+announce her, a woman emerged from a passage leading into the interior
+of the house. He confronted the only person in Jerusalem who might
+know him as an impostor.
+
+The woolen chiton of her countrywomen draped a figure almost too
+slender, yet perfect in its delicate modeling. Though her eyes were
+black, her hair was fair and brilliant with a wash of gold powder. Her
+features were Hellenic, cold, pure and classic, and for all her youth
+and beauty there was an atmosphere about her of middle-age, immense
+experience, and old sagacity.
+
+The pretender braced himself for the scrutiny the eyes made of him.
+
+"You are that Philadelphus, as my servant tells me?" she asked.
+
+"I am he."
+
+She inclined her head.
+
+"Welcome; in the name of all the need of you!"
+
+After a silence he came closer and lifted her hand to his lips. He
+added nothing, but presently raised his eyes softened with feeling and
+unexpressed appreciation.
+
+"Certainly you have suffered, lady," he said finally in a subdued
+tone. "But please God you will not suffer alone hereafter."
+
+Amaryllis' non-committal front changed.
+
+"You are gentler of speech than is common among the Maccabees," she
+said.
+
+"Nevertheless the Maccabees are the more touched by devotion," he
+maintained.
+
+He led her to the exedra, unslung his wallet and laid it on the
+lectern before them.
+
+"When thou hast leisure, perchance thou wilt find interest in these
+papers here."
+
+She thanked him and there was a moment's silence. Under his lashes the
+impostor saw that he had not filled her fancied picture of the
+Maccabee made from long years of correspondence. She was disappointed;
+her intuition was perplexed. He would complete his work and get away
+in time.
+
+"My wife is here?" he asked.
+
+"She came yesterday," Amaryllis responded, clapping her hands in
+summons. A female servant of such prepossessing appearance that
+Philadelphus looked at her again, bowed in the archway.
+
+"Send hither the princess," Amaryllis said.
+
+"The princess," Philadelphus repeated to himself. "Then, by Ate, I am
+the prince!"
+
+"While we wait," Amaryllis continued, "let us talk of details which
+you may not have patience to hear after she comes. Jerusalem, as you
+have learned, is in grave danger--"
+
+"Jerusalem should fear the Roman army less than herself. I have seen
+its disease."
+
+"The citizens will hail Titus as a deliverer. But this week's
+ceremonies are bringing us disaster. Should Titus be forced to lay
+siege about us, how shall we feed this multitude of a million on the
+supplies gathered for only a third of that number?"
+
+"Gathered and burned."
+
+"Even so. But of your creature comforts. My house is open to your
+chief enemy. It must be so. You must be hidden--not concealed, but
+disguised. You know my weakness for people of charm and people of
+ability. My house is full of them. The master of this place is
+indulgent; he permits me to add to my collection whatever pleases me
+in the way of society. Therefore, you are come as a student of this
+wonderful drama to be enacted in Jerusalem presently. You may live
+under part of your name. Substitute, however, your city for your
+surname. Be Philadelphus of Ephesus. No one then will question your
+presence here.
+
+"I have bound to me by oath and by fear one hundred Idumeans who will
+rise or fall with you. They are of John's own army and alienated to
+you without his knowledge. Hence they are in armor and ready at any
+propitious moment. This house is provisioned and equipped for siege;
+everything is prepared."
+
+"At what cost, my Amaryllis?" he asked tenderly.
+
+She drew away from him quickly, as if his tone had touched a place of
+deeper disappointment.
+
+"That I do not remember. I am your minister; you need no other. More
+than the one would be multiplying chances for betrayal."
+
+"And what wilt thou have out of all this for thyself?" he asked.
+
+Slowly she turned her face back to him.
+
+"I would have it said that I made a king," she said.
+
+There was a step in the corridor leading into the andronitis, and,
+smiling, Amaryllis rose. Philadelphus got upon his feet and looked to
+catch the first glimpse of the woman who was bringing him two hundred
+talents.
+
+A woman entered the hall. Behind her came a servant bearing a
+shittim-wood casket.
+
+Had Amaryllis been looking for suspicious signs, she would have
+observed in the intense silence that fell, in the arrested attitude of
+the pair, more than a natural embarrassment. Any one informed that
+these were a pair of impostors would have seen that there was no
+confusion here, but amazement, chagrin and no little fear.
+
+Instead, Amaryllis, nothing suspecting, glanced from one set face to
+the other and laughed.
+
+"Poor children! Married fourteen years and more than strangers to each
+other! I will take myself off until you recover."
+
+She signed to the servant to follow her and passed out of the hall.
+
+Philadelphus then put off his stony quiet and gazed wrathfully at the
+woman who had entered.
+
+Hers was a fine frame, broad and square of shoulder, tall and lank of
+hip as some great tiger-cat, and splendid in its sinuosity. She had
+walked with a long stride and as she dropped into the chair she
+crossed her limbs so that her well-turned ankles showed and the hands
+she clasped about her knees were long and strong, white and remarkably
+tapering. Her features were almost too perfect; her beauty was
+sensuous, insolent and dazzling. Withal her presence intimated
+tremendous primal charm and the mystery of undiscovered
+potentialities. And she was royal! No mere upstart of an impostor
+could have assumed that perfect hauteur, that patrician bearing.
+
+But the pretended Philadelphus was not impressed by this beauty.
+
+"How now, Salome?" he demanded. "What play is this?"
+
+The Ephesian actress motioned toward the shittim-wood casket.
+
+"For that," she said calmly.
+
+Her voice became, instantly, her foremost charm. It was a deep voice;
+the profoundest contralto with an illimitable strength in suggestion.
+
+"Where is--what is that?"
+
+"Two hundred talents."
+
+Philadelphus took a step toward her.
+
+"What!" he exclaimed evilly. "Whose two hundred talents?"
+
+"Mine."
+
+There was silence in which the man's fingers bent, as if he felt her
+throat between them. Then he recovered himself.
+
+"But--this woman--where is she?"
+
+The actress lifted her shapely shoulders.
+
+"Where is the Maccabee?" she asked in return.
+
+He made no answer.
+
+"Did you get that treasure here--since yesterday?" he asked at last
+querulously.
+
+"No, by Pluto! I got it in the hills near to Emmaus. You would have
+had it in another day." She laughed impudently, in spite of the
+murderous blackening in his face.
+
+"Then, since you are such a shrewd thief, why did you come here at
+all, since you had the gold?" he demanded, astonished in spite of his
+rage.
+
+She waved a pair of jeweled hands.
+
+"They said that the Maccabee was strong and ambitious and forceful,
+that he would be king over Judea. Knowing you, I believed he would
+still come to Jerusalem in spite of you. How did you do it? In his
+sleep? Now, I," she continued with an assumption of concern, "failed
+in that detail. She was guarded by a monster. I could not get near
+her. But I got the casket."
+
+"She will come here then!" Philadelphus exclaimed.
+
+"What of it! Amaryllis does not know her; no one else does. And I have
+her proofs--and her dowry!"
+
+After a silence in which she read the expression on his face, she rose
+and came near him with determination in her manner.
+
+"You will have the wisdom not to recognize her," she said, "lest I
+suddenly discover that you are not the Philadelphus I expected."
+
+He made rapid survey of her advantage over him, and submitted.
+
+"But there will be no need of waiting for such an issue," he fumed,
+after a silence. "I am here and not the Maccabee, whose crown you
+coveted. We shall get out of this perilous city."
+
+"So?" she said, lifting her finely penciled brows. "No, we shall not."
+
+"Why?" he stormed.
+
+"Because," she answered, "John of Gischala may yet be king of
+Judea--and John hath a queen's diadem for sale at two hundred
+talents--or a heart which I can have for nothing."
+
+There was malevolent and impotent silence in the andronitis of
+Amaryllis, the Greek.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX
+
+THE YOUNG TITUS
+
+
+They who stood on the wall by the Tower of Psephinos in Coenopolis of
+Jerusalem on a day in March, 70 A.D., saw prophecy fulfilled.
+
+Since the hour in which the Roman eagles had appeared above the
+horizon to the west in their circling over the rebellious province of
+Judea there had not been one day of peace. Then their coming had meant
+the approach of an enemy. But in a short time such implacable and
+fierce oppressors, with such genius for ferocity and bloodshed, had
+developed among the Jews' own factions that the miserable citizens had
+turned to the tyrant Rome for rescue. They who had risen against
+Florus and had driven him out would have willingly accepted him again
+in place of Simon bar Gioras and John of Gischala, before two years
+had elapsed. Now, their plight was so desperate that they clambered
+daily upon the walls of their unhappy city to look for the first
+glimpse of the approaching enemy, Titus, whom they had learned to call
+the Deliverer.
+
+Near noon of this day in March certain citizens on the wall beside
+Hippicus saw a flash down the road to the west beyond the Serpent's
+Pool near Herod's monuments. Again they saw it and again, until they
+observed that its appearance was rhythmic, striking through a soft
+colored cloud of Judean dust.
+
+Out of that yellow haze, rolling nearer, they saw now the glittering
+Roman standards emerge, one by one; saw the spiky level of shouldered
+spears; saw the shapes of horses, saw the shapes of men; heard the
+soft thunder of six hundred horse on the packed earth, heard the music
+of six hundred whetting harnesses; heard like a tender, far-off song
+the winding of a Roman bugle and heard then in their own hearts, the
+shout: "He has come! The Deliverer!"
+
+It was the hour of the City's last hope.
+
+On the near side of the Pool of the Serpent, they saw the body of
+horse break into a light trot and, wheeling in that fine concord in
+which even the dumb beasts were perfect, turn the broadside of the
+splendid column to Jerusalem as it swept up Hill Gareb to the north.
+
+The citizens clambered down from the wall by Hippicus and, speeding
+silently but with moving lips and shining eyes through alleys and
+byways, came finally to an angle in Agrippa's wall that stood out
+toward Gareb. Here was built the Tower of Psephinos. Dumb and callous
+as beasts to the blows and commands of the sentries there mounted, the
+citizens clambered up on the fortifications and, with their chins on
+the battlements that stood shoulder-high, gazed avidly at the sight
+they saw.
+
+Scattered confidently over the uneven country the six hundred had
+broken file and were in easy disarray all over Gareb. Spears were at
+rest, standards grounded, many were dismounted, whole companies
+slouched in their saddles. The Jews, long used to rigid military
+discipline among the Romans, looked in amazement. Then a light click
+of a hoof attracted their attention to the bridle-path immediately
+under the overhanging battlements.
+
+There a solitary horseman rode. Not a scale of armor was upon his
+horse; not a weapon, not even a shield depended from his harness. His
+head was uncovered and a sheeny purple fillet showed in the tumbled,
+dusty black hair. There was no guard on the hand that held the bridle;
+the cloak that floated from his shoulders was white wool; the tunic
+was the simple light garment that soldiers usually wear under armor;
+the shoes alone were mailed. It seemed that the young Roman had
+stripped off his helmet, breast-plate and greaves to ride less
+encumbered or to appear less warlike.
+
+But the Jews who looked at him understood. Here was Titus come in
+peace!
+
+The horse went with loosened rein, while the young Roman's eyes raised
+to the great wall towering over him had more of admiration and a
+generous foe's appreciation of his enemy's strength than of the
+note-making search of a spy in them.
+
+"Ha! By Hector, that penurious Herod was a builder!" they seemed to
+say. "There is enough stone insolence in these walls to trouble Rome
+for a while!"
+
+Rod after rod of the slowly rising ground he traversed; rod after rod
+of the tall fortification passed under his inspection, and now the
+twin Women's Towers rose upon the ashes and scarped rock to the north.
+
+Titus spoke to his horse and rode faster.
+
+Meanwhile silent dozens climbed panting and dumbly resisting the
+sentries up beside the first Jews. They were citizens who dared not
+rejoice aloud. They followed the young Roman with brightened eyes,
+saying each within his heart:
+
+"Thus David came up against Saul, unto Israel!"
+
+But there was an increase of uproar in the city below, as if news of
+the coming of Titus had spread abroad.
+
+Titus was now almost a mile from the nearest of his soldiers. He
+passed the Gate of the Women's Towers. Hedges, gardens, ditches and
+wind-breaks of cedars of Lebanon from time to time obscured him. When
+he came in sight again, he had placed obstruction between himself and
+retreat.
+
+The next instant the Gate of the Women's Towers swung in. Out of it
+rushed a sortie of motley soldiery, brandishing weapons and shouting
+the war-cries of Simon and John.
+
+The citizens on the walls pressed their hands to their temples and
+watched, transfixed with horror. Jerusalem's defenders had gone out
+against the Deliverer!
+
+The attack had been seen by the disorganized troops on Gareb and the
+rapid trumpet-calls showed formation. But between the time of their
+movement and the moment of their relief a company could have been
+unhorsed. Meanwhile Titus, with nothing less than Fate preserving him
+for its own work, dodged javelins and, enraging the white stallion
+that he rode, kept out of reach of hand-to-hand encounter with his
+assailants. Back and forward he rode, his horse carrying him at times
+out of range of missiles; again, all but surrounded by the unorganized
+enemy. About his head whizzed axes and spears, wild, and frequently
+slaying their own. Far up the slope of Gareb the six hundred gathered
+itself and swept in mass down upon the conflict.
+
+Between them and Titus lay two furlongs. To join his column with all
+honor to himself, he had to work back over the wadies he had crossed
+and circle the gardens that stood in his way. But a hedge pressed too
+close upon the space he must pass, between it and the enemy, before he
+could return to his men. An ax glanced beside his ear; he wavered in
+his saddle. Then, that happened which a Roman of that day could not be
+forced to do and forget.
+
+Titus wheeled his horse and, plunging his spurs into its sides, fled
+on into the open country to the north, with the jeers of the men of
+Simon and John following him.
+
+His troops rushed down upon his assailants. But the wary soldiers
+turned when the Roman had fled and the Gate of the Women's Towers
+closed upon them.
+
+Up from the visitors within the wall rose a shout:
+
+"A sign, a sign! An omen! Thus shall the children of God overthrow the
+heathen in battle!"
+
+But one of the Jews on the wall thrust his fingers under his turban
+and seized his hair.
+
+"Jerusalem is fallen! Woe! Woe to the wicked city!"
+
+He turned in his place and leaped a good twenty feet to the ground.
+When he raised himself the look of a maniac had settled on his face.
+Tearing his garments from him as he went, he entered a narrow street
+that made its ascent toward Zion by steps and cobbled slants. Here he
+came upon great crowds of terror-stricken citizens who had rushed
+together as the news spread abroad over Jerusalem that the men of
+Simon and John had gone out against the Deliverer. No definite news of
+the outcome of the sortie had reached them and they were moving in a
+dense pack down toward the walls to hear the worst. The whole hurrying
+mass seemed to vibrate with suspense and dread. The maniac met them.
+
+"Woe, woe to Jerusalem!" he cried.
+
+A lean, apish, half-naked, lash-scarred idiot in the street,
+instantly, as if in echo to that mad cry, shouted in a voice of the
+most prodigious volume:
+
+"A voice from the east, a voice from the west, a voice from the four
+winds, a voice against Jerusalem and the Holy house, a voice against
+the bridegrooms and the brides and a voice against this whole people!"
+
+The temper of the crowd had reached that point of tension that needed
+only a little more strain to become panic. Some one received the
+discordant cries of the maniacs with piercing rapid screams. Instantly
+the choked passage filled with frantic uproar. Scores attempting to
+flee blindly trampled over those transfixed with fear. They fought,
+men with women, youths with old age, children with one another.
+Hundreds attracted by the tumult rushed in on the panic and added
+fresh victims and new death. Out of the horror rose the fearful cries
+of the madmen:
+
+"Woe, woe to this wicked city!"
+
+Meanwhile, the soldiers of Simon and John came to prevent citizens
+from gathering in bodies, and with sword and spear drove into the
+struggle and added murder to it all. The spirit of terror then issued
+out of that bloody alley and seized upon street by street. Far and
+wide the tumult ran, growing in volume with every accession, until the
+raging and humiliated Titus, among his six hundred, heard Jerusalem
+howl like a beaten slave and hushed his pagan curses to listen.
+
+Late that same afternoon, the Esquiline Gate, inaccessible, despised
+and sealed, was broken open from within and under it and down its
+difficult and dangerous approach poured a silent multitude, numbering
+thousands. They were abandoning the Rock of David to its fate. Among
+them went the last remnants of that sect of Christians who had tarried
+long after their brethren had been warned away, hoping against hope.
+
+They were not missed among the numbers in Jerusalem, for the Passover
+hosts still poured through the gates to the south and took their
+places in the unhappy city. And with these that same afternoon Laodice
+and her old servant came into Jerusalem.
+
+It was the eighth day after they had applied to the priest at Emmaus
+whither they had fled in their search for the frosts, a good three
+leagues north of the direct road to Jerusalem. They had stopped at the
+Lavatory outside the walls, washed themselves and had purchased the
+white garments of the purified. Old Momus carried with him the price
+of the lambs, of the fine flour and the oil for their cleansing and
+the two were ready to present themselves for their purification at the
+Temple. But all the roar and disorder of the great city in its warfare
+and its discord confused them. Ascalon had not a thousandth part of
+this turmoil at its busiest season. Neither was there a servant in a
+purple turban with the gold star to meet them and they were bewildered
+and lost.
+
+The rest of the visitors to the Passover hurried into the heart of the
+city; wave after wave of new-comers replaced them; but the young woman
+and her dumb old servant stood aside just within reach of the shadow
+of the immemorial portal and waited.
+
+Time and again wolfish Idumean soldiers who were numerous about the
+place noted the pair and commented to one another or spoke insolently
+to the shrinking girl who hid ineffectually behind her veil. Hour
+after hour they stood with growing distress and no friendly face in
+all that army of hurrying, restless, quarreling Jews welcomed them.
+
+The afternoon waned. Laodice thought of the darkness and trembled.
+
+An old man fumbling a talisman of bone drew near them. Laodice took
+courage and approached him.
+
+"I pray thee, sir, I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid."
+
+The old man turned large, grave eyes upon her.
+
+"Daughter, what dost thou know of this woman?" he asked.
+
+"My husband knows her; I do not. I am to join him under her roof."
+
+The old man looked reassured.
+
+"Follow this street unto one intersecting it on the summit of Zion.
+That will be a broad street and a straight one, terminating on a
+bridge. Go thence to the hither side of that bridge, pass down the
+ravine and cross to the other side against Moriah. There thou shalt
+see a new Greek house. It is the residence of Amaryllis."
+
+Laodice thanked her informant and began the pursuit of the cloudy
+directions to her destination. Twice before she brought up at the
+sentry line before the house of the Seleucid, she asked further of
+other citizens. Many times she met affront, once or twice she
+perilously escaped disaster. At last, near sunset, she stood before
+the dwelling-place of the one secure citizen of the Holy City.
+
+A sentry dropped his spear across her path and she had not the
+countersign to give him. There she and her helpless old attendant
+stood and looked hopelessly at the refuge denied them.
+
+Presently a man appeared in the colonnade across the front of the
+house and descending to the sentry line called to him the officer in
+command. They stood within a few paces of Laodice and she heard the
+soldier address the man as John, and heard him deliver a report of the
+day.
+
+When the soldier withdrew to his place, Laodice stepped forward and
+called to the Gischalan. He stopped, noted that she was beautiful and
+waited.
+
+"I would speak with the Lady Amaryllis," she hesitated.
+
+"Have you the countersign?" he asked.
+
+"No; else I should have entered. But Amaryllis will know me."
+
+"Enter then," the Gischalan said.
+
+In a moment she was admitted at the solid doors and led into a
+vestibule. Here, a porter took charge of Momus and showed him into a
+side passage, while Laodice followed her conductor through a corridor
+into an interior hall of splendid simplicity. Lounging on an exedra
+was a young woman in a woolen chiton, barefoot and trifling with the
+Greek ampyx that bound her golden hair.
+
+Laodice put up her veil and looked with hurrying heart at her hostess.
+Before she could get a preliminary idea of the woman she was to meet,
+John spoke lightly:
+
+"Be wearied no longer. I have brought you a mystery--a stranger,
+without the countersign, asking audience with you."
+
+"Go back to the fortress," the young woman answered. "Sometime you
+will find strangers awaiting you there, also without the password. You
+will lose Jerusalem trifling with me. I have spoken!"
+
+John filliped her ear as he passed through into a corridor which must
+have led into the Temple precincts. Under the light, Laodice saw that
+he was a middle-aged Jew, not handsome, but luxuriant with virility.
+His face showed great ability with no conscience, and force and charm
+without balance or morals. Here, then, thought Laodice, is the first
+of Philadelphus' enemies.
+
+The idler in the exedra, meanwhile, was awaiting the speech of her
+visitor.
+
+"Art thou she whom I seek?" Laodice asked. "Amaryllis, the Seleucid?"
+
+"I am called by that name."
+
+"I was bidden," Laodice continued, "by one whom we both know, to seek
+asylum with thee."
+
+"So? Who may that be?"
+
+Laodice whispered the name.
+
+"Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+
+The Greek's eyes took on a puzzled look. Then she surveyed the girl
+and as a full conception of the beauty of the young creature before
+her formed in the Greek's mind, the perplexity left her expression.
+Her air changed; a subtle smile played about her lips.
+
+"He sent you to me for protection?"
+
+"Until he arrives in Jerusalem," Laodice assented.
+
+"But he is already here."
+
+It was the moment that Laodice had avoided fearfully ever since she
+had gathered from that winsome stranger by the roadside that his
+companion was her husband. Although, after that fact had been made
+known to her, she had felt that she ought to join Philadelphus and
+proceed with him to the Holy City, she had endured the exposure of the
+hills, the want and discomfort of insufficient supplies and the
+affronts of wayfarers, that she might spare herself as long as
+possible her union with the unsafe man who had become even more
+hateful by comparison with the one who had called himself Hesper.
+
+"Perchance thou wilt lead me to him," Laodice said finally.
+
+Amaryllis made no immediate answer. It would have been a natural
+impulse for her to wish to inquire for the girl's business with the
+man that the Greek as hostess was expected to conceal. But Amaryllis
+had her own explanation for this visit. It had been plain to less
+observant eyes than hers that the newly arrived Philadelphus was not
+delighted with the bride he had met.
+
+The Greek summoned a servant.
+
+"Go summon thy master, Prisca; and haste. I doubt not I have for him a
+sweet relief."
+
+The woman bowed.
+
+"If it please thee, madam, the master is without in the vestibule,
+returning from the city." Amaryllis signed to the ivory chair before
+her.
+
+"Sit, lady," she said to Laodice. "He will come at once."
+
+The young woman dropped into the seat and gazed wistfully at her
+hostess. Instinctively, she knew that in this woman was no relief from
+the darkened life she was to lead with her husband. The Greek's face,
+palely lighted by a thoughtful smile, vanished in sudden darkness.
+Laodice saw instead an image of a strong intent face, brightening
+under the sunrise, saw it relax, soften, grow inexpressibly kind, then
+pass, as a tender memory taking leave for ever.
+
+She was brought to herself by the Greek's rising suddenly. The
+Ephesian appeared at the arch, tossing mantle and kerchief to the
+porter as he entered. Laodice rose to her feet with difficulty. It was
+he, indeed!
+
+He was kissing Amaryllis' hand. The Greek was smiling an accusing,
+conscious smile. She indicated Laodice. The Ephesian's face showed
+startlement, suspicion and a quick recovery. He bowed low and waited
+for explanation.
+
+"Then I will go," Amaryllis said with amusement in her eyes, "if you
+are acting pretenses for my sake."
+
+[Illustration: Amaryllis the Greek.]
+
+She turned toward the arch which led into the interior of the house.
+The pretender glanced again at Laodice and again at the Greek.
+
+"What is the play, lady?" he asked.
+
+Amaryllis looked at Laodice standing stony white at her place, and
+lost her confident smile.
+
+"Is this not he?" she asked.
+
+"Is this Philadelphus Maccabaeus?" Laodice asked.
+
+The Ephesian's face changed quickly. Enlightenment mixed with
+discomfiture appeared there for an instant.
+
+"I am he," he said evenly.
+
+"Then," Laodice said, "I am she whom thou hast expected."
+
+Philadelphus smiled and dropped his head as if in thought.
+
+"One always expects the pleasurable," he essayed, "but at times one
+does not recognize it when it comes. Who art thou, lady?"
+
+"Pestilence, war and the evil devices of men have desolated me," she
+said coldly. "I have only a name. I am Laodice."
+
+"Laodice!" he repeated amiably. "A familiar name; eh, Amaryllis?"
+
+Laodice waited. Philadelphus looked again at her and appeared to wait.
+
+"I am Laodice," the girl repeated, a little disconcerted, "thy wife."
+
+"So!" Philadelphus exclaimed.
+
+There was such well-assumed astonishment in the exclamation that she
+raised her eyes quickly to his face. There was another expression
+there; one wholly incredulous.
+
+"Now did I in the profligacy of mine extreme youth marry two
+Laodices?" he said. "For another Laodice, wife to me, joined me some
+days since."
+
+Laodice gazed at him without comprehending.
+
+"I say," he repeated, "that my wife Laodice joined me some time ago."
+
+"Why, I--I am Laodice, daughter to Costobarus, and thy wife!" she
+exclaimed, while her eyes fixed upon him the full force of her
+astonishment.
+
+He turned to Amaryllis.
+
+"What labyrinth is this, O my friend," he asked, "in which thou hast
+set my feet?"
+
+"I do not know," Amaryllis laughed suddenly. "Call the princess."
+
+Philadelphus summoned a servant and instructed her to bring his wife.
+For a short space the three did not speak, though Laodice's lips
+parted and she stroked her forehead in a bewildered way.
+
+Then Salome, late actress in the theaters at Ephesus, came into the
+hall. Amaryllis bowed to her and the impostor gave her a chair. He
+turned to Laodice and with the faintest shadow of a grimace motioned
+toward the new-comer.
+
+"This," he said, "is Laodice, daughter of Costobarus."
+
+Laodice blazed at the insolent beauty who stared at her with curious
+eyes.
+
+"That!" she cried. "The daughter of Costobarus!"
+
+The fine brown eyes of the woman smoldered a little, but she
+continued to gaze without the least discomposure.
+
+"Who is this, sir?" she asked of Philadelphus.
+
+"That," said Philadelphus evenly, to the actress, "is Laodice,
+daughter of Costobarus."
+
+"I do not understand," the actress said disgustedly. "You are clumsy,
+Philadelphus, when you are playful. If this is all, I shall return to
+my chamber."
+
+She rose, but Laodice sprang into her path.
+
+"Hold!" she cried. "Philadelphus, hast thou accepted this woman
+without proofs?"
+
+Philadelphus smiled and shook his head.
+
+"And by the by," he asked, "what proof have you?"
+
+Up to that moment Laodice had burned with confident rage, feeling
+that, by force of the justice of her cause, she might overthrow this
+preposterous villainy, but at Philadelphus' question she suddenly
+chilled and blanched and shrank back. A new and supreme disadvantage
+of her loss presented itself to her at last. She could not prove her
+identity!
+
+Meanwhile, seeing Laodice falter, the woman's lip curled.
+
+"Weak! Very weak, Philadelphus," she said. "You must invent something
+better. The success of a jest is all that pardons a jester."
+
+"She robbed me!" Laodice panted impotently. "Robbed me, after my
+father had given her refuge!"
+
+"Of what?" the Greek asked.
+
+"My proofs--and two hundred talents!"
+
+"Lady," the actress said to Amaryllis, "my husband's emissary, Aquila,
+was a pagan. He had with him, on our journey, this woman and her old
+deformed father who fled when the plague broke out among us. She
+hoped, I surmise, that we should all die on the way. Even Samson gave
+up secrets to Delilah, and this Aquila was no better than Samson."
+
+Oriental fury fulminated in the eyes of Laodice. Philadelphus, fearing
+that she was about to spring at the throat of her traducer, sprang
+between the two women. In his eyes shone immense admiration at that
+moment.
+
+There was an instant of critical silence. Then Laodice drew herself up
+with a sudden accession of strength.
+
+"Madam," she said coldly to Amaryllis, "with-hold thy judgment a few
+days. I shall send my servant back to Ascalon for other proof. _He_
+can go safely, for he has had the plague."
+
+Philadelphus started; the actress flinched.
+
+"Friend," Philadelphus said in his smooth way, "I came upon this woman
+by the wayside in the hills. I and a wayfarer cast a coin for
+possession of her--and the other man won. Give thyself no concern."
+
+Laodice flung her hands over her face and shrank in an agony of shame
+down upon the exedra. Amaryllis looked down on her bowed head.
+
+"Is it true?" she asked. After a moment Laodice raised herself.
+
+"God of Israel," she said in a low voice, "how hast Thy servant
+deserved these things!"
+
+There was a space of silence, in which the two impostors turned
+together and talking between themselves of anything but the recent
+interview walked out of the chamber.
+
+After a time Laodice lifted her head and spoke to the Greek.
+
+"If thou wilt give me shelter, madam, for a few days only, I promise
+thee thou shalt not regret it," she said.
+
+The girl was interesting and Amaryllis had been disappointed in
+Philadelphus. Nothing tender or compassionate; only a little
+curiosity, a little rancor, a little ennui and a faint instinctive
+hope that something of interest might yet develop, moved the Greek.
+
+"Send your servant to Ascalon for proofs," she said. "I shall give you
+shelter here until you are proved undeserving of it. And since the
+times are uncertain, do not delay."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter X
+
+THE STORY OF A DIVINE TRAGEDY
+
+
+The following morning, there was a rap at the door of the chamber to
+which Laodice had been led and informed that it was her own.
+
+She had passed a sleepless night and had risen early, but the knock
+came late in the morning.
+
+She opened the door.
+
+Without stood a ten year old girl, of the most bewitching beauty, as
+barely clad as ever the children of her blood went over the green
+meadows of Achaia. Her golden hair was knotted on the back of her
+pretty head and held in place by an ampyx. On her feet were tiny
+sheepskin buskins; about her perfect little body, worn carelessly, was
+a simple chiton, out of which her dimpled shoulders and small round
+arms showed pink and tender as field-flowers. Nothing could have been
+more composed than her gaze at Laodice.
+
+"We breakfast in the hall, now. You are to join us," she said.
+
+Laodice stepped, out of the chamber into the court and followed her
+little guide.
+
+"The mistress and her guests rise late," the child went on. "That
+perforce starves the rest of us until mid-morning. Eheu! It is the one
+injustice in this house."
+
+Laodice dumbly wondered if she were to be classed with the house
+servants while she waited until the return of her devoted old mute.
+
+She was led into a long narrow room, showing the same simple elegance
+that marked all the house of Amaryllis, the Greek. Down the center
+were two tables, separated by a cluster of tall plants that almost
+screened one from the other.
+
+At the first table place was laid for one. At the other, she found by
+the talk and laughter the rest of the company were gathered. The
+little girl led Laodice to the single place, seated her, and kissing
+her hand to her with an almost too-practised bow, fled around the
+cluster of tall plants. There she heard her childish voice imperiously
+ordering a servant to attend the mistress' latest guest.
+
+Prisca appeared and silently served Laodice with melon, honey-cakes
+and milk. Other of the house-servants were visible from time to time.
+This, then, manifestly was not the breakfast of the menials. She
+glanced toward the cluster of tall plants. Through an interstice she
+was able to see all the persons seated at the other table.
+
+There first was the blue-eyed, golden-haired girl. Beside her was a
+youth, slim, dark, exquisitely fashioned, with limbs and arms as
+strong as were ever displayed in the games, yet powerful without
+brutality, graceful without weakness--marks of the ideal athlete that
+had long since disappeared with the coming of the Roman gladiator.
+Opposite was a grown man, tall, broad and deep chested, with prominent
+eyes wide apart and a large mouth. There was a singleness of attitude
+in him, as in all persons reared to a purpose. It was that certain
+self-centeredness which is not egotism, yet a subconsciousness of self
+in all acts. He was the finished product of a specific, life-long
+training, and the confidence in his atmosphere was the confidence of
+one aware of his skill and prepared at all times.
+
+Besides these three, there were two women, both in the garments of the
+ancient atelier. One was bemarked with clay; the other was stained
+with paint. Laodice knew at a glance that she looked at a gathering of
+artists.
+
+"Evidently a gift from John," the little girl was saying. "He can not
+see that our lady does anything but collect curiosities in this her
+search after art, and so he must needs add a contribution in this
+Stygian monster we saw yesterday evening."
+
+Laodice knew that they discussed Momus.
+
+"Perhaps," the athlete said, "he bought this left-handed catapult
+thinking he might throw the discus farther than I can throw it."
+
+"Well enough," the woman with paint on her tunic put in; "she sent the
+monster packing. He went out of the gates post-haste last night, they
+say."
+
+"The pretty stranger that came with him stayed, I observe," the
+athlete said.
+
+"Pst!" the girl said in a low voice. "Where are the man's eyes in your
+head, that you do not see her?"
+
+"Looking at you!" the athlete answered.
+
+"Too soon!" the child retorted. "A good six years before I shall know
+what your looks mean!"
+
+"Is she, this pretty stranger, something of John's taste?" the woman
+who had blue clay on her garment asked.
+
+"Tut!" the athlete broke in. "John never departed from his ancient
+barbarism to that extent. That, unless I misjudge my own inclinations
+in a similar matter, is something this mysterious Philadelphus hath
+arranged to relieve the tedium of--"
+
+"Tedium!" the girl exclaimed. "By Hector, this Jewish wife of his
+would open his Ephesian eyes were she to let loose all I suspect in
+her!"
+
+"Brrr! But you are suspicious!" the athlete shivered. The little girl
+shaped her lips into a kiss and the athlete leaning across the table
+snatched it from her before she could avoid him.
+
+The women caught him by the back of his tunic and pulled him down in
+his chair.
+
+"Sit down!" they whispered. "Don't you see that Juventius is about to
+speak?"
+
+The athlete glanced at the grown man, who had looked down into his
+plate at the youth's frolic with the child, with the utmost disdain
+and boredom in his expression. Now that the silence became noticeable,
+he spoke in an affected voice, but one of the deepest music.
+
+"Alas, these Jews!" he said. "How little they know about art! How long
+has it been since he introduced one of the Temple singers into our
+lady's hall to show what a piercing high note could be reached by a
+male voice? And he had the creature sing to prove his contention. I
+thought I should die! It was worse than awful; it was criminal!"
+
+The athlete laughed.
+
+"Any singer, then, but Juventius therefore is a malefactor!" he said.
+
+"No, it does not follow," Juventius protested in all seriousness,
+while the child flashed a look of intense amusement at the athlete.
+"But," waving a pair of long white hands, "none should trifle with
+music. It is one of the graces of Nature, divine and elemental.
+Wherefore, anything short of a perfect production becometh a mockery
+and a mockery against divine things is blasphemy. Ergo, the poor
+musician is in danger of Hades!"
+
+"The monster is safe, safe!" the girl protested. "He does not sing,
+and from what I caught through the crack of the door, the pretty
+stranger had better not. My lady, the princess, had a merry time with
+my lord, the prince, at breakfast this morning, all about this same
+pretty one. So this is why she breakfasts with us--the second table."
+
+Laodice heard this with a sinking heart. This was a strange house in
+which to live at no definite status, with a future blank and
+inscrutable.
+
+"Is it, then, that you are wary of offending the over-nice exactions
+of music, that you do not sing?" the athlete demanded of Juventius.
+
+"Song," replied the singer gravely, "is originally the expression of
+the highest exaltation. To sing before the high mark of feeling is
+reached is an insincerity."
+
+"Alas, Juventius," the girl was saying, "how much difficulty you lay
+up for yourself in determining the limits of art! Teach broadly and
+the fulfilment of your laws will not be such a task for the overworked
+and irritable gods of art."
+
+"Child!" Juventius cried passionately. "Your ignorance outreaches your
+presumption!"
+
+"Fie! Fie!" the athlete put in comfortably. "Let us make a truce, for
+I announce to you the opportunity each to have whatever you wish. We
+are to have at the proper moment, according to the Jews, a celestial
+visitation which will enable us to have what we most desire."
+
+"You announce it!" the girl scoffed indignantly. "I have heard of that
+ever since I was born!"
+
+"I, too, have heard it," said Juventius.
+
+"Well," said the unabashed athlete, "the Pharisee that brings
+Amaryllis her fruit is so full of it that he gets prophecies mixed
+with his prices and the patriarchs with his fruit. He says that there
+are those that declare he is already in the city."
+
+"That he has been seen?" Juventius asked, after a little silence.
+
+"No; merely suspected. They say that things go on in the Temple which
+seem to show that some resident of their Olympus already inhabits the
+air."
+
+"I saw Seraiah to-day," one of the women said in a low voice.
+
+"Silent as ever? Spotless as ever? Mysterious as ever?" the athlete
+asked.
+
+The woman who had spoken shook her head at him as if alarmed.
+
+"I can not bear to hear him ridiculed," she said. "Somehow it seems
+blasphemous. They say he marks every one who laughs in his hearing."
+
+"They are not many," the girl said. "For the most part, the citizens
+of Jerusalem feel as apprehensive about him as you do."
+
+"I wonder that John will stay in the Temple with a god in it,"
+Juventius said, as if he had not heard the rest of the discussion.
+
+"John!" the athlete exclaimed. "John is an adventurer that believes
+in nothing, has no cause and furthers this warfare for loot and the
+possible chance of escape when the conflict comes."
+
+"Simon is different," another said. "Now he is wild and mad and
+insolent and foolhardy, because he believes that, no matter what
+tangle the situation is in, the celestial emissary he expects will
+straighten it out for him."
+
+"In short, he means to work such a complexity here that the man who
+unravels it must needs be divine."
+
+At this moment the door that cut off the rest of the house from this
+dining-room opened smartly and the supposed Philadelphus stepped in.
+He closed the door behind him and glanced at the filled table. Those
+there seated rose. He spoke to each one by name, and after they had
+greeted him, they filed out into the court and the servants began to
+remove the remnants of their meal. Laodice rose at sign of this
+concerted deference to Philadelphus but sat down again, with her lips
+compressed. However they had disposed her, she would not accept the
+menial attitude. She had not finished her honey-cakes.
+
+He came round to her, drew up a chair and sat down beside her. She
+ignored him, making a feint that was not entirely successful at
+interest in her fruit.
+
+"Who art thou, in truth?" he asked finally.
+
+"Laodice," she answered coldly.
+
+He sighed and she added nothing more.
+
+"What can your purpose be in this?" he asked.
+
+She ignored the question. After a longer silence, he said in an
+altered and softened tone:
+
+"What an innocent you are! Certainly this is your first attempt! What
+marplot told you that such a thing as you have essayed was possible?"
+
+She put aside her plate and her cup, and turned to him.
+
+"By your leave I will retire," she said.
+
+"Not yet," he answered, smiling. "It is my duty as a Jew to help you
+while there is time."
+
+She settled back in her chair and looked at the cluster of plants
+while he talked.
+
+"Nothing so damages the beauty of a woman as trickery. No bad woman is
+beautiful very long. There comes a canker on her soul's beauty, in her
+face, that disfigures her, soon or late. Whoever you are, whatever
+your condition, you are lovely yet. Be beautiful; of a surety then you
+must be good."
+
+It was the same old hypocritical pose that the bad man assumes to
+cloak himself before innocence. Laodice remembered the incident in the
+hills.
+
+"Where," she asked coldly, "is he who was with you at Emmaus?"
+
+The pretender started a little, but the increase of alarm on his face
+showed that he realized next that here was a peril in this woman which
+he had overlooked.
+
+"Gone," he said unreadily, "gone back to Ephesus."
+
+She did not know what pain this announcement of that winsome
+stranger's desertion would waken in her heart. Her eyes fell; her
+brows lifted a little; the corners of her mouth became pathetic. The
+pretender, casting a sidelong glance at her, saw to his own safety
+that she had believed him.
+
+"He was a parasite," he sighed, "living off my bounty. But even that
+did not invite him when he neared the peril of this city. So he turned
+back. I--I do not blame him," he added with a little laugh.
+
+"Blame him?" she said quickly. "You--you do not blame him?"
+
+"No! Any place, any condition is more desirable than residence in
+Jerusalem at this hour."
+
+"If one seeks but to be comfortable. But here is a place for work and
+for achievement," she declared.
+
+"Too desperate an extreme. Nothing can be done here," he observed,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+She gazed at him with immense contempt.
+
+"That from a son of Judas Maccabaeus!" she exclaimed.
+
+He looked disconcerted.
+
+"Why not?" he urged. "It is neither rational nor practical to attempt
+the impossible. Jerusalem is doomed. I would but add myself to the
+sacrifice did I interfere between destruction and its sure prey."
+
+After a silence in which she confronted him with many emotions showing
+on her face, she said with infinite pity and disappointment:
+
+"O Philadelphus, you to throw greatness away!"
+
+"Where, O my mysterious genius, are my army, my engines, my
+subsistence, my advantage and the prize?"
+
+"What was that dowry which was stolen from me to purchase for you but
+these things? I brought it for this purpose. Another than myself
+delivered it to you; the end is achieved; what use will you make of
+it?"
+
+"There is no nation here for that dowry to defend, no crown for it to
+support. But for this same madness which possesses my lady, the
+princess, I should depart this day for a safer venture, in some safer
+country!"
+
+She faced him intently.
+
+"And you will do nothing for Judea?" she asked.
+
+"What can be done?" he asked, throwing out his hands with a careless
+gesture.
+
+"Oh," she exclaimed with a rush of passionate feeling, "that I were
+you! You, with the materials for empire-building at your feet! You,
+with the hour beseeching you, with a people searching for you, with a
+treasury filled for you, with ancient prophecy establishing you,
+ancient precept teaching you, and the cause of God arming you!
+Philadelphus, son of a great patriot, what are you saying! What can
+there be done! Oh rather, how dare you not do! What have you about you
+but the inevitable end of Judah, living contrary to God's plan for it!
+It is the conscience of Israel rising against its sin and submission!
+It is the blood of David rebelling against the heathen yoke! It is the
+hour foretold by Isaiah and Jeremiah and Ezekiel and Daniel and the
+Twelve, when Israel shall repent and be chastened and return to the
+heritage of Jacob. Be the repairer of the breach! Be the restorer of
+the paths to dwell in, my husband! Go out and let Israel behold you!
+Help them to wipe out the shame of Babylonia and Persia and Macedonia
+and Rome! Make Jerusalem not only a sanctuary but a capital! Restore
+the glory of David and the peace of Solomon, for those were God's days
+and Judah can not prosper except as it returns to them!
+Philadelphus--"
+
+Laodice halted abruptly in her appeal, breathless with feeling.
+
+The amusement had gone out of his face and his expression was one of
+mingled discomfort and surprise at her speech.
+
+"Since you are a thinking woman," he answered, "I must answer you
+soberly. Even I, expecting disorder and uproar in Jerusalem, when I
+came from Ephesus, was not prepared for this chaos! Never was such a
+time! Order is not possible in this extreme. It is unthinkable.
+Nothing human can save Jerusalem!"
+
+She laid her hand upon him.
+
+"Nothing human!" she repeated quickly. "Seest not that this is the
+time of the Messiah? Be ready to be helped of God!"
+
+Philadelphus drew away from her uneasily and looked at her from under
+lowered brows.
+
+"They say," he said in a suppressed voice, as fearing his own words,
+"that He has come and gone!"
+
+She looked at him blankly. He was glad he had thought of this; it
+would divert her from a discourse momently growing unpleasant for him.
+And yet he was afraid of the thing he had said.
+
+"What dost thou say?" she asked.
+
+"He is come and gone--they say."
+
+"Come and gone!"
+
+He nodded irritably. It made him nervous to dwell on the subject.
+
+"Who say?" she demanded.
+
+"Many! Many!" he whispered.
+
+"It is not--do you believe it?" she persisted, with strange terror
+waiting upon his answer. He moved uneasily but he answered the truth.
+It was superstition in him that spoke.
+
+"Something in me says it is true," Philadelphus whispered.
+
+She stood transfixed; then all her horror rose in her and cried out
+against the story.
+
+"It can not be!" she cried. "See the misery and oppression, here,
+tenfold! Nothing has been done! Nobody heard of Him! He could not
+fail! What a blasphemy, what a travesty on His Word, to come and
+fulfil it not and go hence unnoticed! It can not be!"
+
+"But, but--" he protested, somehow terrified by her denial, "only you
+have not heard. Everywhere are those who believe it and I saw--I
+saw--"
+
+The growing violence of dissent on her face urged him to speak what
+his shamed and guilty tongue hesitated to pronounce.
+
+"I saw in Ephesus one who saw Him; I saw in Patmos one who had
+reclined on His breast!"
+
+"A--a--woman?" she whispered.
+
+"No! No!" he returned in a panic. "A man, a prisoner, old and white
+and terrible! But it was in his youth! He told me! And the one in
+Ephesus, a red-beard, hunchbacked and half-blind and even more
+terrible than the first! He saw Him after He was dead!"
+
+"Dead!" Her lips shaped the word.
+
+"They--yes! He was crucified!"
+
+Her lips parted as if to speak the word, but her mind failed to grasp
+it certainly. She stood moveless in an actual pain of horror.
+
+"But He rose again from the dead," he persisted, "and left the earth
+to its own devices hereafter. And so behold Jerusalem!
+
+"And there was one woman," he added, "who had been a scarlet woman.
+She had anointed His feet with precious oil and wiped them with her
+hair. And I saw her also--I sought them all out, because they could do
+miracles and foretell events. Thousands upon thousands believe in
+them."
+
+"Crucified!" she whispered.
+
+"They say," he went on, "that He pronounced judgment on Jerusalem and
+that it now cometh to pass!"
+
+The accumulated effect of the calamitous recital was to stun her. She
+gazed at him with unintelligent eyes, and her lips moved without
+speaking. For one reared in constant contemplation of God's nearness
+to His children, acquainted with divine politics, divine literature
+and divine law, cut off from the world and devoted wholly to religion,
+the story of a divine tragedy carried with it the full force of its
+fearful import. Philadelphus' narrative meant to her the crumbling of
+earth and the effacement of Heaven. She cried wildly her unbelief when
+words returned to her. But under the fury of her denunciation,
+unconsciously directed against the conviction that the story was true,
+she felt her hope of a restored Kingdom of David wavering toward a
+fall.
+
+While she stood thus, Amaryllis, languid and pre-occupied, entered the
+room with John of Gischala at her side. The Greek noted Philadelphus
+with a quick accession of interest. John's attention had been
+instantly arrested by the presence of the other man. Philadelphus
+turned with fine ease to meet the man whom he must regard as his enemy
+and Laodice shrank back in an attempt to get out of sight of the trio.
+
+"Welcome!" said Amaryllis to Philadelphus. "A fortunate visit that
+makes possible an amnesty for two of my friends at once. This, John,
+is Philadelphus of Ephesus, a seeker of diversion out of mine own
+country come to see the end of this great struggle thou wagest against
+Rome. And thou, Philadelphus, seest before thee, John of Gischala, the
+arbiter of Judea's future. Be friends."
+
+With a comprehensive sweeping glance John inspected the man before
+him.
+
+"John of Gischala," he repeated in his feline voice, "the oppressor
+John. Art thou not afraid of me, sir?"
+
+"Dost thou meditate harm for me, sir?" Philadelphus smiled.
+
+"Art thou, in that case, against me, sir?" John parried.
+
+"On that hingeth his answer," Amaryllis said, glancing at Laodice.
+"And here is this same pretty stranger who bewitched thee yesterday.
+Know her as Laodice. Let that be parentage, history, ambition and
+religion for her. She, too, seeks diversion in Jerusalem, and is my
+guest for a while."
+
+The Gischalan took Laodice's hand and held it.
+
+"Welcome, thou," he said. "I will tolerate another man under thy roof
+if thou wilt but make this pretty bird of passage a permanency," he
+said to the Greek, after a silent study of Laodice's beauty.
+
+"Let her be a hostage dependent on thy good behavior. Lapse, and I
+shall send her back to Olympus where they keep such nymphs."
+
+Philadelphus smiled at Laodice, but the shock of their recent talk had
+shaken her too much to enter into this idle chaff on the lips of those
+upon whom the fortunes of Israel depended at that very hour.
+
+John looked at her for a long time.
+
+"Amaryllis veils thee in the enchantment of mystery. I think she is
+tired of me and would have me interested in another woman. She does
+all things well. Who art thou, in truth?"
+
+The Greek lifted her head and gazed with overt anxiety at the girl;
+Philadelphus turned toward her uneasily. Here was an opportunity for
+Laodice either as a disappointed adventuress or as a supplanted wife,
+to take revenge by exposing this pair of conspirators pledged to
+undermine the Gischalan. But the girl had no such thought.
+
+"I am Laodice," she said unreadily. "What history I have belongs to
+another. What future shall be mine depends on others. I wait."
+
+"If you mean to throw me off, Amaryllis, I shall not miss you," said
+John.
+
+The Greek smiled and plucking Philadelphus' sleeve led both men away.
+
+"Do not commit yourself," she said to John, "there is yet another
+woman under this roof. You shall have a choice."
+
+They disappeared in the direction of her hall.
+
+Laodice, stunned, amazed and shaken, stood still. The stock of her
+troubles amounted to a sum of such magnitude that she could not grasp
+it clearly. The entire structure which her life training and all her
+purposes, the hope of her house and her husband's, the future of Judea
+and the King to come, had constituted, had been attacked and
+threatened to crumble and be swept away in a few hours' time.
+
+Out of the wreck she rescued one hope. Momus would return from the
+west with proofs in a few days' time--only a few days!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XI
+
+THE HOUSE OF OFFENSE
+
+
+On his way to the oaken door that was for ever double-barred, in that
+small hall which led to the apartments of Amaryllis' corps of artists,
+Philadelphus met Salome, the actress. He would have passed her without
+a word, but the woman, armed with the nettle of a small triumph over
+the man who held her in contempt, could not forbear piercing him as he
+passed.
+
+"Hieing away to excite your disappointment further?" she said. "Has
+the forlorn lady convinced you, yet, that she is indeed your wife?"
+
+"Had I that two hundred talents, I would confess her!" he declared.
+
+"Cruel obstacle! But that two hundred talents is locked away safely,
+out of your reach. Why do you not run away with this pretty creature?"
+
+Philadelphus glowered at her.
+
+"I have been known to make way with those who stood in my way," he
+declared.
+
+"I sleep with my door locked," she answered, "and I ever face you. I
+need never be afraid, therefore."
+
+For a moment he was silent, while she sensed that overweening hate and
+menace which charged the air about him.
+
+"It is not all as it should be," he said finally. "You are not rid of
+me. I shall stay."
+
+"You should," she responded comfortably. "You are a show of
+domesticity which lends color to our claim of wedded state. But you
+may go or stay. As usual, you are not essential."
+
+"I have been known to be superfluous. However it may be, I get much
+pleasure in the companionship of this lovely creature, the single flaw
+in the fine fabric of your villainy. Do not fear her convincing me.
+She might convince others."
+
+There was no response; after a silence he said as he moved on:
+
+"I shall warn her to feed a morsel of her food to the parrots ere she
+tastes it, however."
+
+He was gone. The woman felt of the keys that swung under the folds of
+her robes. Then she, too, went on.
+
+The oaken door was still fast closed when Philadelphus reached it, but
+he knew that the girl, who lived within, came out to walk in the
+sunshine of Amaryllis' court at certain hours while the household was
+engaged within doors.
+
+He had not long to wait. She came out in a little while, and glanced
+up and down the hall; but he had heard the turn of the bolt and had
+stepped into shadow in time. Reassured that no one was near, she
+emerged and passing down the hall entered the court.
+
+And there presently he joined her.
+
+He sat down on one of the stone seats and smiled at her.
+
+"Do I appear excited?" he asked.
+
+She glanced at him indifferently.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"I have this day seen destruction resolved for the city."
+
+She took his easy declaration with a frown. If it were true he should
+not show that flippancy; if it were not he should not have jested.
+
+"I saw," he continued, "Titus and his beloved Nicanor ride around the
+walls. Though they were the full length of a bow-shot from me, I knew
+what they talked about. Now, this young Nicanor is a gad that tickles
+Titus when his soft heart would urge him into tendernesses toward the
+enemy. But for Nicanor, Titus would have withdrawn his legions long
+ago and left Jerusalem to die of its own violences.
+
+"On the day that you came into Jerusalem, Titus, as a display of
+amicable intentions, rode up to the walls without arms or armor,
+trusting to the Jews' soldierly honor in refusing to attack an unarmed
+man. But the Jews have never been instructed in the nice points of
+military courtesy, so they went out against him by thousands. And but
+for the fact that he is practised in dodging arrows and his horse is
+used to running away, Emperor Vespasian would have to leave the aegis
+to the unlovely Domitian.
+
+"Any Roman but Titus would remember this against the Jews until he had
+put the last one in bondage, but Titus is not a Roman. I think
+some-times that he is a Christian, since it is their boast to love
+their enemies. Whatever his feelings after that ignominious adventure
+of a few days ago, forth he rides this morning; beside him the Gad,
+Nicanor; behind him, that sweet traitor, Josephus.
+
+"The Darling of Mankind rode so meditatively, so dejectedly, that I
+knew by his attitude, he said: 'Alack, it galls me to go against this
+goodly city!'
+
+"By the swagger of the Gad I knew he said: 'Dost gall thee, in truth?
+Then truly, alack! Withhold thy hand until the city comes out against
+thee, so thou canst hush thy conscience saying that they began it!'
+
+"Saith the Darling, 'But there be babes and innocent men and women
+within those walls, who, deserving most of all, shall suffer the
+greatest!'
+
+"'By Hecate!' quoth the Gad, 'there is not a yearling within that city
+possessing the power to pucker its lips but would spit upon thee!'
+
+"'It would be sacred innocence!' declares Titus.
+
+"'Or an old man that would not burn thine ears with malediction!'
+
+"'That would be holy dotage!'
+
+"'Or a fine young man but would pale thee on a pike!'
+
+"'Then let some one whom they hate less venomously, beseech them to
+their own salvation,' implores the Darling.
+
+"Whereupon the Gad beckons insinuatingly to Josephus.
+
+"'Josephus,' says he, 'let us, being more lovable men than Titus, go
+up unto these walls and give the Jews a chance to be kind.'
+
+"Josephus turns pale, but Nicanor rides upon Jerusalem. And at that
+what should a miscreant Jew do but string an arrow and plunge it
+nicely, like a bodkin in a pincushion, in the fat shoulder of the Gad!
+Alas! It was the ruin of the Holy City! When Titus, pale with concern,
+reaches his friend kicking on the ground, does the Gad curse the Jews
+and inveigh against the hardy walls that contain them? Not he! He
+struggles about so that he may look into the eyes of Titus and
+commands him to make war on them instantly under pain of the
+accusation of partiality to them against his friends! And behold, war
+is declared. I, with mine own eyes, saw siege laid effectively about
+our unhappy city!"
+
+She gazed at him with alarmed, angry, accusing eyes.
+
+"And yet you do nothing!" she said to him.
+
+He smiled and let his lazy glance slip over her, but he made no
+response.
+
+"O Philadelphus," she said to him, "how you affront opportunity!"
+
+"There are more captivating things than such opportunity. I have known
+from the beginning that there was nothing here."
+
+She looked at him with unquiet eyes. Why, then, had he written so
+confidently to her father, if he had not believed in the hope for
+Judea?
+
+"From the beginning?" she repeated with inquiry. "You wrote my father
+from Caesarea--"
+
+"Your father?" he repeated, smiling with insinuation.
+
+"My father!"
+
+"Who is your father?" he asked.
+
+She turned away from him and walked to the other end of the garden. He
+had never meant to aspire to the Judean throne! He had simply written
+so determinedly to Costobarus, that the merchant of Ascalon would have
+no hesitancy in giving him two hundred talents! In these past days,
+she had learned enough that was blameworthy in this Philadelphus to
+make him more than despicable in her eyes. Again, as hourly since the
+last interview in the depression in the hills beyond the well, the
+fine bigness of that lovable companion of his, that had vanished for
+all time from her life, rose in radiant contrast. She turned back to
+her husband, with the pallor of longing and homesickness in her face.
+
+"Does this other woman see no fault in this, your idleness?" she
+demanded.
+
+"She! By the Shades, she sees nothing in me but fault! I would get me
+up like a sane man and go out of this mad place, but she hath locked
+up her dowry away from me, which was the simple cause that invited me
+to join her, and bids me go without her. And I might--but for one
+other attraction, dearer than the treasure, which also I would take
+with me."
+
+"Even if she forces you into deeds, I shall forgive her," she declared
+at last.
+
+He smiled a baffling smile and she looked at him in despair. The very
+charm of his personal appearance awakened resentment in her; his deft
+and easy complaisance angered her because it could be effective. She
+hated the superficial excellence in him which made him a pleasant
+companion. He had refused to discuss her identity further, except to
+prevent her in her own attempts to identify herself. He did not refer
+to the incidents of their journey to Jerusalem, but she felt that he
+was conscious of all these things, and her resentment was so great
+that she put it out of sight, lest at the time when she should be
+proved she would have come to hate him to the further thwarting of
+their work for Israel.
+
+"It is sweet to have you concerned for me. Now you may understand how
+much I am troubled for your own welfare. Do not regard me with that
+unbending gaze. I am, first and before all else, your friend."
+
+"You have changed," she said slowly. "I did not find in you this
+solicitude in the hills."
+
+"Unhappiness," he sighed, "makes most men law-less. I should be even
+now as bad, were I not sure of the sympathy you feel for me."
+
+She looked at him with large disdain.
+
+"Does not this woman treat you well?" she asked with the first glimmer
+of sarcasm in her eyes.
+
+"Her displeasure in me is that I do not make her a queen; yours,
+however, that I can not save this doomed nation! Her ambitions are for
+herself; yours are for me. Which waketh the response in my heart,
+lady?"
+
+"What have I lived for?" she burst out. "For what was I brought up and
+schooled? For what have I sacrificed all the light and desirable
+things of my youth, but for--"
+
+"Nay! Do not show me, yet, that you are only bent on being queen!" he
+exclaimed.
+
+"I care for nothing but the rescue of Judea!" she cried passionately.
+"There is nothing left to me but that!"
+
+"Then your ambitions are still for me. Alas, that the Messiah has come
+and gone!"
+
+It was his first reference to the great calamity he had told to her a
+short time before. Its recurrence after she had resolved to regard it
+as an impossible and blasphemous tale brought a chill to her heart.
+
+"If I can prove to you that there is no hope for Jerusalem, what
+then?" he asked suddenly.
+
+She flung off the question with a gesture.
+
+"Answer me. What then?"
+
+"It is unimaginable what shall come to pass when God deserts His own."
+
+"No need for imaginings. Look at Jerusalem and observe the fact. And
+if we be abandoned, what fealty do we owe to a God that deserts us? If
+you believe or not you are lost. Let us go out and live."
+
+"If God has deserted us," she said scornfully, "how shall we be
+happier elsewhere than here?"
+
+"Every god to its own country. The Olympians are a jovial lot. I have
+seen Joy's very self in heathendom."
+
+She moved away but he rose and followed her.
+
+"Whoever you are," he said in another tone, "your heritage of
+innocence and earnestness is plain as an open scroll upon your face.
+Nothing in all the world so appeals to the generosity in the heart of
+a man as the purity of the woman who is pure. I have said that I am
+your friend. I do not hold it against you that you doubt that word.
+Nothing remains but the deed to confirm it. This place is lost--as
+good as a heap of ashes and splintered rock, this hour! Come away!
+I'll sacrifice the treasure to protect you!"
+
+"Philadelphus," she said gravely, "we were sent hither to succeed or
+to suffer the penalty of our failure. My father died that we might
+have this opportunity. We must use it, or perish with it!"
+
+He shook his head and walked away a step or two.
+
+"You have not the true meaning of life," he said. "Indeed how few of
+us understand! Obstacles are not an incentive toward attaining
+impossible things. They are barriers set up by the kindly disposed
+gods to inform man that he is opposing destiny when he aspires to
+things he should not have. We were not made to fling ourselves against
+mighty opposition throughout the little daylight we have; to wound
+ourselves, to deny ourselves, to alienate that winsome sprite
+Pleasure, to attain something which was not intended for us by the
+signs of the obstructions placed in our paths. Who are we that we
+should achieve mightily! What are we when the gods have done with us,
+but a handful of dust! Who saves himself from age and unloveliness and
+ultimate imbecility, by all the superhuman efforts he may exert! A
+pest on the first morose man that made dismal endeavor a virtue!"
+
+She looked at him with amazement, though until that hour she believed
+that this man could astonish her no more.
+
+"Misfortune comes often enough without our knocking at her door," he
+continued. "Mankind is the only creature with conceit enough to seek
+to emulate the gods. It is wrong to think that to be moral is to be
+miserable. Nature's scheme for us, faithfully fulfilled, is always
+pleasurable. We have only to recognize it, and receive its benefits.
+Nothing on earth is luckier than man, if he but knew it. A murrain on
+ambition! Let us be glad!"
+
+How could she be glad with such a man! The time, the call of the hour,
+the need of her nation, the obligation to her dead father--all these
+things stood in her way. How had she felt, were this that engaging
+stranger who had called himself Hesper, urging her to be glad with
+him! She felt, then and there, the recurrence of guilt which the sight
+of the reproachful face of Momus had brought to her when she found
+herself forgetting her loyalty in the presence of that winsome man.
+The thought stopped the bitter speech that rose to her lips. She
+looked away and made no answer. He was close beside her.
+
+"Come away and let this woman who wishes the kingdom have it. She had
+liefer be rid of me than not."
+
+She gazed at him with a peculiar blankness stealing over her face.
+
+"Oh, for the quintessence of all compounded oaths to charge my vow!"
+he said.
+
+"For what?" she asked.
+
+"My love, Phryne!"
+
+At the old pagan name with which he had affronted her that morning in
+the hills, Laodice drew back sharply.
+
+"Dost thou believe in me?" she asked.
+
+"Believe what?"
+
+"That I am thy wife."
+
+"Tut! Back to the old quarrel! No! But by Heaven, thou art my
+sweetheart!"
+
+She stopped at the edge of an exclamation and looked at him with
+widening eyes.
+
+"Come, let us get out of this place. I can get the dowry! Let her stay
+here and be queen over this place if she will. I had rather possess
+you than all the kingdoms!"
+
+But Laodice flung him off while a flame of anger crimsoned her face.
+
+"Thou to insult me, thy lawful wife!" she brought out between clenched
+teeth. "Thou to offer affront to thine own marriage! I to live in
+shame with mine own husband!"
+
+The insult in his speech overwhelmed her and after a moment's
+lingering for words to express her rage, she turned and fled back to
+her room and barred her door upon him.
+
+After sunset the lights leaped up in the hall of Amaryllis the Greek.
+Presently there came a knock at Laodice's door. The girl, fearing that
+Philadelphus stood without, sat still and made no answer. A moment
+later the visitor spoke. It was the little girl who acted as page for
+the Greek.
+
+"Open, lady; it is I, Myrrha."
+
+Laodice went to the windows.
+
+"Amaryllis sends thee greeting and would speak with thee, in her
+hall," the girl said.
+
+Reluctantly Laodice, who feared the revelation which the light might
+have to make of her stunned and revolted face, followed the page.
+
+The Greek was standing, as if in evidence that the interview would not
+be long. She noted the intense change on the face of her young guest
+and watched her narrowly for any new light which her disclosure would
+bring.
+
+"I have sent for thee," the Greek began smoothly, "to tell thee
+somewhat that I should perhaps withhold, that thou shouldst sleep
+well, this night. But it is a perplexity perhaps thou wouldst face at
+once."
+
+Laodice bowed her head.
+
+"It is this: Titus and his friend, Nicanor, approached too close the
+walls this day, and Nicanor was wounded by an arrow. In retaliation,
+perfect siege hath been laid about the walls. None may come into the
+city."
+
+"And--Momus, my servant," Laodice cried, waking for the first time to
+the calamity in this blockade, "he can not come back to me?"
+
+"No. If he attempts it, he will be captured and put to death."
+
+Laodice clasped her hands, while drop by drop the color left her face.
+
+"In God's name," she whispered, "what will become of me?"
+
+Amaryllis made no answer.
+
+"Can--can I not go out?" Laodice asked presently, depending entirely
+on the Greek as adviser.
+
+"You can--but to what fortune? Perhaps--" She stopped a moment. "No,"
+she continued, "you have never been in a camp. No; you can not go
+out."
+
+"What, then, am I to do?" Laodice cried with increasing alarm.
+
+Amaryllis shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"I can advise with John," she said. "Doubtless he will allow you to
+remain here until you can provide yourself with other shelter."
+
+Laodice heard this cold sentence with a chill of fear that was new to
+her. Faint pictures of hunger and violence, terrifying in the extreme,
+confronted her. Yet not any of them frightened her more than the
+offered favor of the Gischalan. Her indignation at the woman who had
+supplanted her swept over her with a reflexive flush of heat.
+
+"God of my fathers, judge her in her lies, and pour the fire of Thy
+wrath upon her!" she exclaimed vehemently.
+
+Amaryllis gazed curiously at the girl. In her soul, she asked herself
+if there might not be unsounded depths of fierceness in this nature
+which she ought not to stir up.
+
+"Thou hast hope," she said tactfully. "She hath no such beauty as
+thine!"
+
+"Nothing but my proofs!" Laodice broke in.
+
+"And Philadelphus is a young man."
+
+"Rejecting her only because I am fairer than she! He is no just man!"
+Laodice cried hotly.
+
+"Softly, child," the Greek said, smiling; "thou hast said that he is
+thy husband."
+
+Laodice turned away, her brain whirling with anger, fear and shame.
+
+"Well?" said the Greek coolly, after a silence.
+
+"Where shall I go?" Laodice asked.
+
+"Thou hast been too tenderly nurtured to go into the streets. I shall
+ask John to shelter thee until thou canst care for thyself."
+
+Laodice looked at her without understanding.
+
+"Thou canst not stay here for long because the wife to Philadelphus is
+in a way a power in my house and she will not suffer it. But never
+fear; Jerusalem is not yet so far gone that it would not enjoy a
+pretty stranger."
+
+The curious sense of indignation that possessed Laodice was purely
+instinctive. Her mind could not sense the actual insult in the Greek's
+words.
+
+"I would advise you to be kind to Philadelphus."
+
+"But, but--" Laodice cried, struggling with tears and shame, "he has
+this day offered insult to his own marriage with me, by asking that I
+live in shame with him till it could be proved that I am his wife!"
+
+The Greek's smile did not change.
+
+"If we weigh all the unpleasantness of wedded life in too delicate a
+balance, my friend, I fear there would be little, indeed, that would
+escape condemnation as humiliating."
+
+Laodice raised her scarlet face to look in wonder at the Greek. The
+cold smiling lips dismayed her for a moment.
+
+"And thou seest no shame in this?" she faltered.
+
+"Thou sayest he is thy husband; why resent it?"
+
+"Dost thou not see--see that--what am I but a shameless woman, if I
+live with him, though I be married to him thrice over!"
+
+"After all," said the Greek, after a silence which said more than
+words, "it is the consciousness of your own integrity which must
+influence you; not what others think of you. It is not as if your
+husband thought better of you than you really are."
+
+"And you believe that I--" Laodice began and stopped, bewildered.
+
+Amaryllis, smiling, moved toward the inner corridor of her house. At
+the threshold of the arch she called back:
+
+"Please yourself, my friend," and was gone.
+
+Laodice was, by this time, stunned and intensely repelled. The hand on
+which Amaryllis had laid hers in passing tingled under the touch.
+Unconsciously she shook off the sensation of contact. The whole clear
+white interior of the hall became instantly unclean. Her standards of
+right and wrong were shaken; the wholesale assaults on her ideals left
+her shocked and unconfident. She felt the panic that all innocent
+women feel when suddenly aroused to the unfitness of their
+surroundings.
+
+When she turned to hurry to her room, a flood of scarlet rushed into
+her cheeks and she shrank back, shaken with surprise and delight.
+
+Before her stood a man, pale and thin, with his eyes upon her.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII
+
+THE PRINCE RETURNS
+
+
+Joseph, the shepherd, son of Thomas of Pella, moved out of the green
+marsh before sunset, as he had planned to do, but not for the original
+motive. The sheep, indeed, would not have flourished in that dampness,
+rich as it was in young grass, but, more than that, there was no
+shelter for the wounded man who lay by the roadside.
+
+The shepherd, who knew the hills of Judea as far as the Plain of
+Esdraelon as well as he knew the stony streets of the Christian city,
+located the nearest roof as one which a fagot-maker had occupied two
+years before. It was some distance up in the hills to the west. Since
+the scourge of war had passed over Palestine, there were scores of
+such hovels, vacant and abandoned to the bats and the small wild life
+about the countryside, and the boy doubted seriously if the thatch
+that covered it were still whole. But he attracted the attention of a
+pair of robust young Galileans on the way to the Passover, and, by
+their help, carried the wounded man to shelter in this hut. Urge, the
+sheep-dog, rushed the sheep out of the sedge and hurried them after
+his master, and in an hour Joseph was once more settled, his sheep
+were once more nosing over the rocky slants of a hill, his dog once
+more flat on his belly, watching. But it was a different day, after
+all.
+
+The hut of the fagot-maker was the four walls and a roof and the earth
+that floored it, but it was wealth because it was shelter. It had two
+doors which were merely openings in the sides and between them lay the
+man on sheep-pelts with a cotton abas, which one of the Galileans had
+left, over him. At one of these doors, sitting sidewise, so that he
+could watch in or out, sat Joseph.
+
+All night the man on the sheepskins spoke to the blackened thatch
+above him of the siege of Jerusalem and the treachery of Julian of
+Ephesus. He read letters from Costobarus and instructed Aquila over
+and over again. Then he tossed a coin and spent hours counting the
+hairs in the long locks that fell from the shining head of the moon
+down upon his breast, at midnight.
+
+At times the boy, with the exquisite beauty of sleep on his heavy
+lids, would creep over from his vigil at the door and lay his cool
+hand on the sick man's forehead. And the sick man would speak in a low
+controlled voice, saying:
+
+"Naaman being a leper, my friend, why was not the law fulfilled
+against him?"
+
+But the soothing influence of that touch did not endure. Again, he
+took census of the fighting-men of Judea, by the Roman statistics
+which he had from the decurion, and searched through his tunic for his
+wallet to write down the result. Failing to find it, he raised himself
+to shout for Julian to return his property.
+
+Again the cool hands would stroke the fevered forehead and the sick
+man would say:
+
+"Good my Lord, they fetched snow from the mountains to cool this
+wine."
+
+But how white the hands of that fair girl in the hills! Why, these
+hands beside hers were as satyrs' hooves to anemones! Her lashes were
+so long, and he knew that her lips were as cool as the heart of a
+melon; but that husband of hers knew better than he!
+
+And he, grandson of the just Maccabee, allied by marriage to the noble
+line of Costobarus through his daughter, Laodice, the bride with the
+greatest dowry in Judea, had staked his soul on the toss of a coin and
+had lost it!
+
+At this the shepherd boy straightened himself and gave attention.
+
+But he was wholly lost, the sick man would go on, rolling his head
+from side to side; he could not join Laodice because he had loved a
+woman of the wayside and could not cast out that love; he was not a
+Jew because he had rather linger with this strange beauty in the hills
+than hasten on the rescue of Jerusalem; he had not apostatized, though
+he was as wholly lost as if he had done so; he hated the heathen and
+would not be one of them. He would abide in the wilderness and perish,
+if this young spirit that abode by his side, with a face like
+Michael's and a form so like the shepherd David's, would only suffer
+the darkness to come at him.
+
+"Unless I mistake," the little shepherd said at such times, "there is
+more than a wound troubling this head."
+
+Thus day in and day out the shepherd watched by the sick man who had
+no medicine but the recuperative powers of his strong young body. So
+there came a night when the boy, rousing from a doze into which he had
+dropped, saw the sick man stretched upon his pallet motionless as he
+had not been for days. The shepherd felt the forehead and the wrists
+and sank again into slumber. At dawn he rose from the earth which had
+been his bed throughout this time and went forth to attend his flocks,
+and when he was gone, the sick man opened his eyes.
+
+He looked up at the blackened rafters; he looked out at either door
+and frowned perplexed, first at the hills, then at the valley. He
+raised his head and dropped it suddenly with great amazement and much
+weariness. Finally he ventured to lift a wilted and fragile hand and
+looked at it. It was not white; but it was unsteady as a laurel leaf
+beside a waterfall. After a moment's rest from the exertion he parted
+his lips to speak, but a whisper faint as the sound of the air in the
+shrubs issued from them. He listened but there was no answer. There
+was the activity of birds and insects, moving leaves and bleating
+sheep without, but it was all blithely indifferent to him. Finally he
+extended his arms and pressing them on his pallet tried to rise, but
+he could have lifted the earth as easily. Falling back and dazed with
+weakness, he lay still and slept again.
+
+When he awoke rested sufficiently to think, he recalled that he had
+been twice stabbed by Julian of Ephesus by the marsh on the road to
+Jerusalem. He had probably been carried to this place and nursed back
+to life by the householder.
+
+Then he remembered. In his search after cause for his cousin's attack
+upon him, he readily fixed upon Julian's rage at the Maccabee's
+preemption of the beautiful girl in the hills. Instantly, the disgrace
+of violence committed in a quarrel between himself and his cousin over
+the possession of a woman, appealed to him. And even as instantly, his
+defiant heart accepted its shame and persisted in its fault. It is an
+extreme of love, indeed, if no circumstance however impelling raises a
+regret in the heart of a man; for he flung off with a weak gesture any
+chiding of conscience against cherishing his dream, and abandoned
+himself wholly to his yearning for the girl in the tissue of
+moonbeams.
+
+There was a quiet step on the earth at the threshold. Joseph, the
+shepherd, stood there. The two looked at each other; one with inquiry
+and weakness in his face; the other with good-will and reassurance.
+
+"Boy," said the Maccabee feebly, "I have been sick."
+
+"Friend, I am witness to that. I am your nurse," the boy replied.
+
+After a little silence the Maccabee extended his hand. The boy took it
+with a sudden flush of emotion, but feeling its weakness, refrained
+from pressing it too hard, and laid it back with great care on his
+patient's breast. The Maccabee looked out at the door, away from the
+full eyes of his young host.
+
+He was touched presently, and a cup of milk was silently put to his
+lips. He drank and turning himself with effort fell asleep.
+
+When he awoke again, after many hours, it was night. In the door with
+his head dropped back between his shoulders gazing up at the sky
+overhead, sat the boy.
+
+"Where," the Maccabee began, "are the rest of you?"
+
+The boy turned around quickly, and answered with all seriousness.
+
+"I am all here."
+
+"Did you," the Maccabee began again, after silence, "care for me
+alone?"
+
+"There has been no one here but us," the boy said, hesitating at the
+symptoms of gratitude in the Maccabee's voice.
+
+"Us?"
+
+"You and me."
+
+After another silence, the Maccabee laughed weakly.
+
+"It requires two to constitute 'us' and I am, by all signs, not a
+whole one!"
+
+"But you will be in a few days," the boy declared admiringly. "You are
+an excellent sick man."
+
+The Maccabee looked at him meditatively.
+
+"I am merely perverse," he said darkly; "I knew it would be so much
+pleasure to my murderer to know that I died, duly."
+
+The shepherd repressed his curiosity, as the best thing for his
+patient's welfare, and suggested another subject rather disjointedly.
+
+"I have been thinking," he said, "about Jerusalem. I was there once
+upon a time."
+
+"Once!" the Maccabee said. "You are old enough to attend the
+Passover."
+
+"But our people do not attend the feast. We are Christians."
+
+The Maccabee moved so that he could look at the boy. He might have
+known it, he exclaimed to himself. It was just such an extreme act of
+mercy, this assuming the care of a stranger in a wilderness, as he had
+ever known Christians to do in that city of irrational faiths,
+Ephesus.
+
+"Well?" he said, hoping the boy would go on and spare him an
+expression on that announcement.
+
+"I can not forget Jerusalem."
+
+"No one forgets Jerusalem--except one that falls in love by the
+wayside," the man said.
+
+Again the boy detected a ring of unexplained melancholy in his
+patient's voice, and talked on as a preventive.
+
+"Urban, the pastor, took me there. It was in the days of mine
+instruction for baptism. He went to Jerusalem to trial, but there was
+disorder in the city about the procurator, who was driven out that
+day, and Urban was not called. But he remained, lest he be accused of
+fleeing, and then it was he took me over the walks of Jesus."
+
+"Jesus--that is the name," the Maccabee said to himself. "They are
+born, given in marriage, fall or flourish, live and die in that name.
+Likewise they pick up a wounded stranger and care for him in that
+name. They are a strange people, a strange people!"
+
+"They would not let us into the Temple," Joseph went on, "because I am
+an Arab, born a Christian. So I could not see where Jesus was
+presented, in infancy. But we went to the synagogues where He taught;
+we went out upon Olivet to Gethsemane where He suffered in the Garden;
+we climbed that hill to the south from which He looked upon the City
+and wept over it, and prophesied this hour. Then we sought the ravine
+where Judas betrayed Him with a kiss, and afterward Urban led me over
+the streets by which He was taken first to Annas and to Caiaphas and
+thence to Pilate and to Herod. After that, by the Way of the Cross to
+Golgotha; from there to His Tomb. And when we had seen the
+Guest-chamber and stood upon the Place of the Ascension, I needed no
+further instruction."
+
+The boy had forgotten his guest. By the rapt light in his eyes, the
+Maccabee knew that the boy was once more journeying over the stones of
+the streets of the Holy City, or standing awed on the polished
+pavements of its lordly interiors, or on the topmost point of her
+hills with the broad-winged wind from the east flying his long locks.
+
+"_If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning.
+If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my
+mouth; if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief joy_," the Maccabee
+said, half to himself.
+
+The boy heard him, but his patient's words merged with the dream that
+held him entranced. The Maccabee went on.
+
+"So said the Psalmist to himself," he said. "What had he to do for
+Jerusalem; what did he fear would win him away from that labor for
+Jerusalem, that he took that vow? It was easy enough to revile
+Babylon, the oppressor, that stood between him and Jerusalem; but what
+if he had been the captive of beauty, and chained by the bonds of
+lovely hair!"
+
+The boy turned now and looked at the Maccabee. The eyes of the two met
+fair. Then the Maccabee unburdened his soul and told of the girl to
+this child, who was a Christian and a humble shepherd in the starved
+hills of Judea.
+
+"I met her," the boy said after a long silence. "And by what I learned
+of her spirit that night, she will not be happy to know that you have
+stepped aside for her sake."
+
+"You met her, also; and you loved her, too?"
+
+The boy assented gravely. The Maccabee slowly lifted his eyes from the
+young shepherd's face, till they rested on the slope of sky filled
+with stars visible through the open door.
+
+"And she would have me go on to this city, to the one who awaits me
+there and whom I shall not be glad to see; take up the labor that will
+be robbed of its chief joy in its success and live the long, long days
+of life without her?"
+
+The boy made no answer to this; he knew that this white-faced man was
+wrestling with himself and comment from him was not expected. By the
+light of the failing fire without, he saw that face sober, take on
+shadow and grow immeasurably sad. The minutes passed and he knew that
+the Maccabee would not speak again.
+
+Thereafter followed three days of silence, except the essential
+communication or the mutterings of the Maccabee against his weakness
+and unsteadiness. On the fourth day the Maccabee declared that he was
+able to travel. Joseph protested, but not for long. He had learned in
+the sojourn of his guest that this man was in the habit of doing as he
+pleased. So the shepherd sighed and let him go reluctantly.
+
+"But," he insisted to the last moment, "remember that Pella is a City
+of Refuge. If Jerusalem ceases to be hospitable, come to Pella."
+
+A thought struck him.
+
+"She," he said in a low tone, "promised that she would come."
+
+"Then expect me," the Maccabee said.
+
+The shepherd boy smiled contentedly and blessed the Maccabee and let
+him go. As long as the man could see, his young host watched him, and
+at the summit of the hill the Maccabee turned to wave his final
+farewell. When the path dipped down the other side of the hill, the
+man felt that more than the sunshine had been cut off by its great
+shadow.
+
+He did not go forward with a light heart. The whole of his purpose had
+suddenly resolved itself into duty. There had been a certain nervous
+expectancy that was almost fear in the thought of meeting the grown
+woman he had married in her babyhood. He had lived in Ephesus with an
+unengaged heart in all the crowd of opportunities for love, good and
+bad. He had magnetism, strength, aloofness and a certain beauty--four
+qualifications which had made him over and over again immensely
+attractive to all classes of Ephesian women. But whatever his response
+to them, he had not loved. Love and marriage were things so apart from
+his activities as to be uninteresting. When finally he was called in
+full manhood to assume without preliminary both of these things, he
+was uncomfortable and apprehensive. But after he had met the girl in
+the hills, his sensations of reluctance became emphatic, became an
+actual dread, so that he thrust away all thought of the domestic side
+of the life that confronted him, and bitterly resigned all hope in the
+tender things that were the portion of all men. The villainy of Julian
+of Ephesus engaged him chiefly, and his punishment. After that, then
+the establishment of his kingdom, politics, conquest and power--but
+not love!
+
+Late that afternoon, he stepped out of a wady west of Jerusalem and
+halted.
+
+Ahead of him ran a road depressed between worn, hard, bare banks of
+earth, past a deserted pool, marged with stone, up shining surfaces of
+outcropping rock, through avenues of clustered tombs, pillars, pagan
+monuments which were tracks of the Herods, dead and abandoned,
+splendid pleasure gardens, suburban palaces lifeless and still, toward
+the looming Tower of Hippicus, brooding over a fast-closed gate.
+
+The Maccabee nodded. It was as he had expected. The city was besieged.
+
+It was afternoon, a week-day at the busiest portal of Jerusalem; but
+save for the fixed and pygmy sentry upon the tower, there was no
+living thing to be seen, no single sound to be heard.
+
+Beyond the mounting hills of the City of David stood up, shouldering
+like mantles of snow their burden of sun-whitened houses. Above it
+all, supreme over the blackened masonry of Roman Antonia, stood a
+glittering vision in marble and gold--the Temple. At a distance it
+could not be seen that any of those inwalled splendors lacked;
+Jerusalem appeared intact, but the multitudes at the gate were absent
+and the voice of the city was stilled.
+
+For one expecting to find Jerusalem animated and beholding it still
+and lifeless, how quickly its white walls, its white houses and its
+sparkling Temple became haunted, dead crypts and sepulchers.
+
+But presently there came across the considerable distance that lay
+between him and Jerusalem, a sound remarkably distinct because of the
+utter stillness that prevailed. It was the jingle of harness and the
+ring of hoof-beats upon stones embedded in the gray earth.
+
+A Roman in armor polished like gold, with a floating mantle
+significantly bordered in purple, rode slowly into the open space,
+drew up his horse and stopped. The Maccabee looked at him sharply,
+then quitted his shelter and walked down toward the rider. At sight of
+him, the horseman clapped his hand to his short sword, but the
+Maccabee put up his empty hands and smiled at the man of all superior
+advantage. Then the light of recognition broke over the Roman's face.
+
+"You!" he cried.
+
+"I, Caesar," the Maccabee responded. For a moment there was silence in
+which the Jew watched the flickering of amazement and perplexity on
+Titus' face.
+
+"What do you here, away from Ephesus, and worse, attempting to run my
+lines?" he demanded finally.
+
+The Maccabee signed toward the walls.
+
+"My wife is there," he said briefly.
+
+The Roman made an exclamation which showed the sudden change to
+enlightenment.
+
+"Solicitous after these many years?" he demanded.
+
+"She has two hundred talents," the Maccabee replied.
+
+Titus smiled and shook his head.
+
+"I ought to keep her there. Rome must get treasure enough out of that
+rebellious city to repay her for her pains in subjugating it."
+
+"Pay yourself out of another pocket than mine. It will take two
+hundred talents to repay me for all that I have suffered to get it. I
+want the countersign, Titus. You owe me it."
+
+"Will you come out of there, at once?" the Roman demanded. "Not that I
+suspect you will make the city harder to take, but I should dislike to
+make war on an old comrade in my Ephesian revels."
+
+The Maccabee looked doubtful.
+
+"I can not promise," he said. "At least do not hold off the siege
+until you see me again without the walls. It might lose you prestige
+in Rome."
+
+Titus swung his bridle while he gazed at the Maccabee.
+
+"I wish Nicanor were here," he said finally. "He might be able to see
+harm in you; but I never could. You will have to promise me
+something--anything so it is a promise--before I can let you in.
+Something to appease Nicanor, else I shall never hear the last of
+this."
+
+The Maccabee laughed, the sudden harsh laugh of one impelled to
+amusement unexpectedly.
+
+"Assure Nicanor, for me, that I shall come out of Jerusalem one day.
+Dead or alive, I shall do it! You need not add that I did not specify
+the date of my exodus. What is the word?"
+
+"Berenice. And Jove help you! Farewell."
+
+Titus rode on.
+
+A little later, after a parley with the Roman sentries and again with
+the sentries at the Gate of Hippicus, the Maccabee was admitted to the
+Holy City.
+
+About him as he passed through the gates were the soldiers of Simon.
+They were not such men as he expected to see defending the City of
+David. There was an extravagant, half-pastoral manner about them, a
+pose of which they should not have been conscious at this hour of
+peril for the nation and the hierarchy. He looked at their incomplete,
+meaningless uniform, at their arms, half savage, at their faces, half
+mad, and believed that he, with an army rationally organized and
+effectually equipped, would have little difficulty in subduing the
+unbalanced forces of Simon.
+
+Since siege was laid, he did not expect to be met by Amaryllis'
+servant in the purple turban. He approached a citizen.
+
+"I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid," he said.
+
+The eye of the Jew traveled over him, with some disapproval.
+
+"The mistress of the Gischalan?" was the returned inquiry. The
+Maccabee assented calmly. The young man indicated a broad street
+moving with people which led with tolerable directness toward the base
+of Moriah.
+
+"Hence to the Tyropean Bridge at the end of this street; thence down
+beside the bridge into Gihon. Cross to the wall supporting Moriah and
+builded against it thou wilt find a new house, of the fashion of the
+Greeks. If thou canst pass her sentries, thou wilt find her within."
+
+The Maccabee thanked his informant and turned through the Passover
+hosts to follow the directions.
+
+To a visitor recently familiar with the city, Jerusalem would have
+been strange; he would have been lost in its ruined and disordered
+streets. But this man came with only the four corners of the compass
+to direct him and the Temple as a landmark to guide him. Therefore
+though he entered upon territory which he had not traversed since
+childhood he went forward confidently.
+
+It was not simple; it was not readily done; but the darkness found him
+at his destination.
+
+When he was within a rod of the house, he was halted by a Jewish
+soldier. He whispered to the man the word which Amaryllis had sent to
+him, and the soldier stepped aside and let him pass.
+
+In another moment he was admitted to the house of Amaryllis.
+
+A wick coated with aromatic wax burned in the brass bowl on a tripod
+and cast a crystal clear light down upon the exedra and the delicate
+lectern with its rolls of parchment and brass cylinders from which
+they had been withdrawn. Opposite, with her arms close down to her
+sides, her hands clenched, her shoulders drawn up, stood the girl he
+had played for and won in the hills of Judea!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII
+
+A NEW PRETENDER
+
+
+A sudden wave of delight, a sudden rush of blood through his veins,
+swept before it and away for that time all memory of his struggle and
+his resolution to renounce her. All that was left was the irresistible
+storm of impulse upon his reserve and his self-control.
+
+When she recognized him, she started violently, smote her hands
+together and gazed at him with such overweening joy written on her
+face, that he would have swept her into his arms, but for her quick
+recovery and retreat. In shelter behind the exedra she halted, fended
+from him by the marble seat. He gazed across its back at her with all
+the love of his determined soul shining in his eyes.
+
+"You! You!" she cried.
+
+"But you!" he cried back at her across the exedra.
+
+The preposterousness of their greetings appealed to them at that
+moment and they both laughed. He started around the exedra; she moved
+away.
+
+"Stay!" he begged. "I want only to touch--your hand."
+
+Shyly, she let him take both of her hands, and he lifted them in spite
+of her little show of resistance and kissed them.
+
+"We might have saved ourselves farewells and journeyed together," he
+said blithely.
+
+"But I thought you had gone back to Ephesus," she said.
+
+"What! After you had told me you were going to Jerusalem? No. I have
+been nursing a knife wound in a sheep hovel in the hills since an hour
+after I saw you last."
+
+Her lips parted and her face grew grave, deeply compassionate and
+grieved. If there remained any weakness in his frame before that
+moment, the spell of her pity enchanted him to strength again. He
+found himself searching for words to describe his pain, that he might
+elicit more of that curative sweet.
+
+"I was very near to death," he added seriously.
+
+"What--what happened?" she asked, noting the pallor on his face under
+the suffusion which his pleasure had made there.
+
+"There was one more in the party than was needed; so my amiable
+companion reduced the number by stabbing me in the back," he
+explained.
+
+There was instant silence. Slowly she drew away from him. Entire
+pallor covered her face and in her eyes grew a horror.
+
+"Did--do you say that Philadelphus stabbed--you--in the back?" she
+asked, speaking slowly.
+
+"Phila--" he stopped on the brink of a puzzled inquiry, and for a
+space they regarded each other, each turning over his own perplexity
+for himself.
+
+"Ask me that again," he commanded her suddenly. "I did not
+understand."
+
+She hesitated and closed her lips. Her husband had stabbed this man in
+the back! Because of her? No! Philadelphus had refused to believe her.
+Why then should he have committed such a deed?
+
+"So you are not ready to believe it of this--Philadelphus?" he asked,
+venturing his question on an immense surmise that was forcing itself
+upon him.
+
+She looked at him with beseeching eyes. How was she to regard herself
+in this matter? A partizan of the man she hated, or a sympathizer with
+this stranger who had already given her too much joy? Was she never to
+know any good of this man to whom she was wedded? For a moment losing
+sight of her concern for Judea and her resolution that her father
+should not have died in vain, she was rejoiced that another woman had
+taken her place by his side. The quasi liberty made her interest in
+this stranger at least not entirely sinful.
+
+"Who are you?" he demanded finally.
+
+How, then, could she tell him that she was the wife of the man who had
+treacherously attempted his life? How, also, since she was denied by
+every one in that house, expect him to believe her? The bitterness of
+her recent interview with Amaryllis rose to the surface again.
+
+"I am nothing; I have no name; I am nobody!" she cried.
+
+He was startled.
+
+"What is this? Are you not welcome in this house?" he demanded.
+
+"Yes--and no! Amaryllis is good--but--"
+
+"But what?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Surely, thou canst speak without fear to me," he said gently.
+
+"There is--only Amaryllis is kind," she essayed finally.
+
+He laid his hand on her wrist.
+
+"Is it--the woman from Ascalon?" he asked, his suspicion lighting
+instantly upon the wife whom he had expected to meet.
+
+She flung up her head and gazed at him with startled eyes. He believed
+that he had touched upon the fact.
+
+"So!" he exclaimed.
+
+"She has deceived Philadelphus--" she whispered defensively, but he
+broke in sharply.
+
+"Whom hath she deceived?"
+
+She closed her lips and looked at him perplexed. Certainly this was
+the companion of Philadelphus, who had told her freely half of her
+husband's ambitions, long before he had come to Jerusalem. She could
+not have betrayed her husband in thus mentioning his name.
+
+"Your companion of the journey hither--whom you even now
+accused--Philadelphus Maccabaeus."
+
+There was a dead pause in which his fingers still held her wrist and
+his deep eyes were fixed on her face. He was recalling by immense
+mental bounds all the evidence that would tend to confirm the
+suspicion in his brain. He had told her his own story but had invested
+it in Julian of Ephesus. His wallet, with all its proofs, was gone;
+the Ephesian had examined him carefully to know if any one in
+Jerusalem would recognize him; and lastly, without cause, Julian had
+stabbed him in the back. Could it be possible that Julian of Ephesus,
+believing that he had made way with the Maccabee, had come to
+Jerusalem, masquerading under his name?
+
+While he stood thus gazing, hardly seeing the face that looked up at
+him with such troubled wonder, he saw her turn her eyes quickly,
+shrink; and then wrenching her hands from his, she fled.
+
+He looked up. Two women were standing before him.
+
+"I seek Amaryllis, the Seleucid," he said, recovering himself.
+
+"I am she," the Greek said, stepping forward.
+
+"Thou entertainest Laodice, daughter of Costobarus of Ascalon?" he
+added.
+
+The Greek bowed.
+
+"I would see her," he said bluntly.
+
+Amaryllis signed to the woman at her side.
+
+"This is she," she said simply.
+
+The Maccabee looked quickly at the woman. After his close
+communication with the beautiful girl for whom his heart warmed as it
+had never done before, he was instantly aware of an immense contrast
+between her and the woman who had been introduced to him at that
+moment. They were both Jewesses; both were beautiful, each in her own
+way; both appeared intelligent and winsome. But he loved the girl, and
+this woman stood in the way of that love. Therefore her charms were
+nullified; her latent faults intensified; all in all she repelled him
+because she was an obstacle.
+
+The injustice in his feelings toward her did not occur to him. He was
+angry because she had come; he hated her for her stateliness; he found
+himself looking for defects in her and belittling her undeniable
+graces. Confused and for the moment without plan, he looked at her
+frowning, and with cold astonishment the woman gazed back at him.
+
+"Thou art Laodice, daughter of Costobarus?" he asked, to gain time.
+
+She inclined her head.
+
+"When--when dost thou expect Philadelphus?" he asked next.
+
+"Why do you ask?" she parried.
+
+"I--I have a message for him," he essayed finally. "Is he here?"
+
+"Tell me, who art thou?" the woman asked pointedly.
+
+A vision of the girl, flushed and trembling with pleasure at sight of
+him, flashed with poignant effect upon him at that moment. The warmth
+and softness of her hands under the pressure of his happy lips was
+still with him. It would be infidelity to his own feelings to renounce
+her then. It was becoming a physical impossibility for him to accept
+this other woman.
+
+He hesitated and reddened. An old subterfuge occurred to him at a
+desperate minute.
+
+"I--I am Hesper--of Ephesus," he essayed.
+
+"What is thy business with Philadelphus?" the woman persisted.
+
+Again the Maccabee floundered. It had been easy to invent a story to
+keep the woman he loved from discovering that he was a married man,
+but the point in question was different. Now, filled with dismay and
+indignation, apprehension and reluctance, his fertile mind failed him
+at the moment of its greatest need.
+
+And the eyes of the Greek, filling with suspicion and intense
+interest, rested upon him.
+
+"I asked," the actress repeated calmly, "thy business with
+Philadelphus."
+
+At that instant a tremendous shock shook the house to its foundations;
+the hanging lamps lurched; the exedra jarred and in an instant several
+of the servants appeared at various openings into passages. Before any
+of the group could stir, a second thunderous shock sent a tremor over
+the room, and a fragment of marble detached from a support overhead
+and dropped to the pavement.
+
+"It is an attack!" Amaryllis cried.
+
+"On this house?" Salome demanded.
+
+There was a clatter of arms and several men in Jewish armor rushed
+through the chamber from the passage that led in from the Temple.
+
+"I shall see," said the Maccabee, and followed the men at once.
+
+Without he saw the night sky overhead crossed by dark stones flying
+over the wall to the east. Warfare had begun.
+
+But the attack was simply preliminary and desultory. It ceased while
+he waited. Presently it began farther toward the north. The catapult
+had been moved. The Maccabee hesitated in the colonnade.
+
+The beautiful girl in the house of Amaryllis was in no further danger.
+The interruption had saved him at a critical moment.
+
+He walked down the steps and out into the night.
+
+"Liberty!" he whispered with a sigh of relief. "Now what to do?"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV
+
+THE PRIDE OF AMARYLLIS
+
+
+The night following the wounding of Nicanor, John spent on his
+fortifications expecting an attack. It was one of the few nights when
+the Gischalan kept vigil, for he refused to contribute fatigue to the
+prospering of his cause.
+
+Sometime in mid-morning he appeared in the house of Amaryllis and sent
+a servant to her asking her to breakfast with him. The Greek sent him
+in return a wax tablet on which she had written that she was shut up
+in her chamber writing verse, but that she had provided him a
+companion as entertaining as she.
+
+When he passed into the Greek's dining-room, the woman who called
+herself wife to Philadelphus awaited him at the table.
+
+When he sat she dropped into a chair beside him and laid before him a
+bunch of grapes from Crete, preserved throughout the winter in casks
+filled with ground cork.
+
+"It is the last, Amaryllis says," she observed. "And siege is laid."
+
+John looked ruefully at the fruit.
+
+"Perhaps," he said after thought, "were I a thrifty man and a spiteful
+one, I would not eat them. Instead, I should have the same cluster
+served me every morning that I might say to mine enemies, with truth,
+that I have Cretan grapes for breakfast daily. They will keep," he
+added presently, "for it is tradition that stores laid up for siege
+never decay."
+
+"Obviously," said the woman, "they do not last long enough."
+
+John plucked off one of the light green grapes and ate it with relish.
+
+"Since thou doubtest the tradition, I shall not have these spoil."
+
+"But you destroy even a better boast over your enemy. Then you could
+say to him, 'We can not consume all our food. Behold the grapes rot in
+the lofts!'"
+
+John smiled.
+
+"Half of the lies go to preserve another's opinion of us. How much we
+respect our fellows!"
+
+"Be comforted; there are as many lying for our sakes! But how goes it
+without on the walls?"
+
+"Against Rome or against Simon?"
+
+"Both."
+
+"Ill enough. But when Titus presses too close Simon will lay down his
+hostility toward me; and when Titus becomes too effective, we are to
+have a divine interference, so our prophets say."
+
+"I observe," the woman said, "we Jews at this time are relying much on
+the prophets to fight our battles. Behold, our stores will hold out,
+we say, because it is said; and we shall fight indifferently, because
+Daniel hath bespoken a Deliverer for us at this time!"
+
+John, with his wine-glass between thumb and finger, looked at her.
+
+"I should expect a heretic to be so critical for us," he said.
+
+The woman sat with her elbows on the table, her chin in her hands,
+gazing moodily at the sunlight falling through the brass grill over
+the windows on the court. She ignored his remark, but answered
+presently in another tone.
+
+"There is nothing to employ a surfeited mind in this city."
+
+"No?" he said lightly, while interest began to awaken in his eyes.
+"The making of enjoyment is here. I have found it so."
+
+"Perchance you have," but she halted and resumed her moody gaze at the
+flood of sunlight.
+
+"Are you weary?" he asked. "What is it?"
+
+"Idleness! Eating, sleeping--no; not even that; for idleness steals
+away my appetite and my repose."
+
+"Strange restiveness for one reared in the quiet inner chambers of a
+Jewish house," he observed.
+
+Her eyes dropped away to the floor; he saw that she was breathing
+quickly.
+
+"I dreamed of a free life once," she said in a restrained way. "I have
+not since been satisfied. I dreamed of cities and kings, that were
+mine! of crises that I dared, of--of things that I did!"
+
+There was indignation and pride in the words, too much recollection of
+an actuality to rise from the reminiscences of a dream. John watched
+her alertly.
+
+"Enough will happen here in time to divert you," he said.
+
+She made a motion with her hand that swept the round of masonry about
+her.
+
+"Not until this falls."
+
+"Come, then, up into my fortress and see my fellows from Gischala," he
+offered. "They fled with me from that city when Titus took it and
+together we came to this place. They are hardened to disaster; they
+and death are fellow-jesters."
+
+"Soldiers?"
+
+"Everything! Better athletes than soldiers, better mummers than
+athletes; villains most engaging of all!"
+
+She showed no interest and, after a critical pause, he continued:
+
+"They robbed the booth of some costumer whom the Sadducees had made
+rich and captured a maid whom they held until she had taught them how
+to use henna and kohl. So I had a garrison of swearing girls until
+they wearied of the fatigue of stepping mincingly and untangling their
+garments. It was that which robbed the sport of its pleasure and
+changed my harem back to a fortress. But while it lasted they were
+kings over Jerusalem. And what dear mad dangerous wantons they were!
+What confusion to short-sighted citizens; what affrights to sociable
+maidens! Even I laughed at them."
+
+"What antics indeed!" she murmured perfunctorily.
+
+"Now they want new entertainment; something immense and different," he
+said.
+
+She looked up at him; in her eyes he read, "Even as I do!"
+
+"But they are not unique in that," he continued. "All the world seeks
+diversion. Observe the pretty stranger come here fresh from some
+lady's tiring-room, hunting adventure, bearding thee and wearing thy
+name!"
+
+Her eyes sparkled.
+
+"She shall have adventure enough," she declared.
+
+"I hear," John pursued, "that she does not expect her servant to
+return, whom she sent to Ascalon for proofs."
+
+"No?" the woman cried, sitting up.
+
+"How can she, when the siege is laid?"
+
+There was a moment of silence. The woman drew in a deep breath that
+was wholly one of relief.
+
+"Now what will she do?" she asked.
+
+"She expects," John answered, "the mediation of the Messiah. It is the
+talk among the slaves that He is in the city and she has heard it. She
+seems not to be overconfident, however."
+
+"It is her end," the woman remarked with meaning.
+
+"Perchance not. She is a good Jew, it seems, whatever else she may be,
+and every good Jew may have his wishes come to pass if the Messiah
+come. So it has become the national habit to expect the Messiah in
+every individual difficulty. Now, according to prophecies, the time is
+of a surety ripe and the whole city is expectant. She may have her
+wish."
+
+She stared at him coolly. There was implied disbelief in this speech.
+She debated with herself if it would serve to resent his doubt.
+Whatever her conclusion she added no more to the discussion of
+Laodice's hopes.
+
+"Are you expectant?" she asked.
+
+"I see the need of a Messiah," he responded.
+
+"Doubtless. You and Simon do not unite the city; nothing but an
+united, confident and supremely capable people can resist Rome in even
+this most majestic fortification in the world--unless miracle be
+performed, indeed."
+
+"Nothing but a divine visitor can achieve union here."
+
+"What an event to behold!" she mused. "That would be an excitement!
+Surely that would be a new thing! No one really ever beheld a god
+before."
+
+"What learned things dreams are! What things of experience!" he
+remarked with a sly smile. She refused to observe his insisted
+disbelief in her claim, but went on as if to herself.
+
+"Whatever Jove can do, man can do!" she declared. "I never heard that
+the gods do more than change maidens into trees or themselves into
+swans for an old mortal purpose that even man's a better adept at. Why
+can there not rise one who is greater than Alexander and of stouter
+heart than Julius Caesar? There is no limit to the greatness of
+mankind. Behold, here is a city rich beyond even the wealth of
+Croesus; and a country which the emperor is longing to bestow upon
+some orderly king! Heavens, what an opportunity! I could pray,
+Jerusalem should pray, that the hour may bring forth the man!"
+
+Her eyes shone with an unnatural yearning. The immense scope of her
+desires suddenly brought a smile to his lips that he checked in time.
+He had remembered offering his Idumeans in women's clothing for her
+diversion.
+
+Hunger for power, the next greatest hunger after hunger for love! He
+felt that he stood in the presence of a desire so immense that it
+belittled his own hopes. He was not too much of a Jew to have sympathy
+with the ambition that dwells in the breasts of women. Cleopatra had
+been an evil that he had admired profoundly, because she had attained
+that which his own soul yearned after but which had eluded him. Yet he
+was large enough not to be envious of a success. He was made of the
+stuff that seekers of excitement are made of. If he could not furnish
+the intoxication of activity he was a ready supporter of that one who
+could.
+
+"What disorder, then, in the world," she went on, as if she had
+followed a train of imagination through the triumph of the risen great
+man. "Rome, the ruler of nations humbled! Conquest from Germany to the
+First Cataract, from Gaul to the dry rocks of Ecbatana! A world in
+anarchy, for one greater than Alexander to subjugate! The ancient
+splendor of Asia, the wisdom of Africa and the virginity of Europe to
+be his, and the homage of the four corners of the earth to be to him!"
+
+John said nothing. Before him, the woman had entirely stripped off her
+disguise. Now for the purpose!
+
+At that moment one of Amaryllis' servants, who had stood guard without
+the door, dodged apprehensively into the room and fled across to the
+opposite arch. There he paused, ready for flight, and looked back with
+wide eyes. John turned hastily but with an impatient gesture fell
+again to his neglected meal. The actress looked to see what had
+annoyed him. There passed in from the outer corridor a young man,
+tall, magnificently formed, covered with a turban and draped in quaint
+garments, which to her who was familiar with all the guises of the
+theater seemed to be Buddhistic. He looked neither to the right nor
+left, but passed with a step infinitely soft and gliding across to the
+arch, from which the terrified servant vanished instantly. The
+stranger stayed only a dramatic instant on the threshold and then
+disappeared into the corridor which led up into the Temple. When he
+had gone the startled actress retained a picture of a face, fearless,
+beatified, mystic to the very edge of the supernatural.
+
+"Who was that?" she asked of the Gischalan, who was gazing at the
+color of his wine, sitting in a shaft of sunlight.
+
+"Seraiah! But more than that, no one knows. He appeared with the
+slaying of Zechariah the Just. He haunts the garrisons. Hence his
+name--Soldier of Jehovah!"
+
+"He did not speak; why did he come?"
+
+"He never speaks; he goes where he will; no one would dare to stop
+him!"
+
+Then suddenly realizing that he was showing disinterest the Gischalan
+drew himself up and smiled.
+
+"He is mad; I believe he is mad. The city is full of demoniacs."
+
+"There is something great about him!" the woman declared. "He seems to
+be the instrument of miracle."
+
+"Is it that?" John asked in an amused tone.
+
+She studied him for a moment that was tense with meaning.
+
+"Do you know," she began slowly, "that neither you nor Simon, nor any
+of these who aspire to the control of Jerusalem, have come upon the
+plan which will best appeal to your distracted subjects?"
+
+"Have we not?" he repeated. "We have bought them and bullied them; we
+are fighting the Romans for them; we are preaching patience in the
+will of the Lord. What more, lady?"
+
+"What have you to offer them in their hope of a Messiah?" she said
+pointedly.
+
+"Messiah! What else is preached in the Temple but the Messiah, or in
+the proseuchae or the streets or on the walls? We eat, drink, sleep,
+fight, buy, sell, rob or restore in the name of the Messiah! They are
+surfeited with religion."
+
+"Are they?" she asked sententiously. "But you haven't given them a
+Messiah."
+
+He looked at her without comprehending.
+
+"You have a mad city here; you can not reason with it; indulge it,
+then, as you indulge your lunatics," she suggested.
+
+He shook his head, smiling that he did not understand her. She turned
+again to Seraiah.
+
+"Watch him," she insisted. "He possesses me."
+
+After a long silence in which John trifled with his wine, she prepared
+to rise.
+
+"Send me the roll of the law," the woman said suddenly.
+
+"Posthumus shall bring it. He is another lunatic. Experiment with him
+and learn how I shall act toward the city."
+
+"Well said," she averred; "and I will see your Idumeans. Is it proper
+for me to appear in the Temple?"
+
+The Gischalan's eyes flashed a sudden elation and delight. He bent low
+and kissed her hand.
+
+"And I will fetch somewhat which will divert us," she added and was
+gone.
+
+When a few moments later John passed again into the Greek's apartment,
+Amaryllis entered from an inner corridor. Before she spoke to the
+master of the house she addressed a servant who had been a moment
+before summoned.
+
+"Send hither my guest."
+
+"The stranger?" John asked. "Is she still with you?"
+
+"I mean to add her to my household, if you will," she explained.
+
+"Keep her or dismiss her at your pleasure."
+
+"It shall be for my pleasure. She has a charm that besets me. It will
+be entertainment to discover her history."
+
+"I see no mystery in her. It is plain enough that there is between her
+and this married Philadelphus some cause for her coming. His wife is
+much more engaging."
+
+She sighed and dropped into her ivory chair, pushed back the locks of
+fair hair that had loosened from their fillet and waited languidly.
+
+John studied her critically. In the last hour the slowly dissolving
+bond between them seemed to have vanished, wholly, at once.
+
+"O Queen of Kings," he said, "art thou lonely in this mad place?"
+
+"I have found diversion," she answered.
+
+"With these new guests?"
+
+"With these new guests. Observe them; there are a pair of lovers among
+them, mersed in difficulty, hampering themselves, multiplying sorrow
+and sure to accomplish the same end as if they had proceeded happily."
+
+"Interested no longer in thine own passion? Alas, my Amaryllis, that
+love is dead that is interested no longer in itself."
+
+"O thou bearded warrior, are we then still in the self-centered period
+of our romance?"
+
+"I fear not; I see the twilight."
+
+Amaryllis looked down and her face grew more weary.
+
+"You have maintained a long fidelity, John," she said.
+
+He gazed at her, waiting a further remark, and she went on at last.
+
+"I wonder why?"
+
+He flung out his hands.
+
+"Shall I be faithless to Sheba? Is the charm of the Queen of Kings
+faded? Shall I turn from Aphrodite or weary of the lips of Astarte?"
+
+"Nothing so stamps your love of me as wicked, in your own eyes, as the
+paganism you fall into when you speak of it!"
+
+He laughed.
+
+"But it is not that I am lovely which made you a lover--until now,"
+she went on. "I have seen men faithful to women unlovely as Hecate. It
+is not that. And I am still as I was, but--"
+
+He looked down on the triple bands of the ampyx that bound her
+gold-powdered hair and said:
+
+"It is you who have grown weary; not I."
+
+She astutely drew back from the ground upon which she had entered. It
+lay in the power of this Gischalan to refuse further protection to her
+out of sheer spite if she made her disaffection too patent.
+
+"O leader of hosts, canst thou be mummer, languishing poet, pettish
+woman and spoiled princeling all in one? No! And I shall love the
+clanking of arms and thy mailed footsteps all the more if thou
+permittest me to look upon irresponsible folly while thou art absent."
+
+"Have thy way. I have mine. Furthermore, I wish to thank thee for the
+companion thou sentest me at breakfast. He who dines alone with her,
+hath his table full. Farewell."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV
+
+THE IMAGE OF JEALOUSY
+
+
+The Maccabee resolved that in spite of his heart-hunger, he must not
+be a frequent visitor to the house of Amaryllis because of the
+imminent risk of confronting the impostor Julian and the danger of
+exposure. Not danger to his life, but danger to his freedom to court
+the beautiful girl, which an unmasking might accomplish. Besides, he
+had made an extraordinary entry into the Greek's house in the
+beginning, and he was not prepared to explain himself even now, if he
+returned.
+
+But his longing to look at her again was stronger than his caution.
+Much had happened since he had left the house of the Greek on the
+evening of his first day in Jerusalem, and he feared that his
+absorption in his own plans might result in the loss of her soon or
+late. So when the evening of the second week to a day of his sojourn
+in the city came round, unable to endure longer, he turned his steps
+with considerable apprehension toward the house of Amaryllis.
+
+When he was led across the threshold of the Greek's hall, he saw
+Amaryllis sitting in her exedra, her slim white arms crossed back of
+her head, her tiring-woman, summoned for a casual attention, busy with
+a parted ribbon on the sandal of the lady's foot.
+
+The Maccabee awaited her invitation. Her eyes flashed a sudden
+pleasure when she looked up and saw him.
+
+"Enter," she said, with an unwonted lightness in her voice that was
+usually low and grave; "and be welcome."
+
+He came to the place she indicated at her side and sat. In silence he
+waited until the tiring-woman had finished her service and departed.
+Then it was Amaryllis who spoke.
+
+"You left us abruptly on occasion of your first visit."
+
+"The siege was of greater interest to you than I was. When I
+discovered the cause of the disturbance, you would have failed to
+remember me."
+
+"Yet I recall you readily after many days."
+
+"The city is in disorder; conventions can not always be observed in
+war-time. I returned when I could."
+
+"Our interest in you as our guest has not abated. Philadelphus is
+ready to see you, at any time," she said, watching his face.
+
+"And in time of war," he answered composedly, "we intend many things
+in the first place which we do not carry out in the second. I do not
+care to see--Philadelphus."
+
+She lifted her brows. He answered the implied question.
+
+"I was a familiar to this Philadelphus; he is young and boastful,
+talkative as a woman. If he means to be king, as those who knew him in
+Ephesus were given to believe, it is not unnatural that some of us,
+without fortune or tie to keep us home, should follow him--as
+parasites, if you will--to share in the largess which he will surely
+give his friends if he succeeds."
+
+He did not face her when he made this speech, and he did not observe
+the amusement that crept into her eyes. He could not sense his own
+greatness of presence sufficiently to know that his claim to be a
+parasite upon so incapable a creature as the false Philadelphus would
+awaken doubt in the mind of an intelligent woman like Amaryllis.
+
+He felt that he was not covering his tracks well, and put his
+ingenuity to a test.
+
+"The boon-craver therefore should not sit like a dog, begging crumbs,
+till the table is laid. My hunger would appear as competition, if I
+showed it him, while he is yet unfed. Of a truth, I would not have him
+know I am here."
+
+"I will keep thy secret," she promised, smiling.
+
+"I thank you," he said gravely. "I came, on this occasion, to ask
+after the young woman, whose name I have not learned--her whom you
+have sheltered."
+
+Amaryllis' smiling eyes darkened suddenly.
+
+"Pouf!" she said. "I had begun to hope that you had come to see me!"
+
+"I had not John's permission," he objected.
+
+"Have you Philadelphus' permission to see her?"
+
+He looked his perplexity.
+
+"What," she exclaimed, "has she not laid her claim before you yet?"
+
+The Maccabee shook his head.
+
+"Know, then, that this pretty nameless creature claims to be the wife
+of this same Philadelphus."
+
+He sat up in his earnestness.
+
+"What!" he cried.
+
+"Even so! Insists upon it in the face of the lady princess' proofs and
+Philadelphus' denial!"
+
+The Maccabee's brows dropped while he gazed down at the Greek.
+
+Julian of Ephesus was then the husband that she was to join in
+Jerusalem! Small wonder she had been indignant when he, the Maccabee,
+in the spirit of mischief, had laid a wife to Julian's door and had
+described her as most unprepossessing. And that was why her terror of
+Julian had been so abject! That was why she had flown to him, a
+stranger, rather than be left alone with a husband who, it seemed,
+would be rid of her that he might pursue his ends the better!
+
+"What think you of it!" he exclaimed aloud, but to himself.
+
+"And I never saw in all my life such pretensions of probity!" the
+Greek continued. "She is outraged by any little word that questions
+her virtue; she holds herself aloof from me as if she were not certain
+that I am fit for her companionship; and she flies with fluffed
+feathers and cries of rage in the face of the least compliment that
+comes from any lips--even Philadelphus!"
+
+The Maccabee continued to gaze at the Greek. He did not see the
+woman's search of his face for an assent to her speech. He was
+struggling with a desire to tell her that he was eager to exchange his
+wife for Julian's.
+
+"Perchance she is right," he said instead. "What know we of this
+paganized young Jew? He has been separated from his lady from
+childhood. It is right easy to marry, once we fall into the way."
+
+"No, no! Her claim is hopeless. She confesses it. But she maintains
+the assumption, nevertheless."
+
+"Absolutely? No little sign of lapse among thy handsome servants,
+here?"
+
+"I do not see her when she is with the servants," she said astutely.
+
+"What will you do with her?" he asked.
+
+"She is beautiful, unique, and so eligible to my collection of arts
+and artists under this roof. She shall stay till fate shows its hand
+for all of us."
+
+"You have housed Discord under your roof, then," he said. "Laodice,
+the wife to this Philadelphus, will not be a happy woman; and I--I
+shall not be a happy man. Let me return favor for your favor to me. I
+will take her away."
+
+She laughed, though it seemed that a hard note had entered her voice.
+
+"You will permit me, then, to surmise for myself why you came to
+Jerusalem. You seem to have known this girl before. I shall not ask
+you; in return for that promise that I may conclude what I will."
+
+"If you are too discerning, lady," he answered, while his eyes sought
+down the corridor for a glimpse of the one he had come to see, "you
+are dangerous."
+
+"And what then?"
+
+"I must devise a way to silence you."
+
+She lifted her brows. In that very speech was the portrait of the
+Maccabee that she had come to love through letters.
+
+"There is something familiar in your mood," she said thoughtfully. "It
+seems that I have known you--for many years."
+
+He made no answer. He had said all that he wished to say to this
+woman. She noted his silence and rose.
+
+"I shall send the girl to you."
+
+"Thou art good," he answered and she withdrew.
+
+A moment later Laodice came into the chamber. She was not startled. In
+her innocent soul she did not realize that this was a sign of the
+depth of her love for him. He rose and met her half-way across the
+hall; took her hand and held it while they walked back to the exedra,
+and gazed at her face for evidence that her sojourn in this house had
+been unhappy or otherwise; noted that she had let down her hair and
+braided it; observed every infinitesimal change that can attract only
+the lover's eye.
+
+"Sit," he said, giving her a place beside him. "I came of habit to see
+you. Of habit, I was interrupted. Is there no way that I can talk to
+you without the resentment of some one who flourishes a better right
+to be with you than I can show?"
+
+"Where hast thou been," Laodice asked, "so long?"
+
+"Was it long," he demanded impulsively, "to you?"
+
+"New places, new faces, uncertainty and other things make time seem
+long," she explained hastily.
+
+"Nay, then," he said, "I have been busy. I have been attending to that
+labor I had in mind for Judea, of which we spoke in the hills that
+morning."
+
+Laodice drew in a quick breath. Then some one, if not herself or the
+husband who had denied her, was at work for Judea.
+
+"There is no nation, here, for a king," he went on. "It is a great
+horde that needs organization. It wants a leader. I am ambitious and
+Judea will be the prize to the ablest man. Seest thou mine intent?"
+
+"You--you aspire--" she began and halted, suddenly impressed with the
+complication his announcement had effected.
+
+"Go on," he said.
+
+"You would take Judea?"
+
+"I would."
+
+"But it belongs of descent to the Maccabees!"
+
+"To Philadelphus Maccabaeus, yes; but what is he doing?"
+
+She dropped her head.
+
+"Nothing," she said in a half-whisper.
+
+"No? But let me tell you what I have done already. Three days ago
+Titus took revenge upon Coenopolis for her sortie against Nicanor by
+firing the suburbs. The citizens could not spare water to fight the
+fire, and after futile attempts they gathered up food and treasure and
+fled into Jerusalem. Now, a thousand householders in the streets of
+this oppressed city, with their gods and their goods in their arms,
+made the pillagers of Simon and John laugh aloud. They fell upon these
+wandering, bewildered, treasure-laden people and robbed them as
+readily and as joyously as a husbandman gathers olives in a fat year.
+Oh, it was a merry time for the men of Simon and the men of John! But
+I in my wanderings over the city came upon a party of Bezethans,
+reluctant to surrender their goods for the asking, and they were
+fighting with right good will a body of Idumeans twice their number.
+In fact they fought so well, so unanimously, so silently that I saw
+they lacked the essential part of the fight--the shouting. That I
+supplied. And when they had whipped the Idumeans and had a chance for
+flight before reinforcements came, they obeyed my voice in so far as
+they followed me into a subterranean chamber beneath a burned ruin on
+Zion.
+
+"We were not followed and our hiding-place was not discovered. In
+fact, their resistance was a complete success. Whereupon, they were
+ready to unite and take Jerusalem! No--it was not strange! It is the
+nature of men. I never saw a wine-merchant in Ephesus, who, after
+clearing his shop of brawlers single-handed, was not ready thereupon
+to march upon Rome and besiege Caesar on the Palatine! So it was with
+these Bezethans.
+
+"I, with my voice, expressed the yearnings that they felt in their
+victorious breasts, and plotted for them. After council and
+organization we went forth by night and finding Idumean patrols by the
+score sleepy and inert from overfeeding we robbed them of that which
+was our own. Then we sought out hungry Bezethans and fed them when
+they promised to become of our party. Nothing was more simple! By dawn
+we had a hundred under our ruin, bound to us by oath and the
+enticements of our larder, and hungry only for fight! Will you believe
+me when I boast that I have an army in Jerusalem?"
+
+She heard him with a strange confusion of emotions. In her soul she
+was excited and eager for his success; but here was a strong and
+growing enemy to Philadelphus, who was reluctant to become a king! Her
+impulsive joy in a forceful man struggled with her sense of duty to
+the man she could not love.
+
+"Why do you tell me these things?" she said uneasily. "It is perilous
+for any one to know that you are constructing sedition against these
+ferocious powers in Jerusalem."
+
+"Ah, but you fear for me; therefore you will not betray me. None else
+but those as deeply committed know of it."
+
+He had confided in her, and because of it his ambitions took stealthy
+hold upon her.
+
+"But--but is there no other way to take Jerusalem, except--by
+predatory warfare?" she hesitated.
+
+"No," he laughed. "We are fighting thieves and murderers; they do not
+understand the open field; we must go into the dark to find them."
+
+"Then--then if your soldiers have the good of the city and the love of
+their fellows in their hearts, and if you feed them and shelter
+them--why shall you not succeed?" she asked, speaking slowly as the
+sum of his advantages occurred to her.
+
+He dropped his hand on hers.
+
+"It lacks one thing; if I have discouragement in my soul, it will
+weaken my arm, and so the arm of all my army."
+
+Intuition bade her hesitate to ask for that essential thing; his eyes
+named it to her and she looked away from him quickly that he might not
+see the sudden flush which she could not repress.
+
+"Tell me," she said, "more of that night--"
+
+"That would be recounting the same incident many times. But one thing
+unusual happened; nay, two things. In the middle of the night, after
+we had brought in our second enlistment of patriots, we were feeding
+them and I was giving them instruction. At the entrance, I had posted
+a sentry; none of us believed that any one had seen us take refuge in
+that crypt. Indeed, we were all frank in our congratulations and
+defiant in our security. Suddenly, I saw half of my army scuttle to
+cover; the rest stood transfixed in their tracks. I looked up and
+there before me in the firelight stood a young man, whom I had not, I
+am convinced, brought in with me. He was tall, comely, dressed as I
+have seen the Hindu priests dress in Ephesus, but in garments that
+were fairly radiant for whiteness. But his face gave cause enough to
+make any man lose his tongue. Believe me, when I say he looked as if
+he had seen angels, and had talked with the dead. His eyes gazed
+through us as if we had been thin air. So dreadful they were in their
+unseeing look that every man asked himself what would happen if that
+gaze should light upon him. He stood a moment, walked as soft-footed
+and as swiftly as some shade through our burrow and vanished as he had
+come. In all the time he tarried, he made not one sound!"
+
+Laodice was looking at him with awed, but understanding eyes.
+
+"It was Seraiah," she said in a low voice. "He entered this place on a
+day last week. All the city is afraid of him."
+
+"So my soldiers told me afterward, between chattering teeth. He almost
+damped our patriotism. We uttered our bombast, sealed our vows and
+made our sorties, thereafter, every man of us, with our chins over our
+shoulders! Spare me Seraiah! He has too much influence!"
+
+"Is he a madman?" she asked.
+
+"Or else a supernatural man. Would I could manage men by the fall of
+my foot, as he does. I should have Jerusalem's fealty by to-morrow
+night. But it was near early morning that the other incident occurred.
+That was of another nature. We stumbled upon a pair huddled in the
+shadow of a building. We stumbled upon many figures in shadows, but
+one of these murmured a name that I heard once in the hills hereabout,
+and I had profited by that name, so I halted. It was an old man,
+starved and weary and ill; with him was a gray ghost of a creature
+with long white hair, that seemed to be struck with terror the instant
+it heard my voice. At first I thought it was a withered old woman, but
+it proved to be a man--somehow seeming young in spite of the
+snow-white hair and wasted frame. I had them taken up, the gray ghost
+resisting mightily, and carried to my burrow where they now lie. They
+eat; they take up space; they add nothing to my cause. But I can not
+turn them out. The old man disarms me by that name."
+
+He looked down at her with softening eyes.
+
+"And the shepherd held thy hand?" he said softly. She turned upon him
+in astonishment. How much of joy and surprise and hope he could bring
+in a single visit, she thought. Now, behold he had met that same
+delightsome child that had passed like a dash of sunlight across her
+dark day.
+
+"Did you meet the shepherd of Pella?" she asked. Instant deduction
+supplied her the name that had moved him to compassion. "And did he
+serve you in the name of his Prophet?" she whispered.
+
+"He saved my life in the name of his Christ, but was tender of me in
+thy name," he replied.
+
+"His is a sweet apostasy," she ventured bravely, "if it be his
+apostasy that made him kind. And I--I owe him much, that he repaired
+that for which I feel at fault."
+
+He smiled at her and stroked her hand once, soothingly.
+
+"Let us not remember blames or injury. It damages my happiness. But of
+this apostasy that the shepherd preached me. I passed the stones of
+the Palace of Antipas to-day, a ruin, black and shapeless. Thought I,
+where is the majesty of order and the beauty of strength that was this
+place? And then," his voice fell to a whisper, "beshrew the boy's
+tattle, I said, the footprints of his Prophet before the throne of
+Herod are erased."
+
+"Even then," she whispered when he paused, "you do not forget!"
+
+"No! Why, these streets, that should ring for me with the footsteps of
+all the great from the days of David, are marked by the passage of
+that Prophet. I might forget that Felix and Florus and Gessius were
+legates in that Roman residence, but I do not fail to remember that
+they took that Prophet before Pilate there. By my soul, the street
+that leads north hath become the way of the Cross, and there are three
+crosses for me on the Hill of the Skull!"
+
+She looked at him gravely and with alarm. What was it in this history
+of the Nazarene which won aristocrats and shepherds alike? She would
+see from this man if there were indeed any truth in the story that
+Philadelphus had told her.
+
+"I have heard," she began, faltering, "I have heard that--" She
+stopped. Her tongue would not shape the story. But after a glance at
+her, he understood.
+
+"And thou hast heard it, also?" he whispered. "Thou believest it?"
+
+It seemed that to acknowledge her fear that the King had come and gone
+would establish the fact.
+
+"No!" she cried.
+
+"It is enough," he said nervously. "We do not well to talk of it. I
+came for another reason. Tell me; hast thou other shelter than this
+house?"
+
+"No," she answered.
+
+"Hast thou talked with this Philadelphus, here?" he asked after
+silence.
+
+She assented with averted face.
+
+"Is he that one who was with me in the hills?" he persisted.
+
+Again she assented, with surprise.
+
+His hands clenched and for a moment he struggled with his rage.
+
+"This house is no place for you!" he declared at last.
+
+"What manner of house is this?" she asked pathetically. "It is so
+strange!"
+
+"Why did you come here?"
+
+"Because there was nowhere else to go."
+
+He was silent.
+
+"Who is this Amaryllis?" she asked.
+
+"John's mistress."
+
+She shrank away from him and looked at him with horror-stricken eyes.
+
+"Hast thou not yet seen him, who buys thy bread and meat and insures
+this safe roof?" he persisted.
+
+"And--and I eat bread--bought--bought by--" she stammered.
+
+"Even so!"
+
+Her hands dropped at her sides.
+
+"Are the good all dead?" she said.
+
+"In Jerusalem, yes; for Virtue gets hungry, at times."
+
+She had risen and moved away from him, but he followed her with
+interested eyes.
+
+"Then--then--" she began, hesitating under a rush of convictions.
+"That is why--why I can not--why he--he--"
+
+He knew she spoke of Philadelphus.
+
+"Go on," he said.
+
+"Why I can not live in safety near him!"
+
+He, too, arose. Until that moment it had not occurred to him that
+Julian of Ephesus, as repugnant to her as she had shown him ever to
+be, might prove a peril to her life as he had been to the Maccabee who
+had stood in his way.
+
+"What has he said to you?" he demanded fiercely. "How do you live,
+here in this house?"
+
+She threw up her head, seeing another meaning in his question.
+
+"Shut in! Locked!" she said between her teeth.
+
+"But even then you are not safe!"
+
+She drew back hastily and looked at him with alarm. What did he mean?
+
+He was beside her.
+
+"Tell me, in truth, who you are," he said tenderly, "and I shall
+reveal myself."
+
+Then, indeed, Amaryllis had told him her claim and had convinced him
+that it was fraudulent.
+
+"And she told you?" she said wearily.
+
+"Tell me," he insisted. "I have truly a revelation worth hearing!"
+
+She made no answer.
+
+"You owe it me," he added presently. "Behold what damaging things I
+have intrusted to you. You can ruin me by the droop of an eyelash."
+
+"I should have told you at first who I am," she said finally. "I will
+not betray what you told me in ignorance--"
+
+"But Amaryllis told me this before you came."
+
+"Nevertheless, tell me no more; if I must be a partizan, I shall be a
+partizan to my husband."
+
+"There is nothing for you here, clinging to this man," he continued
+persuasively. "This woman brought him a great dowry. She is ambitious
+and therefore jealous. You will win nothing but mistreatment, and
+worse, if you stay here for him."
+
+"It is my place," she said.
+
+After a moment's helpless silence, he demanded bitterly:
+
+"Dost thou love that man?"
+
+The truth leaped to her lips with such wilful force that he read the
+reply on her face, though her eyes were down and by intense resolution
+she restrained the denial. He was close to her, speaking quickly under
+the pressure of his earnestness.
+
+"I have sacrificed name, birthright, fortune--even honor--that I might
+be free to love thee!"
+
+She drew back from him hurriedly, afraid that his very insistence
+would destroy her fortitude.
+
+"Let me not have bankrupted myself for a trust thou wilt not give!"
+
+"It--it is not mine to give," she stammered.
+
+"Otherwise--otherwise--" he prompted, leaning near her. But she put
+him back from her, desperately.
+
+"Go, go!" she whispered. "I hear--I hear Philadelphus!"
+
+He turned from her obediently.
+
+"It is not my last hope," he said to himself. "Neither has she
+suffered her last perplexity in this house. I shall come again."
+
+He passed out into the streets of Jerusalem.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVI
+
+THE SPREAD NET
+
+
+Beginning with the moment that the Maccabee first entered her hall,
+Amaryllis struggled with a perplexity. Certain discrepancies in the
+hastily concocted story which that stern compelling stranger who had
+called himself Hesper of Ephesus had told had started into life a
+doubt so feeble that it was little more than a sensation.
+
+Love and its signs had been a lifelong study to her; she knew its
+stubbornness; she was wise in the judgment of human nature to know
+that love in this stranger was no light thing to be dislodged. And to
+finish the sum of her perplexities, she felt in her own heart the
+kindling of a sorrowful longing to be preferred by a spirit strong,
+forceful and magnetic as was that of the man who had called himself
+Hesper of Ephesus.
+
+With the egotism of the courtezan she summarized her charms. Even
+there were spirits in that fleshly land of Judea to whom the delicate
+refinement of her beauty, the reserve of her bearing and the power of
+her mentality had appealed more strongly than a mere opulence of
+physical attraction. She had her ambitions; not the least of these was
+to be loved by an understanding nature. The greater the congeniality,
+the greater the attraction, she argued; but behold, was this iron
+Hesper, the man of all force, to be dashed and shaken by the rich
+loveliness of Laodice, who was simply a woman?
+
+"Such attachments do not last," she argued hopefully. "Such
+attachments make unfaithful husbands. They are monotonous and
+wearisome. She is but a mirror giving back the blaze of the sun,
+one-surfaced and blinding. It is the many lights of the diamond that
+make it charming."
+
+She had arrived at no definite resolution when she met Laodice in the
+hall that led to the quarters of the artists, as the Greek went that
+way for her day's observation of their work.
+
+"What an unrefreshed face!" the Greek said softly, as the light from
+the cancelli showed the weariness and distress that had begun to make
+inroads on the animation of the girl's beauty. "No woman who would
+preserve her loveliness should let her cares trouble her dreams."
+
+"How am I to do that?" Laodice asked with a flare of scorn.
+
+"Do I perceive in that a desire for advice or an explanation of a
+situation?"
+
+"Both."
+
+Amaryllis smiled thoughtfully at the girl, while the light of sudden
+intent appeared on her face.
+
+"You are unhappy, my dear, through your prejudices," she began. "We
+call convictions prejudices when they are other than our own beliefs.
+By that sign, you shall know that I am going to take issue with you. I
+am, perhaps, the ideal of that which you would not be. But no man will
+say that my lot is not enviable."
+
+"Are you happy?" Laodice asked in a low voice.
+
+"Are you?" the Greek returned. "No," she went on after a pause. "A
+woman has the less happy part in life, though the greater one, if she
+will permit herself to make it great. It was not her purpose on earth
+to be happy, but to make happy."
+
+"You take issue with Philadelphus in that," Laodice interposed. "It is
+his preachment to me that all that is expected of all mankind is to be
+happy."
+
+"He is a man, arguing from the man's view. It is inevitable law that
+one must be gladder than another. Woman has the greater capacity for
+suffering, hence her feeling for the suffering of others is the
+quicker to respond. And some creature of the gods must be
+compassionate, else creation long since had perished from the earth."
+
+Laodice made no answer. This was new philosophy to her, who had been
+taught only to aspire at great sacrifice as long as God gave her
+strength. She could not know that this strange and purposeful creed
+might some day appeal to her beyond her strength.
+
+"Yet," Amaryllis added presently in a brighter tone, "there is much
+that is sweet in the life of a woman."
+
+Laodice played with the tassels of her girdle and did not look up.
+What was all this to lead to?
+
+"I have spoken to Philadelphus about you," the Greek continued. "He
+has no doubt of this woman who hath established her claim to his name
+by proofs but without the manner of the wife he expected. Yet he can
+not turn her out. The siege hath put an end to your efforts in your
+own behalf and it is time to face your condition and make the best of
+it. John feels restive; I dare not ask too much of him. My household
+was already full, before you came."
+
+Laodice was looking at her, now with enlightenment in her face.
+
+"Philadelphus," Amaryllis continued, following up her advantage, "is
+nothing more than a man and you are very lovely."
+
+"All this," Laodice said, rousing, "is to persuade me to--"
+
+"There are two standards for women," the Greek interposed before
+Laodice finished her indignant sentence. "Yours and another's. As
+between yours, who would have love from him whom you have married, and
+hers, who hath love from him whom she hath not married, there is only
+the difference of a formula. Between her condition and yours, she is
+the freer; between her soul and yours, she is the more willingly
+faithful. If woman be born to a purpose, she fulfils it; if not she
+hath not consecrated her life to a mistake. You overrate the
+importance of marriage. It is your whole purpose to preserve yourself
+for a ceremony. It is too much pains for too trivial an end. At least,
+there are many things which are farther reaching and less selfish in
+intent. And who, by the way, holds the longest claim on history? Your
+kind or this other? The world does not perpetuate in its chronicles
+the continence of women; it is too small, too personal, too common to
+be noted. Cleopatra were lost among the horde of forgotten sovereigns,
+had she wedded duly and scorned Mark Antony; Aspasia would have been
+buried in a gynaeconitis had she wedded Pericles, and Sappho--but the
+list is too long; I will not bury you in testimony."
+
+Laodice raised her head.
+
+"You reason well," she said. "It never occurred to me how wickedness
+could justify itself by reason. But I observe now how serviceable a
+thing it is. It seems that you can reason away any truth, any fact,
+any ideal. Perhaps you can banish God by reason, or defend crime by
+reason; reason, I shall not be surprised to learn, can make all things
+possible or impossible. But--does reason hush that strange speaking
+voice in you, which we Jews call conscience? Tell me; have you
+reasoned till it ceases to rebuke you?"
+
+"Ah, how hard you are to accommodate," Amaryllis smiled. "I mean to
+show you how you can abide here. I can ask no more of John.
+Philadelphus alone is master of your fate. I have not sought to change
+you before I sought to change Philadelphus. He will not change so long
+as you are beautiful. This is life, my dear. You may as well prepare
+for it now."
+
+Laodice gazed with wide, terrorized eyes at the Greek. She saw force
+gathering against her. Amaryllis shaped her device to its end.
+
+"And if you do not accept this shelter," she concluded, "what else is
+there for you?"
+
+Hesper, many times her refuge, rose before the hard-pressed girl.
+
+"There is another in Jerusalem who will help me," she declared.
+
+"And that one?" Amaryllis asked coolly.
+
+"Is he who calls himself Hesper, the Ephesian," Laodice answered.
+
+"Why should you trust him?" the Greek asked pointedly.
+
+"He--when Philadelphus--you remember that Philadelphus told you what
+happened--"
+
+"That he tossed a coin with a wayfarer in the hills for you?" the
+Greek asked.
+
+Laodice dropped her head painfully.
+
+"This Hesper let me go then, and afterward--"
+
+"He has repented of that by this time. It is not safe to try him a
+second time. Besides, if you must risk yourself to the protection of
+men, why turn from him whom you call your husband for this stranger?"
+
+The question was deft and telling. Laodice started with the suddenness
+of the accusation embodied in it. And while she stood, wrestling with
+the intolerable alternative, the Greek smiled at her and went her way.
+
+Laodice stood where Amaryllis had left her, at times motionless with
+helplessness, at others struck with panic. On no occasion did
+homelessness in the war-ridden city of Jerusalem appear half so
+terrible as shelter under the roof of that hateful house.
+
+The little golden-haired girl from the chamber of artists beyond
+skipped by her.
+
+"Hast seen Demetrius?" she called back as she passed. "Demetrius, the
+athlete, stupid!"
+
+Laodice turned away from her.
+
+"Nay, then," the girl declared; "if I have insulted you let me heal
+over the wound with the best jest, yet! John hath written a sonnet on
+Philadelphus' wife and our Lady Amaryllis is truing his meter for him.
+Ha! Gods! What a place this is for a child to be brought up! I would
+not give a denarius for my morals when I am grown. There's Demetrius!
+Now for a laugh!"
+
+She was gone.
+
+Where was that ancient rigor of atmosphere in which she had been
+reared? thought Laodice. Had it existed only in the shut house of
+Costobarus? Was all the world wicked except that which was confined
+within the four walls of her father's house? Could she survive long in
+this unanimously bad environment? But she remembered Joseph of Pella,
+the shepherd; even then his wholesomeness was not without its canker.
+He was a Christian!
+
+Philadelphus was at her side.
+
+She flinched from him and would have fled, but he stopped her with a
+sign.
+
+"My lady objects to your presence in this house," he said. "You have
+not made it worth my while to insist on your shelter here."
+
+"Your lady," she said hotly, "is two-fold evilly engaged, then. She
+has time to ruin you, while she furnishes John with all the
+inspiration he would have for sonnets."
+
+"So she refrains from furnishing John with my two hundred talents, I
+shall not quarrel with her. You have your own difficulties to adjust,
+and mine, only in so far as they concern you."
+
+His voice had lost none of its smoothness, but it had become hard and
+purposeful.
+
+"I have come to that point, Philadelphus, where my difficulties and
+not yours concern me," she replied. "I had nothing to give you but my
+good will. You have outraged even that. Hereafter, no tie binds us."
+
+"No? You cast off our ties as lightly as you assumed them. With a word
+you announce me wedded to you; with another you speak our divorcement.
+And I, poor clod, suffer it? The first, yes; but the last, no. You
+see, I have fallen in love with you."
+
+She turned her clear eyes away from him and waited calmly till she
+could escape.
+
+"You have spent your greatest argument in persuading me to be a king.
+Kings, lady, are essentially tyrants, in these bad days. Wherefore, if
+I am to be one, I shall not fail to be the other. And you--ah, you!
+Will you endure the oppressor that you made?"
+
+There was enough that was different in his manner and his words for
+her to believe that something worthy of attention was to follow. She
+looked at him, now.
+
+"This roof, since the alienation of John to my wife, is mine empire.
+Within it, I am despot. From its lady mistress, the Greek, to the
+meanest slave, I have homage and subjection. Even thou wilt be
+submissive to me--for having lost one wife through indulgence, I shall
+be most tyrannical to the one yet in my power!"
+
+She drew herself up in splendid defiance.
+
+"I have not submitted!" she said. "I will not submit!"
+
+"No? Nothing stands in your way now but yourself. Your supplanter hath
+removed herself. And I shall make your submission easy."
+
+She turned from him and would have hurried back into the Greek's
+andronitis, but he put himself in her way.
+
+"Listen!" he said, suddenly lifting his hand.
+
+In the stillness which she finally was able to observe over the
+tumultuous beating of her enraged heart, a profound moan of great
+volume as from immense but remote struggle came into the corridor.
+Through it at times cut a sharp accession of sound, as if violence
+heightened at intervals, and steadily over it pulsated the throb of
+tireless siege-engines. It was the groan of the City of Delight in
+mortal anguish.
+
+"This," he said in a soft voice touching his breast, "or that,"
+motioning toward the dying city. "Choose. And by midnight!"
+
+While she stood, gazing at him transfixed with the horror of her
+predicament, there was the sweeping of garments, the soft tinkle of
+pendants as they struck together, and Salome, the actress, was beside
+the pair. Close at hand was Amaryllis. The Greek showed for the first
+time discomfiture and an inability to rise to the demand of the
+occasion. The glance she shot at Laodice was full of cold anger that
+she had permitted herself to be surprised in company with
+Philadelphus.
+
+Philadelphus drew back a step, but made no further movement toward
+withdrawing. Laodice would have retreated, but the actress stood in
+her way. With a motion full of stately indignation, Salome turned to
+Amaryllis.
+
+"It so occurs, madam, that I can point out to you the disease which
+saps my husband's ambition. You observe that he is diverted now, as
+all men are diverted six weeks after marriage--by another woman. I am
+not a jealous woman. I am only concerned for his welfare and the
+welfare of the city of our fathers. For it is not himself that his
+luxurious indolence affects; but all the unhappy city which is
+suffering while he is able to help it. He must be saved. And I shall
+go with him out of this house into want and peril, but he shall be
+saved."
+
+Laodice said nothing. She stood drawn up intensely; her brows knitted;
+her teeth on her lip; her insulted pride and growing resolution
+effecting a certain magnificence in her pose.
+
+"I can find her another house," Amaryllis said.
+
+"Also my husband can find it," the woman broke in. "Let the streets do
+their will with the woman of the streets. Bread and shelter are too
+precious to waste on the iniquitous this hour."
+
+Amaryllis turned to Laodice.
+
+"What wilt thou do?" she asked.
+
+"The streets can offer me no more insult than is offered me in this
+house," she said slowly.
+
+It was in her mind that there were certainly unprotected gates at
+which she could get out of the city and return to Ascalon.
+
+At least the peril for her in this house was already too imminent for
+her to remain longer. She continued to Amaryllis:
+
+"Lady, you have been kind to me--in your way. You have been so in the
+face of your doubt that I am what I claim to be. How happy, then, you
+would have made my lot had I not been supplanted and denied! For all
+this I thank you. Mine would be a poor gratitude if I stay to make you
+regret your generosity. Wherefore I will go."
+
+She slipped past the three and entered her room. Before Amaryllis
+could gather resolution to protest, she was out again, clothed in
+mantle and vitta and, walking swiftly, disappeared into the vestibule.
+As they sat in the darkening hall, the three heard the doors close
+behind her.
+
+"She will return," said Philadelphus coolly, moving away.
+
+Gathering her robes about her, Salome swept out of the corridor and
+away. Amaryllis stood alone.
+
+Somewhere out in the city was Hesper the Ephesian. Amaryllis knew that
+Laodice would not return.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVII
+
+THE TANGLED WEB
+
+
+Meanwhile Jerusalem was in the fury of barbarous warfare. At this
+ravine and that debouching upon Golgotha, the Vale of Hinnom and the
+Valley of Tophet, whole legions of besiegers were stationed. Along the
+walls the men of Simon and the men of John tramped in armor. From the
+various gates furious sorties were made by swarms of unorganized Jews
+who fell upon the Romans unused to frantic warfare, and slaughtered,
+set fire to engines, destroyed banks and threw down fortifications and
+retreated within the gates before the demoralized Romans could rally.
+
+Catapult and ballista upon the eminences outside the walls kept up an
+unceasing rain of enormous stones which whistled and screamed in the
+air and shook Jerusalem to its foundations. The reverberating boom and
+the tremor of earth were varied from time to time by the splintering
+crash of houses crushing and the increase of uproar, as scores of
+luckless inhabitants went down under the falling rock. Giant cranes
+with huge, ludicrous awkward arms, heaved up pots of burning pitch and
+oil and flung them ponderously into the city to do whatever horror of
+fire and torture had not been done by the engines. Hourly the rattle
+of small stones increased, merely to attract the attention of the
+citizens to an activity to which they were so accustomed that it was
+almost unnoticed. At times citizens and soldiers rushed upon a
+threatened gate or segment of the wall and lent strength to keep the
+Romans out; at other times the defenses were forsaken while the
+besieged fell upon one another. Back from the broad summit of Olivet,
+which was the mountain of peace, the echoes gave all day long the
+shudder of the struggling city.
+
+The sun daily grew more heated; the cisterns and pools within the city
+began to shrink so rapidly that the inhabitants feared that the enemy
+had come at the source of the waters of Jerusalem and had cut them
+off. Hundreds of the wounded were allowed to die, simply as a defense
+of the wells and store-houses. Burial became too gigantic a labor, and
+John and Simon ordered the bodies thrown over the walls to prevent
+pestilence.
+
+Titus riding around the city on a day came upon a heap of this outcast
+dead and turned suddenly white. He rode back to his camp and within
+the hour there approached the walls under a flag of truce an imposing
+Jew of middle-age, with a superb beard and a veritable mantle of rich
+black hair escaping from his turban and falling heavy with life and
+strength upon a pair of great shoulders. He was simply dressed, but
+his stately carriage and splendid presence made a kingly garment out
+of his white gown.
+
+Those upon the wall knew him and though they were obliged to respect
+the banner under which he approached, they gnashed their teeth and
+greeted him with epithets, poisonous with hate. He was Flavius
+Josephus, one time patriot and enemy of Rome, but now secure under
+Titus' patronage, abettor of his patron against his fellow-countrymen.
+
+The Maccabee, among the fighting-men on the wall, saw his approach and
+discreetly stepped behind a soldier that he might not be singled out
+as a familiar toward which the approaching mediator would logically
+direct his appeal. He had no desire to be addressed by his name before
+this precarious mob already mad with rage at a turncoat.
+
+And thus concealed the Maccabee heard Josephus appeal to the Jews with
+apparent sincerity and affection, promise amnesty, protection and
+justice in his patron's name; heard his overtures greeted with fury
+and finally saw the Jews swarm over the walls and drive him to fly for
+his life up Gareb to the camp of Titus.
+
+It was not the first incident he had seen which showed him his own
+fate if it became known that he intended to treat with Rome. He put
+aside his calculations in that direction as a detail not yet in order,
+and turned to the organization of his army. Here again he met
+obstacle.
+
+Among his council of Bezethans he found an enthusiasm for some
+intangible purpose, objection to his own plans and a certain hauteur
+that he could not understand.
+
+"What is it you hope for, brethren?" he asked one night as he stood in
+the gloom of the crypt under the ruin with fifty of his ablest
+thinkers and soldiers about him.
+
+"The days of Samuel before Israel cursed itself with a king," one man
+declared. The others were suddenly silent.
+
+"Those days will not come to you," he answered patiently. "You must
+fight for them."
+
+"We will fight."
+
+"Good! Let us unite and I will lead you," the Maccabee offered.
+
+"But after you have led us, perhaps to victory, then what?" they asked
+pointedly.
+
+The Maccabee saw that they were sounding him for his ambitions, and
+discreetly effaced them.
+
+"Do with me what you will; or if you doubt me, choose a leader among
+yourselves."
+
+They shook their heads.
+
+"Then enlist under Simon and John and fight with them," he cried,
+losing patience.
+
+Murmurs and angry looks greeted this suggestion, and the Maccabee put
+out his hands toward them hopelessly.
+
+"Then what will you do?" he asked.
+
+"It shall be shown us," they replied; and with this answer, with his
+organization yet uneffected, his plans more than ever chaotic, the
+Maccabee began another day. Shrewd and resourceful as he believed
+himself to be, he beheld plan after plan reveal its inefficiency.
+Forced by some act of the city to abandon one idea, the next that
+followed found a new intractability. It seemed that there were no two
+heads in Jerusalem of a similar thought. Whoever was not demoralized
+by panic was fatally stubborn or mad. The single purpose that seemed
+to prevail was to hold out against reason.
+
+Finally he determined to pick the most rational of his men and shape
+an army that would be distinctly Jewish and enviable. Nothing Roman
+should mar its organization. He would have again the six hundred
+Gibborim of David, and after he had formed them into a body he would
+trust to the existing circumstances to direct him how to proceed to
+the assistance of Jerusalem with them. He should be the sole captain,
+the sole authority, the single commander of them all. He would not
+have an unwieldy army, but one perfectly devoted. He would lead by his
+own genius, attract and command by his own personality. With six
+hundred absolutely subject to his will, trained in endurance and
+steadfastness, he could achieve more surely than with an undisciplined
+horde which first of all must be fed.
+
+Throughout those days of predatory warfare he made careful selection
+of material for his army. As yet, while famine had not reduced
+Jerusalem to a skeleton, he could select for bodily strength and
+mental balance. He worked swiftly, sparing his men daily to the
+defense of the city against the Roman and daily sacrificing precious
+numbers of them to the pit of the dead just over the wall.
+
+They were weary days--days of increasing storm and multiplying
+calamity. Famine in some quarters of the city reached appalling
+proportions. Insurrections in these regions were so vigorously
+suppressed that the victims chose to starve and live rather than to
+revolt and perish. Pestilence broke out among the inhabitants near the
+eastern wall, against the other side of which the dead had been cast
+by hundreds; and a general flight from the city was stopped in full
+flood by the spectacle of some scores of unfortunates crucified by the
+Roman soldiers and set up in sight of the walls.
+
+Simon and John had a disastrous quarrel and during the interval, when
+the sentries and the fighting-men were killing each other, the Romans
+possessed the first fortification around Jerusalem, the Wall of
+Agrippa. The following day Titus pitched his camp within the limits of
+the Holy City, upon the site of Sennacherib's Assyrian bivouac.
+
+At sight of this signal advance, tumult broke out afresh in the city
+and for days Titus lay calmly by, merely harassing the Jews while he
+watched Jerusalem weaken itself by internal combat. The Maccabee,
+steadily training his picked Gibborim, saw these lulls as signs that
+Titus was still in the hope that the city would submit to occupation
+and spare him the repugnant task of slaughtering half a nation. In his
+soul he knew that at no time would Titus be unwilling to receive the
+voluntary capitulation of the city.
+
+So, composed and intent through struggle and terror, he continued to
+prepare for the day when an organized army could take the unhappy
+inhabitants out of the bloody hands of the two factionists, Simon and
+John.
+
+During one of the casual attacks on the Second Wall, a lean,
+lash-scarred maniac that had not ceased to cry night or day for seven
+years, "Woe unto Jerusalem!" mounted the Old Second Wall, and there
+pointed to his breast and added, "Woe unto me also!" At that instant a
+great stone struck him and tumbling with it to the ground, he was
+crushed into the earth and left so buried for all time.
+
+With the hushing of that embodiment of doom, silence fell upon the
+city and after that, panic; and during that Titus heaved his four
+legions against the Second Wall and took it. Simon was seized with
+frenzy, and with a body of crazed Idumeans rushed out upon the banks
+of the Romans and in one hour's time overthrew the army's work of days
+and so thoroughly set back the advance of the besieger that Titus
+resolved that no more insane sorties should be made from the gates.
+
+He retired to his camp and in a short time soldiers appeared with
+tape, stakes, sledges and spades and laid out an immense circle, all
+but compassing the great city of Jerusalem.
+
+The Maccabee saw all this. He stood on the wall above the roar and
+frenzy and looked across bleached stretches of sunny, rocky earth
+toward the orderly ranks of soldiers, the simple business, the
+tranquil speed of Rome making war, and understood that peaceful
+despatch as deadly.
+
+He saw the young general ride down to this circle, dismount and,
+catching a spade from the nearest legionary, drive it into the earth.
+When he tossed out the first clay, each of the men in the visible
+segment of that great cordon struck his implement into the ground. And
+even as the Maccabee watched, he saw grow up under his eyes a wall!
+
+He understood. Titus was walling against a wall; turning upon the Jews
+that same thing which they had reared against him. As the Maccabee
+stood gazing transfixed at this grim work, he heard beside him an old
+voice say, with terrible conviction:
+
+"_O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest
+them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy
+children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her
+wings, and ye would not!... For the days shall come upon thee, that
+thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round,
+and keep thee in on every side, and shall lay thee even with the
+ground, and thy children within thee; and they shall not leave in thee
+one stone upon another; because thou knewest not the time of thy
+visitation._"
+
+The Maccabee, shaken with the culmination of Rome's resolution and
+afraid in spite of himself, whirled angrily upon that voice speaking
+doom at his side. There in the old ragged tunic bound about him with
+rope, stood the old man he had rescued and had sheltered persistently
+for many days.
+
+The old man faced the young man's rage with supernatural composure and
+strength. With clenched hands, the Maccabee stood away from him and
+felt that he threatened with his fists a hoary citadel that armies had
+beaten themselves against in vain.
+
+The Maccabee did not speak to his old pensioner. He felt the futility
+of words against this thing which seemed to be a revelation, denying
+absolutely all of his ambitions. He dropped from his position and,
+pushing his way through the distress upon the city, turned toward the
+house of Amaryllis. It was a climacteric hour, when men should look
+well to the protection of all that was near and dear to them.
+
+When he was gone a strange, bent figure with long white hair and a
+gray distorted face came from the shadow of one of the towers and
+plucked the old Christian's tunic. The Christian turned and seeing who
+stood beside him said with intense surety in his tones:
+
+"It is proven. Accept the Lord Jesus while it is time, my son, for
+behold the hour of the last day of this city is fulfilled!"
+
+The apparition lifted a palsied hand on which the skin was yet fair
+and young and pointed after the Maccabee, losing himself in the
+groaning mass in the city.
+
+"If I believe, I must tell him!" he said.
+
+"Whatever thou hast done against that man must be amended," the
+Christian declared.
+
+The palsied figure shrank and wringing his hands about each other said
+in a whisper that sounded like wind among dried leaves:
+
+"I, who saw the candor of perfect trust in his eyes, once, I can not
+behold their reproach--I, who love him, and sold him--for a handful of
+gold!"
+
+The old Christian laid his hand on the other's arm.
+
+"Another Judas?" he said. The apparition made no answer.
+
+"Nay, then; tell it me," the Christian urged. But the other shrank
+away from him, while distrust collected in his eyes.
+
+"I fear thee; the evil man fears the good one, even more than the good
+man fears the evil one. I will not tell thee."
+
+"But thou hast thy bread from this Hesper; thou hast thy shelter from
+him. He will not injure thee."
+
+"Injure me! Not with his hands, perhaps. But he would look at me, he
+would kill me with his eyes! Thou canst not dream what evil I have
+done him!"
+
+The old Christian looked at him for a time, but with the hopefulness
+of the spiritually confident.
+
+"Christ spare thee, till thou hast the strength to do right!" he
+exclaimed. But the palsied man covered his face with his hands and
+groaned. The old Christian took him by the arm and led him down from
+the wall and back to the cavern under the ruins.
+
+"In thy good time, O Lord," he said to himself, beginning with that
+incident a ministry that should not end.
+
+It was dark when the Maccabee came down into the ravine in which the
+Greek's house was builded. In the shadow the house cast before it he
+saw some one pass the sentry lines. The soldiers looked after that
+figure. Presently, emerging into the lesser darkness of the open
+streets, it proved to be a woman. The Maccabee stopped. By the
+movements, now hurried, now slow, he believed that the night was full
+of apprehension for this unknown faring into the disordered city. She
+was coming in his direction. He stepped into shadow to see who would
+come forth from shelter at such an hour.
+
+The next instant she hurried by his hiding-place and the Maccabee saw
+with amazement that it was the girl he loved. He sprang out to speak
+to her, but the sound of his footsteps frightened her and she ran.
+
+The whole hilly foreground of Jerusalem was lifted like a black and
+impending cloud over her, a-throb with violence and strife. Here and
+there were lights on the bosom of the looming blackness, but they only
+emphasized the darkness pressing on the outskirts of the radiance.
+Every area way and alley had its sound. The air was full of footsteps;
+behind her a voice called to her. She dashed by yawning darkness that
+was an open alley, hurried toward lights, halted precipitately at
+signals of danger and veered aside at unexpected sounds. Once she
+stumbled upon the body of a sleeper who had come down into the
+darkness of the ravine to pass the night. At her suppressed cry the
+Maccabee sprang forward, but she caught herself and ran faster.
+
+He ceased then to attempt to stop her. Curiosity to know what brought
+her out into danger at night impelled him to follow near enough to
+protect her, but unsuspected until she had revealed her mission to
+him.
+
+A hungry dog, probably the last one to escape the execution which had
+been meted out to all useless consumers of food, barked at her heels
+and brought her up sharply.
+
+The beast in his siege of her circled in the dark around near enough
+to the Maccabee hidden in the darkness for him to deliver a vindictive
+kick in the staring ribs of the brute. When the howl of the surprised
+dog faded up the black ravine, Laodice ran on. The Maccabee, silently
+pursuing, heard with a contracting heart that she was crying softly
+from terror and bewilderment. Not yet, however, had she approached the
+danger of Jerusalem, which John had kept far removed from the
+precincts of Amaryllis' house.
+
+She was entering Akra. The heap of grain, yet burning, showed a dull
+black-red mound over which towered a column of strong incense. Here,
+for the night was cool, lay in circles many of the unhoused Passover
+guests. Here, also, was wakefulness and the hatchment of evil.
+
+The running girl was upon them before she knew it. One of the figures
+that sat with its back to the dull glow saw her approaching. Instantly
+he rose upon one knee and snatched her dress as she ran.
+
+Jerked from her balance, she screamed and threw out her hands to keep
+from falling upon the shoulders of her assailant. One or two others
+with unintelligible sounds struggled up, and as she fell, the Maccabee
+leaped from the darkness, wrenched her from the grasp of her captor,
+and warding off attack with his knife, fled with her into the
+darkness.
+
+The transfer of control over her had been made so swiftly that in her
+stupor of terror she hardly realized it. She was struggling silently
+and strongly in his hold, when he clasped her to him with a firmer
+impulsive embrace and whispered to her:
+
+"Comfort thee, dear heart! It is I, Hesper!"
+
+She ceased to resist so suddenly and was so tensely still that he knew
+the shock of immense reaction was having its way with her.
+
+He knew without asking that she had been forced to leave the shelter
+of the Greek's roof, and though his rage threatened to rise up and
+blind him he was not entirely unaware of the benefit the inhospitality
+of others had given him. At last she was with him; entirely in his
+care.
+
+It was a safe shelter into which she was brought, but no luxurious
+one. There was light enough from the single torch stuck in a crevice
+in the ancient rock to show that it was habitable. The immense floor
+was packed hard by the trampling of many feet; overhead, lost in
+gloom, there must have been a rocky roof, but it was invisible. On the
+ledges of rocks were belongings by heaps and collections, showing that
+this was an abiding-place for great numbers. In the far shadows she
+distinguished long, silent, mummied windrows of men wrapped in
+blankets, sleeping. Huge gloomy piles of provisions filled up shadowy
+corners; about under the light was the litter left in the wake of
+human counsel; over all was the air of repose and occupancy that made
+a home out of the burrow.
+
+Though the place held a great number of refugees, the footstep of the
+Maccabee wakened resounding emptiness. At the threshold he slackened
+his step and looked with pathetic anxiety at whatever light on
+Laodice's face would show her opinion of her refuge. But the uncertain
+torch revealed nothing and he led her in and across to a solitary
+place where rugs from some looted house had been folded up for a
+pallet and spread about for carpets. She sat down and awaited his
+speech.
+
+He motioned to the spacious barrenness about him.
+
+"Canst thou content thyself in this place?" he asked, hesitating.
+
+She nodded, but feeling that her reply had not shown all that words
+might, she lifted her face that he might see therein that which she
+could not trust her lips to say.
+
+It was her undoing. Her weakness overwhelmed her and burying her face
+in the folds of her mantle, she wept.
+
+After a dismayed silence, he bent over her and said with a quiver of
+distress in his voice:
+
+"I--I have work, here, to do, but I shall take thee out of the city
+for better refuge--"
+
+That she should seem to be grieving over the nature of the shelter
+given her, stirred her deeply. She half rose and with the light
+shining on her face, filled with gratitude in spite of her tears, took
+his hand in both of hers and pressed it with pathetic insistence.
+
+He understood her.
+
+He laid a hand unsteady with its tremor of delight and young eagerness
+upon the vitta and it slipped off her hair. As it dropped, the subtle
+warm fragrance of the heavy locks, now braided in maidenly style,
+reached him; the liveliness of her relaxed young figure communicated
+itself to him without his touch; all the invitation of her
+helplessness swept him to the very edge of abandoning his restraint.
+On his dark face a transformation occurred. All the hardness, even his
+years and his experience vanished from him and a soft recovering flush
+faintly colored his cheeks. In that sudden bloom of beauty in his face
+was stamped a realization of the far progress of his triumph. She was
+in his house and dependent on him, within the very reach of his arms.
+
+When she looked up at him again, she read all this in his face, and
+instantly there returned to her, with warning intensity, the fear of
+her love of him. The last obstacle but her own conscience that stood
+between her and his perfect supremacy over her life had suddenly been
+swept away.
+
+She started away from him, and put up her hands to ward off his touch.
+
+"If you do that," she said in a tone sharp with distress, "it is sin
+and I shall be cursed! I shall have to go back to him!"
+
+Then she had voluntarily left Julian, perhaps to seek him!
+
+"You shall not go back to him!" he exclaimed. "After I have given up
+everything but my life to have you for myself!"
+
+"You must not think of me in that way!" she commanded him vehemently.
+"I am a married woman! You shall remember that! If you forget it, I
+will go out into the streets and ask the Idumeans to kill me!"
+
+"Nay, peace, peace! I shall do you no harm! You are frightened! I will
+do nothing that you would not have me do! Be comforted. Not any one in
+all the world has your happiness at heart so much as I. Believe me!"
+
+"Believe _me_!" she insisted. "I am weary of doubt and denial. I am
+only safe if you recognize me as that which I claim to be. Answer me!
+You do believe I am the wife of Philadelphus?"
+
+"I believed it, at once," he said frankly.
+
+"Then--then--" but she flung her hands over her face and slipped down
+on the rugs. For a moment he hesitated, restraining the impulse to
+break over the limits she had laid down for him.
+
+Then he rose and, summoning one of the women who had taken refuge in
+the crypt, sent her to remain with the girl, and departed, shaken and
+uncertain, to his own place.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVIII
+
+IN THE SUNLESS CRYPT
+
+
+The twilight of the cavern rarely revealed enough of the features of
+her fellows to Laodice for her to identify them or for them to
+identify her. She lived among them a dusky shadow among shadows. And
+because of her fear that Philadelphus might be searching for her, she
+stayed in the sunless crypt day by day until the Maccabee, noting with
+affectionate distress that she was growing white and weak, bade her
+take one of the women and venture up to the light.
+
+There were, besides the women, two men who took no part in the
+preparation for war which went on about them in the cavern day and
+night. While weapons and armor were made and tramping ranks formed and
+broke before the commands of the lithe dark commander of that fortress
+and subdued but fierce councils took place around torches--while all
+this went on, they kept back, even apart from the women, and said
+nothing.
+
+Laodice saw that they were physically unfit; that one was very old and
+the other very feeble and her heart warmed again to that stern master
+who saw them fed as abundantly as his most valued men. These, then,
+were those Christians whom he had taken into his protection because of
+the Name which had inspired a shepherd boy to save his life.
+
+When he commanded Laodice to go up into the sunlight, he approached
+the corner in which the two useless men hid and bade them, too, to go
+up into the air.
+
+"Let us have no sickness in this place," he said bluntly and turned on
+his heel and left them to obey.
+
+Laodice took one of the older women and timidly climbing the steps
+from which the rubbish had been pushed away by the climbing hundreds,
+went through the dusk of the passage that terminated in a brilliancy
+that dazzled her. And as she walked she heard the footsteps of the two
+men behind her.
+
+Up in the chaos of fallen columns, she stood a moment with her hands
+pressed over her eyes. Only little by little was she able to permit
+the full blaze of the Judean sun to reach them. The uproar on
+Jerusalem after the muffled silence of the underground cavern filled
+her with terror, and she pressed close to the shelter of the entrance
+until the woman at her side reassured her.
+
+"It is nothing," the woman said, with a dreary patience. "It is as it
+was yesterday. I come here every day. I know."
+
+After a while Laodice looked about her. The entrance to their refuge
+was about the middle of the ruin and therefore a great many paces back
+from the streets, so that she did not see Jerusalem's agonies face to
+face. But she saw enough to make her cold and to turn her shivering
+and panic-stricken into the darkness of the crypt below.
+
+She saw the ascending streets of Zion and the tall fortifications
+mounting the heights within the city's limits. There she saw the flash
+of swords, swung afar off, spears brandished and the running hither
+and thither of defenders on the wall. Below she saw the remote
+constricted passages between rows of desolate houses, moving with
+people, sounding with clamor. There she saw combats, terrible scenes
+of frenzy, deaths and unnamable horrors; starvelings gnawing their
+nails; shadows of infants pressed to hollow bosoms; old men too weak
+to walk that went on hands and knees; young men and young women in
+rags that failed to cover them, and wandering skeletons screaming,
+"Woe!"
+
+Meanwhile huge stones mounted over the walls and fell within the city;
+three great towers planted beyond the walls, out of range of the
+Jewish engines and equipped with superior machines, were steadily
+devastating the entire quarter near which they were erected. Here
+two-thirds of the forces of Jerusalem were concentrated in a vain
+effort to resist the dire inroads of these effective engines. Here,
+the Maccabee and his Gibborim stood shoulder to shoulder with the
+Idumeans and fanatics of Simon and John, and here the half-mad
+defenders awakened at last to the fact that only divine interference
+could save the city against Rome.
+
+In the south and the east conflagrations roared and crackled, where
+burning oil had been scattered over some remaining structures near the
+walls. When a great ram began its thunder somewhere near the Sheep
+Gate, there came a hollow booming noise of deafening volume from the
+charnel pits outside the walls and a black cloud of incredible depth
+soared up into the skies.
+
+Laodice, dumb with horror, looked at the prodigy without
+understanding, but the woman at her side shuddered.
+
+"God help us!" she exclaimed. "They are vultures!"
+
+Laodice turned to rush back into the cavern and so faced the two men
+who stood behind her.
+
+One, at sight of her, shrank with a gasp, and, averting his shaggy
+head till the long white locks covered his face, fled back into the
+crypt.
+
+The other was gazing with unseeing eyes across groaning Jerusalem.
+
+"_I am the man_," he was saying aloud, but to himself, "_that hath
+seen affliction by the rod of His wrath._"
+
+The sight of him had a paralyzing effect upon Laodice. She saw, before
+her, Nathan, the Christian, who had buried her father, who had blessed
+her, who would know and could testify to a surety that she was the
+wife of Philadelphus!
+
+She slipped by him without a sound and hurried down into the darkest
+corner of the cavern.
+
+Circumstance had found her in her refuge and would drive her away from
+this sweet home back to that hateful house, to the man she did not
+love!
+
+For many days, with increasing distress, Laodice avoided Nathan, the
+Christian. With that fascinated terror which at times forces human
+creatures to examine a peril, she felt irresistibly impelled to try
+his memory of events, that she might know if indeed he would recognize
+her.
+
+Though she turned cold and flashed white when he came upon her one day
+in the darkness of their shelter, she felt nevertheless the relief of
+approaching a solution to her perplexity.
+
+"They tell me," he said with the deliberate speech of the old, "that
+Titus is once more permitting citizens to depart from Jerusalem
+unharmed."
+
+"Then," she said, grasping at this hope, "why do you stay here in this
+peril?"
+
+"Why should I leave it? Even with the singers who wept by the waters
+of Babylon, I prefer Jerusalem above my chief joy. Except for the time
+when we of the Way were warned to depart, I have been in Jerusalem all
+my life. Then, though I had gone as far as Caesarea on my way to
+Antioch to join the brethren there, homesickness overtook me and I
+turned in my tracks, saying no man farewell, and came back."
+
+"A weary journey for one so old," she said gently.
+
+Would he remember also that it had been dangerous?
+
+"Nay, but a journey full of works and reward. And I discovered at the
+end of it that I had lived in error forty years; that Christ never
+ceases to prove Himself."
+
+Already the forbidden tenets of the Nazarene faith had entered into
+his words. But feeling somehow that her deflection from uprightness
+covered her whole life, there was no reason why she should not hear
+what these people believed and have done with it.
+
+"Art thou a Christian?" she asked timidly.
+
+"I am a believer in Christ, but whether I may call myself one of the
+blessed I do not know, for they have had faith. But I demanded a sign.
+Behold it! The ruin of the City of David!"
+
+Her eyes widened with alarm.
+
+"Is there no hope?" she exclaimed.
+
+He looked at her, even in his old age impressed with the immense
+importance life and love must have to so beautiful and beloved a
+woman. Presently he said, as if to himself:
+
+"Yea, be thou blessed, O thou Redeemer, that givest life to them to
+whom life is dear and death approacheth."
+
+Her concern for concealment vanished entirely in her rising terror for
+the future of the Holy City.
+
+"I pray thee, Rabbi," she said in a low voice, drawing close to him,
+"tell me what thy people believe about the city. I have heard--but it
+can not be true!"
+
+"Do not be troubled about the city," he answered. "Ask me rather how
+to become safeguarded against any disaster, greater even than the fall
+of cities."
+
+"It is not for myself," she protested earnestly, "but for the world.
+Is there not a King to come to Israel?"
+
+"There is, but not yet, my daughter. Of that day and hour no man
+knoweth. Now is Daniel's abomination of desolation; the generation
+passeth and the prophecy is fulfilled. Jerusalem is perishing."
+
+Seeing the wave of panic sweep over her, he put out a soothing hand.
+
+"Yet, do not fear. For such as you the Redeemer died; for your kind
+the Kingdom of Heaven is built, and the King whom the earth did not
+receive is for ever Lord of it."
+
+The veiled reference to the tragedy which Philadelphus had recounted
+stood out with more prominence than the promise in his words.
+
+"Whom the earth did not receive?" she repeated. "O prophet, as thou
+boasteth truthful lips and a hoary head, tell me what hath befallen
+us."
+
+"Hear it not as a calamity," he said reassuringly. "Thou canst make it
+of all things the most profitable, if thou wilt. Forget the city. I,
+who would forget it but can not, bid thee do this. Behold, there is
+another Jerusalem which shall not fall. Look to that and be not
+afraid."
+
+Her lips, parted to protest against the vague answer, closed at the
+final sentence and the Christian pressed his advantage.
+
+"Of that Jerusalem there is no like on earth. Against its walls no
+enemy ever comes; neither warfare nor hunger nor thirst nor suffering
+nor death. This which David builded is a poor city, a humble city
+compared to that New Jerusalem. There the King is already come; there
+the citizens are at peace and in love with one another. There thou
+shalt have all that thy heart yearneth after, and all that thy heart
+yearneth after shall be right."
+
+In that city would it be right that she love Hesper instead of
+Philadelphus, and that she should have her lover instead of her lawful
+husband?
+
+While she turned these things over in her mind, he wisely went on with
+his story. Shrewdly sensing the young woman's anxiety, the old
+Christian guessed the interest to her of the Messiah's history before
+His teaching and began with prophecy to support the authenticity of
+the wonderful Galilean's claim to divinity. It was no fisherman or
+weaver of tent-cloth who brought forth the declarations of the
+comforter of Hezekiah, the captive prophet and the priest in the land
+of the Chaldeans. His was no barbarous manner or slipshod tongue of
+the market-place and the wheat-fields, but the polish and the
+clean-cut flawless language of the synagogues and the colleges.
+Laodice saw in the gesture and phrase the refinement of her father,
+Costobarus, of the gentlest Judean blood.
+
+"I saw Him," he went on in a low voice.
+
+Laodice with her intent gaze on the beatified face put her hand to her
+heart.
+
+"Forty years ago," the old voice continued, "I saw Him first in
+Galilee. There He was disbelieved and cast out. He came then unto
+Jerusalem and I saw Him there heal lepers, cast out evil spirits, cure
+the blind and the sick and the palsied. And in the house of Jairus and
+at Nain, I saw Him raise the dead.
+
+"I saw Him come to Jerusalem. Multitudes followed Him and accompanied
+Him, casting their mantles and palm-branches in the way that His mule
+might tread upon them."
+
+The old man pointed south toward the single summit from which Christ
+approaching could overlook Jerusalem.
+
+"On that hill," he said, "while the multitudes hailed Him and the
+sound of Alleluia shook the air, He reined in His meek beast and
+looked upon this city, and wept over it. When He spoke, He said, _If
+thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things
+which belong unto thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes. For
+the days shall come upon thee, that thine enemies shall cast a trench
+about thee, and compass thee round, and keep thee in on every side,
+and shall lay thee even with the ground, and thy children within thee;
+and they shall not leave in thee one stone upon another; because thou
+knewest not the time of thy visitation._
+
+[Illustration: "And there His enemies crucified Him."]
+
+"And three days later, I saw the Rock of David and all that multitude
+follow Him unto the Hill of the Skull and there His enemies crucified
+Him!"
+
+After a paralyzed silence, Laodice whispered with frozen lips,
+
+"In God's name, why?"
+
+But he wisely did not pause with the calamity. He had the whole of the
+beginnings of Christianity to tell, a long narrative that contained as
+yet no dogma. Paul had seen the great light on the road to Damascus,
+and accepting apostleship to all the world had fought a good fight and
+had come unto his crown of righteousness; Peter had established the
+Church and had fed the sheep and had been offered up by the Beast who
+was Nero; John the Divine was seeing visions of the Apocalypse in the
+Island of Patmos; Herod Antipas, "that fox," had passed to his own
+place, prisoner and exile, sacrifice to a mad Caesar's imaginings;
+Judas had hanged himself; Pilate had drowned himself; thousands of the
+saints had died for the faith by fire and sword and wild beasts; kings
+had been converted and of the believers in Rome it was said, _Your
+faith is spoken of throughout the whole world_.
+
+Laodice sat with clasped hands, intent on each word as it fell from
+the lips of the aged teacher, seeing at one and the same time the
+Kingdom of Heaven constructed and her dream of an earthly empire
+falling.
+
+"He said," the Christian continued, "_They that are whole need not a
+physician; but they that are sick. I came not to call the righteous,
+but sinners to repentance._"
+
+Repentance was a rite for Laodice, a payment of offering, a process to
+the righteously inclined, a thing that could in no wise purify the
+sinner as to make him worthy of association with the upright. The old
+Christian's use of the word was different; he had said that the
+Messiah came to the sinner, and not to the righteous. Had the young
+Jewess been less in need of comfort in her own consciousness of
+spiritual delinquency she would have set down the old teacher as one
+of the idlest dealers in contradiction. But now she listened with
+keener zest; perchance in this doctrine there was balm for her hurt.
+She made some answer which showed the awakening of this new interest
+and then with infinite poetry and earnestness he began to unfold the
+teachings of Christ.
+
+A woman came to them with wine and food, for the midday had come, but
+neither noticed it. In his fervor to enlighten this tender soul, the
+old man forgot his weariness; in her wonder at the strangely gentle
+doctrine which had contradicted all the world's previous usage, the
+girl forgot her prejudice. She listened; and with such signs as change
+of expression, flushes of emotion, movements of surprise and
+brightenings of interest to encourage him, the old Christian talked.
+When he had progressed sufficiently to round out the theory of
+Christianity, she had grasped a new standard. The contrast between the
+old and the new made itself instantly felt. On one hand was the simple
+and logical; on the other the complex and dogmatic. The Christian was
+able to measure proportionately how much should be laid upon her mind
+for study at once and while she still waited, he rose from his place.
+
+"There is more; yet there are other days," he said.
+
+But she caught his hand as he rose and with a sudden yearning in her
+eyes whispered:
+
+"O Rabbi, what said He of love?"
+
+"Love?" he repeated, with a softening about his lips. "The Master
+blessed love between man and woman."
+
+"But, but--" she faltered, "if one love another than one's wedded
+spouse, then what?"
+
+His face grew grave.
+
+"That is not lawful even among you, who are still of the old faith."
+
+"But suppose--"
+
+He laid a kindly hand on the one that held his.
+
+"Suffer but sin not. He that endureth unto the end shall be saved."
+
+"What end?"
+
+"Death."
+
+She was silent while she gazed at him with change showing on her
+gradually paling face.
+
+"Then--then what is in thy faith for the forlorn in love?" she
+exclaimed.
+
+"Peace, and the consciousness of the joy of Christ in your
+steadfastness," he said.
+
+She rose. How much longer had she to live?
+
+"And thou sayest we die?"
+
+"_Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the
+soul_," he said gently.
+
+Fear Hesper, then, but not the Roman. While she stood in the immense
+debate of heart and conscience he laid a tender hand on her head.
+
+"Perchance in His mercy thou shalt be welcomed there first by thy
+father, whom I buried, and by thy mother."
+
+The sudden recurrence to that past tragedy and the unfolding of his
+recognition fairly swept Laodice off her feet with shock and alarm. If
+he noted her feeling, he was sorry he had not succeeded in comforting
+her with a promise of reunion with her beloved in that other land. He
+took away his tremulous hand from her hair.
+
+Leaving her transfixed with all he had said, he moved painfully away,
+stiffened by long sitting while he discoursed.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIX
+
+THE FALSE PROPHET
+
+
+It was a different Amaryllis that the pretended Philadelphus faced
+now, from the one who had welcomed him on his arrival in Jerusalem
+months ago. Then she had been so cold and self-contained that it would
+have been effrontery to discuss her hopes with her. Now, with the
+avarice of love in her eyes, with wishfulness and defeat making their
+sorry signs on her face, she was a creature that even the humblest
+would have longed to help.
+
+Philadelphus sat opposite her in the ivory chair which was hers by
+right. She sat in the exedra and listened eagerly to the things he
+said with her finger-tips on her lips and her eyes gazing from under
+her brow as her head drooped.
+
+She had ceased long ago to debate idly on the actual identity of the
+man who had called himself Hesper of Ephesus. There was another
+question that absorbed her. Of late, it had been brought home to her
+that the charm of Laodice for the stranger from Ephesus, to whom the
+Greek knew the girl had fled, had been her purity. Why should it
+matter so much about virtue? she had asked herself. Why should it
+weigh so immeasurably more than the noble gifts of wit and beauty and
+strength and charm? Behold, she was wise enough to educate a barbarous
+nation, beautiful enough to bewitch potentates--for a time--strong
+enough to take a city; yet Hesper, who best of all could appreciate
+the value of these things, had turned from her to Laodice, who was
+merely chaste.
+
+The greater part of the jealous and bitter passion that had shaken her
+then was dumb regret that the measure of charm was so irrational--and
+that she had not believed in it, in time, in time!
+
+Now, however, since she had become convinced that Laodice had gone to
+Hesper for refuge, hope had awakened in her, but so filled with
+uncertainty and lack of confidence in another's weakness that it was
+little more than a torture to her.
+
+If Laodice had gone to this winsome stranger, either claiming to be
+the wife of Philadelphus or acknowledging the imposture, there was now
+no difference between Laodice and herself!
+
+But, she asked herself, was it not possible that this lovely girl who
+had shown signs of illimitable fortitude, could live in the shelter of
+the captivating Hesper as uprightly as she had lived under the roof of
+the man she called her husband?
+
+In one exigency, the hopes of Amaryllis budded; in the other, her
+intuitive belief in the strength of Laodice discouraged her. And while
+she alternately hoped and doubted, Philadelphus, in the chair opposite
+her, talked.
+
+"It follows that you and I must work together to gain diverse ends. If
+our fortunes are to be tragic, we are undoing each other in this
+conjunction. Since I in all frankness prefer it to turn out comedy,
+let us make no error. Are you weary of John? Do you seek a new
+diversion?"
+
+She looked at him, at first puzzled, then with a frown. It leaped to
+her lips, grown impatient with suffering, to tell him all that she had
+evolved of the histories of himself, his lady and of Hesper; but there
+seemed to be an element of recklessness in that which threatened to do
+away with a means for her success. He did not wait for her answer.
+
+"And I," he said with mock intensity, "am done to death with
+weariness--with my moneyer, this lady of mine. Let us be diverted
+while we live, for by the signs we shall all die soon."
+
+"Where," he began when her mind wandered entirely from him, "dost thou
+think the mysterious man hath taken my other wife?
+
+"I would I knew," he continued, conducting his inquiry alone. "It will
+be right simple to have her beauty spoiled in this hungry town, unless
+he takes tenderest care of her."
+
+There was still no comment, but the lively sparkle in the Greek's eye
+showed that he had touched upon a jealous spot.
+
+"And by the by," he pursued, "what does this stranger, whom I can not
+remember having known, look like? A villain?"
+
+She answered now in a voice filled with rancor.
+
+"Win away the girl from him and thou wilt know thyself to be the
+better man; but study how much he hath outstripped thee and thou shalt
+decide for thyself, then, that he is handsomer, more winsome, stronger
+and more profitable. Describe him for thyself."
+
+"Out upon you! How irritable misfortune makes most of us! Now, here is
+my lady. She would fail to see the humor in my fetching back this
+pretty impostor. Alas! Were I Deucalion or Pyrrha or whoever else it
+was that repeopled the world, I should have left jealousy out of the
+make-up of wives. It is a needless element. It gives them no pleasure,
+and Jove! how inconvenient it is for husbands! Now, I am not jealous
+of my wife. In fact, had any man the hardihood to supplant me, I
+should not discourage him; I should not, by my soul!"
+
+"Why," she burst out again, irritated beyond control at his manner,
+"do you not leave this place?"
+
+He swung his foot idly and smiled.
+
+"I shall when I can take with me this dear pretty impostor who is so
+determined to have me," he answered lightly.
+
+"Will you?" she asked eagerly. "Is that why you remain?"
+
+"And for my lady's dowry. She keeps the key. But had I the girl
+cloaked and hooded for flight, I might go, even without the treasure.
+The times are precarious, you observe."
+
+She rose almost precipitately and hurried over to the swaying curtain
+of some heavy white material like samite, covering that which appeared
+to be a blind arch in the wall. She drew the hanging aside. It had
+hidden the black mouth of a tunnel, closed by a brass wicket which was
+locked.
+
+"Here," she said rapidly, "is what strengthens John in his folly. This
+is a passage that leads under the Temple through Moriah into Tophet.
+The whole city is underlaid with these galleries, but this is the only
+one which leads to safety."
+
+She dropped the curtain and approached him.
+
+"But thou canst not go out of that passage alone!"
+
+He smiled, and then with that boyish impulsiveness that he had
+cultivated to cover the evil in his nature, he thrust out his hand to
+her.
+
+"Here is my hand on it!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Go, then, and cease not till you have found her. Then, by any or all
+the gods, I shall see that you do not go out of that passage
+empty-handed."
+
+He smiled at her radiantly and went at once to his chambers.
+
+When he reached the apartments, he found them silent and deserted. He
+seized upon the opportunity as most propitious for a search for the
+possible hiding-place of the dowry of two hundred talents.
+
+When he opened first the great press in which his lady kept her
+raiment he was confronted by emptiness. Dismayed, he turned to look
+into the room and found the chests for the most part open and rifled.
+On the brazier, now cold, lay a wax tablet. He snatched it up and read:
+
+ Received of Julian of Ephesus the appended salvage in good repair.
+ Items: One wife, Two hundred talents.
+
+ JOHN, KING OF JERUSALEM.
+
+He went back to the andronitis of Amaryllis.
+
+"I have lost interest in the treasure," he said whimsically. "But I'll
+go out and look for the girl. I--I should like to discover of a truth
+if the passage leads out of Jerusalem."
+
+Amaryllis closed her lips firmly. Philadelphus read in the look that
+he could not escape without Laodice.
+
+Without further speech, he went to the vestibule, took his cloak and
+kerchief from the porter and went out into the city.
+
+It was nearly midnight when he passed into the streets. The tumult of
+assault on the walls had ceased. The long lines of beacon-fires on the
+walls showed only a few men in arms posted there. Without there came
+no sound of activity in the camp of the Roman. The streets below,
+lighted up by the ever-burning beacons, showed its usual restless
+tramping of houseless, hungry ones. But there was no talk; each one
+who walked the passages went wrapped in his own dismal thoughts; the
+thousands took no notice of one another. Jerusalem was as silent as a
+city stricken with plague.
+
+From the summit of Zion, which Philadelphus mounted, he could see
+three Roman war-towers, planted along the outer works, dimly lighted,
+and manned by a vigilant garrison of legionaries. These had been a
+dread and a destruction which the Jews had been unable to overthrow;
+coigns of vantage from which the enemy had been able to deal the
+sturdiest blows of the campaign. They had permitted no rest to the
+defenders on the wall; they had spread ruin by fire and carnage, by
+arrow and sling for days. Sorties against them had resulted in the
+death of their assailants, only. Jewish engines accomplished nothing
+against them. The three, alone, were taking Jerusalem.
+
+Philadelphus looked at their tall shapes, black against the remote
+illumination of the Roman camp, and inwardly hoped that they would
+hold off complete destruction of the city, until he had found the
+desirable woman.
+
+No one noticed him; men passed him like shadows with their eyes ever
+on the ground; no one spoke; nothing disturbed the deadly quiet of the
+falling city.
+
+But the next minute, Philadelphus, who walked alertly, saw people step
+out into gutters or press against walls, as if to allow some one to
+pass. Awakening interest ran abroad over the street ahead of him. A
+lane between the wandering multitude opened almost by magic. Through
+it, walking swiftly, his head up, his mystic eyes ignited, came
+Seraiah, soldier of Jehovah. There was no sound of his footfall. His
+garments flashed in the light of the beacons, but there was not even a
+whisper of their motion. But he had changed. There was fierce,
+superhuman intent in the despatch of his gait and in the uplift of his
+superb head. After him, as he passed, ran whispers. Each one stopped
+and looked. He went down the uneven slope of Zion as some great shade
+borne on a swift air.
+
+Two or three bold ones began to move after him. Others followed. The
+little nucleus grew. Philadelphus was caught in it. Numbers were added
+as courage grew with numbers. From intersecting streets people came.
+Some, although oppressed by the silence, asked what it was and were
+silenced quickly. Others began to mutter unintelligible predictions,
+and their neighbors shook their heads without understanding that which
+was said.
+
+The news of Seraiah's mysterious progress communicated itself to rank
+and rank and spread abroad. Faces appeared against a background of
+lights at barred windows, along the balustrades of house-tops, from
+areas and ruins. Philadelphus, fascinated and astonished at this
+curious demonstration, was contented to pass with it. Silence, except
+for the rustling of garments and the multitudinous footfall, fell
+about the vicinity.
+
+Ahead of them, Seraiah moved. His steps, finely balanced, passed over
+obstructions where most of his followers stumbled, and when he turned
+across Akra and faced the Old Wall, the excitement became painful.
+
+His pace was flying; many of his followers were running. It seemed
+that he was going against the Wall. Dozens anticipated that course and
+skirting through short ways clambered up on the fortifications and
+clung there though menaced by the sentries until Seraiah appeared.
+
+At a narrow point in the street that ended against the wall, Seraiah
+met that Jew who had become a maniac on the day Jerusalem attacked
+Titus. Without warning the maniac leaped up into an intensely rigid
+posture; his legs spread, his lean arms upstretched at painful
+tension, his mouth wide, his eyes dilated immensely in their hollow
+depths.
+
+Seraiah passed him as if no man stood in his way. Instantly the maniac
+wheeled, as a huge spread-eagle wind-vane on its staff, and stood at
+gaze, the broad uninterrupted light of the beacon shining down on him
+and the mysterious man. The street ended short of the wall. About the
+base of the fortification was an open space, in which was planted a
+scaling-ladder. Seraiah climbed this, an infinitesimal detail on the
+great blank of blackened stone.
+
+Hundreds, rushing upon the wall, though a goodly distance from the
+point at which the strange man had mounted, climbed it and beat off
+the sentries.
+
+And the foremost who reached the top saw the Roman Tower directly
+opposite Seraiah shudder suddenly and sink in a roaring cloud of dust
+upon itself to the earth.
+
+Instantly the maniac below broke the tense silence with a scream that
+was heard in the paralyzed Roman camp:
+
+"It is He, the Deliverer! Come!"
+
+Of the thousands of Jews that heard the madman's cry, every heart
+credited it. Hundreds melted away suddenly, as if stricken with terror
+at what they might see; other hundreds scrambled down from their
+places to run purposelessly, crying aimless things to the night over
+the city; yet others covered their faces with their arms and fell in
+their places, expecting the end of the world; and of the rest, the
+less imaginative, the more composed and the more curious, remained on
+the walls to see enacted a further miracle. Uproar had broken out
+instantly among the four stolid legions of Titus on the Assyrian
+bivouac. Lights flashed out everywhere; great running to and fro could
+be distinguished; rapid trumpet-calls and the prolonged roll of drums
+from company quarters to quarters were echoed back from Antonia and
+from Hippicus. The startled shouts of commanders; the nervous dropping
+of arms; the sharp excited response to roll-call; the sound of
+sentries challenging, the curt response by countersign, showed
+everywhere irregularities and the symptoms of panic in the immovable
+ranks of Titus.
+
+Seraiah meanwhile had disappeared from his place as mysteriously as he
+had come.
+
+Many of the Jews who remained on the wall believed that he had passed
+into the Roman camp and was troubling it. The fall of the tower, and
+the confusion it had wrought in the Roman camp, never occurred to them
+to have been fortuitous incidents with which Seraiah had nothing to
+do. Of the thousands that witnessed that miracle, most of them were
+convinced that the hour had come.
+
+Meanwhile Jerusalem was roaring with excitement. The city was ready
+for a Messiah. Seraiah had arisen at the psychological moment. Earlier
+the Jews would have been too critical to accept him readily; later
+they would have reviled him for coming too late. Whatever his advent
+lacked in thunders, in darkness, voices, and shaking of the earth, had
+been passed by his miraculous work against the Romans.
+
+Philadelphus, who had seen the fall of the tower, and had dropped down
+from the wall as soon as he had explained it all to himself, came upon
+new disorders. Great concourses of awakened Jews were hurrying to the
+walls to see what had happened, or to behold the Roman army wiped out
+by the Angel of Death as the army of Sennacherib had perished. Others
+collected at the end of the Tyropean Bridge and watched the pinnacle
+of the Temple for the miracle which should restore the city. But the
+burned ruin where the Herodian palace had stood was the center of the
+most characteristic frenzy.
+
+There thousands were congregated. A great bonfire had been kindled and
+above the multitude, on a colossal architrave fallen at one end from
+the giant columns that had supported it, stood a figure, redly
+illuminated by the fire, tiny as compared to the immense ruin of its
+high place, but Titan in its control over the wild mob below it.
+
+It was a woman, a Jewess, dressed in faithful imitation of the archaic
+garb of the prophetesses, mantled with a storm of flying black hair,
+stripped of veil or cloak, and splendidly defiant of the restrictions
+laid upon woman long after the days of Deborah.
+
+Over the heads of the panting multitude she shook a pair of arms that
+glistened for whiteness, and bewitched by the spell of their motion.
+From under her half-fallen lids shot gleams of fire that transfixed
+any upon whom they fell; from her supple body shaken at times with the
+power of its own dynamic force her hearers caught the grosser
+infection of physical excitement; they swayed with her as blown by the
+wind; they ceased to breathe in her periods; they groaned as the
+intensity of her fervor pressed upon them for response that they could
+not shape in words; they wept, they shouted, they prophesied, and over
+them swept ever the witchery of her wonderful voice, preaching
+impiety--the worship of Seraiah!
+
+Philadelphus looked at this frantic work with a creeping chill. He
+knew the sorceress. Salome of Ephesus, who could send the sated
+theaters wild with her appeal to their senses, had found enchantment
+of a half-mad city not hard. Aside from the impiety, in fear of which
+his own irreligious spirit stood, he saw suddenly opened to him the
+immense scope of her influence. Not Simon, not John, not Titus, had
+discovered the logical appeal to the city's unbalanced impulses. But
+the reckless woman, robing herself in the ancient garb of the days to
+which the citizens would revert, assuming the pose of a woman they had
+sanctified, preaching the dogma they would hear, showing them the sign
+that helped them most, held Jerusalem, at least for that hour, in her
+hands.
+
+He realized at once that to attempt to denounce her would expose him
+to destruction at the wolfish hands of the frenzied mob. There were
+not soldiers enough in the city to destroy her influence, for she had
+achieved in her followers that infatuation that goes down to death
+before it relinquishes its conviction. Her control was complete.
+Seraiah was the anointed one, but the prophetess, the instigator, the
+founder of the worship, as follows in all apostasies, was the final
+recipient of the benefits of that devotion.
+
+Philadelphus walked away from the sight of Salome's triumph. He had
+surrendered instantly his hope of regaining the treasure. The whole of
+mad Jerusalem had ranged itself with her to protect it. And Laodice
+was not yet found.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XX
+
+AS THE FOAM UPON WATER
+
+
+The madness on Jerusalem poured like an overwhelming flood into the
+cavern under the ruin of the Herodian palaces. There was Hesper, with
+most of his Gibborim gathered, preparing to proceed to the defense of
+the First Wall in Akra against which the Roman would hurl himself in
+the morning.
+
+For days he had controlled his men only by the force of his fierce
+will. Restlessness, little short of turbulence, had changed his six
+hundred from earnest recruits to bright-eyed, contentious,
+irresponsible enthusiasts whom only intimidation could manage. They
+seemed to be balanced, prepared, ready at the least whisper in the
+wind to scatter madly, each in his own direction, after a vagary,
+albeit the end were destruction.
+
+Throughout these latter days the Maccabee had become strained and
+unnatural in his manner. There was a vehemence in all he did which
+seemed to be a final resolution against despair. His decisions were
+arbitrary; his methods extreme. Laodice, sensing something climacteric
+in his atmosphere, kept aloof from him, and regarded him from the dusk
+of her corner with wonder and a pity that she could not explain. The
+Christian on the other hand seemed always in an unobtrusive way to be
+at the Maccabee's elbow. The apparition with the long white hair,
+however, ran away and was found on the streets by the Christian and
+brought back to the cavern, where he hid in a dark shadow in the
+remote end of the crypt and was not seen.
+
+Of late the cavern was always full of suppressed excitement;
+unpremeditated conferences among the Gibborim, which Hesper harshly
+forbade; and general sharp resentment against imposed regulations and
+military drill. On several occasions the six hundred were sent in
+defense of the walls only by sheer force of their leader's will-power.
+And there they fell in at once with the irregular methods of the
+Idumeans and fanatics that fought each after his own liking, and the
+careful instruction of the Maccabee was disregarded. Only so long as
+he cowed them, they obeyed him; and he seemed to feel, as they seemed
+to indicate, that when that thing happened which all Jerusalem
+indefinitely expected and could not name, his control over them would
+be lost beyond restoration.
+
+On the night of the fall of the Roman tower, the Maccabee's forces had
+been withdrawn for rest to their retreat and at midnight were formed
+again for return to the fortifications.
+
+By the strange inscrutable spread of rumor, sweeping with the air, the
+tidings of the miracle and the rise of Seraiah poured in upon the
+restive hundreds that the Maccabee was attempting to form in his
+fortress. It came like the gradual velocity of a burning star across
+the sky. From the ranks nearest the exit from the burrow the murmur
+issued, growing into intelligible sound, mounting to the wildness of
+hysteria and prevailing wholly over the Gibborim in the space between
+heart-beats. Everywhere they cast down their spears and their weapons,
+everywhere they gazed at him with brilliant threatening eyes and cried
+in loud voices so that the things each mad mind put into expression
+were lost in a great unintelligible raving.
+
+Laodice, the Christian and that white-haired trembler in his refuge,
+saw the Maccabee raise himself to his full height and lifting his
+sword confront in one grand effort at command a mob of six hundred
+madmen!
+
+Perhaps that manifestation of iron courage and strength, which the
+crazy lot somehow realized, saved him from death. Instead of falling
+upon him they turned away from the scene of the last vain effort for
+their own salvation and rushed, trampling one another, into the mad
+city of Jerusalem.
+
+From without, the hoarse uproar of their desertion was heard to merge
+with the great tumult over the Holy City. Tense silence fell in the
+crypt.
+
+The light of the torch wavered up and down the tall figure of the
+Maccabee as he stood transfixed in the attitude of command that had
+achieved nothing. It seemed the final inclination beyond the
+perpendicular that precedes the fall. The Christian started from his
+place and hurried toward the tense figure in the torch-light. Laodice,
+unconscious of what she did, approached him with an agony of distress
+for him written in her face. The white-haired apparition crept out a
+little way on his knees and putting aside his tangled locks gazed with
+burning eyes at the defeated man.
+
+Laodice, in her anxiety, moved into the range of the Maccabee's
+vision. The next instant he had thrown away his sword and had caught
+her in a crushing embrace to him. His voice, blunted and repressed as
+if something had him by the throat, was stunning her ear.
+
+"And thou!" he was saying. "What from thee, now? Hate! Curses!
+Ingratitude! Hast thou poison for me, or a knife? Or worse, yet,
+scorn? Speak! It is a day of enlightenment! I'll brook anything but
+deceit!"
+
+She stopped him in the midst of his vehement despair, by laying her
+hands on his hair. There surged to her lips all the eloquence of her
+love and sympathy, but beside her old Nathan stood--an embodiment of
+her conscience, watching.
+
+Twice she essayed to put into words the comfort of her submission to
+his love. Twice her lips failed her; but the third time she turned to
+the Christian.
+
+"Rabbi, what shall I do?" she implored. "Tell me out of thy wisdom!"
+
+"What is it?" he asked, feeling that there was more than sympathy for
+the defeated man in her heart.
+
+"What would thy Christ have me to do?" she insisted. "This stranger,
+here, is the joy of my heart; I am like to die if I can not give him
+the love that I feel for him this hour!"
+
+The startled Christian looked at her with suspicion growing in his
+eyes.
+
+"Art thou a wife? Wedded to another than this man?" he asked gravely.
+
+"Wedded," she whispered, "to one who hath denied me, affronted me and
+cast me out of his house! In this man I have found favor from the
+beginning. He has been tender of me, he has sheltered me, and he has
+strengthened me against himself to this hour. There has been nothing
+sinful between us!"
+
+The old Christian's face grew immeasurably sad.
+
+"There is but one thing for you to do," he said.
+
+She wrenched herself away from the Maccabee, who had been angrily
+protesting against her carrying his case to another for decision, and
+confronted Nathan.
+
+"But he rejected me!" she cried with earnestness. "That alone is
+enough among our people for divorcement!"
+
+The Christian shook his head sadly. He was not happy to lay down this
+prohibition before them who suffered.
+
+"There is no help in thy faith for such as I am. In that thy religion
+fails!" she cried.
+
+"Love, now, is all in all to thee, daughter. It is but the speech of
+thy young blood running through thy veins, the claim of thy youth to
+thy use upon earth. Resist it; for when thy years are as many as mine
+thou wilt lose thy rebellious spirit and the fervor will have died out
+of thy heart. Then, if thou hast fallen in this hour, how vain and
+worthless it will seem to thee! Divine fires in the heart of men never
+become changed in value. Love purely and thou wilt never repent; but I
+say unto thee thou fashionest for thyself humbled and shamed old age
+if thou transgressest the Law!"
+
+"What mercy, then, since thou preachest mercy, in filling me with this
+weakness if my life must be darkened resisting it, and my future show
+no relief for it?" she insisted passionately.
+
+It was the cry old as the world. He looked at her sadly, hopelessly.
+
+"As for God, His way is perfect," he said. "_How unsearchable are his
+judgments, and his ways past finding out!_ Thou shalt struggle with
+the truth, my daughter, but without fail and most readily thou shalt
+know when thou hast sinned!"
+
+She was past the influence of argument. Impulse controlled her now
+entirely. She would see if there were not an intelligence, even a
+religion which would see her sorrow from her own heart's position.
+
+She listened now to the words of her lover.
+
+"He is an exclaimer, a prophet of doom!" he was crying. "Love me and
+let us die!"
+
+Without in the entrance of the crypt some great-lunged fanatic was
+calling the multitude to harken to the prophetess.
+
+The Maccabee's lips were against her cheek as he continued to speak.
+
+"It is the end! There is no help for us. Love me, and let me be happy
+an hour before we perish! The Nazarene is right! The city is cursed!
+God's wrath is upon us. The hour is still ours. Love me and let us
+die!"
+
+Without the great voice, like an unwearying bell, was calling:
+
+"A sign! A sign! Behold the Deliverer! Come all ye who would share his
+triumph and hear! Hear! Come ye and be fed, ye hungry; be drunken, ye
+thirsty; love and be loved, ye forlorn!"
+
+Laodice stiffened in the Maccabee's clasp.
+
+"Dost thou hear?" she whispered. "It may be true!"
+
+He shook his head that he had bowed upon her shoulder.
+
+"Let us go," she urged. "Perchance he has comfort for us. Come,
+Hesper; let us see what he has for the forlorn."
+
+"Who?" he asked dully.
+
+"They say the Deliverer has come."
+
+He shook his head again, but with her two hands she lifted his face
+from its refuge, and urging with her eyes and her hands and her lips
+she led him toward the stairs. The Christian looked after them.
+
+"_For there shall arise false Christs; and false prophets, and shall
+shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they
+shall deceive the very elect_," he said sorrowfully.
+
+The horror of the city augmented hour by hour. The Jerusalem Laodice
+locked upon now was infinitely more afflicted than the one she had
+seen in the daylight days before.
+
+The walls were now outlined by fire which illuminated all the city
+that lay directly beneath the beacons. To the north gnomish outlines
+by hundreds against the flames showed where the soldiers of the
+factionists were placing the topmost stones upon an inner wall or
+curtain erected just within the Old Wall, which was by this time
+shaking and cracking under the assaults of a great siege-engine
+without. Titus, awakened by the fall of his tower, had immediately
+renewed the attack, although the morning was still some hours distant.
+
+But the citizens were no longer disinterested, no longer wrapped in
+hopelessness and dull misery.
+
+Hungry, sleepless, houseless, diseased and mad though they were, their
+hollow eyes gleamed now with hope that was almost defiant. Around the
+Maccabee and Laodice roared the comment of the multitude.
+
+"They say he climbed to the summit of the outer wall overlooking
+Tophet and remains there a target for the Roman arrows, which rebound
+from him!" cried one.
+
+"One of John's men says that the heads of the arrows are blunted and
+the most of them snapped in two when they are picked up."
+
+"The Romans have ceased to shoot at him!"
+
+"They say that his footprints in the dust on the Tyropean Bridge are
+Hebrew letters writing 'Elia' in gold!"
+
+"It is said that the inner Temple is rocking with trumpet blasts and
+that John is struck dead!"
+
+"They say that those who believe in him shall ask for whatever they
+would have and have it!"
+
+"The breaches in the First Wall have been healed; the old rock is back
+in its place!"
+
+"They say that the dead beyond the wall in Tophet are prophesying!"
+
+"There is a bolt of lightning fixed in the sky over Titus' camp. We
+are called to go forth and see it fall!"
+
+A voice swept by distantly crying that a woman had eaten her child.
+Crazed Posthumus, self-elected guardian of the Law, with the sacred
+roll under his arm, declaimed, without any of his audience attending,
+that prophecy which this horror fulfilled.
+
+All Jerusalem was in the streets; all Jerusalem poured into the
+immense open space where some palatial ruin stood, and melted in the
+giant concourse that gathered to hear the prophetess.
+
+Laodice and the Maccabee were unable to see the woman; only her voice,
+mystic, musical, pitched at a singing monotone, intoning rather than
+speaking, reached them from the distance. The long harangue, delivered
+as a chant, had long ago had a mesmerizing effect on her audience.
+Absolutely she controlled them; along the dead level of her preaching
+they maintained a low continuous murmur, accompanied by a slight slow
+swaying of the body; in the climaxes of the appeal they responded with
+cries and wild gestures, flinging themselves about in attitudes
+characteristic of their frenzy. In their faces was the reflection of a
+peculiar light that proved that derangement had settled over
+Jerusalem. It was the end of the reign of reason.
+
+"It is the abomination of desolation. Even so, it is finished! It is
+the time, it is full time, and Michael hath come. There are seventy
+weeks; behold them. The transgression is finished and the end hereto
+of all sins. Approacheth the hour for the reconciliation for iniquity
+and to bring in everlasting righteousness and to seal up the vision
+and prophecy and to anoint the most Holy! Prepare ye!"
+
+Somewhere in the city a voice that was heard even by the fighting-men
+on the wall in Akra cried:
+
+"The Sacrifice has failed! The Oblation is ceased! There is no
+Offering for the Altar; none is left to offer it!"
+
+The vast gathering heard it, and immediately from the high place of
+the prophetess came back the words, prompt and effective:
+
+"_And he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week: and in the
+midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to
+cease!_"
+
+Posthumus, buried in the midst of the crowd, was shouting, but over
+him the splendid mesmerism of the prophetess' voice soared.
+
+"_The hands of the pitiful women have sodden their own children; they
+were their meat in the destruction of the daughter of my people ...
+The punishment of thine iniquity is accomplished, O daughter of
+Zion; ... and for the overspreading of abominations he shall make it
+desolate, even until the consummation, and that determined shall be
+poured upon the desolate_!"
+
+Among the crowd now growing frantic, people began to cry:
+
+"A sign! A sign!"
+
+Others shouted:
+
+"Lead us!"
+
+"Persecute and destroy them in anger from under the Heaven of the
+Lord!"
+
+"Lead us!" they still shouted.
+
+They were hungry; they had been abstinent; they had surrendered their
+riches and their comforts. It was not independence but necessities
+that they wanted now. The primal wants were at the surface.
+
+"Come up and be filled!" she cried. "Ask and it shall be given unto
+you! Eat of the grapes and the honey; drink of wine and warm milk;
+sleep as kings; be housed in mansions; be rulers; command potentates!
+Let kings bow at your footstools! Be replenished; be great! Suffering
+hath been your portion since the earth was; but the end is come. Draw
+nigh and have your recompense. Laugh, you whose eyes have trickled
+down with the waters of affliction! You in the low dungeon come forth
+and range all the free boundaries of the world. Whosoever hath gravel
+between his teeth, let them be grapes! He who sitteth alone, gather
+company and revel unto him! Feast, ye hungry; be drunken, ye thirsty;
+love and be loved, ye forlorn!"
+
+Laodice leaned forward suddenly and hung on the woman's words.
+
+"The time for sacrifice and humiliation is paid out! It was a long
+time! Now, behold in the generosity of his repentance, ye shall ask
+and nothing shall be denied. Speak! Ask! The whole world, Heaven and
+earth and the delights of all the years are yours, now and for all
+time!"
+
+At Laodice's side was Amaryllis. The Greek's face was pale but lighted
+with a certain enlightenment that was almost threatening.
+
+Startled and frightened Laodice moved back from the Greek, who moved
+with her, without a glance at the Maccabee.
+
+The voice of the prophetess swept on:
+
+"Ye have bowed to tyrants and bent your necks to murderers; ye have
+waged wars for pillagers and shared not in the spoils. Why are ye
+hungry now? Who is full-fed in these days of want, yourselves or your
+masters? A sword, a sword is drawn; uphold the arm that wields it!"
+
+"Sedition!" Amaryllis whispered, as the mob began to murmur and stir
+at this new doctrine.
+
+"For behold, he shall go forth with great fury to destroy and utterly
+to make away many!"
+
+Amaryllis bent so she could whisper in Laodice's ear.
+
+"John hath taken him a new woman to keep him cheerful this hour. I was
+not daring enough. Philadelphus' wife hath supplanted me. Your place
+with him is vacant. Go back and possess it!"
+
+"Why was appetite and desire and thirst of power and the love of
+riches lighted in you, but to be satisfied?" The prophetess' words
+swept in after Laodice's sudden fear of returning to Philadelphus. "We
+have expiated the sin of Adam, the greed of Jacob and the fault of
+David. The judgment is run out; ye have come to your own! Verily, I
+say unto you, if ye follow me in the name of him who hath come unto
+you, the world shall be yours!"
+
+Amaryllis still continued to whisper, and Laodice, fearing that the
+Maccabee might hear, drew farther away. He stood where she had left
+him, with his head lowered, waiting--at last a creature dependent on
+another's will.
+
+"Listen!" Amaryllis said. "I have been seeking you since midnight!
+Philadelphus' doubt was awakened in this woman. He questioned her, so
+minutely that she betrayed ignorance of many things she should have
+known had she been the real daughter of Costobarus. And when finally
+he taxed her with imposture, she robbed him of the dowry and fled to
+John. Convinced that you are his wife, he set forth and hath since
+searched for you without ceasing! See, over there! He seeks you, now!"
+
+Laodice looked the way the Greek pointed and saw Philadelphus,
+standing with lifted head and stretched to his full height, as if
+searching over the crowd for her.
+
+Panic seized her. She wrenched herself from the Greek's hold and,
+forgetting even the protection of Hesper who was within touch of her,
+she threw herself into the crowd behind her and struggled out of the
+press.
+
+Nathan, the Christian, saw her turn and followed instantly in the path
+she made.
+
+Once out, she turned in a bewildered manner this way and that. What
+refuge, now, for her, indeed, but the cavern under the ruin and the
+care of Hesper, until the end which should swallow them all!
+
+A trembling hand was laid on her arm.
+
+She whirled, expecting to find Philadelphus. Beside her, his old face
+radiant with emotion, stood Momus!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXI
+
+THE FAITHFUL SERVANT
+
+
+Within the Roman lines was a bent and deformed figure of an old waif
+that the soldiers had picked up attempting to run the lines into
+Jerusalem the second day after the siege had been laid about the Holy
+City.
+
+The old man, though wrinkled and twisted and bowed, had fought with
+such terrible savagery and had incontinently laid in the dust in
+succession three of the camp's best fighting-men, that the Roman
+soldiers, for ever partizan to the strong man, had finally with great
+difficulty succeeded in trussing the old belligerent and had brought
+him before Titus.
+
+There they laid the twisted old burden before the young general and
+shamelessly told how he, thrice the age of the vanquished men, had
+finished them with despatch.
+
+It was evident that the old man was a Jew; it became also apparent
+that he was dumb and partly deaf, and further to their amazement and
+admiration, they discovered that his right leg and arm were too stiff
+for ordinary use and that he had done his wonderful execution with
+terrific left limbs.
+
+This saved his life and gave him a partial liberty. Titus, however,
+admitted to Carus that the old man's distress at being kept out of
+Jerusalem was pitiable enough to urge the young general to deport him
+and get him out of sight.
+
+For it was manifest that the old minotaur was in deep trouble. But his
+paralyzed tongue would not serve him, and his menial ignorance had not
+provided him with the means of telling his desire by writing. Titus
+was unable to understand from his signs anything further than that he
+wished to get into the city. The young general in one of his outbursts
+of generosity would have permitted this, but that Nicanor happened in
+at an evil moment and drew such pictures of calamitous effect in
+passing the old servant into Jerusalem that Titus was forced
+reluctantly and irritably to be convinced of the folly of his
+kindness. So here, through the terrible days of the siege, old Momus
+at times desperate and savage, at others piteously suppliant, wore on
+the sentries' peace of mind and stood like a shadow, for ever watching
+the white walls of the besieged city.
+
+The Romans were now within the city. Only Zion and the Temple held
+against them. A wall built with the thoroughness of David, the
+ancient, and solidified by the mortising of Time, ran directly from
+Hippicus to the Tyropean Valley, joining the tremendous fortifications
+of Moriah and so cut off Zion from the advance of the army. Securely
+intrenched within that quarter and the Temple, Simon and John began
+the last resistance which should tax Roman endurance and Roman
+patience as it had not been taxed before.
+
+Titus no longer lagged. Famine had long since become a powerful ally
+and the honor of the Flavian house rested upon his immediate
+subjugation of the rebellious city. He no longer expected
+capitulation; yet he did not neglect to be prepared for it and to
+encourage it. Though the heart of the historian Josephus broke, he did
+not fail to serve his patron as mediator, though without hope. Titus
+himself, as from time to time the horror of his work impressed itself
+upon him, made overtures to the factionists, neglecting no art or
+inducement which should convince the seditious that their resistance
+was foolhardy, even mad. At such times, Nicanor's face became
+contemptuous and Carus himself frowned at the young general's
+attitude. But the spirit of a Roman and the traditions of a soldier
+even could not prevent the young man from weakening at times before
+the charnel pit in Tophet where countless thousands of vultures
+fattened with roaring of wings and hissing of combat.
+
+But under an ever-thickening veil of horrid airs, the struggle went
+on.
+
+The Roman Ides of July arrived.
+
+Titus had erected banks upon which his engines were raised to batter
+the walls of the Temple.
+
+From Titus' camp, the Romans on sick leave, the commissaries, those
+attached to the army who were not fighting-men, and old Momus, saw
+first, before the attack on the Temple began, a soft increasing
+dun-colored vapor rise between the Temple and Antonia. It issued from
+the cloister at the northwest which joined the Roman tower. As they
+watched, they saw that vapor grow into a pale but intensely luminous
+smoke, as if fine woods and burning metals were consumed together. In
+a moment the whole north-west section was embraced in a sublime pall
+of fire.
+
+John was burning away the connection between the Temple and the tower
+and was making the sacred edifice four-square.
+
+As soon as it became confirmed, in the minds of the watchers in the
+Roman camp, that the Temple had been fired, the old mute among them
+seemed to become wholly unbalanced. Without warning, he leaped upon
+the nearest sentry who, not expecting the attack, went down with a
+clatter of armor and a shout of astonishment. The next instant the old
+man was making across the intervening space between the camp and
+Jerusalem as fast as his stiff legs could carry him.
+
+The purple sentry sprang to his feet and strung an arrow, but before
+he could send it singing, the old minotaur was mixed with a second
+soldier in such confusion that the first sentry hesitated to shoot
+lest he should kill his fellow. Another moment and a second soldier
+was struggling in the impediment of his armor in the dust and the old
+mute was again hobbling straight away toward the walls of Jerusalem.
+He was now a fair mark for the first sentry, but that Roman's rancor
+died after he had seen his own disgrace covered by the overthrow of
+his fellow. Two of Titus' scouts next stood in the path of the running
+old man. One went to the ground so suddenly and so violently that the
+watchers, now breaking into howls of delight, knew that he had been
+tripped. The other stood but a moment longer, than he, too, rolled
+into the dust.
+
+The old man might have gone no farther at this juncture, for at every
+latest triumph he left a crimson soldier murderous with shame. But
+before the arrow next strung to overtake him could fly, Titus, Carus
+and Nicanor, accompanied by their escort, rode between the fugitive
+and the men he had defeated.
+
+"There goes our minotaur," Carus said quietly. Titus drew up his horse
+and looked. Nicanor with a sidelong glance awaited the young Roman's
+command to his escort to ride down the fugitive. But he waited, and
+continued to wait, while Titus with lifted head and with indecision in
+his eyes watched the deformed old shape hobble on toward the Wall of
+Circumvallation.
+
+"Shall we let him go?" Nicanor inquired coldly.
+
+"If some of my legionaries or those erratic Jews fail to get him
+between here and Jerusalem, he shall get into Jerusalem. But by
+Hector, he will earn his entry!"
+
+They saw the old man mount by the causeway of earth which the Romans
+had built over the siege wall for the passage of the troops, saw him
+an instant outlined against the sky on the summit, and the next
+instant he disappeared.
+
+Titus touched his horse and rode at a trot toward the causeway
+himself. He would see the end of this mad venture.
+
+In the hour of sunrise the sentinel above the North Gate in the Old
+Wall saw among the ruins of the houses of Coenopolis a figure dodging
+painfully hither and thither. It was not habited in the brasses of the
+Roman armor. Also, it hobbled as if lame and ran toward the gate fast
+closed below the sentry.
+
+The Jew, too intensely interested in the great climax enacting in the
+city below, ceased to remark on this figure.
+
+Presently, however, he looked again into ruined Coenopolis. He saw
+there this un-uniformed figure wrapped in fierce embrace with a young
+legionary. Almost before the sentry's astonishment shaped itself into
+exclamation, the legionary was tumbled aside as if crushed and the old
+figure hobbled on.
+
+Suddenly there appeared in the path of the wayfarer a galloping
+horseman, who drew his mount back on his haunches, then spurred him to
+ride down the old man.
+
+The sentry on the Old Wall made a choked sound, unslung his bow and
+sent an arrow singing. There was a shout and the figure of the
+horseman plunged from his saddle face down on the earth.
+
+The wayfarer flung himself away and rushed toward the wall, only a
+little distance away.
+
+But all Coenopolis seemed to swarm now with legionaries, afoot or
+horseback.
+
+The Jewish sentry rushed to the edge of the tower overhanging the
+gate.
+
+"Open!" he shouted below. "One cometh!"
+
+With a rattle and clang of falling bars and chains the gate of the Old
+Wall swung.
+
+Disregarding the known wishes of Titus, two of the legionaries
+simultaneously let fly their javelins. But the mute, hobbling
+uncertainly, was not a steady mark and under the whistle of arrows
+received and sent, he blundered up the causeway leading to the Gate of
+the Old Wall, and the portal slowly and ponderously closed behind him.
+
+Wild howls of derision and exultation went up from the Jews. Many of
+the soldiers clambered down to satisfy their curiosity about the
+latest addition to the starving garrison. But he proved to be a
+deformed old man, mute and weary, who was distressed for fear he would
+be detained by them and who hobbled out into the besieged city and
+posted as fast as his legs could carry him toward the house of
+Amaryllis, the Seleucid.
+
+But at the edge of a great open space where the Herodian palaces had
+stood he came upon a concourse which seemed to be all Jerusalem. It
+was a gaunt horde, shouting, raging, prophesying and drowning the roar
+of battle at the Temple fortifications with the sound of religious
+frenzy.
+
+Momus, fresh from the orderly camp of Titus, was struck with terror.
+He would have retreated and followed some side street toward his
+destination, when he caught sight of a girl on the very outskirts of
+this mob. Momus laid a trembling hand on her arm. She threw up her
+head with a start.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXII
+
+VANISHED HOPES
+
+
+The tremulous old man, weakened from his long and superhuman struggle
+to enter the doomed city, held Laodice to his breast while she stroked
+his rough cheeks and murmured things that he did not hear and which
+she did not realize in the rush of her helplessness and dismay.
+
+At the corner of Moriah and the Old Wall, the tumult was infernal. Out
+of the suffocating sallow smoke from the tuns of burning tar heaved
+over the fortification upon the engines and their managers, the stones
+from the catapults soared into view and fell upon the sun-colored
+marbles that paved the Court of the Gentiles. Clouded by the vapor,
+targets for the immense missiles, the Jews heaving and writhing in
+personal encounters appeared black and inhuman. Every combatant
+shouted; the great stones screamed; the boiling pitch hissed and
+roared, and the thunder of the conflict shook the Temple to its very
+foundations.
+
+Without, the Romans planted scaling ladders, mounted them and were
+pitched backward into the moat regularly. Regularly, the ladders were
+set up again after struggle, mounted without hesitation and thrown
+down again, with an inevitability which furnished a grim travesty to
+the struggle. The two remaining towers were set in position against
+the base of Moriah and resumed execution. One after another the
+engines of the Romans were hauled into position, and worked
+unceasingly until covered with burning oil from the battlements above
+and consumed. Others were hauled into place; fresh detachments of
+Romans seized upon the scaling-ladders or mounted to the towers, and
+the roar of the conflict never abated.
+
+Meanwhile on the slopes of Zion the whole of Jerusalem, gaunt, dying
+and demoniacal, was packed in the ruins of the palace of Herod.
+
+Old Momus with triumph and tearful exultation was holding out to
+Laodice a heavy roll of writings, dangling important seals, ancient
+papers showing yellow beside the fresh parchment, and an old record
+dark with long handling.
+
+Here were the proofs of her identity!
+
+Laodice shrank from him with a gasp that was almost a cry. Behold, the
+faithful old servant had suffered she knew not what to bring such
+evidence as would force her to do that which she believed she could
+not do and survive!
+
+Momus sought to put the papers in her hands, but she thrust them away
+and he stood looking at her in amazement and sorrow.
+
+Nathan, the Christian, stood close to her. From the opposite side,
+Philadelphus rounded the outskirts of the mob, searching. He did not
+see her. She flung herself between Momus and Nathan and cowered down
+until Philadelphus had passed from sight. When she lifted her head,
+Momus was gazing at her with the light of shocked comprehension
+growing in his eyes. Nathan, the Christian, touched her.
+
+"Who was that man?" he asked gravely.
+
+She rose and laid her hands on the Christian's shoulders.
+
+"My husband," she said.
+
+Something had happened at the Temple. She saw the Jews at the wall
+recoil from the dust of battle, rally, plunge in and disappear. From
+out that presently shone now and again, then with increasing frequency
+and finally in great numbers, the brass mail of Roman legionaries.
+Titus' forces had scaled the wall.
+
+From her position, she saw running toward them John of Gischala, with
+his long garments whipping about him, wrapping his tall figure in live
+cerements. He was disarmed and bleeding. She saw next Amaryllis, with
+compassionate uplifted hands stop in his way; saw next the Gischalan
+thrust her aside with a blow and the next instant disappear as if the
+earth had swallowed him.
+
+Nathan was speaking to her.
+
+"How often, O my daughter, we recognize truth and deny it because it
+does not give us our way! God put a sense of the right in us. We
+transgress it oftener than we mistake it!"
+
+The roar of the turning battle and the mob about her drowned his next
+words, except,
+
+"You can not be happy in iniquity; neither blessed; but you are sure
+to be afraid. Right has its own terror, but there is at least courage
+in being right, against your desires."
+
+He was talking continuously, but only at times did the wind from the
+uproar sweep his fervent words to her.
+
+"Christ had His own conflict with Himself. What had become of us had
+He listened to the tempter in the wilderness, or failed to accept the
+cup in the Garden of Gethsemane! How much we have the happiness of
+Christ in our hands! Alas! that His should be a sorrowful countenance
+in Heaven!
+
+"The love of a man for a woman was near to the Master's heart! How can
+you feel that you must love and be loved in spite of Him! Pity
+yourself all you may you can not then be pitied so much as He pities
+you!
+
+"Love as long and as wilfully as you will, and then it is only a
+little space. The time of the supremacy of Christ cometh surely, and
+that is all eternity! Which will you do--please yourself for an hour,
+or be pleased by the will of God through all time? Love is in the
+hands of the Lord; you can not consign it longer than the little span
+of your life to the hands of the devil."
+
+Momus, in whose mind had passed an immense surmise, was again at her
+side.
+
+"O daughter of a noble father," his dumb gaze said, "wilt thou put
+away that virtue which was born in thee and let my labor come to
+naught?"
+
+But the preaching of Nathan and the reproach of Momus were feeble,
+compared to the great tumult that went on in her soul. She had seen
+John of Gischala cast Amaryllis aside. Even the Greek's sympathy was
+hateful to him. Yet when Laodice had first entered the house of
+Amaryllis, the woman had been obliged to dismiss John from her
+presence for his own welfare and the welfare of the city. Why this
+change?
+
+Amaryllis was no less beautiful, no less brilliant, no less attractive
+than she had once been; but the Gischalan had wearied of her.
+
+Laodice recalled that she had not been surprised to see the man throw
+Amaryllis aside. It seemed to be the logical outcome of love such as
+theirs. How, then, was she to escape that which no other woman escaped
+who loved without law? In the soul of that stranger who had called
+himself Hesper, were lofty ideals, which had not been the least charm
+which had attracted her to him. Was she, then, to dislodge these holy
+convictions, to take her place in his heart as one falling short of
+them, or were they still to exist as standards which he loved and
+which she could not reach? In either event, how long would he
+love--what was the length of her probation before she, too, would
+encounter the inevitable weariness?
+
+It occurred to her, then, how nearly the natural law of such love
+paralleled the religious prohibition that the Christian had shown to
+her. However harsh and unjust the sentence seemed, it was rational.
+With her own eyes she had seen its predictions borne out. Already the
+relief of the sorrowing righteous possessed her. She turned to the
+Christian.
+
+"Take me to my husband," she said. "Now! While I have strength."
+
+Momus caught the old Christian by the arm and, signing eagerly that he
+would lead, hurried away in advance of the two down into the ravine
+and crossed to the house of Amaryllis.
+
+There were no soldiers to stop them about the house. When no response
+was made to her knock, Laodice opened the door and passed in.
+
+Her old conductors followed her.
+
+Amaryllis sat in her ivory chair; opposite her in the exedra was
+Philadelphus. At sight of him, the last of the soft color went out of
+Laodice's face. A curve of despair marked the corners of her mouth and
+she seemed to grow old before those that looked at her.
+
+Philadelphus and the Greek sprang to their feet, the instant the group
+entered.
+
+Laodice waited for no preliminary. Amaryllis' design was patent to
+her; it was part of her sorrow that now Hesper would be free to the
+devices of this deceitful woman. So she did not look at the Greek. She
+addressed Philadelphus in a voice from which all hope and vivacity had
+gone.
+
+"I have brought proofs. Behold them!"
+
+Nathan, the Christian, stood forth.
+
+"I, Nathan of Jerusalem, met and talked with this Laodice, daughter of
+Costobarus, in company with Aquila, the Ephesian, three men-servants
+in all the panoply and state of a coming princess three leagues out of
+Ascalon, her native city. I buried by the roadside her father, who
+died of pestilence on their journey hither. I bear witness that she is
+the daughter of Costobarus and thy wedded wife."
+
+A great light sprang into the face of the Greek. Philadelphus,
+nervous, albeit the news he heard filled him with pleasure, stood and
+waited.
+
+The Christian stepped back and Momus, bowing, approached and handed
+the leather roll into the none too steady hands of the Ephesian. He
+opened it and drew forth parchments.
+
+Aloud he read a minute description of Laodice from the rabbi of the
+synagogue in Ascalon; under the great seals of the Roman state, he
+found and read the oath of the prefect, that such a maiden as the
+rabbi had described had been married before him to Philadelphus
+Maccabaeus fourteen years before. Then followed the depositions of
+forty Jews and Gentiles who were nurses, tradesmen and other people
+like to have daily contact with the young woman in her house, setting
+entirely at naught any claim that Laodice was other than the wife who
+had been supplanted by an adventuress. Philadelphus did not read them
+all. Before he made an end he dropped the documents and flung wide his
+arms. But Laodice with a countenance frozen with suffering held him
+off for a moment.
+
+"Go," she said to the old Christian, "unto Hesper and lead him into
+the belief of the Lord Jesus Christ which is mine."
+
+The old Christian approached the fountain in the center of the
+andronitis and taking up water in his palm sprinkled a few drops on
+her hair while she knelt.
+
+"In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, I baptize
+thee, Laodice. Amen!"
+
+While she knelt, he said:
+
+"I shall search for him also. Christ have mercy on thee now and for
+ever. Farewell."
+
+He was gone.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIII
+
+THE FULFILMENT
+
+
+When Nathan, the Christian, stepped into the streets once more there
+was an immense accession of tumult about him.
+
+He turned to look toward the corner of the Old Wall in time to behold
+Jews in armor and Romans in blazing brass rush together in a great
+cloud of dust as the Old Wall went in and Titus swept down upon
+Jerusalem.
+
+At the same instant from the ruined high place upon Zion came a roar
+of stupendous menace. The Christian, with sublime indifference to
+danger, kept his path toward the concourse from which he had taken
+Laodice. As he ascended the opposite slope of the ravine, he saw,
+descending toward the battle, the front of a rushing multitude, as
+irresistible and as destructive as a great sea in a storm.
+
+He saw that the mob was turning toward Akra, and to avoid it, the
+Christian climbed up to the Tyropean Bridge, and from that point
+viewed the whole of Jerusalem sweeping down upon the heathen.
+
+At the head of the inundation passed a melodious voice crying:
+
+"An end, an end is come upon the four corners of the land! Draw near
+every man with his destroying weapon in his hands for the glory of the
+Lord! For His house is filled with cloud and the Court is full of the
+brightness of the Lord's glory! A sword! A sword is sharpened! The way
+is appointed that the sword may come! For the time for favor to Zion
+is here; yea, the set time is come!"
+
+After this poured a gaunt horde numbering tens of thousands. They bore
+paving-stones, stakes, posts, railings, garden implements, weapons
+from kitchens, from hardware booths and from armories; anything that
+one man or a body of men could wield; torches and kettles of tar;
+chains and ropes; knotted whips, and bundles of fagots; iron spikes,
+instruments of torture, anything and everything which could be turned
+as a weapon or to inflict pain upon the Roman, who believed at this
+moment that Jerusalem was his!
+
+The Christian overlooked this ferocious inundation and shook his head.
+On a mound near him stood the spirit of the mob concentrated and
+personified. It was crazed Posthumus.
+
+He was screaming: "It is finished; the law is run out! All prophecy is
+fulfilled!"
+
+And over his head he was swinging a parchment fiercely burning.
+
+It was the Scroll of the Law!
+
+After uncounted minutes, vibrating with roar, the terrible flood
+rushed by. Feeble arms clasped the Christian about the knees and he
+looked down on the tangled white locks of the palsied man, who had
+searched for him until he had found him. The Christian laid his hand
+on the man's head but did not speak.
+
+At the breach in the Old Wall, the watchers on that almost deserted
+street saw the brazen wave of four legions gather and sweep forward to
+gain ground in the city before the mob swept down on them.
+
+Between the two warring bodies, one orderly, prepared but
+apprehensive, the other mad and perishing, was a considerable space.
+Fighting still went on at the breach in the walls, but the supreme
+conflict of a comparatively small body of soldiers and an uncounted
+horde was not yet precipitated.
+
+Ordinarily, the Roman army could have reduced any popular insurrection
+with half that number of men. But at present the legionaries
+confronted desperate citizens who were simply choosing their own way
+to die. Reason and human fear long since had ceased to inspire them.
+They were believing now and following a prophet because it was the
+final respite before despair. There was no alternative. It was death
+whatever they did, unless, in truth, this splendid sorceress was
+indeed the Voice of the Risen Prince. Force would be of no avail
+against them. Madness had flung them against Rome; only some other
+madness would turn them back.
+
+The Christian, from his commanding position, expected anything.
+
+It was the moment which would show if the false prophet would triumph.
+If the four legions went down before the multitude, it would mean the
+ascendancy of a strange woman over Israel, and the obliteration of the
+faith in Jesus Christ in the Holy Land.
+
+It can not be said that the Christian watched the crisis with a calm
+spirit. He did not wish to see the heathen overthrow the ancient
+people of God, nor could he behold the triumph of a false Christ. He
+put his hands together and prayed.
+
+A figure appeared between the two bodies of combatants, rushing on
+intensely, to grapple.
+
+It was a tall commanding form, clothed in garments that glittered for
+whiteness. By the step, by the poise of the head, the Christian
+recognized Seraiah.
+
+The front of the multitude fell on their faces at that moment as if he
+had struck them down.
+
+Out of the forefront, the prophetess appeared. The Christian heard her
+splendid voice out of the uproar, and while he gazed, he saw mad
+Seraiah turn away from her, with the front of the mob turning after
+him, as a needle turns to the pole.
+
+In that fatal moment of pause, out of which the warning cry of the
+prophetess rang wildly, the Roman tribune, in view for a moment under
+the blowing veils of smoke, flung up his sword, the Roman bugle sang,
+and the brassy legions of Titus hurled themselves upon the halted mob.
+
+The Christian dropped his head into the bend of his elbow and strove
+to shut out the sound. The nervous arms of the palsied man at his feet
+gripped him frantically.
+
+Up from the corner of the Old Wall, came the prolonged "A-a-a-a!" of
+dying thousands.
+
+Jerusalem had fallen.
+
+The foremost of the mob, turning with Seraiah, escaped the onslaught
+of the Romans, and as the mad Pretender strode toward the broad street
+from which the Tyropean Bridge crossed to the demesnes of the Temple,
+they followed him fatuously, blind to the death behind them and the
+oncoming slaughter in which they might fall.
+
+Seraiah passed above the spot where the sorrowful Christian stood,
+crossed the great causeway leading toward the Royal Portico and after
+him six thousand blind and insane enthusiasts followed, expecting
+imminent miracle. Above them towered the heights of Moriah, now veiled
+in smoke. Up the great white bank of stairs they rushed after him,
+facing an ordeal which must mean a baptism in fire, and on through a
+curtain of luminous smoke into a gate pillared in flame, up into the
+Royal Portico, resounding with the tread of the advancing Destroyer,
+out into the great Court of Gentiles wrapped in cloud through which
+the Temple showed, a stupendous cube of heat, through the Gate
+Beautiful where the Keeper no longer stood, thence into the Women's
+Court, raftered with red coals, up smoking stones tier upon tier till
+the roof of the Royal Portico was reached.
+
+At the brink of the pinnacle, they saw through tumbling clouds Seraiah
+towering. He was looking down through masses of smoke upon the City of
+Delight, perishing. They who had followed watched, uplifted with
+terror and frenzy, and while they waited for the miracle which should
+save, the roof crumbled under them and a grave of thrice heated rock
+received them and covered them up.
+
+Below, Nathan, the Christian, seized upon the shoulders of the
+Maccabee as he was dashing after the thousands. His face was black
+with terror for Laodice. He struggled to throw off Nathan, crying
+futilely against the uproar that Laodice was perishing.
+
+"Comfort thee!" the Christian shouted in his ear. "She is saved. She
+sent me to thee."
+
+The Maccabee stopped, as if he realized that he need not go on, but
+had not comprehended what was said to him.
+
+Nathan dragged him out of the way, still choked with people struggling
+to pass on to the Temple or to flee from it. Half-way down the Vale of
+Gihon, where speech was a little more possible, the Maccabee, who had
+been crying questions, made the old man hear.
+
+"Where is she? Where is she?"
+
+"She has returned to her husband. In love with thee, she has done that
+only which she could do and escape sin. She has gone to shelter with
+him whom she does not love!"
+
+The Maccabee seized his head in his hands.
+
+"It is like her--like her!" he groaned.
+
+In the Christian's heart he knew how narrowly Laodice had made her
+lover's mark for her.
+
+"It is her wish," Nathan continued, "that I teach thee Christ whom she
+hath received."
+
+"How can I receive Him, when He sent her from me?" the unhappy man
+groaned, unconscious of his contradictions.
+
+"How canst thou reject Him when His teaching led thy love to do that
+which thine own lips have confessed to be the better thing?"
+
+"Then what of myself, when I love where I should not love?" the
+Maccabee insisted.
+
+"You may suffer and sin not," the Christian said kindly.
+
+The unhappy man dropped to his knees.
+
+"O Christ, why should I resist Thee!" he groaned. "Thou hast stripped
+me and made me see that my loss is good!"
+
+The Christian laid his hands on the Maccabee's head.
+
+"Dost thou believe?" he asked.
+
+"Will Christ accept me, coming because I must?"
+
+"It is not laid down how we shall baptize in the thirst of a famine,"
+Nathan said, "yet He who sees fit to deny water never yet hath denied
+grace."
+
+But the Christian's hand extended over the kneeling man was caught in
+a grip steadied with intense emotion. The unknown had seized him.
+
+But for his feeling that this interruption was necessary to the
+welfare of another soul, the Christian would not have paused in his
+ministry.
+
+The phantom straightened himself with a superb reinvestment of
+manhood.
+
+"Thou, son of the Maccabee, Philadelphus!" he exclaimed to the
+kneeling man.
+
+The Ephesian's arms sank.
+
+"Who art thou that knoweth me?" he asked in a dead voice.
+
+"I am all that plague and sin hath left of thy servant Aquila," the
+phantom declared.
+
+The Maccabee lifted his face for what should follow this revelation.
+It was only a manifestation of his subjection to another will than his
+own. He was not interested--he who was hoping to die.
+
+"Hear me, and curse me!" Aquila went on. "But save thy wife yet. I say
+unto thee, master, that she whom thou hast sheltered in the cavern is
+thy wife, Laodice!"
+
+The Maccabee struggled up to his feet and gazed with stunned and
+unbelieving eyes at this wreck of his pagan servant, who went on
+precipitately.
+
+"Her I plotted against at the instigation of Julian of Ephesus. Her,
+my mistress, Salome the Cyprian, robbed and hath impersonated thus
+long to her safety in the house of the Greek. This hour, through
+ignorance of thine own identity, through my fault, she hath gone
+reluctantly to his arms. Curse me and let me die!"
+
+The Maccabee seized the hair at his temples. For a moment the awful
+gaze he bent upon Aquila seemed to show that the gentler spirit had
+been dislodged from his heart. Then he cried:
+
+"God help us both, Aquila! My fault was greater than thine!"
+
+He turned and fled toward the house of the Greek.
+
+The four legions of Titus swept after him.
+
+Aquila lifted his eyes for the first time and gazed at Nathan.
+
+"I cursed thee for sparing me to such an existence as was mine!
+Behold, father, thou didst bless me, instead. I am ready to die."
+
+"Wait," the Christian said peacefully.
+
+A moment later, the Maccabee dashed into the andronitis of Amaryllis.
+
+After him sprang a terrified servant crying:
+
+"The Roman! The Roman is upon us!"
+
+A roar of such magnitude that it penetrated the stone walls of
+Amaryllis' house, swept in after the servant. Quaking menials began to
+pour into the hall. Among them came the blue-eyed girl, the athlete
+and Juventius the Swan. These three joined their mistress who stood
+under a hanging lamp. Into the passage from the court, left open by
+the frightened servants, swept the prolonged outcry of perishing
+Jerusalem. Over it all thundered the boom of the siege-engines shaking
+the earth.
+
+The slaves slipped down upon their knees and began to groan together.
+The silver coins on the lamp began to swing; the brass cyanthus which
+Amaryllis had recently drained of her last drink of wine moved
+gradually to the edge of the pedestal upon which she had placed it.
+
+The dual nature of the uproar was now distinct; organized warfare and
+popular disaster at the same time. The Roman was sweeping up the
+ancient ravine. Jerusalem had fallen.
+
+The gradual crescendo now attained deafening proportions; the hanging
+lamp increased its swing; the silver coins began to strike together
+with keen and exquisitely fine music. Juventius the Swan, with his dim
+eyes filled with horror, was looking at them. The peculiar desperate
+indifference of the wholly hopeless seized him. His long white hands
+began to move with the motion of the lamp; the music of the meeting
+coins became regular; he caught the note, and mounting, with a bound,
+the rostrum that had been his Olympus all his life, began to sing. The
+melody of his glorious voice struggled only a moment for supremacy
+with the uproar of imminent death and then his increasing exaltation
+gave him triumph. The great hall shook with the magnificent power of
+his only song!
+
+The Maccabee confronted Amaryllis, with fierce question in his eyes.
+She pointed calmly at the heavy white curtain pulled to one side and
+caught on a bracket. The brass wicket over the black mouth of the
+tunnel was wide.
+
+Without a word, the Maccabee plunged into it and was swallowed up.
+
+Amaryllis looked after him.
+
+"And no farewell?" she said.
+
+The thunder of assault began at her door. Juventius sang it down. The
+athlete and the girl crept toward the mouth of the black passage,
+wavered a moment and plunged in. After them tumbled a confusion of
+artists and servants who were swallowed up, and the hall was filled
+only with music.
+
+The woman by the lectern and the singer on the rostrum had chosen. To
+live without beauty and to live without love were not possible to the
+one who had known beauty all his life, to the one who had learned love
+so late--after she had been beggared of her dowry of purity.
+
+There was hardly an appreciable interval between the time of the
+desertion of her artists and the thunder of assault at her door, but
+in that space there passed before Amaryllis that useless retrospect
+which is death's recapitulation of the life it means to take. And out
+of that long procession, she singled one conviction which made the
+step of the Roman on her threshold welcome. It was an old, old moral,
+so old that it had never had weight with her, who believed it was time
+to reconstruct the whole artistic attitude of the world.
+
+And that was why she waited impatiently at her doorway for death,
+which was a kinder thing than life.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIV
+
+THE ROAD TO PELLA
+
+
+There was no incident in the Maccabee's long struggle through the inky
+blackness of the tunnel leading under Moriah.
+
+It was night when the first new air from the outside world reached
+him. So he rushed into great open darkness, lighted with stars, before
+he knew that he had emerged from the underground passage.
+
+Entire silence after the turmoil which had shaken Jerusalem for many
+months fell almost like a blow upon his unaccustomed ears. The air was
+sweet. He had not breathed sweet air since May. The hills were
+solitary. Week in and week out, he had never been away from the sound
+of groaning thousands. Not since he had assumed his disguise to
+Laodice in the wilderness had he been close to the immemorial repose
+of nature. All his primitive manhood rushed back to him, now
+infuriated with a fear that his love was the spoil of another.
+
+All instinct became alert; all his intelligence and resource assembled
+to his aid. It came to him as inspiration always occurs at such times,
+that if the pair proceeded rationally, they would move toward a secure
+place at once. Pella occurred to him in a happy moment.
+
+He took his bearings by the stars and hurried north and east.
+
+He came upon a road presently, almost obliterated by a summer's drift
+of dust and sand. It had been long since any one had gone up that way
+to Jerusalem. There was no moon to show him whether there were any
+recent marks of fugitives fleeing that way.
+
+He did not expect that Julian of Ephesus would have courage to halt
+within sight of the glow on the western horizon which was the burning
+from the Temple. He expected the Ephesian to flee far and long, and in
+that consciousness of the cowardice of his enemy he based his hope.
+
+But he ran tirelessly, seeking right and left, led on by instinct
+toward the Christian city in the north.
+
+At times, his terror for Laodice made him cry out; again, he made
+violent pictures of his revenge upon Julian; and at other moments, he
+believed, while drops stood on his forehead from the effort of faith,
+that his new Christ would save her yet. There were moments when he was
+ready to die of despair, when he wondered at himself attempting to
+trace Julian with all the directions of wild Judea to invite the
+fugitives. Why might they not have fled toward Arabia as well, or even
+toward the sea? Perhaps they had not gone far, but had hidden in the
+rock, and had been left behind. Conflicting argument strove to turn
+him from his path, but the old instinct, final resource after the mind
+gives up the puzzle, kept him straight on the road to Pella.
+
+He came upon the rear of a flock of sheep, heading away from him. A
+Natolian sheep-dog, galloping hither and thither in his labor at
+keeping them moving, scented the new-comer. There was a quick savage
+bark that heightened at the end in an excited yelp of welcome. The
+shepherd, a dim figure at the head of the flock, turned in time to see
+his dog leaping upon the Maccabee.
+
+"Down, Urge," the shepherd cried.
+
+"Joseph, in the name of God," the Maccabee cried, "where is Laodice?"
+
+He threw off the excited dog and rushed toward the boy, who turned
+back at the cry with extended hands.
+
+"True to thy promise, friend, friend!" the boy cried. "She is here!"
+
+The Maccabee stiffened.
+
+"Is there one with her?" he demanded fiercely.
+
+"A man and her servant."
+
+The Maccabee threw off the boy's hands.
+
+"Where?" he cried.
+
+"Ahead of the sheep," the boy said a little uncertainly.
+
+The Maccabee dashed through the flock and rounding a turn in the road
+came upon Laodice walking; behind her Momus; at her side was Julian of
+Ephesus.
+
+Immense strain had sharpened their sense of fear until it was as acute
+as an instinct. Before the sound of the Maccabee's furious approach
+reached Julian, the Ephesian whirled.
+
+Towering over him, the very picture of retribution, was the man he had
+left, apparently dead by his hand, by the roadside in the hills of
+Judea months and months before.
+
+For an instant, Julian stood petrified. Over his lips came a faint,
+frozen whisper that Laodice heard--that was proof enough to her, the
+moment after.
+
+"Philadelphus--Maccabaeus!"
+
+When his outraged kinsman put out vengeful hands to seize him, the
+Maccabee grasped the air. Julian of Ephesus had vanished!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Among the rocks at the base of the cliff that sheltered Christian
+Pella from the rude winds of the Perean mountains, the procurator of
+the city, Philadelphus Maccabaeus, and his wife, Laodice, sat side by
+side in the morning sun. There was a path little wider than a man's
+hand wandering along below them toward a well in the hollow of the
+rocks. Along this way, in early morning, Joseph, the shepherd, was in
+the habit of driving his sheep to drink. And hither the procurator and
+his wife came to visit the boy from time to time. Within their hall,
+there was too much state. Something in the wild open of Judea with its
+winds gave them all an ease whenever they wished to talk with Joseph.
+
+But the shepherd was not in sight. The pair sat down and waited for
+him.
+
+Laodice rested against her husband's arm, laid along the rock behind
+her. Presently he freed that arm and with the ease of much usage
+withdrew the bodkins from her hair. The heavy coil dropped over his
+breast down to his knee. With delicate touches he began to free from
+the splendid tangle a single strand of glistening white hair. When she
+saw it shining like spun silver across the back of his hand, she
+looked up at him. With infinite care he searched her face, while she
+waited with questioning in her tender eyes.
+
+"This," he said, lifting the hand that supported the silver threads,
+"is the sole evidence that thou hast seen the abomination of
+desolation."
+
+"And that came the night I journeyed away from Jerusalem, without
+you," she declared. "But, my Philadelphus," she said, turning herself
+a little that she might hide her face away from him, "had I stayed
+with you against my conscience, I had been by this time wholly white."
+
+He kissed her.
+
+"I did not expect you to stay," he said. "I knew from the beginning
+that you would not. Ask Joseph. He will bear me out."
+
+Low on the slope of the hill, the shepherd approached, calling his
+sheep that trailed after him contentedly by the hundreds. The excited
+bark of Urge, the sheep-dog, came up faintly to them.
+
+While they leaned watching them, old Momus, bent and broken, stood
+before them. Laodice hurriedly drew away from her husband's clasp. It
+was a habit she had never entirely shaken off, whenever the mute
+appeared, in spite of the old man's pathetic dumb protest.
+
+He handed a linen scroll to his master.
+
+It read:
+
+ The captives whom thou hast asked for freedom at Caesar's hand are
+ this day sent to thee, Philadelphus, under escort. They should
+ reach thee a little later than this messenger. However, it is
+ Caesar's pain to inform thee that the Greek Amaryllis as well as
+ the actress Salome were not to be found. Julian of Ephesus, who
+ named the woman for us, is here at Caesarea, but being a Roman
+ citizen, is not a captive. However it shall be seen to that his
+ liberty is sufficiently curtailed for the welfare of the public.
+ Also, I send herewith a shittim-wood casket found with John of
+ Gischala when he was captured in a cavern under Jerusalem. It
+ contains treasure and certain writings which identify it as
+ property of thy wife. There were other features in it which,
+ coming to my hand first, made it advisable that the State should
+ not know of its existence. And privately, it will be wise in thee
+ to destroy them.
+
+The Maccabee stopped at this point and looked at Laodice.
+
+"What does he mean?" he asked.
+
+"My father put your last letter in the case," she said, with a little
+panic in her face.
+
+The Maccabee laughed, and went on,
+
+ Those that go forward to thee are Nathan of Jerusalem and Aquila
+ of Ephesus. To thy wife my obeisances. To thyself, greeting.
+
+ CARUS, TRIBUNE.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The City of Delight, by Elizabeth Miller
+
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