<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>Elissa</h1>
<h3>OR THE DOOM OF ZIMBABWE </h3>
<h2 class="no-break">by H. Rider Haggard</h2>
<hr />
<h2>Contents</h2>
<table summary="" >
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#pref01">DEDICATION</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#pref02">AUTHOR’S NOTE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#pref03">NOTE</SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. THE CARAVAN</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. THE GROVE OF BAALTIS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. ITHOBAL THE KING</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. THE DREAM OF ISSACHAR</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. THE PLACE OF SACRIFICE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. THE HALL OF AUDIENCE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. THE BLACK DWARF</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. AZIEL PLIGHTS HIS TROTH</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. GREETING TO THE BAALTIS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. THE EMBASSY</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. METEM SELLS IMAGES</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. THE TRYST</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII. THE SACRILEGE OF AZIEL</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV. THE MARTYRDOM OF ISSACHAR</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV. ELISSA TAKES SANCTUARY</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI. THE CAGE OF DEATH</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII. “THERE IS HOPE”</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<h2><SPAN name="pref01"></SPAN>DEDICATION</h2>
<p class="center">
To the Memory of the Child<br/>
Nada Burnham,</p>
<p>who “bound all to her” and, while her father cut his way through
the hordes of the Ingobo Regiment, perished of the hardships of war at Buluwao
on 19th May, 1896, I dedicate these tales—and more particularly the last,
that of a Faith which triumphed over savagery and death.</p>
<p class="right">
H. Rider Haggard.</p>
<p class="letter">
Ditchingham.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="pref02"></SPAN> AUTHOR’S NOTE</h2>
<p>Of the three stories that comprise this volume[*], one, “The
Wizard,” a tale of victorious faith, first appeared some years ago as a
Christmas Annual. Another, “Elissa,” is an attempt, difficult
enough owing to the scantiness of the material left to us by time, to recreate
the life of the ancient Phœnician Zimbabwe, whose ruins still stand in
Rhodesia, and, with the addition of the necessary love story, to suggest
circumstances such as might have brought about or accompanied its fall at the
hands of the surrounding savage tribes. The third, “Black Heart and White
Heart,” is a story of the courtship, trials and final union of a pair of
Zulu lovers in the time of King Cetywayo.</p>
<p class="footnote">
[*] This text was prepared from a volume published in 1900 titled “Black
Heart and White Heart, and Other Stories.”— JB.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="pref03"></SPAN> NOTE</h2>
<p>The world is full of ruins, but few of them have an origin so utterly lost in
mystery as those of Zimbabwe in South Central Africa. Who built them? What
purpose did they serve? These are questions that must have perplexed many
generations, and many different races of men.</p>
<p>The researches of Mr. Wilmot prove to us indeed that in the Middle Ages
Zimbabwe or Zimboe was the seat of a barbarous empire, whose ruler was named
the Emperor of Monomotapa, also that for some years the Jesuits ministered in a
Christian church built beneath the shadow of its ancient towers. But of the
original purpose of those towers, and of the race that reared them, the
inhabitants of mediæval Monomotapa, it is probable, knew less even than we know
to-day. The labours and skilled observation of the late Mr. Theodore Bent,
whose death is so great a loss to all interested in such matters, have shown
almost beyond question that Zimbabwe was once an inland Phœnician city, or at
the least a city whose inhabitants were of a race which practised Phœnician
customs and worshipped the Phœnician deities. Beyond this all is conjecture.
How it happened that a trading town, protected by vast fortifications and
adorned with temples dedicated to the worship of the gods of the
Sidonians—or rather trading towns, for Zimbabwe is only one of a group of
ruins—were built by civilised men in the heart of Africa perhaps we shall
never learn with certainty, though the discovery of the burying-places of their
inhabitants might throw some light upon the problem.</p>
<p>But if actual proof is lacking, it is scarcely to be doubted—for the
numerous old workings in Rhodesia tell their own tale—that it was the
presence of payable gold reefs worked by slave labour which tempted the
Phœnician merchants and chapmen, contrary to their custom, to travel so far
from the sea and establish themselves inland. Perhaps the city Zimboe was the
Ophir spoken of in the first Book of Kings. At least, it is almost certain that
its principal industries were the smelting and the sale of gold, also it seems
probable that expeditions travelling by sea and land would have occupied quite
three years of time in reaching it from Jerusalem and returning thither laden
with the gold and precious stones, the ivory and the almug trees (1 Kings x.).
Journeying in Africa must have been slow in those days; that it was also
dangerous is testified by the ruins of the ancient forts built to protect the
route between the gold towns and the sea.</p>
<p>However these things may be, there remains ample room for speculation both as
to the dim beginnings of the ancient city and its still dimmer end, whereof we
can guess only, when it became weakened by luxury and the mixture of races,
that hordes of invading savages stamped it out of existence beneath their
blood-stained feet, as, in after ages, they stamped out the Empire of
Monomotapa. In the following romantic sketch the writer has ventured—no
easy task—to suggest incidents such as might have accompanied this first
extinction of the Phœnician Zimbabwe. The pursuit indeed is one in which he
can only hope to fill the place of a humble pioneer, since it is certain that
in times to come the dead fortress-temples of South Africa will occupy the pens
of many generations of the writers of romance who, as he hopes, may have more
ascertained facts to build upon than are available to-day.</p>
<h2>ELISSA</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>CHAPTER I<br/> THE CARAVAN</h2>
<p>The sun, which shone upon a day that was gathered to the past some three
thousand years ago, was setting in full glory over the expanses of
south-eastern Africa—the Libya of the ancients. Its last burning rays
fell upon a cavalcade of weary men, who, together with long strings of camels,
asses and oxen, after much toil had struggled to the crest of a line of stony
hills, where they were halted to recover breath. Before them lay a plain,
clothed with sere yellow grass—for the season was winter—and
bounded by mountains of no great height, upon whose slopes stood the city which
they had travelled far to seek. It was the ancient city of Zimboe, whereof the
lonely ruins are known to us moderns as Zimbabwe.</p>
<p>At the sight of its flat-roofed houses of sun-dried brick, set upon the side of
the opposing hill, and dominated by a huge circular building of dark stone, the
caravan raised a great shout of joy. It shouted in several tongues, in the
tongues of Phœnicia, of Egypt, of the Hebrews, of Arabia, and of the coasts of
Africa, for all these peoples were represented amongst its numbers. Well might
the wanderers cry out in their delight, seeing that at length, after eight
months of perilous travelling from the coast, they beheld the walls of their
city of rest, of the golden Ophir of the Bible. Their company had started from
the eastern port, numbering fifteen hundred men, besides women and children,
and of those not more than half were left alive. Once a savage tribe had
ambushed them, killing many. Once the pestilential fever of the low lands had
taken them so that they died of it by scores. Twice also had they suffered
heavily through hunger and thirst, to say nothing of their losses by the fangs
of lions, crocodiles, and other wild beasts which with the country swarmed. Now
their toils were over; and for six months, or perhaps a year, they might rest
and trade in the Great City, enjoying its wealth, its flesh-pots, and the
unholy orgies which, among people of the Phœnician race, were dignified by the
name of the worship of the gods of heaven.</p>
<p>Soon the clamour died away, and although no command was given, the caravan
started on at speed. All weariness faded from the faces of the wayworn
travellers, even the very camels and asses, shrunk, as most of them were, to
mere skeletons, seemed to understand that labour and blows were done with, and
forgetting their loads, shambled unurged down the stony path. One man lingered,
however. Clearly he was a person of rank, for eight or ten attendants
surrounded him.</p>
<p>“Go,” said he, “I wish to be alone, and will follow
presently.” So they bowed to the earth, and went.</p>
<p>The man was young, perhaps six or eight and twenty years of age. His dark skin,
burnt almost to blackness by the heat of the sun, together with the fashion of
his short, square-cut beard and of his garments, proclaimed him of Jewish or
Egyptian blood, while the gold collar about his neck and the gold graven ring
upon his hand showed that his rank was high. Indeed this wanderer was none
other than the prince Aziel, nick-named the Ever-living, because of a curious
mole upon his shoulder bearing a resemblance to the <i>crux ansata</i>, the
symbol of life eternal among the Egyptians. By blood he was a grandson of
Solomon, the mighty king of Israel, and born of a royal mother, a princess of
Egypt.</p>
<p>In stature Aziel was tall, but somewhat slimly made, having small bones. His
face was oval in shape, the features, especially the mouth, being fine and
sensitive; the eyes were large, dark, and full of thought—the eyes of a
man with a destiny. For the most part, indeed, they were sombre and over-full
of thought, but at times they could light up with a strange fire.</p>
<p>Aziel the prince placed his hand against his forehead in such fashion as to
shade his face from the rays of the setting sun, and from beneath its shadow
gazed long and earnestly at the city of the hill.</p>
<p>“At length I behold thee, thanks be to God,” he murmured, for he
was a worshipper of Jehovah, and not of his mother’s deities, “and
it is time, since, to speak the truth, I am weary of this travelling. Now what
fortune shall I find within thy walls, O City of Gold and devil-servers?”</p>
<p>“Who can tell?” said a quiet voice at his elbow. “Perhaps,
Prince, you will find a wife, or a throne, or—a grave.”</p>
<p>Aziel started, and turned to see a man standing at his side, clothed in robes
that had been rich, but were now torn and stained with travel, and wearing on
his head a black cap in shape not unlike the fez that is common in the East
to-day. The man was past middle age, having a grizzled beard, sharp, hard
features and quick eyes, which withal were not unkindly. He was a Phœnician
merchant, much trusted by Hiram, the King of Tyre, who had made him captain of
the merchandise of this expedition.</p>
<p>“Ah! is it you, Metem?” said Aziel. “Why do you leave your
charge to return to me?”</p>
<p>“That I may guard a more precious charge—yourself, Prince,”
replied the merchant courteously. “Having brought the child of Israel so
far in safety, I desire to hand him safely to the governor of yonder city. Your
servants told me that by your command they had left you alone, so I returned to
bear you company, for after nightfall robbers and savages wander without these
walls.”</p>
<p>“I thank you for your care, Metem, though I think there is little danger,
and at the worst I can defend myself.”</p>
<p>“Do not thank me, Prince; I am a merchant, and now, as in the past, I
protect you, knowing that for it I shall be paid. The governor will give me a
rich reward when I lead you to him safely, and when in years to come I return
with you still safe to the court of Jerusalem, then the great king will fill my
ship’s hold with gifts.”</p>
<p>“That depends, Metem,” replied the prince. “If my grandfather
still reigns it may be so, but he is very old, and if my uncle wears his crown,
then I am not sure. Truly you Phœnicians love money. Would you, then, sell me
for gold also, Metem?”</p>
<p>“I said not so, Prince, though even friendship has its
price——”</p>
<p>“Among your people, Metem?”</p>
<p>“Among all people, Prince. You reproach us with loving money; well, we
do, since money gives everything for which men strive—honour, and place,
and comfort, and the friendship of kings.”</p>
<p>“It cannot give you love, Metem.”</p>
<p>The Phœnician laughed contemptuously. “Love! with gold I will buy as
much of it as I need. Are there no slaves upon the market, and no free women
who desire ornaments and ease and the purple of Tyre? You are young, Prince, to
say that gold cannot buy us love.”</p>
<p>“And you, Metem, who are growing old, do not understand what I mean by
love, nor will I stay to explain it to you, for were my words as wise as
Solomon’s, still you would not understand. At the least your money cannot
bring you the blessing of Heaven, nor the welfare of your spirit in the eternal
life that is to come.”</p>
<p>“The welfare of my spirit, Prince? No, it cannot, since I do not believe
that I have a spirit. When I die, I die, and there is an end. But the blessing
of Heaven, ah! that can be bought, as I have proved once and again, if not with
gold, then otherwise. Did I not in bygone years pass the first son of my
manhood through the fire to Baal-Sidon? Nay, shrink not from me; it cost me
dear, but my fortune was at stake, and better that the boy should die than that
all of us should live on in penury and bonds. Know you not, Prince, that the
gods must have the gifts of the best, gifts of blood and virtue, or they will
curse us and torment us?”</p>
<p>“I do not know it, Metem, for such gods are no gods, but devils, children
of Beelzebub, who has no power over the righteous. Truly I would have none of
your two gods, Phœnician; upon earth the god of gold, and in heaven the devil
of slaughter.”</p>
<p>“Speak no ill of him, Prince,” answered Metem solemnly, “for
here you are not in the courts of Jehovah, but in his land, and he may chance
to prove his power on you. For the rest, I had sooner follow after gold than
the folly of a drunken spirit which you name Love, seeing that it works its
votary less mischief. Say now, it was a woman and her love that drove you
hither to this wild land, was it not, Prince? Well, be careful lest a woman and
her love should keep you here.”</p>
<p>“The sun sets,” said Aziel coldly; “let us go forward.”</p>
<p>With a bow and a murmured salute, for his quick courtier instinct told him that
he had spoken too freely, Metem took the bridle of the prince’s mule,
holding the stirrup while he mounted. Then he turned to seek his own, but the
animal had wandered, and a full half hour went by before it could be captured.</p>
<p>By now the sun had set, and as there is little or no twilight in Southern
Africa it became difficult for the two travellers to find their way down the
rough hill path. Still they stumbled on, till presently the long dead grass
brushing against their knees told them that they had lost the road, although
they knew that they were riding in the right direction, for the watch-fires
burning on the city walls were a guide to them. Soon, however, they lost sight
of these fires, the boughs of a grove of thickly-leaved trees hiding them from
view, and in trying to push their way through the wood Metem’s mule
stumbled against a root and fell.</p>
<p>“Now there is but one thing to be done,” said the Phœnician, as he
dragged the animal from the ground, “and it is to stay here till the moon
rises, which should be within an hour. It would have been wiser, Prince, if we
had waited to discuss love and the gods till we were safe within the walls of
the city, for the end of it is that we have fallen into the hands of king
Darkness, and he is the father of many evil things.”</p>
<p>“That is so, Metem,” answered the prince, “and I am to blame.
Let us bide here in patience, since we must.”</p>
<p>So, holding their mules by the bridles, they sat down upon the ground and
waited in silence, for each of them was lost in his own thoughts.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>CHAPTER II<br/> THE GROVE OF BAALTIS</h2>
<p>At length, as the two men sat thus silently, for the place and its gloom
oppressed them, a sound broke upon the quiet of the night, that beginning with
a low wail such as might come from the lips of a mourner, ended in a chant or
song. The voice, which seemed close at hand, was low, rich and passionate. At
times it sank almost to a sob, and at times, taking a higher note, it thrilled
upon the air in tones that would have been shrill were they not so sweet.</p>
<p>“Who is it that sings?” said Aziel to Metem.</p>
<p>“Be silent, I pray you,” whispered the other in his ear; “we
have wandered into one of the sacred groves of Baaltis, which it is death for
men to enter save at the appointed festivals, and a priestess of the grove
chants her prayer to the goddess.”</p>
<p>“We did not come of our own will, so doubtless we shall be
forgiven,” answered Aziel indifferently; “but that song moves me.
Tell me the words of it, which I can scarcely follow, for her accent is strange
to me.”</p>
<p>“Prince, they seem to be holy words to which I have little right to
hearken. The priestess sings an ancient hallowed chant of life and death, and
she prays that the goddess may touch her soul with the wing of fire and make
her great and give her vision of things that have been and that shall be. More
I dare not tell you now; indeed I can barely hear, and the song is hard to
understand. Crouch down, for the moon rises, and pray that the mules may not
stir. Presently she will go, and we can fly the holy place.”</p>
<p>The Israelite obeyed and waited, searching the darkness with eager eyes.</p>
<p>Now the edge of the great moon appeared upon the horizon, and by degrees her
white rays of light revealed a strange scene to the watchers. About an open
space of ground, some eighty paces in diameter, grew seven huge and ancient
baobab trees, so ancient indeed that they must have been planted by the
primæval hand of nature rather than by that of man. Aziel and his companion
were hidden with their mules behind the trunk of one of these trees, and
looking round it they perceived that the open space beyond the shadow of the
branches was not empty. In the centre of this space stood an altar, and by it
was placed the rude figure of a divinity carved in wood and painted. On the
head of this figure rose a crescent symbolical of the moon, and round its neck
hung a chain of wooden stars. It had four wings but no hands, and of these
wings two were out-spread and two clasped a shapeless object to its breast,
intended, apparently, to represent a child. By these symbols Aziel knew that
before him was an effigy sacred to the goddess of the Phœnicians, who in
different countries passed by the various names of Astarte, or Ashtoreth, or
Baaltis, and who in their coarse worship was at once the personification of the
moon and the emblem of fertility.</p>
<p>Standing before this rude fetish, between it and the altar, whereon lay some
flowers, and in such fashion that the moonlight struck full upon her, was a
white-robed woman. She was young and very beautiful both in shape and feature,
and though her black hair streaming almost to the knees took from her height,
she still seemed tall. Her rounded arms were outstretched; her sweet and
passionate face was upturned towards the sky, and even at that distance the
watchers could see her deep eyes shining in the moonlight. The sacred song of
the priestess was finished. Now she was praying aloud, slowly, and in a clear
voice, so that Aziel could hear and understand her; praying from her very
heart, not to the idol before her, however, but to the moon above.</p>
<p>“O Queen of Heaven,” she said, “thou whose throne I see but
whose face I cannot see, hear the prayer of thy priestess, and protect me from
the fate I fear, and rid me of him I hate. Safe let me dwell and pure, and as
thou fillest the night with light, so fill the darkness of my soul with the
wisdom that I crave. O whisper into my ears and let me hear the voice of
heaven, teaching me that which I would know. Read me the riddle of my life, and
let me learn wherefore I am not as my sisters are; why feasts and offerings
delight me not; why I thirst for knowledge and not for wealth, and why I crave
such love as here I cannot win. Satisfy my being with thy immortal lore and a
love that does not fail or die, and if thou wilt, then take my life in payment.
Speak to me from the heaven above, O Baaltis, or show me some sign upon the
earth beneath; fill up the vessel of my thirsty soul and satisfy the hunger of
my spirit. Oh! thou that art the goddess, thou that hast the gift of power,
give me, thy servant, of thy power, of thy godhead, and of thy peace. Hear me,
O Heaven-born, hear me, Elissa, the daughter of Sakon, the dedicate of thee.
Hear, hear, and answer now in the secret holy hour, answer by voice, by wonder,
or by symbol.”</p>
<p>The woman paused as though exhausted with the passion of her prayer, hiding her
face in her hands, and as she stood thus silent and expectant, the sign came,
or at least that chanced which for a while she believed to have been an answer
to her invocation. Her face was hidden, so she could not see, and fascinated by
her beauty as it appeared to them in that unhallowed spot, and by the depth and
dignity of her wild prayer, the two watchers had eyes for her alone. Therefore
it happened that not until his arm was about to drag her away, did either of
them perceive a huge man, black as ebony in colour, clad in a cloak of leopard
skins and carrying in his right hand a broad-bladed spear who, following the
shadow of the trees, had crept upon the priestess from the farther side of the
glade.</p>
<p>With a guttural exclamation of triumph he gripped her in his left arm, and,
despite her struggles and her shrill cry for help, began half to drag and half
to carry her towards the deep shade of the baobab grove. Instantly Aziel and
Metem sprang up and rushed forward, drawing their bronze swords as they ran. As
it chanced, however, the Israelite caught his foot in one of the numerous
tree-roots, which stood above the surface of the ground and fell heavily upon
his face. In a few seconds, twenty perhaps, he found his breath and feet again,
to see that Metem had come up with the black giant who, hearing his approach,
suddenly wheeled round to meet him, still holding the struggling priestess in
his grasp. Now the Phœnician was so close upon him that the savage could find
no time to shift the grip upon his spear, but drove at him with the knobbed end
of its handle, striking him full upon the forehead and felling him as a butcher
fells an ox. Then once more he turned to fly with his captive, but before he
had covered ten yards the sound of Aziel’s approaching footsteps caused
him to wheel round again.</p>
<p>At sight of the Israelite advancing upon him with drawn sword, the great
barbarian freed himself from the burden of the girl by throwing her heavily to
the ground, where she lay, for the breath was shaken out of her. Then snatching
the cloak from his throat he wound it over his left arm to serve as a shield,
and with a savage yell, rushed straight at Aziel, purposing to transfix him
with the broad-headed spear.</p>
<p>Well was it for the prince that he had been trained in sword-play from his
youth, also, notwithstanding his slight build, that he was strong and active as
a leopard. To await the onslaught would be to die, for the spear must pierce
him before ever he could reach the attacker’s body with his short sword.
Therefore, as the weapon flashed upward he sprang aside, avoiding it, at the
same time, with one swift sweep of his sword, slashing its holder across the
back as he passed him.</p>
<p>With a howl of pain and rage the savage sprang round and charged him a second
time. Again Aziel leapt to one side, but now he struck with all his force at
the spear shaft which his assailant lifted to guard his head. So strong was the
blow and so sharp the heavy sword, that it shore through the wood, severing the
handle from the spear, which fell to the ground. Casting away the useless
shaft, the warrior drew a long knife from his girdle, and before Aziel could
strike again faced him for the third time. But he no longer rushed onward like
a bull, for he had learnt caution; he stood still, holding the skin cloak
before him shield fashion, and peering at his adversary from over its edge.</p>
<p>Now it was Aziel’s turn to take the offensive, and slowly he circled
round the huge barbarian, watching his opportunity. At length it came. In
answer to a feint of his the protecting cloak was dropped a little, enabling
him to prick its bearer in the neck, but only with the point of his sword. The
thrust delivered, he leapt back, and not too soon, for forgetting his caution
in his fury, the savage charged straight at him with a roar like that of a
lion. So swift and terrible was his onset that Aziel, having no time to spring
aside, did the only thing possible. Gripping the ground with his feet, he bent
his body forward, and with outstretched arm and sword, braced up his muscles to
receive the charge. Another instant, and the leopard skin cloak fluttered
before him. With a quick movement of his left arm he swept it aside; then there
came a sudden pressure upon his sword ending in a jarring shock, a flash of
steel above his head, and down he went to the ground beneath the weight of the
black giant.</p>
<p>“Now there is an end,” he thought; “Heaven receive my
spirit.” And his senses left him.</p>
<p>When they returned again, Aziel perceived dimly that a white-draped figure bent
over him, dragging at something black which crushed his breast, who, as she
dragged, sobbed in her grief and fear. Then he remembered, and with an effort
sat up, rolling from him the corpse of his foe, for his sword had pierced the
barbarian through breast and heart and back. At this sight the woman ceased her
sobbing, and said in the Phœnician tongue:—</p>
<p>“Sir, do you indeed live? Then the protecting gods be thanked, and to
Baaltis the Mother I vow a gift of this hair of mine in gratitude.”</p>
<p>“Nay, lady,” he answered faintly, for he was much shaken,
“that would be a pity; also, if any, it is my hair which should be
vowed.”</p>
<p>“You bleed from the head,” she broke in; “say, stranger, are
you deeply wounded.”</p>
<p>“I will tell you nothing of my head,” he replied, with a smile,
“unless you promise that you will not offer up your hair.”</p>
<p>“So be it, stranger, since I must; I will give the goddess this gold
chain instead; it is of more worth.”</p>
<p>“You would do better, lady,” said the shrill voice of Metem, who by
now had found his wits again, “to give the gold chain to me whose scalp
has been broken in rescuing you from that black thief.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” she answered, “I am grateful to you from my heart, but
it is this young lord who killed the man and saved me from slavery worse than
death, and he shall be rewarded by my father.”</p>
<p>“Listen to her,” grumbled Metem. “Did I not rush in first in
my folly and receive what I deserved for my pains? But am I to have neither
thanks nor pay, who am but an old merchant; they are for the young prince who
came after. Well, so it ever was; the thanks I can spare, and the reward I
shall claim from the treasury of the goddess.</p>
<p>“Now, Prince, let me see your hurt. Ah! a cut on the ear, no more, and
thank your natal star that it is so, for another inch and the great vein of the
neck would have been severed. Prince, if you are able, draw out your sword from
the carcase of that brute, for I have tried and cannot loosen the blade. Then
perhaps this lady will guide us to the city before his fellows come to seek
him, seeing that for one night I have had a stomach full of fighting.”</p>
<p>“Sirs, I will indeed. It is close at hand, and my father will thank you
there; but if it is your pleasure, tell me by what names I shall make known to
him you whose rank seems to be so high?”</p>
<p>“Lady, I am Metem the Phœnician, captain of the merchandise of the
caravan of Hiram, King of Tyre, and this lord who slew the thief is none other
than the prince Aziel, the twice royal, for he is grandson to the glorious King
of Israel, and through his mother of the blood of the Pharaohs of Egypt.”</p>
<p>“And yet he risked his life to save me,” the girl murmured
astonished; then dropping to her knees before Aziel, she touched the ground
with her forehead in obeisance, giving him thanks, and praising him after the
fashion of the East.</p>
<p>“Rise, lady,” he broke in, “because I chance to be a prince I
have not ceased to be a man, and no man could have seen you in such a plight
without striking a blow on your behalf.”</p>
<p>“No,” added Metem, “none; that is, as you happen to be noble
and young and lovely. Had you been old and ugly and humble, then the black man
might have carried you from here to Tyre ere I risked my neck to stop him, or
for the matter of that, although he will deny it, the prince either.”</p>
<p>“Men do not often show their hearts so clearly,” she answered with
sarcasm. “But now, lords, I will guide you to the city before more harm
befalls us, for this dead man may have companions.”</p>
<p>“Our mules are here, lady; will you not ride mine?” asked Aziel.</p>
<p>“I thank you, Prince, but my feet will carry me.”</p>
<p>“And so will mine,” said Aziel, ceasing from a prolonged and
fruitless effort to loosen his sword from the breast-bone of the savage,
“on such paths they are safer than any beasts. Friend, will you lead my
mule with yours?”</p>
<p>“Ay, Prince,” grumbled Metem, “for so the world goes with the
old; you take the fair lady for company and I a she-ass. Well, of the two give
me the ass which is more safe and does not chatter.”</p>
<p>Then they started, Aziel leaving his short sword in the keeping of the dead
man.</p>
<p>“How are you named, lady?” he said presently, adding “or
rather I need not ask; you are Elissa, the daughter of Sakon, Governor of
Zimboe, are you not?”</p>
<p>“I am so called, though how you know it I cannot guess.”</p>
<p>“I heard you name yourself, lady, in the prayer you made before the
altar.”</p>
<p>“You heard my prayer, Prince?” she said starting. “Do you not
know that it is death to that man who hearkens to the prayer of a priestess of
Baaltis, uttered in her holy grove? Still, none know it save the goddess, who
sees all, therefore I beseech you for your own sake and the sake of your
companion, say nothing of it in the city, lest it should come to the ears of
the priests of El.”</p>
<p>“Certainly it would have been death to you had I <i>not</i> chanced to
hear it, having lost my way in the darkness,” answered the prince
laughing. “Well, since I did hear it I will add that it was a beautiful
prayer, revealing a heart high and pure, though I grieve that it should have
been offered to one whom I hold to be a demon.”</p>
<p>“I am honoured,” she answered coldly; “but, Prince, you
forget that though you, being a Hebrew, worship Him they call Jehovah, or so I
have been told, I, being of the blood of the Sidonians, worship the lady
Baaltis, the Queen of Heaven the holy one of whom I am a priestess.”</p>
<p>“So it is, alas!” he said, with a sigh, adding:—</p>
<p>“Well, let us not dispute of these matters, though, if you wish, the
prophet Issachar, the Levite who accompanies me, can explain the truth of them
to you.”</p>
<p>Elissa made no reply, and for a while they walked on in silence.</p>
<p>“Who was that black robber whom I slew?” Aziel asked presently.</p>
<p>“I am not sure, Prince,” she answered, hesitating, “but
savages such as he haunt the outskirts of the city seeking to steal white women
to be their wives. Doubtless he watched my steps, following me into the holy
place.”</p>
<p>“Why, then, did you venture there alone, lady?”</p>
<p>“Because, to be heard, such prayers as mine must be offered in solitude
in the consecrated grove, and at the hour of the rising of the moon. Moreover,
cannot Baaltis protect her priestess, Priest, and did she not protect
her?”</p>
<p>“I thought, lady, that I had something to do with the matter,” he
answered.</p>
<p>“Ay, Prince, it was your hand that struck the blow which killed the
thief, but Baaltis, and no other, led you to the place to rescue me.”</p>
<p>“I understand, lady. To save you, Baaltis, laying aside her own power,
led a mortal man to the grove, which it is death that mortal man should
violate.”</p>
<p>“Who can fathom the way of the gods?” she replied with passion,
then added, as though reasoning with a new-born doubt, “Did not the
goddess hear my prayer and answer it?”</p>
<p>“In truth, lady, I cannot say. Let me think. If I understood you rightly,
you prayed for heavenly wisdom, but whether or not you have gained it within
this last hour, I do not know. And then you prayed for love, an immortal love.
O, maiden, has it come to you since yonder moon appeared upon the sky? And you
prayed——”</p>
<p>“Peace!” she broke in, “peace and mock me not, or, prince
that you are, I will publish your crime of spying upon the prayer of a
priestess of Baaltis. I tell you that I prayed for a symbol and a sign, and the
prayer was answered.</p>
<p>“Did not the black giant spring upon me to bear me away to be his
slave—his, or another’s? And is he not a symbol of the evil and the
ignorance which are on the earth and that seek to drag down the beauty and the
wisdom of the earth to their own level? Then the Phœnician ran to rescue me
and was defeated, since the spirit of Mammon cannot overcome the black powers
of ill. Next you came and fought hard and long, till in the end you slew the
mighty foe, you a Prince born of the royal blood of the
world——” and she ceased.</p>
<p>“You have a pretty gift of parable, lady, as it should be with one who
interprets the oracles of a goddess. But you have not told me of what I, your
servant, am the symbol.”</p>
<p>She stopped in her walk and looked him full in the face.</p>
<p>“I never heard,” she said, “that either the Jews or the
Egyptians, being instructed, were blind to the reading of an allegory. But,
Prince, if you cannot read this one it is not for me, who am but a woman, to
set it out to you.”</p>
<p>Just then their glances met, and in the clear moonlight Aziel saw a wave of
doubt sweep over his companion’s dark and beautiful eyes, and a faint
flush appear upon her brow. He saw, and something stirred at his heart that
till this hour he had never felt, something which even now he knew it would
trouble him greatly to escape.</p>
<p>“Tell me, lady,” he asked, his voice sinking almost to a whisper,
“in this fable of yours am I even for an hour deemed worthy to play the
part of that immortal love embodied which you sought so earnestly a while
ago?”</p>
<p>“Immortal love, Prince,” she answered, in a new voice, a voice low
and deep, “is not for one hour, but for all hours that are and are to be.
You, and you alone, can know if you would dare to play such a part as
this—even in a fable.”</p>
<p>“Perchance, lady, there lives a woman for whom it might be dared.”</p>
<p>“Prince, no such woman lives, since immortal love must deal, not with the
flesh, but with the spirit. If a spirit worthy to be thus loved and worshipped
now wanders in earthly shape upon the world, seeking its counterpart and its
completion, I cannot tell. Yet were it so, and should they chance to meet, it
might be happy for such brave spirits, for then the answer to the great riddle
would be theirs.”</p>
<p>Wondering what this riddle might be, Aziel bent towards her to reply, when
suddenly round a bend in the path but a few paces from them came a body of
soldiers and attendants, headed by a man clad in a white robe and walking with
a staff. This man was grey-headed and keen-eyed, thin in face and ascetic in
appearance, with a brow of power and a bearing of dignity. At the sight of the
pair he halted, looking at them in question, and with disapproval.</p>
<p>“Our search is ended,” he said in Hebrew, “for here is he
whom we seek, and alone with him a heathen woman, robed like a priestess of the
Groves.”</p>
<p>“Whom do you seek, Issachar?” asked Aziel hurriedly, for the sudden
appearance of the Levite disturbed him.</p>
<p>“Yourself, Prince. Surely you can guess that your absence has been noted.
We feared lest harm should have come to you, or that you had lost your path,
but it seems that you have found a guide,” and he stared at his companion
sternly.</p>
<p>“That guide, Issachar,” answered Aziel, “being none other
than the lady Elissa, daughter of Sakon, governor of this city, and our host,
whom it has been my good fortune to rescue from a woman-stealer yonder in the
grove of the goddess Baaltis.”</p>
<p>“And whom it was my bad fortune to try to rescue in the said grove, as my
broken head bears witness,” added Metem, who by now had come up, dragging
the two mules after him.</p>
<p>“In the grove of the goddess Baaltis!” broke in the Levite with a
kindling eye, and striking the ground with his staff to emphasise his words.
“You, a Prince of Israel, alone in the high place of abomination with the
priestess of a fiend? Fie upon you, fie upon you! Would you also walk in the
sin of your forefathers, Aziel, and so soon?”</p>
<p>“Peace!” said Aziel in a voice of command; “I was not in the
grove alone or by my own will, and this is no time or place for insults and
wrangling.”</p>
<p>“Between me and those who seek after false gods, or the women who worship
them, there is no peace,” replied the old priest fiercely.</p>
<p>Then, followed by all the company, he turned and strode towards the gates of
the city.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>CHAPTER III<br/> ITHOBAL THE KING</h2>
<p>Two hours had gone by, and the prince Aziel, together with his retinue, the
officers of the caravan, and many other guests, were seated at a great feast
made in their honour, by Sakon, the governor of the city. This feast was held
in the large pillared hall of Sakon’s house, built beneath the northern
wall of the temple fortress, and not more than a few paces from its narrow
entrance, through which in case of alarm the inhabitants of the palace could
fly for safety. All down this chamber were placed tables, accommodating more
than two hundred feasters, but the principal guests were seated by themselves
upon a raised daïs at the head of the hall. Among them sat Sakon himself, a
middle-aged man stout in build, and thoughtful of face, his daughter Elissa,
some other noble ladies, and a score or more of the notables of the city and
its surrounding territories.</p>
<p>One of these strangers immediately attracted the attention of Aziel, who was
seated in the place of honour at the right of Sakon, between him and the lady
Elissa. This man was of large stature, and about forty years of age; the
magnificence of his apparel and the great gold chain set with rough diamonds
which hung about his neck showing him to be a person of importance. His tawny
complexion marked him of mixed race. This conclusion his features did not
belie, for the brow, nose, and cheek-bones were Semitic in outline, while the
full, prominent eyes, and thick, sensuous lips could with equal certainty be
attributed to the Negroid stock. In fact, he was the son of a native African
queen, or chieftainess, and a noble Phœnician, and his rank no less than that
of absolute king and hereditary chief of a vast and undefined territory which
lay around the trading cities of the white men, whereof Zimboe was the head and
largest. Aziel noticed that this king, who was named Ithobal, seemed angry and
ill at ease, whether because he was not satisfied with the place which had been
allotted to him at the table, or for other reasons, he could not at the time
determine.</p>
<p>When the meats had been removed, and the goblets were filled with wine, men
began to talk, till presently Sakon called for silence, and rising, addressed
Aziel:—</p>
<p>“Prince,” he said, “in the name of this great and free
city—for free it is, though we acknowledge the king of Tyre as our
suzerain—I give you welcome within our gates. Here, far in the heart of
Libya, we have heard of the glorious and wise king, your grandfather, and of
the mighty Pharaoh of Egypt, whose blood runs also within your veins. Prince,
we are honoured in your coming, and for the asking, whatever this land of gold
can boast is yours. Long may you live; may the favour of those gods you worship
attend you, and in the pursuit of wisdom, of wealth, of war, and of love, may
the good grain of all be garnered in your bosom, and the wind of prosperity
winnow out the chaff of them to fall beneath your feet. Prince, I have greeted
you as it behoves me to greet the blood of Solomon and Pharaoh; now I add a
word. Now I greet you as a father greets the man who has saved his only and
beloved daughter from death, or shameful bondage. Know you, friends, what this
stranger did since to-night’s moonrise? My daughter was at worship alone
yonder without the walls, and a great savage set on her, purposing to bear her
away captive. Ay, and he would have done it had not the prince Aziel here given
him battle, and, after a fierce fight, slain him.”</p>
<p>“No great deed to kill a single savage,” broke in the king Ithobal,
who had been listening with impatience to Sakon’s praises of this
high-born stranger.</p>
<p>“No great deed you say, King,” answered Sakon. “Guards, bring
in the body of the man and set it before us.”</p>
<p>There was a pause, till presently six men staggered up the hall bearing between
them the corpse of the barbarian, which, still covered with the leopard skin
mantle, they threw down on the edge of the daïs.</p>
<p>“See!” said one of the bearers, withdrawing the cloak from the huge
body. Then pointing to the sword which still transfixed it, he added,
“and learn what strength heaven gives to the arms of princes.”</p>
<p>Such of the guests as were near enough rose to look at the grizzly sight, then
turned to offer their congratulations to the conqueror, but there was one of
them—the king Ithobal—who offered none; indeed, as his eyes fell
upon the face of the corpse, they grew alight with rage.</p>
<p>“What ails you, King? Are you jealous of such a blow?” asked Sakon,
watching him curiously.</p>
<p>“Speak no more of that thrust, I pray you,” said Aziel, “for
it was due to the weight of the man rushing on the sword, which after he was
dead I could not find the power to loosen from his breast-bone.”</p>
<p>“Then I will do you that service, Prince,” sneered Ithobal, and,
setting his foot upon the breast of the corpse, with a sudden effort of his
great frame, he plucked out the sword and cast it down upon the table.</p>
<p>“Now, one might think,” said Aziel, flushing with anger,
“that you, King, who do a courtesy to a man of smaller strength, mean a
challenge. Doubtless, however, I am mistaken, who do not understand the manners
of this country.”</p>
<p>“Think what you will, Prince,” answered the chieftain, “but
learn that he who lies dead before us by your hand—as you say—was
no slave to be killed at pleasure, but a man of rank, none other, indeed, than
the son of my mother’s sister.”</p>
<p>“Is it so?” replied Aziel, “then surely, King, you are well
rid of a cousin, however highly born, who made it his business to ravish
maidens from their homes.”</p>
<p>By way of answer to these words Ithobal sprang from his seat again, laying hand
upon his sword. But before he could speak or draw it, the governor Sakon
addressed him in a cold and meaning voice:—</p>
<p>“Of your courtesy, King,” he said, “remember that the prince
here is my guest, as you are, and give us peace. If that dead man was your
cousin, at least he well deserved to die, not at the hand of one of royal
blood, but by that of the executioner, for he was the worst of thieves—a
thief of women. Now tell me, King, I pray you, how came your cousin here, so
far from home, since he was not numbered in your retinue?”</p>
<p>“I do not know, Sakon,” answered Ithobal, “and if I knew I
would not say. You tell me that my dead kinsman was a thief of women, which, in
Phœnician eyes, must be a crime indeed. So be it; but thief or no thief, I say
that there is a blood feud between me and the man who slew him, and were he
great Solomon himself, instead of one of fifty princelets of his line, he
should pay bitterly for the deed. To-morrow, Sakon, I will meet you before I
leave for my own land, for I have words to speak to you. Till then,
farewell!”—and rising, he strode down the hall, followed by his
officers and guard.</p>
<hr />
<p>The sudden departure of king Ithobal in anger was the signal for the breaking
up of the feast.</p>
<p>“Why is that half-bred chief so wrath with me?” asked Aziel in a
low voice of Elissa as they followed Sakon to another chamber.</p>
<p>“Because—if you would know the truth—he set his dead cousin
to kidnap me, and you thwarted him,” she answered, looking straight
before her.</p>
<p>Aziel made no reply, for at that moment Sakon turned to speak with him, and his
face was anxious.</p>
<p>“I crave your pardon, Prince,” he said, drawing him aside,
“that you should have met with such insults at my board. Had it been any
other man who spoke thus to you, by now he had rued his words, but this Ithobal
is the terror of our city, for if he chooses he can bring a hundred thousand
savages upon us, shutting us within our walls to starve, and cutting us off
from the working of the mines whence we win gold. Therefore, in this way or
that, he must be humoured, as indeed we have humoured him and his father for
years, though now,” he added, his brow darkening, “he demands a
price that I am loth to pay,” and he glanced towards his daughter, who
stood watching them at a little distance, looking most beautiful in her white
robes and ornaments of gold.</p>
<p>“Can you not make war upon him, and break his power?” asked Aziel,
with a strange anxiety, guessing that this price demanded by Ithobal was none
other than Elissa, the woman whom he had rescued, and whose wisdom and beauty
had stirred his heart.</p>
<p>“It might be done, Prince, but the risk would be great, and we are here
to work the mines and grow rich in trade—not to make war. The policy of
Zimboe has always been a policy of peace.”</p>
<p>“I have a better and cheaper plan,” said a calm voice at his
elbow—that of Metem. “It is this: Slip a bow-string over the
brute’s head as he lies snoring, and pull it tight. An eagle in a cage is
easy to deal with, but once on the wing the matter is different.”</p>
<p>“There is wisdom in your counsel,” said Sakon, in a hesitating
voice.</p>
<p>“Wisdom!” broke in Aziel; “ay, the wisdom of the assassin.
What, noble Sakon, would you murder a sleeping guest?”</p>
<p>“No, Prince, I would not,” he answered hastily; “also, such a
deed would bring the Tribes upon us.”</p>
<p>“Then, Sakon, you are more foolish than you used to be,” said Metem
laughing. “A man who will not despatch a foe, whenever he can catch him,
by means fair or foul, is not the man to govern a rich city set in the heart of
a barbarous land, and so I shall tell Hiram, our king, if ever I live to see
Tyre again. As for you, most high Prince, forgive the humblest of your servants
if he tells you that the tenderness of your heart and the nobility of your
sentiments will, I think, bring you to an early and evil end;” and,
glancing towards Elissa as though to put a point upon his words, Metem smiled
sarcastically and withdrew.</p>
<p>At this moment a messenger, whose long white hair, wild eyes and red robe
announced him to be a priest of El, by which name the people of Zimboe
worshipped Baal, entered the room, and whispered something into the ear of
Sakon which seemed to disturb him much.</p>
<p>“Pardon me, Prince, and you, my guests, if I leave you,” said the
governor, “but I have evil tidings that call me to the temple. The lady
Baaltis is seized with the black fever, and I must visit her. For an hour,
farewell.”</p>
<p>This news caused consternation among the company, and in the general confusion
that followed its announcement Aziel joined Elissa, who had passed on to the
balcony of the house, and was seated there alone, looking out over the moonlit
city and the plains beyond. At his approach she rose in token of respect, then
sat herself down again, motioning him to do likewise.</p>
<p>“Give me of your wisdom, lady,” he said. “I thought that
Baaltis was the goddess whom I heard you worshipping yonder in the grove; how,
then, can she be stricken with a fever?”</p>
<p>“She is the goddess,” Elissa answered smiling; “but the
<i>lady</i> Baaltis is a woman whom we revere as the incarnation of that
goddess upon earth, and being but a woman in her hour she must die.”</p>
<p>“Then, what becomes of the incarnation of the goddess?”</p>
<p>“Another is chosen by the college of the priests of El, and the company
of the priestesses of Baaltis. If that lady Baaltis who is dead chances to
leave a daughter, it is usual for the lot to fall upon her; if not, upon such
one of the noble maidens as may be chosen.”</p>
<p>“Does the lady Baaltis marry, then?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Prince, within a year of her consecration, she must choose herself
a husband, and he may be whom she will, provided only that he is of white
blood, and does public sacrifice to El and Baaltis. Then after she has named
him, this husband takes the title of Shadid, and for so long as his wife shall
live he is the high priest of the god El, and clothed with the majesty of the
god, as his wife is clothed with the majesty of Baaltis. But should she die,
another wins his place.”</p>
<p>“It is a strange faith,” said Aziel, “which teaches that the
Lord of Heaven can find a home in mortal breasts. But, lady, it is yours, so of
it I say no more. Now tell me, if you will, what did you mean when you said
that this barbarian king, Ithobal, set the savage whom I slew to kidnap you? Do
you know this, or do you suspect it only?”</p>
<p>“I suspected it from the first, Prince, and for good reasons; moreover, I
read it in the king’s face as he looked upon the corpse, and when he
perceived me among the feasters.”</p>
<p>“And why should he wish to carry you away this brutally, lady, when he is
at peace with the great city?”</p>
<p>“Perchance, Prince, after what passed to-night you can guess,” she
answered lowering her eyes.</p>
<p>“Yes, lady, I can guess, and though it is shameful that such an one
should dare to think of you, still, since he is a man, I cannot blame him
overmuch. But why should he press his suit in this rough and secret fashion
instead of openly as a king might do?”</p>
<p>“He may have pressed it openly and been repulsed,” she replied in a
low voice. “But if he could have carried me to some far fortress, how
should I flout him there, that is, if I still lived? There, with no price to
pay in gold or lands or power, he would have been my master, and I should have
been his slave till such time as he wearied of me. That is the fate from which
you have saved me, Prince, or rather from death, for I am not one who could
bear such shame at the hands of a man I hate.”</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said bowing, “I think that perhaps for the first
time in my life I am glad to-night that I was born.”</p>
<p>“And I,” she answered, “who am but a Phœnician maiden, am
glad that I should have lived to hear one who is as royal in thought and soul
as he is in rank speak thus to me. Oh! Prince,” she added, clasping her
hands, “if your words are not those of empty courtesy alone, hear me, for
you are great, a Lord of the Earth whom none refuse, and it may be in your
power to give me aid. Prince, I am in a sore strait, for that danger from which
I prayed to be delivered this night presses me hard. Prince, it is true that
Ithobal has been refused my hand, both by myself and by my father, and
therefore it was that he strove to steal me away. But the evil is not done
with, for the great nobles of the city and the chief priests of El came to my
father at sunset and prayed him that he would let Ithobal take me, seeing that
otherwise in his rage he will make war upon Zimboe. When a man placed as is my
father must choose between the safety of thousands and the honour and happiness
of one poor girl, what will his answer be, think you?”</p>
<p>“Now,” said Aziel, “save that no wrong can right a wrong, I
almost grieve that I cried shame upon the counsel of Metem. Sweet lady, be sure
of this, that I will give all I have, even to my life, to protect you from the
vile fate you dread—yes, all I have—except my soul.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” she cried with a sudden flash of her dark eyes, “all
except your soul. If we women could find the man who would risk both life and
soul for us, then, were he but a slave, we would worship him as never man was
worshipped since Baaltis mounted her heavenly throne.”</p>
<p>“Were I not a Hebrew you would tempt me, lady,” Aziel answered
smiling, “but being one I may not risk my soul even were such a prize
within my reach.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Prince,” she broke in, “I did but jest; forget my
words, for they were wrung from a heart torn with fears. Oh! did you know the
terror of this half-savage Ithobal which oppresses me, you would forgive me
all—a terror that to-night lies upon me with a tenfold weight.”</p>
<p>“Why so, lady?”</p>
<p>“Doubtless because it is nearer,” Elissa whispered, but her
beautiful pleading eyes and quivering lips seemed to belie her words and say,
“because <i>you</i> are near, and a change has come upon me.”</p>
<p>For the second time that day Aziel’s glance met hers, and for the second
time a strange new pang that was more pain than joy, and yet half-divine,
snatched at his heart-strings, for a while numbing his reason and taking from
him the power of speech.</p>
<p>“What was it?” he wondered vaguely. He had seen many lovely faces,
and many noble women had shown him favour, but why had none of them stirred him
thus? Could it be that this stranger Gentile maiden was his soul-mate—she
whom he was destined to love above all upon the earth, nay, whom he did already
love, and so soon?</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said, taking a step towards her,
“lady——” and he paused.</p>
<p>Elissa bowed her dark head till her gold-bedecked and scented hair almost fell
upon his feet, but she made no answer.</p>
<p>Then another voice broke upon the silence, a clear, strident voice that
said:—</p>
<p>“Prince, forgive me, if for the second time to-day I disturb you; but the
guests have gone; your chamber is made ready, and, not knowing the customs of
the women of this country, I sought you, little guessing that, at such an hour,
I should find you alone with one of them.”</p>
<p>Aziel looked up, although there was no need for him to do so, for he knew that
voice well, to see the tall form of the Levite Issachar standing before them, a
cold light of anger shining in his eyes.</p>
<p>Elissa saw also, and, with some murmured words of farewell, she turned and
went, leaving them together.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV<br/> THE DREAM OF ISSACHAR</h2>
<p>For a moment there was silence, which Aziel broke, saying:—</p>
<p>“It seems to me, Issachar, that you are somewhat over zealous for my
welfare.”</p>
<p>“I think otherwise, Prince,” replied the Levite sternly. “Did
not your grandsire give you into my keeping, and shall I not be faithful to my
trust, and to a higher duty than any which he could lay upon me?”</p>
<p>“Your meaning, Issachar?”</p>
<p>“It is plain, Prince; but I will set it out. The great king said to me
yonder in the hall of his golden palace at Jerusalem, ‘To others, men of
war, I have given charge of the body of my grandson to keep him safe. To you,
Issachar the Levite, who have fostered him, I give charge over his soul to keep
it safe—a higher task, and more difficult. Guard him, Issachar, from the
temptation of strange doctrines and the whisperings of strange gods, but guard
him most of all from the wiles of strange women who bow the knee to Baal, for
such are the gate of Gehenna upon earth, and those who enter by it shall find
their place in Tophet.’”</p>
<p>“Truly my grandsire speaks wisely on this matter as on all others,”
answered Aziel, “but still I do not understand.”</p>
<p>“Then I will be more clear, Prince. How comes it that I find you alone
with this beautiful sorceress, this worshipper of the she-devil, Baaltis, with
whom you should scorn even to speak, except such words as courtesy
demands?”</p>
<p>“Is it then forbidden to me,” asked Aziel angrily, “to talk
with the daughter of my host, a lady whom I chanced to save from death, of the
customs of her country and the mysteries of worship?”</p>
<p>“The mysteries of worship!” answered Issachar scornfully.
“Ay! the mysteries of the worship of that fair body of hers, that ivory
chalice filled with foulness—whereof, if a man drink, his faith shall be
rotted and his soul poisoned. The mysteries of that worship was it, Prince,
that caused you but now to lean towards this woman as though to embrace her,
with words of love burning in your heart if not between your lips? Ah! these
witches of Baaltis know their trade well; they are full of evil gifts, and of
the wisdom given to them by the fiend they serve. With touch and sigh and look
they can stir the blood of youth, having much practice in the art, till it
seethes within the veins and drowns conscience in its flood.</p>
<p>“Nay, Prince, hear the truth,” continued Issachar. “Till
moonrise you had never seen this woman, and now your quick blood is aflame, and
you love her. Deny it if you can—deny it on your honour and I will
believe you, for you are no liar.”</p>
<p>Aziel thought for a moment and answered:—</p>
<p>“Issachar, you have no right to question me on this matter, yet since you
have adjured me by my honour, I will be open with you. I do not know if I love
this woman, who, as you say, is a stranger to me, but it is true that my heart
turns towards her like flowers to the sun. Till to-day I had never seen her,
yet when my eyes first fell upon her face yonder in that accursed grove, it
seemed to me that I had been born only that I might find her. It seemed to me
even that for ages I had known her, that for ever she was mine and that I was
hers. Read me the riddle, Issachar? Is this but passion born of youth and the
sudden sight of a fair woman? That cannot be, for I have known others as fair,
and have passed through some such fires. Tell me, Issachar, you who are old and
wise and have seen much of the hearts of men, what is this wave that overwhelms
me?”</p>
<p>“What is it, Prince? It is witchery; it is the wile of Beelzebub waiting
to snatch your soul, and if you hearken to it you shall pass through the
fire—through the fire to Moloch, if not in the flesh, then in the spirit,
which is to all eternity. Oh! not in vain do I fear for you, my son, and not
without reason was I warned in a dream. Listen: Last night, as I lay in my tent
yonder upon the plain, I dreamed that some danger overshadowed you, and in my
sleep I prayed that your destiny might be revealed to me. As I prayed thus, I
heard a voice saying, ‘Issachar, you seek to learn the future; know then
that he who is dear to you shall be tried in the furnace indeed. Yes, because
of his great love and pity, he shall forswear his faith, and with death and
sorrow he shall pay the price of his sin.’</p>
<p>“Then I was troubled and besought Heaven that you, my son, might be saved
from this unknown temptation, but the voice answered me:—</p>
<p>“‘Of their own will only can they who were one from the beginning
be held apart. Through good and ill let them work each other’s woe or
weal. The goal is sure, but they must choose the road.’</p>
<p>“Now as I wondered what these dark sayings might mean, the gloom opened
and I saw you, Aziel, standing in a grove of trees, while towards you with
outstretched hands drew a veiled woman who bore upon her brow the golden bow of
Baaltis. Then fire raged about you, and in the fire I beheld many things which
I have forgotten, and moving through it was the Prince of Death, who slew and
slew and spared not. So I awoke heavy at heart, knowing that there had fallen
on me who love you a shadow of doom to come.”</p>
<p>In these latter days any educated man would set aside Issachar’s wild
vision as the vapourings of a mind distraught. But Aziel lived in the time of
Solomon, when men of his nation guided their steps by the light of prophecy,
and believed that it was the Divine pleasure, by means of dreams and wonders
and through the mouths of chosen seers, to declare the will of Jehovah upon
earth. To this faith, indeed, we still hold fast, at least so far as that
period and people are concerned, seeing that we acknowledge Isaiah, David, and
their company, to have been inspired from above. Of that company Issachar the
Levite was one, for to him, from his youth up, voices had spoken in the watches
of the night, and often he had poured his warnings and denunciations into the
ears of kings and peoples, telling them with no uncertain voice of the
consequences of sin and idolatry, and of punishment to come. This Aziel, who
had been his ward and pupil, knew well, and therefore he did not mock at the
priest’s dream or set it aside as naught, but bowed his head and
listened.</p>
<p>“I am honoured indeed,” he said with humility, “that the
destiny of my poor soul and body should be a thing of weight to those on
high.”</p>
<p>“Of your poor soul, Aziel?” broke in Issachar. “That soul of
yours, of which you speak so lightly, is of as great value in the eyes of
Heaven as that of any cherubim within its gates. The angels who fell were the
first and chiefest of the angels, and though now we are clad with mortal shape
in punishment of our sins, again redeemed and glorified we can become among the
mightiest of their hosts. Oh! my son, I beseech you, turn from this woman while
there yet is time, lest to you her lips should be a cup of woe and your soul
shall pay the price of them, sharing the hell of the worshippers of
Ashtoreth.”</p>
<p>“It may be so,” said Aziel; “but, Issachar, what said the
voice? That this, the woman of your dream and I were one from the beginning?
Issachar, you believe that the lady Elissa is she of whom the voice spoke in
your sleep and you bid me turn from her because she will bring me sin and
punishment. In truth, if I can, I will obey you, since rather than forswear my
faith, as your dream foretold, I would die a hundred deaths. Nor do I believe
that for any bribe of woman’s love I shall forswear it in act or thought.
Yet if such things come about it is fate that drives me on, not my
will—and what man can flee his fate? But even though this lady be she
whom I am doomed to love, you say that because she is heathen I must reject
her. Shame upon the thought, for if she is heathen it is through ignorance, and
it may be mine to change her heart. Because I stand in danger shall I suffer
her who, as you tell me, was one with me from the beginning, to be lost in that
hell of Baal of which you speak? Nay, your dream is false. I will not renounce
my faith, but rather will win her to share it, and together we shall triumph,
and that I swear to you, Issachar.”</p>
<p>“Truly the evil one has many wiles,” answered the Levite,
“and I did ill to tell you of my dream, seeing that it can be twisted to
serve the purpose of your madness. Have your will, Aziel, and reap the fruit of
it, but of this I warn you—that while I can find a way to thwart it,
never, Prince, shall you take that witch to your bosom to be the ruin of your
life and soul.”</p>
<p>“Then, Issachar, on this matter there may be war between us!”</p>
<p>“Ay! there is war,” said the Levite, and left him.</p>
<hr />
<p>The sun was already high in the heavens when Aziel awoke from the deep and
dreamless sleep which followed on the excitements and exhaustion of the
previous day. After his servants had waited upon him and robed him, bringing
him milk and fruit to eat, he dismissed them, and sat himself down by the
casement of his chamber to think a while.</p>
<p>Below him lay the city of flat-roofed houses enclosed with a double wall,
without the ring of which were thousands of straw huts, shaped like bee-hives,
wherein dwelt natives of the country, slaves or servants of the occupying
Phœnician race. To Aziel’s right, and not more than a hundred paces from
the governor’s house in which he was, rose the round and mighty
battlements of the temple, where the followers of El and Baaltis worshipped,
and the gold refiners carried on their business. At intervals on its
flat-topped walls stood towers of observation, alternating with pointed
monoliths of granite and soapstone columns supporting vultures, rudely carved
emblems of Baaltis. Between these towers armed soldiers walked continually,
watching the city below and the plain beyond, for though the mission of the
Phœnicians here was one of peaceful gain it was evident that they considered
it necessary to be always prepared for war. On the hillside above the great
temple towered another fortress of stone—a citadel deemed to be
impregnable even should the temple fall into the hands of an enemy—while
on the crest of the precipitous slope, stretching as far to right and left as
the eye could reach, were many smaller detached strongholds.</p>
<p>The scene that Aziel saw from his window was a busy one, for beneath him a
market was being held in an open square in the city. Here, sheltered from the
sun by grass-thatched booths, the Phœnician merchants who had been his
companions in their long and perilous journey from the coast were already in
treaty with numerous customers, hoping, not in vain, to recoup themselves amply
for the toils and dangers which they had survived. Beneath these booths were
spread their goods; silks from Cos, bronze weapons and copper rods, or ingots
from the rich mines of Cyprus, linens and muslins from Egypt; beads, idols,
carven bowls, knives, glass ware, pottery in all shapes, and charms made of
glazed faience or Egyptian stone; bales of the famous purple cloth of Tyre;
surgical instruments, jewellery, and objects of toilet; scents, pots of rouge,
and other unguents for the use of ladies in little alabaster and earthenware
vases; bags of refined salt, and a thousand other articles of commerce produced
or stored in the workshops of Phœnicia. These the chapmen bartered for raw
gold by weight, tusks of ivory, ostrich feathers, and girls of approved beauty,
slaves taken in war, or in some instances maidens whom their unnatural parents
or relatives did not scruple to sell into bondage.</p>
<p>In another portion of the square, provisions and stock, alive and dead, were
being offered for sale, for the most part by natives of the country. Here were
piles of vegetables and fruits grown in the gardens, sacks of various sorts of
grain, bundles of green forage from the irrigated lands without the walls,
calabashes full of curdled milk, thick native beer and trusses of reed for
thatching. Here again were oxen, mules and asses, or great bucks such as we now
know as eland or kudoo, carried in on rough litters of boughs to be disposed of
by parties of savage huntsmen who had shot them with arrows or trapped them in
pitfalls. Every Eastern tribe and nation seemed to be represented in the motley
crowd. Yonder stalked savages, naked except for their girdles, and armed with
huge spears, who gazed with bewilderment on the wonders of this mart of the
white man; there moved grave, long-bearded Arab merchants or Phœnicians in
their pointed caps, or bare-headed white-robed Egyptians, or half-bred
mercenaries clad in mail. Their variety was without end, while from them came a
very babel of different tongues as they cried their wares, bargained and
quarrelled.</p>
<p>Aziel gazed at this novel sight with interest, till, as he was beginning to
weary of it, the crowd parted to right and left, leaving a clear lane across
the market-place to the narrow gate of the temple. Along this lane advanced a
procession of the priests of El clad in red robes, with tall red caps upon
their heads, beneath which their straight hair hung down to their shoulders. In
their hands were gilded rods, and round their necks hung golden chains, to
which were attached emblems of the god they worshipped. They walked two-and-two
to the number of fifty, chanting a melancholy dirge, one hand of each priest
resting upon his fellow’s shoulder, and as they passed, with the
exception of certain Jews, all the spectators uncovered, while some of the more
pious of them even fell upon their knees.</p>
<p>After the priests came a second procession, that of the priestesses of Baaltis.
These women, who numbered at least a hundred, were clad in white, and wore upon
their heads a gauze-like veil that fell to the knees, and was held in place by
a golden fillet surmounted with the symbol of a crescent moon. Instead of the
golden rods, however, each of them held in her left hand a growing stalk of
maize, from the sheathed cob of which hung the bright tassel of its bloom. On
her right wrist, moreover, a milk-white dove was fastened by a wire, both corn
and dove being tokens of that fertility which, under various guises, was the
real object of worship of these people. The sight of these white-veiled women
about whose crescent-decked brows the doves fluttered, wildly striving to be
free, was very strange and beautiful as they advanced also singing a low and
melancholy chant. Aziel searched their faces with his eyes while they passed
slowly towards him, and presently his heart bounded, for there among them,
clasping the dove she bore to her breast, as though to still its frightened
strugglings, was the Lady Elissa. He noticed, too, that as she went beneath the
palace walls, she glanced at the window-place of his chamber, but without
seeing him for he was seated in the shadow.</p>
<p>Presently the long line of priestesses, followed by hundreds of worshippers,
had vanished through the tortuous and narrow entrance of the temple, and Aziel
leaned back to think.</p>
<p>There, among the principal votaries of a goddess, the wickedness of whose
worship was a scandal and a by-word even in the ancient world, walked the woman
to whom he felt so strangely drawn and with whom, if there were any truth in
the visions of Issachar and the mysterious warnings of his own soul, his fate
was intertwined. As he thought of it a sudden revulsion filled his heart. She
was wise and beautiful, and she seemed innocent, but Issachar was right; this
girl was the minister of an abominable creed; nay, for aught he knew, she was
herself defiled with its abominations, and her wisdom but an evil gift from the
evil powers she served. Could he, a prince of the royal blood of the House of
Israel and of the ancient Pharaohs of Khem, desire to have anything to do with
such an one, he a child of the Chosen People, a worshipper of the true and only
God? Yesterday she had thrown a spell upon him, a spell of black magic, or the
spell of her imperial beauty, which, it mattered not, but to-day he was the
lord of his own mind, and would shake himself free of it and her.</p>
<hr />
<p>In the market-place below, the Levite Issachar also had watched the passing of
the priests and priestesses of El and Baaltis.</p>
<p>“Tell me, Metem,” he asked of the Phœnician who stood beside him,
his head respectfully uncovered, “what mummery is this?”</p>
<p>“It is no mummery, worthy Issachar, but a ceremony of public sacrifice,
which is to be offered in the temple yonder, for the recovery from her sickness
of the Lady Baaltis, the high-priestess.”</p>
<p>“Where then is the offering. I see none, unless it be those doves that
are tied to the wrists of the women?”</p>
<p>“Nay, Issachar,” answered Metem smiling darkly, “the gods ask
nobler blood than that of doves. The offering is within, and it is the
first-born child of a priestess of Baaltis.”</p>
<p>“O Lord of Heaven!” said Issachar lifting up his eyes, “how
long will you suffer that this murderous and accursed race should defile the
face of earth?”</p>
<p>“Softly, friend,” broke in Metem, “I have read your
Scriptures, and is it not set out in them that your great forefather was
commanded to offer up his first-born in such a sacrifice?”</p>
<p>“Blaspheme not,” answered the Jew. “He was commanded indeed,
that his heart might be proved, but his hand was stayed. He Whom I worship
delights not in the blood of children.”</p>
<p>Here Issachar broke off, suddenly recognising the lady Elissa among the
white-robed priestesses. Watching her, he noted her glance at the window of
Aziel’s chamber, and saw what she could not see, that the prince was
seated there. “This daughter of Satan spreads her nets,” he
muttered between his teeth. Then a thought struck him, and he added aloud,
“Say, Metem, is it permitted to strangers to witness the rites in yonder
temple?”</p>
<p>“Surely,” answered the Phœnician; “that is, if they guard
their tongues, and do nothing to offend.”</p>
<p>“Then I desire to see them, Metem, and so doubtless does the prince
Aziel. Therefore, if it is your will, do me the service to enter his chamber in
the palace where he is sitting, and bid him to a great ceremony that goes
forward in the temple. And, Metem, if he asks what that ceremony is, I charge
you, say only that a dove is to be sacrificed.</p>
<p>“I will wait for you at the gate of the temple, but do not tell him that
I send you on this errand. Metem, you love gain; remember that if you humour me
in this and other matters which may arise, doing my bidding faithfully, I have
the treasury of Jerusalem to draw upon.”</p>
<p>“No ill paymaster,” replied Metem cheerfully. “Certainly I
will obey you in all things, holy Issachar, as the king commanded me yonder in
Judea.”</p>
<p>“Now,” he reflected to himself, as he went upon his message,
“I see how the bird flies. The prince Aziel is in love with the lady
Elissa, or far upon the road to it, as at his age it is right and proper that
he should be, after a twelve months’ journey by sea and land with never a
pretty face to sigh for. The holy Issachar, on the other hand, is minded that
his charge shall have naught to do with a priestess of Baaltis, as, his age and
calling considered, is also right and proper. Then there is that black savage
Ithobal, who wishes to win the girl, and the girl herself, who after the
fashion of her sex, will probably play them all off one against the other.
Well, so much the better for me, since I shall be a richer man even than I am
before this affair is done with. I have two hands, and gold is gold whoever be
the giver,” and smiling craftily to himself Metem passed into the palace.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>CHAPTER V<br/> THE PLACE OF SACRIFICE</h2>
<p>Suddenly Aziel, looking up from his reverie, saw the Phœnician bowing before
him, cap in hand.</p>
<p>“May the Prince live for ever,” he said, “yet if he suffer
melancholy to overcome him thus, his life, however long, will be but
sad.”</p>
<p>“I was only thinking, Metem,” answered Aziel with a start.</p>
<p>“Of the lady Elissa, whom you rescued, Prince? Ah! I guessed as much. She
is beautiful, is she not—I have never seen the equal of those dreamy eyes
and that mysterious smile—and learned also, though myself, in a woman I
prefer the beauty without the learning. It is a pity now that she should chance
to be a priestess of our worship, for that will not please the holy Issachar
whom, I fear, Prince, you find a stern guide for the feet of youth.”</p>
<p>“Your business, merchant?” broke in Aziel.</p>
<p>“I crave your pardon, Prince,” answered the Phœnician, spreading
out his hands in deprecation. “I struck a good bargain for my wares this
morning, and drank wine to seal it, therefore, let me be forgiven if I have
spoken too freely in your presence, Prince. This is my business: Yonder in the
temple they celebrate a service which it is lawful for strangers to witness,
and as the opportunity is rare, I thought that, having heard something of our
mysteries in the grove last night, you might wish to see the office. If this be
so, I am come to guide you.”</p>
<p>“Aziel’s first impulse was to refuse to go; indeed, the words of
dismissal were on his lips when another purpose entered his mind. For this once
he would look upon these abominations and learn what part Elissa played in
them, and thus be cured for ever of the longings that had seized him.</p>
<p>“What is the ceremony?” he asked.</p>
<p>“A sacrifice for the recovery of the lady Baaltis who is sick,
Prince.”</p>
<p>“And what is the sacrifice?” asked Aziel.</p>
<p>“A dove, as I am told,” was the indifferent answer.</p>
<p>“I will come with you, Metem.”</p>
<p>“So be it, Prince. Your retinue awaits you at the gate.”</p>
<p>At the main entrance to the palace Aziel found his guard and other servants
gathered there to escort him. With them was Issachar, whom he greeted, asking
him if he knew the errand upon which they were bent.</p>
<p>“I do, Prince; it is to witness the abomination of a sacrifice of these
heathens.”</p>
<p>“Will you then accompany me there, Issachar?”</p>
<p>“Where my lord goes I go,” answered the Levite gravely.
“Moreover, Prince, if you have your reasons for wishing to see this
devil-worship, I may have mine.”</p>
<p>Then they set out, Metem guiding them. At the north gate of the temple, which
was not more than a yard in width, the Phœnician spoke to the guards on duty,
who drew back to let them pass. In single file, for the passages were too
narrow to allow of any other means of progression, they threaded the tortuous
and mazy paths of the great building, passing between huge walls built of
granite blocks laid without mortar, till at length they reached a large open
space. Here the ceremony had already begun. Almost in the centre of this space,
which was paved with blocks of granite, stood two conical towers, the larger of
which measured thirty feet in height and the smaller about half as much. These
towers, also built of blocks of stone, were, as Metem informed them, sacred to
and emblematical of the gods El and Baaltis. In front of them was a platform
surmounted by a stone altar, and between them, built in a pit in the ground,
burned a great furnace of wood. All the centre of the enclosure was occupied by
the marshalled ranks of the priests and priestesses. Without this sacred ring
stood the closely packed masses of spectators, amongst whom Aziel and his
following were given place, though some of the more pious worshippers murmured
audibly at the admission of these Jews.</p>
<p>When they entered, the companies of priests and priestesses were finishing a
prayer, the sentences of which they chanted alternately with strange effect. In
part it was formal, and in part an improvised supplication to the protecting
gods to restore health to that woman or high-priestess who was known as the
lady Baaltis. The prayer ended, a beautiful bold-faced girl advanced to an open
space in front of the altar, and with a sudden movement threw off her white
robe, revealing herself to the spectators in a many-coloured garment of gauze,
through which her fair flesh gleamed.</p>
<p>The black hair of this woman was adorned with a coronet of scarlet flowers and
hung loose about her; her feet and arms were naked, and in each hand she held a
knife of bronze. Very slowly she began to dance, her painted lips parted as
though to speak, and her eyes, brightened with pigments, turned up to heaven.
By degrees her movements grew more rapid, till at length, as she whirled round,
her long locks streamed out straight upon the air and the crown of flowers
looked like a scarlet ring. Suddenly the bronze knife in her right hand
flashed, and a spot of red appeared above her left breast; then the knife in
the left hand flashed, and another spot appeared over the right breast. At each
stroke the multitude cried, “<i>Ah!</i>” as with one voice, and
then were silent.</p>
<p>Now the maddened dancer, ceasing her whirlings, leapt high into the air,
clashing the knives above her head and crying, “Hear me, hear me,
Baaltis!”</p>
<p>Again she leapt, and this time the answer that came from her lips was spoken in
another voice, which said, “I am present. What seek you?”</p>
<p>A third time the priestess leapt, replying in her own voice, “Health for
thy servant who is sick.” Then came the answer in the second
voice—“I hear you, but I see no sacrifice.”</p>
<p>“What sacrifice would’st thou, O Queen? A dove?”</p>
<p>“Nay.”</p>
<p>“What then, Queen?”</p>
<p>“One only, the first-born child of a woman.”</p>
<p>As this command, which they supposed to be divine and from above, issued out of
the lips of the gashed and bleeding Pythoness, the multitude that hitherto had
listened in perfect silence, shouted aloud, while the girl herself, utterly
exhausted, fell to the earth swooning.</p>
<p>Now the high priest of El, who was named the Shadid, none other indeed than the
husband of her who lay sick, sprang upon the platform and cried:—</p>
<p>“The goddess has spoken by the mouth of her oracle. She who is the mother
of all demands one life out of the many she has given, that the Lady Baaltis,
who is her priestess upon earth, may be recovered of her sickness. Say, who
will lay down a life for the honour of the goddess, and that her regent in this
land may be saved alive?”</p>
<p>Now—for all this scene had been carefully prepared—a woman stepped
forward, wearing the robe of a priestess, who bore in her arms a drugged and
sleeping child.</p>
<p>“I, father,” she cried in a shrill, hard voice, though her lips
trembled as she spoke. “Let the goddess take this child, the first-fruit
of my body, that our mother the Lady Baaltis may be cured of her sickness, and
that I, her daughter, may be blessed by the goddess, and through me, all we who
worship her.” And she held out the little victim towards him.</p>
<p>The Shadid stretched out his arms to take it, but he never did take it, for at
that moment appeared upon the platform the tall and bearded figure of Issachar
clad in his white robes.</p>
<p>“Hold!” he cried in a loud, clear voice, “and touch not the
innocent child. Spawn of Satan, would you do murder to appease the devils whom
you worship? Well shall they repay you, people of Zimboe. Oh! mine eyes are
open and I see,” he went on, shaking his thin arms above his head in a
prophetic frenzy. “I see the sword of the true God, and it flames above
this city of idolaters and abominations. I see this place of sacrifice, and I
tell you that before the moon is young again it shall run red with the blood of
you, idol worshippers, and of you, women of the groves. The heathen is at your
gates, ye followers of demons, and my God sends them as He sends the locusts of
the north wind to devour you like grass, to sweep you away like the dust of the
desert. Cry then upon El and Baaltis, and let El and Baaltis save you if they
can. Doom is upon you; Azrael, angel of death, writes his name upon your
foreheads, every one of you, giving your city to the owls, your bodies to the
jackals, and your souls to Satan——”</p>
<p>Thus far the priests and the spectators had listened to Issachar’s
denunciations in bewildered amazement not unmixed with fear. Now with a roar of
wrath they awoke, and suddenly he was dragged from the platform by a score of
hands and struck down with many blows. Indeed, he would then and there have
been torn to pieces had not a guard of soldiers, knowing that he was
Sakon’s guest and in the train of the prince Aziel, snatched him from the
maddened multitude, and borne him swiftly to a place of safety without the
enclosure.</p>
<p>While the tumult was at its height, a Phœnician, who had arrived in the temple
breathless with haste, might have been seen to pluck Metem by the sleeve.</p>
<p>“What is it?” Metem asked of the man, who was his servant.</p>
<p>“This: the lady Baaltis is dead. I watched as you bade me, and, as she
had promised to do, in token of the end, her woman waved a napkin from the
casement of that tower where she lies.”</p>
<p>“Do any know of this?”</p>
<p>“None.”</p>
<p>“Then say no word of it,” and Metem hurried off in search of Aziel.</p>
<p>Presently he found him seeking for Issachar in company with his guards.</p>
<p>“Have no fear, Prince,” Metem said, in answer to his eager
questions, “he is safe enough, for the soldiers have borne the fool away.
Pardon me that I should speak thus of a holy man, but he has put all our lives
in danger.”</p>
<p>“I do not pardon you,” answered Aziel hotly, “and I honour
Issachar for his act and words. Let us begone from this accursed place whither
you entrapped me.”</p>
<p>Before Metem could reply a voice cried, “Close the doors of the
sanctuary, so that none can pass in or go out, and let the sacrifice be
offered.”</p>
<p>“Listen, Prince,” said Metem, “you must stay here till the
ceremony is done.”</p>
<p>“Then I tell you, Phœnician,” answered Aziel, “that rather
than suffer that luckless child to be butchered before my eyes I will cut my
way to it with my guards, and rescue it alive.”</p>
<p>“To leave yourself dead in place of it,” answered Metem
sarcastically; “but, see, a woman desires to speak with you,” and
he pointed to a girl in the robe of a priestess, whose face was hidden with a
veil, and who, in the tumult and confusion, had worked her way to Aziel.</p>
<p>“Prince,” whispered the veiled form, “I am Elissa. For your
life’s sake keep still and silent, or you will be stabbed, for your words
have been overheard, and the priests are mad at the insult that has been put
upon them.”</p>
<p>“Away with you, woman,” answered Aziel; “what have I to do
with a girl of the groves and a murderess of children?”</p>
<p>She winced at his bitter words, but said quietly:—</p>
<p>“Then on your own head be your blood, Prince, which I have risked much to
keep unshed. But before you die, learn that I knew nothing of this foul
sacrifice, and that gladly would I give my own life to save that of yonder
child.”</p>
<p>“Save it, and I will believe you,” answered the prince, turning
from her.</p>
<p>Elissa slipped away, for she saw that the priestesses, her companions, were
reforming their ranks, and that she must not tarry. When she had gone a few
yards, a hand caught her by the sleeve, and the voice of Metem, who had
overheard something of this talk, whispered in her ear:—</p>
<p>“Daughter of Sakon, what will you give me if I show you a way to save the
life of the child, and with it that of the prince, and at the same time to make
him think well of you again?”</p>
<p>“All my jewels and ornaments of gold, and they are many,” she
answered eagerly.</p>
<p>“Good; it is a bargain. Now listen: The lady Baaltis is dead; she died a
few minutes since, and none here know it save myself and one other, my servant,
nor can any learn it, for the gates are shut. Do you be, therefore, suddenly
inspired—of the gods—and say so, for then the sacrifice must cease,
seeing that she for whom it was to be offered is dead. Do you
understand?”</p>
<p>“I understand,” she answered, “and though the blasphemy bring
on me the vengeance of Baaltis, yet it shall be dared. Fear not, your pay is
good,” and she pressed forward to her place, keeping the veil wrapped
about her head till she reached it unobserved, for in the general confusion
none had noticed her movements.</p>
<p>When the noise of shouting and angry voices had at length died away, and the
spectators were driven back outside the sacred circle, the priest upon the
platform cried:—</p>
<p>“Now that the Jew blasphemer has gone, let the sacrifice be offered, as
is decreed.”</p>
<p>“Yea, let the sacrifice be offered,” answered the multitude, and
once more the woman with the sleeping child stepped forward. But before the
priest could take it another figure approached him, that of Elissa, with arms
outstretched and eyes upturned.</p>
<p>“Hold, O priest!” she said, “for the goddess, breathing on my
brow, inspires me, and I have a message from the goddess.”</p>
<p>“Draw near, daughter, and speak it in the ears of men,” the priest
answered wondering, for he found it hard to believe in such inspiration, and
indeed would have denied her a hearing had he dared.</p>
<p>So Elissa climbed the platform, and standing upon it still with outstretched
hands and upturned face, she said in a clear voice:—</p>
<p>“The goddess refuses the sacrifice, since she has taken to herself her
for whom it was to have been offered—the Lady Baaltis is dead.”</p>
<p>At this tidings a groan went up from the people, partly of grief for the loss
of a spiritual dignitary who was popular, and partly of disappointment because
now the sacrifice could not be offered. For the Phœnicians loved these
horrible spectacles, which were not, however, commonly celebrated by daylight
and in the presence of the people.</p>
<p>“It is a lie,” cried a voice, “but now the Lady Baaltis was
living.”</p>
<p>“Let the gates be opened, and send to see whether or no I lie,”
said Elissa, quietly.</p>
<p>Then for a while there was silence while a priest went upon the errand. At
length he was seen returning. Pushing his way through the crowd, he mounted the
platform, and said:—</p>
<p>“The daughter of Sakon speaks truth; alas! the lady Baaltis is
dead.”</p>
<p>Elissa sighed in relief, for had her tidings proved false she could scarcely
have hoped to escape the fury of the crowd.</p>
<p>“Ay!” she cried, “she is dead, as I told you, and because of
your sin, who would have offered human sacrifice in public, against the custom
of our faith and city and without the command of the goddess.”</p>
<hr />
<p>Then in sullen silence the priests and priestesses reformed their ranks, and
departed from the sanctuary, whence they were followed by the spectators, the
most of them in no good mood, for they had been baulked of the promised
spectacle.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI<br/> THE HALL OF AUDIENCE</h2>
<p>When Elissa reached her chamber after the break up of the procession, she threw
herself upon her couch, and burst into a passion of tears. Well might she weep,
for she had been false to her oath as a priestess, uttering as a message from
the goddess that which she had learnt from the lips of man. More, she could not
rid herself of the remembrance of the scorn and loathing with which the Prince
Aziel had looked upon her, or of the bitter insult of his words when he called
her, “a girl of the groves, and a murderess of children.”</p>
<p>It chanced that, so far as Elissa was concerned, these charges were utterly
untrue. None could throw a slur upon her, and as for these rare human
sacrifices, she loathed the very name of them, nor, unless forced to it, would
she have been present had she guessed that any such offering was intended.</p>
<p>Like most of the ancient religions, that of the Phœnicians had two sides to
it—a spiritual and a material side. The spiritual side was a worship of
the far-off unknown divinity, symbolised by the sun, moon and planets, and
visible only in their majestic movements, and in the forces of nature. To this
Elissa clung, knowing no truer god, and from those forces she strove to wring
their secret, for her heart was deep. Lonely invocations to the goddess beneath
the light of the moon appealed to her, for from them she seemed to draw
strength and comfort, but the outward ceremonies of her faith, or the more
secret and darker of them, of which in practice she knew little, were already
an abomination in her eyes. And now what if the Jew prophet spoke truly? What
if this creed of hers were a lie, root and branch, and there did lie in the
heavens above a Lord and Father who heard and answered the prayers of men, and
who did not seek of them the blood of the children He had given?</p>
<p>A great doubt took hold of Elissa and shook her being, and with the doubt came
hope. How was it—if her faith were true—that when she took the name
of the goddess in vain, nothing had befallen her? She desired to learn more of
this matter, but who was to teach her? The Levite turned from her with loathing
as from a thing unclean, and there remained, therefore, but the prince Aziel,
who had put her from him with those bitter words of scorn. Ah! why did they
pain her so, piercing her heart as with a spear? Was it
because—because—he had grown dear to her? Yes, that was the truth.
She had learned it even as he cursed her; all her quick southern blood was
alight with a new fire, the like of which she had never known before. And not
her blood only, it was her spirit—her spirit that yearned to his. Had it
not leapt within her at the first sight of him as to one most dear, one
long-lost and found again? She loved him, and he loathed her, and oh! her lot
was hard.</p>
<p>As Elissa lay brooding thus in her pain, the door opened and Sakon, her father,
hurried into the chamber.</p>
<p>“What is it that chanced yonder?” he asked, for he had not been
present in the sanctuary, “and, daughter, why do you weep?”</p>
<p>“I weep, father, because your guest, the prince Aziel, has called me
‘a girl of the groves, and a murderess of children,’” she
replied.</p>
<p>“Then, by my head, prince that he is, he shall answer for it to
me,” said Sakon, grasping at his sword-hilt.</p>
<p>“Nay, father, since to him I must have seemed to deserve the words.
Listen.” And she told him all that had passed, hiding nothing.</p>
<p>“Now it seems that trouble is heaped upon trouble,” said the
Phœnician when she had finished, “and they were mad who suffered the
prince and that fierce Issachar to be present at the sacrifice. Daughter, I
tell you this: though I am a worshipper of El and Baaltis, as my fathers were
before me, I know that Jehovah of the Jews is a great and powerful Lord, and
that His prophets do not prophesy falsely, for I have seen it in my youth,
yonder in the coasts of Sidon. What did Issachar say? That before the moon was
young again, this temple should run red with blood? Well, so it may happen, for
Ithobal threatens war against us, and for your sake, my daughter.”</p>
<p>“How for my sake, father?” she asked heavily, as one who knew what
the answer would be.</p>
<p>“You know well, girl. Ever since you danced before him at the great
welcoming feast I made in his honour a month ago the man is besotted of you;
moreover, he is mad with jealousy of this new-comer, the prince Aziel. He has
demanded public audience of me this afternoon, and I have it privately that
then he will formally ask you in marriage before the people, and if he is
refused will declare war upon the city, with which he has many an ancient
quarrel. Yes, yes, king Ithobal is that sword of God which the Jew said he saw
hanging over us, and should it fall it will be because of you, Elissa.”</p>
<p>“The Jew did not say that, father; he said it would be because of the
sins of the people and their idolatries.”</p>
<p>“What does it matter what he said?” broke in Sakon hastily.
“How shall I answer Ithobal?”</p>
<p>“Tell him,” she replied with a strange smile, “that he does
wisely to be jealous of the prince Aziel.”</p>
<p>“What! Of the stranger who this very day reviled you in words of such
shame, and so soon?” asked her father astonished.</p>
<p>Elissa did not speak in answer; she only looked straight before her, and nodded
her head.</p>
<p>“Had ever man such a daughter?” Sakon went on in petulant dismay.
“Truly it is a wise saying which tells that women love those best who
beat them, be it with the tongue or with the fist. Not but what I would gladly
see you wedded to a prince of Israel and of Egypt rather than of this half-bred
barbarian, but the legions of Solomon and of Pharaoh are far away, whereas
Ithobal has a hundred thousand spears almost at our gate.”</p>
<p>“There is no need to speak of such things, father,” she said,
turning aside, “since, even were I willing, the prince would have nought
to do with me, who am a priestess of Baaltis.”</p>
<p>“The matter of religion might be overcome,” suggested Sakon;
“but, no, for many reasons it is impossible. Well, this being so,
daughter, I may answer Ithobal that you will wed him.”</p>
<p>“I!” she said; “I wed that black-hearted savage? My father,
you may answer what you will, but of this be sure, that I will go to my grave
before I pass as wife to the board of Ithobal.”</p>
<p>“Oh! my daughter,” pleaded Sakon, “think before you say it.
As his wife at least you, who are not of royal blood, will be a queen, and the
mother of kings. But if you refuse, then either I must force you, which is
hateful to me, or there will be such a war as the city has not known for
generations, for Ithobal and his tribes have many grievances against us. By the
gift of yourself, for a while, at any rate, you can, as it chances, make peace
between us, but if that is withheld, then blood will run in rivers, and perhaps
this city, with all who live in it, will be destroyed, or at the least its
trade must be ruined and its wealth stolen away.”</p>
<p>“If it is decreed that all these things are to be, they will be,”
answered Elissa calmly, “seeing that this war has threatened us for many
years, and that a woman must think of herself first, and of the fate of cities
afterwards. Of my own free will I shall never take Ithobal for husband. Father,
I have said.”</p>
<p>“Of the fate of cities, yes; but how of my fate, and that of those we
love? Are we all to be ruined, and perhaps slaughtered, to satisfy your whim,
girl?”</p>
<p>“I did not say so, father. I said that of my own free will I would not
wed Ithobal. If you choose to give me to him you have the right to do it, but
know then that you give me to my death. Perhaps it is best that it should be
thus.”</p>
<p>Sakon knew his daughter well, and it did not need that he should glance at her
face to learn that she meant her words. Also he loved her, his only child, more
dearly than anything on earth.</p>
<p>“In truth my strait is hard, and I know not which way to turn,” he
said, covering his face with his hand.</p>
<p>“Father,” she replied, laying her fingers lightly on his shoulder,
“what need is there to answer him at once? Take a month, or if he will
not give it, a week. Much may happen in that time.”</p>
<p>“The counsel is wise,” he said, catching at this straw.
“Daughter, be in the great hall of audience with your attendants three
hours after noon, for then we must receive Ithobal boldly in all pomp, and deal
with him as best we may. And now I go to ask peace for the Levite from the
priests of El, and to discover whom the sacred colleges desire to nominate as
the new Baaltis. Doubtless it will be Mesa, the daughter of her who is dead,
though many are against her. Oh! if there were no priests and no women, this
city would be easier to govern,” and with an impatient gesture Sakon left
the room.</p>
<hr />
<p>It was three o’clock in the afternoon, and the great hall of audience in
Zimboe was crowded with a brilliant assemblage. There sat Sakon, the governor,
and with him his council of the notables of the city; there were prince Aziel
and among his retinue, Issachar the prophet, fierce-eyed as ever, though hardly
recovered from the rough handling he had experienced in the temple. There were
representatives of the college of the priests of El. There were many ladies,
wives and daughters of dignitaries and wealthy citizens, and with them a great
crowd of spectators of all classes gathered in the lower part of the hall, for
a rumour had spread about that the farewell audience given by Sakon to King
Ithobal was likely to be stormy.</p>
<p>When all were gathered, a herald announced that Ithobal, King of the Tribes,
waited to take his leave of Sakon, Governor of Zimboe, before departing to his
own land on the morrow.</p>
<p>“Let him be admitted,” said Sakon, who looked weary and ill at
ease. Then as the herald bowed and left, he turned and whispered something into
the ear of his daughter Elissa, who stood behind his chair, her face immovable
as that of an Egyptian Sphinx, but magnificently apparelled in gleaming robes
and jewelled ornaments—which Metem, looking on them, reflected with
satisfaction were now his property.</p>
<p>Presently, preceded by a burst of savage music, Ithobal entered. He was
gorgeously arrayed in a purple Tyrian robe decked with golden chains, while on
the brow, in token of his royalty, he wore a golden circlet in which was set a
single blood-red stone. Before him walked a sword-bearer carrying a sword of
ceremony, a magnificent ivory-handled weapon encrusted with rough gems and
inlaid with gold, while behind him, clad in barbaric pomp, marched a number of
counsellors and attendants, huge and half-savage men who glared wonderingly at
the splendour of the place and its occupants. As the king came, Sakon rose from
his chair of state and, advancing down the hall, took him by the hand and led
him to a similar chair placed at a little distance.</p>
<p>Ithobal seated himself and looked around the hall. Presently his glance fell
upon Aziel, and he scowled.</p>
<p>“Is it common, Sakon,” he asked, “that the seat of a prince
should be set higher than that of a crowned king?” And he pointed to the
chair of Aziel, which was placed a little above his own upon the daïs.</p>
<p>The governor was about to answer when Aziel said coldly:—</p>
<p>“Where it was pointed out to me that I should sit, there I sat, though,
for aught I care, the king Ithobal may take my place. The grandson of Pharaoh
and of Solomon does not need to dispute for precedence with the savage ruler of
savage tribes.”</p>
<p>Ithobal sprang to his feet and cried, grasping his sword:—</p>
<p>“By my father’s soul, you shall answer for this, Princelet.”</p>
<p>“You should have sworn by your mother’s soul, King Ithobal,”
replied Aziel quietly, “for doubtless it is the black blood in your veins
that causes you to forget your courtesy. For the rest, I answer to no man save
to my king.”</p>
<p>“Yet there is one other who will make you answer,” replied Ithobal,
in a voice thick with rage, “and here he is,” and he drew his sword
and flashed it before the prince’s eyes. “Or if you fear to face
him, then the wands of my slaves shall cause you to cry me pardon.”</p>
<p>“If you desire to challenge me to combat, king Ithobal, for this purpose
only I am your servant, though the fashion of your challenging is not that of
any nation which I know.”</p>
<p>Before Ithobal could reply, Sakon cried out in a loud voice:—</p>
<p>“Enough, enough! Is this a place for brawling, king Ithobal, and would
you seek to fix a quarrel upon my guest, the prince Aziel, here in my council
chamber, and to bring upon me the wrath of Israel, of Tyre, and of Egypt? Be
sure that the prince shall cross no swords with you; no, not if I have to set
him under guard to keep him safe. To your business, king Ithobal, or I break up
this assembly and send you under escort to our gates.”</p>
<p>Now his counsellors plucked Ithobal by the sleeve and whispered to him some
advice, which at last he seemed to take with an ill grace, for, turning, he
said, “So be it. This is my business, Sakon: For many years I and the
countless tribes whom I rule have suffered much at the hands of you
Phœnicians, who centuries ago settled here in my country as traders. That you
should trade we are content, but not that you should establish yourselves as a
sovereign power, pretending to be my equals who are my servants. Therefore, in
the name of my nation, I demand that the tribute which you pay to me for the
use of the mines of gold shall henceforth be doubled; that the defences of this
city be thrown down; and that you cease to enslave the natives of the land to
labour in your service. I have spoken.”</p>
<p>Now as these arrogant demands reached their ears, the company assembled in the
hall murmured with anger and astonishment, then turned to wait for
Sakon’s answer.</p>
<p>“And if we refuse these small requests of yours, O King?” asked the
governor sarcastically, “what then? Will you make war upon us?”</p>
<p>“First tell me, Sakon, if you do refuse them?”</p>
<p>“In the name of the cities of Tyre and Sidon whom I serve, and of Hiram
my master, I refuse them one and all,” answered Sakon with dignity.</p>
<p>“Then, Sakon, I am minded to bring up a hundred thousand men against you
and to sweep you and your city from the face of earth,” said Ithobal.
“Yet I remember that I also have Phœnician blood in my veins mixed with
the nobler and more ancient blood at which yonder upstart jeers, and therefore
I would spare you. I remember also that for generations there has been peace
and amity between my forefathers and the Council of this city, and therefore I
would spare you. Behold, then, I build a bridge whereby you may escape, asking
but one little thing of you in proof that you are indeed my friend, and it is
that you give me your daughter, the lady Elissa, whom I seek to make my queen.
Think well before you answer, remembering that upon this answer may hang the
lives of all who listen to you, ay, and of many thousand others.”</p>
<p>For a while there was silence in the assemblage, and every eye was fixed upon
Elissa, who stood neither moving nor speaking, her face still set like that of
a Sphinx, and almost as unreadable. Aziel gazed at her with the rest, and his
eyes she felt alone of all the hundreds that were bent upon her. Indeed, so
strongly did they draw her, that against her own will she turned her head and
met them. Then remembering what had passed between herself and the prince that
very day, she coloured faintly and looked down, neither the glance nor the
blush escaping the watchful Ithobal.</p>
<p>Presently Sakon spoke:—</p>
<p>“King Ithobal,” he said, “I am honoured indeed that you
should seek my daughter as your queen, but she is my only child, whom I love,
and I have sworn to her that I will not force her to marry against her will,
whoever be the suitor. Therefore, King, take your answer from her own lips, for
whatever it be it is my answer.”</p>
<p>“Lady,” said Ithobal, “you have heard your father’s
words; be pleased to say that you look with favour upon my suit, and that you
will deign to share my throne and power.”</p>
<p>Elissa took a step forward on the daïs and curtseyed low before the king.</p>
<p>“O King!” she said, “I am your handmaid, and great indeed is
the favour that you would do your servant. Yet, King, I pray of you search out
some fairer woman of a more royal rank to share your crown and sceptre, for I
am all unworthy of them, and to those words on this matter which I have spoken
in past days I have none to add.” Then again she curtseyed, adding,
“King, I am your servant.”</p>
<p>Now a murmur of astonishment went up from the audience, for few of them thought
it possible that Elissa, who, however beautiful, was but the daughter of a
noble, could refuse to become the wife of a king. Ithobal alone did not seem to
be astonished, for he had expected this answer.</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said, repressing with an effort the passions which were
surging within him, “I think that I have something to offer to the woman
of my choice, and yet you put me aside as lightly as though I had neither name,
nor power, nor station. This, as it seems to me, can be read in one way only,
that your heart is given elsewhere.”</p>
<p>“Have it as you will, King,” answered Elissa, “my heart is
given elsewhere.”</p>
<p>“And yet, lady, not four suns gone you swore to me that you loved no man.
Since then it seems that you have learned to love, and swiftly, and it is
yonder Jew whom you have chosen.” And he pointed to the prince Aziel.</p>
<p>Again Elissa coloured, this time to the eyes, but she showed no other sign of
confusion.</p>
<p>“May the king pardon me,” she said, “and may the prince
Aziel, whose name has thus been coupled with mine, pardon me. I said indeed
that my heart was given elsewhere, but I did not say it was given to any man.
May not the heart of a mortal maid-priestess be given to the
Ever-living?”</p>
<p>Now for a moment the king was silenced, while a murmur of applause at her ready
wit went round the audience. But before it died away a voice at the far end of
the hall called out:—</p>
<p>“Perchance the lady does not know that yonder in Egypt, and in Jerusalem
also, prince Aziel is named the Ever-living.”</p>
<p>Now it was Elissa’s turn to be overcome.</p>
<p>“Nay, I knew it not,” she said; “how should I know it? I
spoke of that Dweller in the heavens whom I worship——”</p>
<p>“And behold, the title fits a dweller on the earth whom you must also
worship, for such omens do not come by chance,” cried the same voice, but
from another quarter of the crowded hall.</p>
<p>“I ask pardon,” broke in Aziel, “and leave to speak. It is
true that owing to a certain birth-mark which I bear, among the Egyptians I
have been given the bye-name of the Ever-living, but it is one which this lady
can scarcely have heard, therefore jest no more upon a chance accident of
words. Moreover, if you be men, cease to heap insult upon a woman. I who am
almost a stranger here have not dared to ask the lady Elissa for her
favour.”</p>
<p>“Ay, but you will ask and she will grant,” answered the same voice,
the owner of which none could discover—for he seemed to speak from every
part of the chamber.</p>
<p>“Indeed,” went on Aziel, not heeding the interruption, “the
last words between us were words of anger, for we quarrelled on a matter of
religion.”</p>
<p>“What of that?” cried the voice; “love is the highest of
religions, for do not the Phœnicians worship it?”</p>
<p>“Seize yonder knave,” shouted Sakon, and search was made but
without avail. Afterwards, however, Aziel remembered that once, when they were
weather-bound on their journey from the coast, Metem had amused them by making
his voice sound from various quarters of the hut in which they lay. Then
Ithobal rose and said:—</p>
<p>“Enough of this folly; I am not here to juggle with words, or to listen
to such play. Whether the lady Elissa spoke of the gods she serves or of a man
is one to me. I care not of whom she spoke, but for her words I do care. Now
hearken, you city of traders: If this is to be thy answer, then I break down
that bridge which I have built, and it is war between you and my Tribes, war to
the end. But let her change her words, and whether she loves me or loves me
not, come to be my wife, and, for my day, the bridge shall stand; for once that
we are wed I can surely teach her love, or if I cannot, at least it is she I
seek with or without her love. Reflect then, lady, and reply again, remembering
how much hangs upon your lips.”</p>
<p>“Do you think, king Ithobal,” Elissa answered, looking at him with
angry eyes, “that a woman such as I am can be won by threats? I have
spoken, king Ithobal.”</p>
<p>“I know not,” he replied; “but I do know that she can be won
by force, and then surely, lady, your pride shall pay the price, for you shall
be mine, but not my queen.”</p>
<p>Now one of the council rose and said:—</p>
<p>“It seems, Sakon, that there is more in this matter than whether or no
the king Ithobal pleases your daughter. Is the city then to be plunged into a
great war, of which none can see the end, because one woman looks askance upon
a man? Better that a thousand girls should be wedded where they would not than
that such a thing should happen. Sakon, according to our ancient law you have
the right to give your daughter in marriage where and when you will. We demand,
therefore, that for the good of the commonwealth, you should exercise this
right, and hand over the lady Elissa to king Ithobal.”</p>
<p>This speech was received with loud and general shouts of approval, for no
Phœnician audience would have been willing to sacrifice its interests for a
thing so trivial as the happiness of a woman.</p>
<p>“Between the desire of a beloved daughter to whom I have pledged my word
and my duty to the great city over which I rule, my strait is hard
indeed,” answered Sakon. “Hearken, king Ithobal, I must have time.
Give me eight days from now in which to answer you, for if you will not, I deny
your suit.”</p>
<p>Ithobal seemed about to refuse the demand of Sakon. Then once more his
counsellors plucked him by the sleeve, pointing out to him that if he did this,
it was likely that none of them would leave the city alive. At some sign from
the governor, they whispered, the captains of the guard were already hastening
from the hall.</p>
<p>“So be it, Sakon,” he said. “To-night I camp without your
walls, which are no longer safe for one who has threatened war against them,
and on the eighth day from this see to it that your heralds being me the Lady
Elissa and peace—or I make good my threat. Till then, farewell.”
And placing himself in the midst of his company king Ithobal left the hall.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII<br/> THE BLACK DWARF</h2>
<p>Some two hours had passed since the break-up of the assembly in the great hall.
Prince Aziel was seated in his chamber, when the keeper of the door announced
that a woman was without who desired to speak with him. He gave orders that she
should be admitted, and presently a veiled figure entered the room and bowed
before him.</p>
<p>“Be pleased to unveil, and to tell me your business,” he said.</p>
<p>With some reluctance his visitor withdrew the wrapping from her head, revealing
a face which Aziel recognised as one that he had seen among the waiting women
who attended on Elissa.</p>
<p>“My message is for your ear, Prince,” she said, glancing at the man
who had ushered her into the chamber.</p>
<p>“It is not my custom to receive strangers thus alone,” said the
prince; “but be it as you will,” and he motioned to the servant to
retire without the door. “I await your pleasure,” he added, when
the man had gone.</p>
<p>“It is here,” she answered, and drew from her bosom a little
papyrus roll.</p>
<p>“Who wrote this?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I know not, Prince; it was given to me to pass on to you.”</p>
<p>Then he opened the roll and read. It ran thus: “Though we parted with
bitter words, still in my sore distress I crave the comfort of your counsel.
Therefore, since I am forbidden to speak with you openly, meet me, I beseech
you, at moonrise in the palace garden under the shade of the great fig tree
with five roots, where I shall be accompanied only by one I trust. Bring no man
with you for my safety’s sake.—Elissa.”</p>
<p>Aziel thrust the scroll into his robe, and thought awhile. Then he gave the
waiting lady a piece of gold and said:—</p>
<p>“Tell her who sent you that I obey her words. Farewell.”</p>
<p>This message seemed to puzzle the woman, who opened her lips to speak. Then,
changing her mind, she turned and went.</p>
<p>Scarcely had she gone when the Phœnician, Metem, was ushered into the room.</p>
<p>“O Prince,” he said maliciously, “pardon me if I caution you.
Yet in truth if veiled ladies flit thus through your apartments in the light of
day, it will reach the ears of the holy but violent Issachar, of whose doings I
come to speak. Then, Prince, I tremble for you.”</p>
<p>Aziel made a movement half-impatient and half-contemptuous. “The woman is
a serving-maid,” he said, “who brought me a message that I
understand but little. Tell me, Metem, for you know this place of old, does
there stand in the palace garden a great fig tree with five roots?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Prince; at least such a tree used to grow there when last I visited
this country. It was one of the wonders of the town, because of its size. What
of it?”</p>
<p>“Little, except that I must be under it at moonrise. See and read, since
whatever you may say of yourself, you are, I think, no traitor.”</p>
<p>“Not if I am well paid to keep counsel, Prince,” Metem answered
with a smile. Then he read the scroll.</p>
<p>“I am glad that the noble lady brings an attendant with her,” he
said as he returned it, with a bow. “The gossips of Zimboe are
censorious, and might misinterpret this moonlight meeting, as indeed would
Sakon and Issachar. Well, doves will coo and maids will woo, and unless I can
make money out of it the affair is none of mine.”</p>
<p>“Have I not told you that there is no question of wooing?” asked
the prince angrily. “I go only to give her what counsel I can in the
matter of the suit of this savage, Ithobal. The lady Elissa and I have
quarrelled beyond repair over that accursed sacrifice——”</p>
<p>“Which her ready wit prevented,” put in Metem.</p>
<p>“But I promised last night that I would help her if I could,” the
prince went on, “and I always keep my word.”</p>
<p>“I understand, Prince. Well, since you turn from the lady, whose name
with yours is so much in men’s mouths just now, doubtless you will give
her wise counsel, namely, to wed Ithobal, and lift the shadow of war from this
city. Then, indeed, we shall all be grateful to you, for it seems that no one
else can move her stubbornness. And, by the way: If, when she has listened to
your wisdom, the daughter of Sakon should chance to explain to you that the
sight of this day’s attempted sacrifice filled her with horror, and that
she parted with every jewel she owns to put an end to it—well, her words
will be true. But, since you have quarrelled, they will have no more interest
for you, Prince, than has my talk about them. So now to other matters.”
And Metem began to speak of the conduct of Issachar in the sanctuary, and of
the necessity of guarding him against assassination at the hands of the priests
of El as a consequence of his religious zeal. Presently he was gone, leaving
Aziel somewhat bewildered.</p>
<p>Could it be true, as she herself had told him, and as Metem now asserted, that
Elissa had not participated willingly in the dark rites in the temple? If so he
had misjudged her and been unjust; indeed, what atonement could suffice for
such words as he had used towards her? Well, to some extent she must have
understood and forgiven them, otherwise she would scarcely have sought his aid,
though he knew not how he could help her in her distress.</p>
<hr />
<p>When Elissa returned from the assembly, she laid herself down to rest, worn out
in mind and body. Soon sleep came to her, and with the sleep dreams. At first
these were vague and shadowy, then they grew more clear. She dreamed that she
saw a dim and moonlit garden, and in it a vast tree with twisted roots that
seemed familiar to her. Something moving among the branches of this tree
attracted her attention, but for a long while she watched it without being able
to discover what it was. Now she saw. The moving thing was a hideous black
dwarf with beady eyes, who held in his hand a little ivory tipped bow, on the
string of which was set an arrow. Her consciousness concentrated itself upon
this arrow, and though she knew not how, she became aware that it was poisoned.
What was the dwarf doing in the tree with a bow and poisoned arrow, she
wondered? Suddenly a sound seemed to strike her ear, the sound of a man’s
footsteps walking over grass, and she perceived that the figure of the dwarf,
crouched upon the bough, became tense and alert, and that his fingers tightened
upon the bow-string until the blood was driven from their yellow tips.
Following the glance of his wicked black eyes, she saw advancing through the
shadow a tall man clad in a dark robe. Now he emerged into a patch of moonlight
and stood looking around him as though he were searching for some one. Then the
dwarf raised himself to his knees upon the bough, and, aiming at the bare
throat of the man, drew the bow-string to his ear. At this moment the victim
turned his head and the moonlight shone full upon his face. It was that of the
prince Aziel.</p>
<hr />
<p>Elissa awoke from her vision with a little cry, then rose trembling, and strove
to comfort herself in the thought that although it was so very vivid she had
dreamed but a dream. Still shaken and unnerved, she passed into another
chamber, and made pretence to eat of the meal that was made ready for her, for
it was now the hour of sunset. While she was thus employed, it was announced
that the Phœnician, Metem, desired to speak with her, and she commanded that
he should be admitted.</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said bowing, so soon as her attendants had withdrawn to
the farther end of the chamber, “you can guess my errand. This morning I
gave you certain tidings which proved both true and useful, and for those
tidings you promised a reward.”</p>
<p>“It is so,” she said, and going to a chest she drew from it an
ivory casket full of ornaments of gold and among them necklaces and other
objects set with uncut precious stones. “Take them,” she said,
“they are yours; that is, save this gold chain alone, for it is vowed to
Baaltis.”</p>
<p>“But lady,” he asked, “how can you appear before Ithobal the
king thus robbed of all your ornaments?”</p>
<p>“I shall not appear before Ithobal the king,” she answered sharply.</p>
<p>“You say so! Then what will the prince Aziel think of you when he sees
you thus unadorned?”</p>
<p>“My beauty is my adornment,” she replied, “not these gems and
gold. Moreover, it is nought to me what he thinks, for he hates me, and has
reviled me.”</p>
<p>Metem lifted his eyebrows incredulously and went on: “Still, I will not
deprive you of this woman’s gear. Look now, I value it, and at no high
figure,” and drawing out his writer’s palette and a slip of
papyrus, he wrote upon it an acknowledgment of debt, which he asked her to
sign.</p>
<p>“This document, lady,” he said, “I will present to your
father—or your husband—at a convenient season, nor do I fear that
either of them will refuse to honour it. And now I take my leave, for
you—have an appointment to keep—and,” he added with emphasis,
“the time of moonrise is at hand.”</p>
<p>“Your meaning, I pray you?” she asked. “I have no appointment
at moonrise, or at any other hour.”</p>
<p>Metem bowed politely, but in a fashion which showed that he put no faith in her
words.</p>
<p>“Again I ask your meaning, merchant,” she said, “for your
dark hintings are scarcely to be borne.”</p>
<p>The Phœnician looked at her; there was a ring of truth in her voice.</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said, “will you indeed deny, after I have seen it
written by yourself, that within some few minutes you meet the prince Aziel
beneath a great tree in the palace gardens, there—so said the
scroll—to ask his aid in this matter of the suit of Ithobal?”</p>
<p>“Written by myself?” she said wonderingly. “Meet the prince
Aziel beneath a tree in the palace gardens? Never have I thought of it.”</p>
<p>“Yet, lady, the scroll I saw purported to be written by you, and your own
woman bore it to the prince. As I think, she sits yonder at the end of the
chamber, for I know her shape.”</p>
<p>“Come hither,” called Elissa, addressing the woman. “Now tell
me, what scroll was this that you carried to-day to the prince Aziel, saying
that I sent you?”</p>
<p>“Lady,” answered the girl confusedly, “I never told the
prince Aziel that you sent him the scroll.”</p>
<p>“The truth, woman, the truth,” said her mistress. “Lie not,
or it will be the worse for you.”</p>
<p>“Lady, this is the truth. As I was walking through the market-place an
old black woman met me, and offered me a piece of gold if I would deliver a
letter into the hand of the prince Aziel. The gold tempted me, for I had need
of it, and I consented; but of who wrote the letter I know nothing, nor have I
ever seen the woman before.”</p>
<p>“You have done wrong, girl,” said Elissa, “but I believe your
tale. Now go.”</p>
<p>When she had gone, Elissa stood for a while thinking; and, as she thought,
Metem saw a look of fear gather on her face.</p>
<p>“Say,” she asked him, “is there anything strange about the
tree of which the scroll tells?”</p>
<p>“Its size is strange,” he answered, “and it has five roots
that stand above the ground.”</p>
<p>As he spoke Elissa uttered a little cry.</p>
<p>“Ah!” she said, “it is the tree of my dream. Now—now I
understand. Swift, oh! come with me swiftly, for see, the moon rises,”
and she sprang to the door followed by the amazed Metem.</p>
<p>Another minute, and they were speeding down the narrow street so fast that
those who loitered there turned their heads and laughed, for they thought that
a jealous husband pursued his wife. As Elissa fumbled at the hasp of the door
of the garden, Metem overtook her.</p>
<p>“What means this hunt?” he gasped.</p>
<p>“That they have decoyed the prince here to murder him,” she
answered, and sped through the gateway.</p>
<p>“Therefore we must be murdered also. A woman’s logic,” the
Phœnician reflected to himself as he panted after her.</p>
<p>Swiftly as Elissa had run down the street, here she redoubled her speed,
flitting through the glades like some white spirit, and so rapidly that her
companion found it difficult to keep her in view. At length they came to a
large open space of ground where played the level beams of the rising moon,
striking upon the dense green foliage of an immense tree that grew there. Round
this tree Elissa ran, glancing about her wildly, so that for a few seconds
Metem lost sight of her, for its mass was between them. When he saw her again
she was speeding towards the figure of a man who stood in the open, about ten
paces from the outer boughs of the tree. To this she pointed as she came,
crying out aloud, “Beware! Beware!”</p>
<p>Another moment and she had almost reached the man, and still pointing began to
gasp some broken words. Then, suddenly in the bright moonlight, Metem saw a
shining point of light flash towards the pair from the darkness of the tree. It
would seem that Elissa saw it also; at least, she leapt from the ground, her
arm lifted above her head as though to catch the object. Then as her feet once
more touched the earth her knees gave way, and she fell down with a moan of
pain. Metem running on towards her, as he went perceived a shape, which looked
like that of a black dwarf, slip from the shadow of the tree into some bushes
beyond where it was lost. Now he was there, to find Elissa half-seated,
half-lying on the ground, the prince Aziel bending over her, and fixed through
the palm of her right hand, which she held up piteously, a little ivory-pointed
arrow.</p>
<p>“Draw it out from the wound,” he panted.</p>
<p>“It will not help me,” she answered; “the arrow is
poisoned.”</p>
<p>With an exclamation, Metem knelt beside her, and, not heeding her groans of
pain, drew the dart through the pierced palm. Then he tore a strip of linen
from his robe, and knotting it round Elissa’s wrist, he took a broken
stick that lay near and twisted the linen till it almost cut into her flesh.</p>
<p>“Now, Prince,” he said, “suck the wound, for I have no breath
for it. Fear not, lady, I know an antidote for this arrow poison, and presently
I will be back with the salve. Till then, if you would live, do not suffer that
bandage to be loosed, however much it pains you,” and he departed
swiftly.</p>
<p>Aziel put his lips to the hurt to draw out the poison.</p>
<p>“Nay,” she said faintly, trying to pull away her hand, “it is
not fitting, the venom may kill you.”</p>
<p>“It seems that it was meant for me,” he answered, “so at the
worst I do take but my own.”</p>
<p>Presently, directing Elissa to hold her hand above her head, he put his arms
about her and carried her a hundred paces or more into the open glade.</p>
<p>“Why do you move me?” she asked, her head resting on his shoulder.</p>
<p>“Because whoever it was that shot the arrow may return to try his fortune
a second time, and here in the open his darts cannot reach us.” Then he
set her down upon the grass and stood looking at her.</p>
<p>“Listen, prince Aziel,” Elissa said after a while, “the venom
with which these black men soak their weapons is very strong, and unless
Metem’s salve be good, it may well chance that I shall die. Therefore
before I die I wish to say a word to you. What brought you to this place
to-night?”</p>
<p>“A letter from yourself, lady.”</p>
<p>“I know it,” she said, “but I did not write that letter; it
was a snare, set, as I think, by the king Ithobal, who would do you to death in
this way or in that. A messenger of his bribed my waiting-maid to deliver it,
and afterwards I learnt the tale from Metem. Then, guessing all, I came hither
to try to save you.”</p>
<p>“But how could you guess all, lady?”</p>
<p>“In a strange fashion, Prince.” And in a few words she told him her
dream.</p>
<p>“This is marvellous indeed, that you should be warned of my danger by
visions,” he said wondering, and half-doubtingly.</p>
<p>“So marvellous, Prince, that you do not believe me,” Elissa
answered. “I know well what you think. You think that a woman to whom
this very morning you spoke such words as women cannot well forgive, being
revengeful laid a plot to murder you, and then, being a woman, changed her
mind. Well, it is not so; Metem can prove it to you!”</p>
<p>“Lady, I believe you,” he said, “without needing the
testimony of Metem. But now the story grows still more strange, for if you had
done me no wrong, how comes it that to preserve me from harm you set your
tender flesh between the arrow and one who had reviled you?”</p>
<p>“It was by chance,” she answered faintly. “I learnt the truth
and ran to warn you. Then I saw the arrow fly towards your heart, and strove to
grasp it, and it pierced me. It was by chance, by such a chance as made me
dream your danger.” And she fainted.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII<br/> AZIEL PLIGHTS HIS TROTH</h2>
<p>At first Aziel feared that the poison had done its work, and that Elissa was
dead, till placing his hand upon her heart he felt it beating faintly, and knew
that she did but swoon. To leave her to seek water or assistance was
impossible, since he dared not loose his hold of the bandage about her wrist.
So, patiently as he might, he knelt at her side awaiting the return of Metem.</p>
<p>How beautiful her pale face seemed there in the moonlight, set in its frame of
dusky hair. And how strange was this tale of hers, of a dream that she had
dreamed, a dream which, to save his own, led her to offer her life to the
murderer’s arrow. Many would not believe it, but he felt that it was
true; he felt that even if she wished it she could not lie to him, for as he
had known since first they met, their souls were open to each other. Yes,
having thus been warned of his danger, she had offered her life for
him—for him who that morning had called her, unjustly so Metem said,
“a girl of the groves and a murderess.” How came it that she had
done this, unless indeed she loved him as—he loved her?</p>
<p>Aziel could no longer palter with himself, it was the truth. Last night when
Issachar accused him, he had felt this, although then he would not admit it
altogether, and now to-night he knew that his fate had found him. They would
say that, after the common fashion of men, he had been conquered by a lovely
face and form and a brave deed of devotion. But it was not so. Something beyond
the flesh and its works and attributes drew him towards this woman, something
that he could neither understand nor define (unless, indeed, the vision of
Issachar defined it), but of which he had been conscious since first he set
eyes upon her face. It was possible, it was even probable, that before another
hour had gone by she would have passed beyond his reach, into the deeps of
death, whither for a while he could not follow her. Yet he knew that the
knowledge that she never could be his would not affect the love of her which
burnt in him, for his desire towards her was not altogether a desire of the
earth.</p>
<p>Aziel bent down over the swooning girl, looking into her pale face, till her
lips almost touched his own, and his breath beating on her brow seemed to give
her life again. Now she stirred, and now she opened her eyes and gazed back at
him a while, deeply and with meaning, even as he gazed at her.</p>
<p>He spoke no word, for his lips seemed to be smitten with silence, but his heart
said, “I love you, I love you,” and her heart heard it, for she
whispered back:—</p>
<p>“Bethink you who and what I am.”</p>
<p>“It matters not, for we are one,” he replied.</p>
<p>“Bethink you,” she said again, “that soon I may be dead and
lost to you.”</p>
<p>“It cannot be, for we are one,” he replied. “One we have
been, one we are to-day, and one we shall be through all the length of life and
death.”</p>
<p>“Prince,” she said again, “once more and for the last time I
say: Bethink you well, for it comes upon me that your words are true, and that
if I take that which to-night you offer, it will be for ever and for
aye.”</p>
<p>“For ever and aye, let it be,” Aziel said, leaning towards her.</p>
<p>“For ever and for aye, let it be,” she repeated, holding up her
lips to his.</p>
<p>And thus in the silent moonlit garden they plighted their strange troth.</p>
<hr />
<p>“Lady,” said a voice in their ears, the voice of Metem, “I
pray you let me dress your hand, for there is no time to lose.”</p>
<p>Aziel looked up to see the Phœnician bending over them with a sardonic smile,
and behind him the tall form of Issachar, who stood regarding them, his arms
folded on his breast.</p>
<p>“Holy Issachar,” went on Metem with malice, “be pleased to
hold this lady’s hand, since it seems that the prince here can only tend
her lips.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” answered the Levite, “what have I to do with this
daughter of Baaltis? Cure her if you can, or if you cannot, let her die, for so
shall a stone of stumbling be removed from the feet of the foolish.” And
he glanced indignantly at Aziel.</p>
<p>“Had it not been for this same stone at least the feet of the foolish by
now would have pointed skywards. The gods send me such a stone if ever a black
dwarf draws a poisoned arrow at me,” answered Metem, as he busied himself
with his drugs. Then he added, “Nay, Prince, do not stop to answer him,
but hold the lady’s hand to the light.”</p>
<p>Aziel obeyed, and having washed out the wound with water, Metem rubbed ointment
into it which burnt Elissa so sorely that she groaned aloud.</p>
<p>“Be patient beneath the pain, lady,” he said, “for if it has
not already passed into your blood, this salve will eat away the poison of the
arrow.”</p>
<p>Then half-leading and half-carrying her, they brought her back to the palace.
Here Metem gave her over into the care of her father, telling him as much of
the story as he thought wise, and cautioning him to keep silent concerning what
had happened.</p>
<p>At the door of the palace Issachar spoke to Aziel.</p>
<p>“Did I dream, Prince,” he said, “or did my ears indeed hear
you tell that idolatress that you loved her for ever, and did my eyes see you
kiss her on the lips?”</p>
<p>“It seems that you saw and heard these things, Issachar,” said
Aziel, setting his face sternly. “Now hear this further, and then I pray
you give me peace on this matter of the lady Elissa: If in any way it is
possible, I shall make her my wife, and if it be not possible, then for so long
as she may live at least I will look upon no other woman.”</p>
<p>“Then that is good news, Prince, to me, who am charged with your welfare,
for be sure, if I can prevent you, you shall never mix your life with that of
this heathen sorceress.”</p>
<p>“Issachar,” the prince replied, “I have borne much from you
because I know well that you love me, and have stood to me in the place of a
father. But now, in my turn, I warn you, do not seek to work harm to the lady
Elissa, for in striking her you strike me, and such blows may bring my
vengeance after them.”</p>
<p>“Vengeance?” mocked the Levite. “I fear but one vengeance,
and it is not yours, nor do I listen to the whisperings of love when duty
points the path. Rather would I see you dead, prince Aziel, then lured down to
hell by the wiles of yonder witch.”</p>
<p>Then before Aziel could answer he turned and left him.</p>
<hr />
<p>As Issachar went to his own chamber full of bitterness and indignation, he
passed the door of Elissa’s apartments, and came face to face with Metem
issuing from them.</p>
<p>“Will the woman live?” he asked of him.</p>
<p>“Be comforted, worthy Issachar. I think so; that is, if the bandage does
not slip. I go to tell the prince.”</p>
<p>“Gladly would I give a hundred golden shekels to him who brought me
tidings that it had slipped and the woman with it, down to the arms of her
father Beelzebub,” broke in the Levite passionately.</p>
<p>“Pretty words for a holy man,” said Metem, feigning amazement.
“Well, Issachar, I will do most things for good money, but to shift that
bandage would be but murder, and this I cannot work even for the gold and to
win your favour.”</p>
<p>“Fool,” answered Issachar, “did I ask you to do murder? I do
not fight with such weapons; let the woman live or die as it is decreed. Nay,
enter my chamber, for I would speak with you, who are a cunning man versed in
the craft of courts. Listen now: I love this prince Aziel, for I have reared
him from his childhood, and he has been a son to me who have none. More, I am
sent hither to this hateful land to watch him and hold him from harm, and for
all that chances to him I must account. And now, what has chanced? This woman,
Elissa, by her witcheries——”</p>
<p>“Softly, Issachar; what witcheries does she need beyond those lips and
form and eyes?”</p>
<p>“By her witcheries, I tell you, has ensnared him so that now he swears
that he will wed her.”</p>
<p>“What of it, Issachar? He might travel far to find a lovelier
woman.”</p>
<p>“What of it, do you ask, remembering who he is? What of it, when you know
his faith, and that this fair idolater will sap it, and cause him to cast away
his soul? What of it, when with your own ears you heard him swear to love her
through all the deeps of life and death? Man, are you mad?”</p>
<p>“No, but some might say that you are, holy father, who forget that I am
also of this religion which you revile. But for good or ill, so the matter
stands; and now what is it that you wish of me?”</p>
<p>“I wish that you should make it impossible that the prince Aziel should
take this woman to wife. Not by murder, indeed, for ‘thou shalt not
kill,’ saith the law, but by bringing it about that she should marry the
king Ithobal, or if that fail, in any other fashion which seems good to
you.”</p>
<p>“‘Thou shalt not kill,’ saith your law; tell me then,
Issachar, does it say also that thou shalt hand over a woman to a fate that she
chances to hold to be worse than death? Doubtless it is foolish of her, and we
should not heed such woman’s folly. Yet this one has a certain strength
of will, and I question if all the elders of the city will bring her living to
the arms of Ithobal.”</p>
<p>“It is nought to me, Metem, if she weds Ithobal, or weds him not, save
that I do not love this heathen man, and surely her temper and her witcheries
would bring ruin on him. What I would have you do is to prevent her from
marrying Aziel; the way I leave to you.”</p>
<p>“And what should I be paid for this service, holy Issachar?”</p>
<p>The Jew thought and answered, “A hundred golden shekels.”</p>
<p>“Two hundred gold shekels,” replied Metem reflectively, “nay,
I am sure you said <i>two</i> hundred, Issachar. At least, I do not work for
less, and it is a small sum enough, seeing that to earn it I must take upon
myself the guilt of severing two loving hearts. But I know well that you are
right, and that this would be an evil marriage for the prince Aziel, and also
for the lady Elissa, who then day by day and year by year must bear the scourge
of your reproaches, Issachar. Therefore I will do my best, not for the money
indeed, but because I see herein a righteous duty. And now here is parchment,
give me the lamp that I may prepare the bond.”</p>
<p>“My word is my bond, Phœnician,” answered the Levite haughtily.</p>
<p>Metem looked at him. “Doubtless,” he said, “but you are old,
and this is—a rough country where accidents chance at times. Still, the
thing would read very ill, and, as you say, your word is your bond. Only
remember, Issachar, two hundred shekels, bearing interest at two shekels a
month. And now you are weary, holy Issachar, with plotting for the welfare of
others, and so am I. Farewell, and good dreams to you.”</p>
<p>The Levite watched him go, muttering to himself, “Alas that I should have
fallen to such traffic with a knave, but it is for your sake and for your
soul’s sake, O Aziel my son. I pray that Fate be not too strong for me
and you.”</p>
<hr />
<p>For two days from this night Elissa lay almost senseless, and by many it was
thought that she would die. But when Metem saw her on the morning after she had
been wounded, and noted that her arm was but little swollen, and had not turned
black, he announced that she would certainly live, whatever the doctors of the
city might declare. Thereon Sakon, her father, and Aziel blessed him, but
Issachar said nothing.</p>
<p>As the Phœnician was walking through the market-place early on the next day an
aged black woman, whom he did not know, accosted him, saying that she had a
message for his ear from the king Ithobal who was camped without the city and
who desired to see the merchandise that he had brought with him from the coasts
of Tyre. Now Metem had already sold all his wares at a great advantage; still,
as he would not neglect this opportunity of trade, he purchased others from his
fellow merchants, and loading two camels with them, set out for the camp of
Ithobal, riding on a mule. By midday he had reached it. The camp was pitched
near water in a pleasant grove of trees, and on one of these not far from the
tent of Ithobal Metem noted that there hung the body of a black dwarf.</p>
<p>“Behold the fate of him who shoots at the buck and hits the doe. Well, I
have always said that murder is a dangerous game, since blood calls out for
blood,” thought Metem as he rode towards the tent.</p>
<p>At its door stood king Ithobal looking very huge and sullen in the sunlight.
Metem dismounted and prostrated himself obsequiously.</p>
<p>“May the King live for ever,” he said, “the great King, the
King to whom all the other kings of the earth are as the little gods to Baal,
or the faint stars to the sun.”</p>
<p>“Rise, and cease from flatteries,” said Ithobal shortly; “I
may be greater than the other kings, but at least you do not think it.”</p>
<p>“If the king says so, so let it be,” replied Metem calmly. “A
woman yonder in the market-place told me that the king wished to trade for my
merchandise. So I have brought the best of it; priceless goods that which much
toil I have carried hither from Tyre,” and he pointed to the two camels
laden with the inferior articles which he had purchased, and began to read the
number and description of the goods from his tablets.</p>
<p>“What value do you set upon the whole of them, merchant?” asked
Ithobal.</p>
<p>“To the traders of the country so much, but to you, O King, so much
only,” and he named a sum twice that which he had paid in the city.</p>
<p>“So be it,” assented Ithobal indifferently; “I do not haggle
over wares. Though your price is large, presently my treasurer shall weigh you
out the gold.”</p>
<p>There was a moment’s pause, then Metem said:—</p>
<p>“The trees in this camp of yours bear evil fruit, O King. If I might ask,
why does that little black monkey hang yonder.”</p>
<p>“Because he tried to do murder with his poisoned arrows,” answered
Ithobal sullenly.</p>
<p>“And failed? Well, it must comfort you to think that he did fail if he
was of the number of your servants. It is strange now that some knave unknown
attempted murder last night in the palace gardens, also with poisoned arrows. I
say attempted, but as yet I cannot be sure that he did not succeed.”</p>
<p>“What!” exclaimed Ithobal, “was——” and he
stopped.</p>
<p>“No, King, prince Aziel was not hit; the Lady Elissa took that shaft
through her hand, and lies between life and death. I am doctoring her, and had
it not been for my skill she would now be stiff and black—as the rogue
who shot the arrow.”</p>
<p>“Save her,” said Ithobal hoarsely, “and I will pay you a
doctor’s fee of a hundred ounces of pure gold. Oh! had I but known, the
clumsy fool should not have died so easily.”</p>
<p>Metem took out his tablets and made a note of the amount.</p>
<p>“Take comfort, King,” he said, “I think that I shall earn the
fee. But to speak truth, this matter looks somewhat ugly, and your name is
mentioned in it. Also it is said that your cousin, the great man whom the
prince Aziel slew, was charged to abduct a certain lady by your order.”</p>
<p>“Then false tales are told in Zimboe, and not for the first time,”
answered Ithobal coldly. “Listen, merchant, I have a question to ask of
you. Will the prince Aziel meet me in single combat with whatever weapons he
may choose?”</p>
<p>“Doubtless, and—pardon me if I say it—slay you as he slew
your cousin, for he is a fine swordsman, who has studied the art in Egypt,
where it is understood, and your strength would not avail against him. But your
question is already answered, for though the prince would be glad enough to
fight you, Sakon will have none of it. Have you nothing else to ask me,
King?”</p>
<p>Ithobal nodded and said:—</p>
<p>“Listen, merchant. I know your repute of old, that you love money and
will do much to gain it, and that you are craftier than any hill-side jackal.
Now, if you can do my will, you will have more wealth than ever you won in your
life before.”</p>
<p>“The offer sounds good in a poor man’s ears, King, but it depends
upon what is your will.”</p>
<p>Ithobal went to the door of the tent, and commanded the sentries who stood
without to suffer none to disturb him or draw near. Then he returned and
said:—</p>
<p>“I will tell you, but beware that you do not betray my counsels in this
or in any other matter, for I have sharp ears and a long arm. You know how
things are between me and the lady Elissa and her father Sakon and the city
which he governs. They stand thus: Unless within eight days she is given to me
in marriage, I have sworn that I will make war upon Zimboe. Ay, and I will make
it, for, filled with hate for the white man, already the great tribes are
gathering to my banners in ten armies, each of them ten thousand strong. Once
let them march beneath yonder walls, and before they leave it Zimboe, city of
gold, shall be nothing but a heap of ruins, and a habitation of the dead. Such
shall be my vengeance; but I seek love more than vengeance, for what will it
avail me to butcher all that people of traders if—as well may chance in
the accidents of war—I lose her whom I desire, whose beauty shall be my
crown of crowns, and whose mind shall make me great indeed?</p>
<p>“Therefore, Metem, if may be, I would win her without war; let the war
come afterwards, as come it must, for the time is ripe. And though she turned
from me, this I should have done, had it not been for yonder prince Aziel, whom
she met in a strange fashion, and straightway learned to love. Now the thing is
more difficult. Nay, while the prince Aziel can take her to wife it is
well-nigh impossible, since no threats of war or ruin can turn a woman’s
heart from him she seeks—to him she flies. Therefore, I ask
you——”</p>
<p>“Your pardon, King,” Metem broke in, “I see that you, like
your rival, are so besotted with the beauty of this girl, that in all with
which she has to do you have lost the rule of your own reason. I would save you
perchance from saying words to which I do not wish to listen, and when you find
a quiet mind again, that you may regret having spoken. If you were about to
require of me that I should cause or be privy to the death of the prince Aziel,
you would require it in vain; yes, even if you were willing to pay me gold in
mountains, and gems in camel loads. With murder I will have nothing to do;
moreover, the prince, your rival, is my friend and master, and I will not harm
him. Further, I may tell you that after the adventure of last night none will
be able to come near him to hurt a hair of his head, seeing that through
daylight and through darkness he is guarded by two men.”</p>
<p>“With a woman’s body to set before him as a shield,” said
Ithobal bitterly. “But you speak too fast; I was not about to ask you to
kill this man, or even to procure his death, because I know it would be
useless, but rather that you should so contrive that he cannot take Elissa. How
you contrive it I care nothing, so that she is not harmed. You may kidnap him,
or stir up the city against him, as one destined to be the source of war, and
cause him to be despatched back to the great sea, or bribe the priests of El to
hide him away, or what you will, if only you separate him from this woman for
ever. Say, merchant, are you willing to undertake the task, or must my good
gold go elsewhere?”</p>
<p>Metem pondered awhile and answered:—</p>
<p>“I think that I will undertake it, King; that is, if we come to terms,
though whether I shall succeed is another matter. I will undertake it not only
because I seek to enrich myself, but because I and others who serve him think
it is a very evil thing that this prince, Aziel, whose blood is the most royal
in the whole world, without the consent of the great king of Israel, his
grandfather, should wed the daughter of a Phœnician officer, however beautiful
and loving she may be. Also I love yonder city, which I have known for forty
years, and would not see it plunged in a bloody war and perhaps destroyed
because a certain man desires to call a certain girl his sweetheart. And now if
I succeed in this, what will you give me?”</p>
<p>Ithobal named a great sum.</p>
<p>“King,” replied Metem, “you must double it, for that amount
you speak of I shall be forced to spend in bribes. More; you must give me the
gold now, before I leave your camp, or I will do nothing.”</p>
<p>“That you may steal it—and do nothing,” laughed Ithobal
angrily.</p>
<p>“As you will, King. Such are my terms; if they do not please you, well,
let me go. But if you accept them, I will sign a bond under which if within
eight days I do not make it impossible for the prince Aziel to marry the lady
Elissa, you may reclaim so much of the gold as I do not prove to you to have
been spent upon your service, and no bond of Metem the Phœnician was ever yet
dishonoured. No, on second thought I will learn wisdom from Issachar the Levite
and put my hand to no writing which it would pain me that some should read.
King, my sworn word must content you. Another thing, soon war may break out, or
I may be forced to fly. Therefore, I demand of you a pass sealed with your seal
that will enable me to ride with twenty men and all my goods and treasure, even
through the midst of your armies. Moreover you shall swear the great oath to me
that notice of this pass will be given to your generals and that it shall be
respected to the letter. Do you consent to these terms?”</p>
<p>“I consent,” said the king presently.</p>
<hr />
<p>That evening Metem returned to the city of Zimboe, but those who led his two
camels little guessed that now they were laden, not with merchandise, but with
treasure.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX<br/> GREETING TO THE BAALTIS</h2>
<p>When Metem accepted bribes from Issachar and from Ithobal, in consideration of
his finding means to make the union of Aziel and Elissa impossible, he had
already thought out his scheme. It was one which, while promoting, as he
considered, the true welfare of the lovers, if successful would separate them
effectually and for ever.</p>
<p>It will be remembered that Elissa had explained to the prince how, on the death
of the lady Baaltis, another woman was elected by the colleges of the priests
and priestesses to fill her place. This lady could marry, indeed she was
expected to do so, but her husband must take the title of Shadid, and for her
lifetime act as high-priest of El. Therefore, thought Metem, if it could be
brought about that Elissa should be chosen as the new Baaltis, it was obvious
that there would be an end of the possibility of her marriage to Aziel. Then,
in order to wed her, he must renounce his own religion—a thing which no
Jew would do—and pose as the earthly incarnation of one whom he
considered a false divinity or a devil.</p>
<p>Indeed, not only marriage, but any further intimacy between the pair would be
rendered impracticable, for upon this point the religious law, lax enough in
many particulars, was very strict. In fact, so strict was it that for the lady
Baaltis of the day to be found alone with any man meant death to her and him.
The reason of this severity was that she was supposed to represent the goddess;
and her husband, the Shadid, a god, so that any questionable behaviour on her
part became an insult to the most powerful divinities of Heaven, which could
only be atoned by the death of their unworthy incarnations. That these laws
were actual and not formal only was proved by the instance that within the
hundred years before the birth of Elissa, a lady Baaltis had been executed for
some such offence, having been hurled indeed from the topmost pinnacle of the
fortress above the temple to the foot of the precipice beneath.</p>
<p>All these sacerdotal customs were familiar to Metem, who argued from them that
to procure the nomination of Elissa as the Baaltis would be to build an
impassable wall between her and the prince Aziel. Also, by way of compensation,
that office would confer upon her the highest dignity and honour which could be
attained by any woman in the city. Moreover, her election would place her
beyond the reach of the persecutions of Ithobal, since as lady Baaltis she was
entitled to choose her own husband without hindrance or appeal, provided only
that he was of pure white blood, which Ithobal was not.</p>
<p>Having thought the matter out, and convinced himself that such a course would
not only benefit his own pocket, but prove to the lasting advantage of all
concerned, Metem, filled with a glow of righteous zeal, set about his task with
the promptitude and cunning of his race. It was not an easy task, for although
she had enemies and rivals, the daughter of the dead Baaltis, Mesa by name, was
considered to be certain of election at the poll of the priests and
priestesses. This ceremony was to take place within two days. Nothing
discouraged, however, by the scant time at his disposal or other difficulties,
without her knowledge or that of her father, Metem began his canvass on behalf
of Elissa.</p>
<p>First with a great sum of gold he bought over the ex-Shadid, the husband of the
late lady Baaltis. As it chanced, this worthy had quarrelled with his daughter.
Therefore it followed that he would prefer to see some stranger chosen in her
place in the hope that, notwithstanding his years, by choosing him in marriage
she might confirm him in his position of spouse to the goddess.</p>
<p>All Metem’s further negotiations need not be followed: money played a
part in most of them; jealousy and dislike in some. A few there were also whom
he won over by urging the beauty and wisdom of Elissa, and her extraordinary
fitness for the post, as evinced by her recent inspiration in the temple! He
found his most powerful allies, however, among the members of the council of
the city. To these grandees he pointed out that Elissa was a woman of great
strength of character, who would certainly never consent to be forced into a
marriage with Ithobal, although her refusal should mean a desperate war, and
that her father was so much under her influence that he could not be brought to
put pressure upon her. Therefore it was obvious that the only way out of the
difficulty was her election as Baaltis. This must prove a perfect answer to the
suit of the savage king, since the goddess could not be compelled, and even
Ithobal, fearing the vengeance of Heaven, would shrink from offering her
violence.</p>
<p>Their support gained, having first sworn him to secrecy, he attacked Sakon
himself, using similar arguments with him. He pointed out, in addition, that if
the governor hoped to see his daughter married to prince Aziel, who was in love
with her, however dazzling might be the prospects of such a match, it would
certainly bring upon him the present wrath of Ithobal, and, in all probability,
future trouble with the Courts of Egypt, of Israel, and through them, of Tyre.
Thus working in many ways, Metem laboured incessantly to win his end, so that
when at last the hour of election came he awaited its issue, fairly confident
of success.</p>
<p>It was on this same afternoon that for the first time since she had received
the arrow which was meant for his heart, Aziel was admitted to see Elissa. Now
at length her recovery was certain, although she had not shaken off her
weakness, and her right arm and wrist were still stiff and swollen. Except for
two or three of her women, who were seated at their work behind a screen near
the far end of the great chamber, she was alone, lying upon a couch in the
recess of the window-place. Advancing to her, Aziel bent down to kiss her
wounded hand.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Elissa, hiding it beneath the folds of her robe,
“it is still black and unsightly with the poison.”</p>
<p>“The more reason that I should kiss it, seeing how the stain came
there,” he answered.</p>
<p>Her eyes met his, and she whispered, “Not my hand, but my brow, Prince,
for so I shall be crowned.”</p>
<p>He pressed his lips upon her forehead, and replied:—</p>
<p>“Queen of my heart you are already, and though the throne be humble it is
sure. The life you saved is yours, and no other’s.”</p>
<p>“I did but repay a debt,” she answered; “but speak of it no
more. Gladly would I have died to save you; should such choice arise, would you
do so for me, I wonder?”</p>
<p>“There is little need to ask such a question, lady; for your sake I would
not only die, I would even endure shame—that is worse than death.”</p>
<p>“Sweet words, Aziel,” she answered, smiling, “of which we
shall learn the value when the hour of trial comes, as come, I think, it will.
You told me but now that you were mine, and no other’s; but is it so? I
have heard the story of a certain princess of Khem with whom your name was
mingled. Tell me, if you will, what was it that set you journeying to this far
city of ours?”</p>
<p>“The desire to find you,” he answered smiling; then seeing that she
still looked at him with questioning eyes, he added, “Nay, this is the
truth, if you seek truth. Indeed, it is the best that I should tell you, since
it seems that already you have heard something of the tale. A while ago I was
sent to the Court of the Pharaoh of Egypt, by the will of my grandsire, the
king of Israel, upon an embassy of friendship, and to escort thence a certain
beautiful princess, my cousin, who was affianced by treaty to an uncle of mine,
a great prince of Israel. This I did, showing to the lady courtesy, and no
more. But the end of the matter was that when we came to Jerusalem the princess
refused to be married to my uncle, to whom she was
betrothed——” and he hesitated.</p>
<p>“Nay, be not timid, Prince,” said Elissa sharply; “continue,
I pray you. I have heard that the lady added somewhat to her refusal.”</p>
<p>“That is so, Elissa. She declared before the king that she would wed no
man except myself only, whereon my uncle was very angry, and accused me of
playing him false, which, indeed, I had not done.”</p>
<p>“Although the lady was so fair, Aziel? But what said the great
king?”</p>
<p>“He said that never having seen him to whom she was affianced, he would
not suffer that she should be forced into marriage with him against her will.
Yet that her will might be uninfluenced, he commanded that I should be sent
upon a long journey. That was his judgment, lady.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but not all of it; surely he added other words?” she broke in
eagerly.</p>
<p>“He added,” continued Aziel, with some reluctance, “that if
while I was on this journey the princess changed her mind, and chose to wed my
uncle, it would be well. But, when I returned from it, if she had not changed
her mind, and chose—to marry me—then it would be well also, and,
though he was little pleased, with this saying my uncle must be
satisfied.”</p>
<p>“It does not satisfy me, prince Aziel,” Elissa answered, the tears
starting to her dark eyes. “I know full well that the lady will not
change her mind, and take a man who is in years, and whom she hates, in place
of one who is young, and whom she loves. Therefore, when you return hence to
Jerusalem, by the king’s command you will wed her.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Elissa; if I am already married that cannot be,” he said.</p>
<p>“In Judea, Prince, I am told that men take more wives than one; also,
they divorce them,” she replied; then added, “Oh, return not there
where I shall lose you. If, indeed, you love me, I pray you return not
there.”</p>
<p>Before he could answer, a sound of singing and of all sorts of music caught
Aziel’s ear. Looking through the casement, he saw a great procession of
the priests and priestesses of El and Baaltis clad in their festal robes and
accompanied by many dignitaries of the city, a multitude of people and bands of
musicians, advancing across the square towards the door of the palace.</p>
<p>“Why, what passes?” he exclaimed. As he spoke the door opened and
two richly arrayed heralds, wands of office in their hands, entered and
prostrated themselves before Elissa.</p>
<p>“Greeting to you, most noble and blessed lady, the chosen of the
gods!” they cried with one voice. “Prepare, we beseech you, to hear
glad tidings, and to receive those who are sent to tell them.”</p>
<p>“Glad tidings?” said Elissa. “Has Ithobal then withdrawn his
suit?”</p>
<p>“Nay, lady; it is not of Ithobal that the messengers come to
speak.”</p>
<p>“Then I cannot receive them,” she said, sinking back in
apprehension. “I am still ill and weak, and I pray to be excused.”</p>
<p>“Nay, lady,” answered the herald, “that which they have to
tell will cure your sickness.”</p>
<p>Again Elissa protested. Before the words had left her lips there appeared in
the doorway he who had been husband of the dead Baaltis, followed by priests
and priestesses, by Sakon her father, with whom was Metem, and many other
nobles and dignitaries.</p>
<p>“All hail, lady!” they cried, prostrating themselves before her.
“All hail, lady, chosen of the gods!”</p>
<p>Elissa looked at them bewildered.</p>
<p>“Your pardon,” she said, “I do not understand.”</p>
<p>Then, rising from his knees, he who was still the Shadid until his successor
was appointed, addressed her as spokesman.</p>
<p>“Listen,” he said, “and learn, lady, the great thing that has
befallen you. Know, O divine One, that by the inspiration of El and Baaltis,
rulers of the heavens, the colleges of the priests and priestesses of the city,
following the voice of the oracles and the pointing of the omens, have set you
in that high place which death has emptied. Greeting to you, holder of the
spirit of the goddess! Greeting to the Baaltis!”</p>
<p>“I did not seek this honour,” she murmured in the silence that
followed, “and I refuse it. The throne of the goddess is Mesa’s
right; let her take it, or if she will not, then find some other woman who is
more worthy.”</p>
<p>“Lady,” said the Shadid, “these words become you well, but it
has pleased the gods to choose you and not my daughter, the lady Mesa, or any
other woman, and the choice of the gods may not be set aside. Till death shall
take you, you and you alone are the lady Baaltis whom we obey.”</p>
<p>“Must I then be made divine against my will,” she pleaded, and
turned to Aziel as though for counsel.</p>
<p>“Be pleased to stand back, prince Aziel,” said the stern voice of
the Shadid, interposing. “Remember that henceforth no man may speak to
the Baaltis save he whom she names with the name of Shadid to be her husband.
Henceforward you are parted, since to seek her company would be to cause her
death.”</p>
<p>Now understanding that the doom of life-long separation had fallen upon them
like the sudden sword of fate, Aziel and Elissa gazed at each other in despair.
Then, before either of them could speak a word, at a sign from the Shadid, the
priestesses closed round Elissa. Throwing a white veil over her head, they
broke into a joyful pæan of song, and half-led, half-carried her from the
chamber to enthrone her in the palace of the goddess, which was henceforth to
be her home.</p>
<p>Presently all the company, including the waiting women, having joined the
procession, the chamber was empty, with the exception of Aziel, Metem and
Issachar the Levite, who, drawn by the sound of singing, had entered the place
unnoticed.</p>
<p>“Take comfort, Prince,” said the Phœnician in a half-bantering
voice, “if you and the lady Baaltis are truly dear to each other she may
still be yours, for you have but to bow the knee to El, and she will name you
Shadid and husband.”</p>
<p>“Blaspheme not,” cried Issachar sternly. “Shall a worshipper
of the God of Israel do sacrifice to a demon to win a woman’s
smile?”</p>
<p>“That time will prove,” answered Metem, shrugging his shoulders;
“at least it is certain that he will win it in no other way.
Prince,” he added, changing his tone, “if you have any such
thoughts, abandon them, I pray of you, for on this matter the law may not be
broken. The man spoke truth, moreover, when he told you that should you be
found with the Baaltis, not being her husband, you would cause her
death.”</p>
<p>Aziel took no notice of his words, but turning to the Levite, he asked in a
quiet voice:—</p>
<p>“Did you plot this to separate us, Issachar? If so, you shall live to
mourn the deed.”</p>
<p>“Listen, Prince,” broke in Metem, “it was not Issachar who
plotted that the lady Elissa should be chosen Baaltis, but I, or at least I
helped the plot. Shall I tell you why I did this? It was to save you and her,
and if possible to prevent a great war also. You could not wed this woman who
is not of your race, or rank, or religion; and if you could, it would bring
about a struggle that must cost thousands their lives, and this city its
wealth. Nor could you make of her less than a wife, seeing that she is
well-born and that you are her father’s guest. Therefore for your own
sake it is best that she should be placed beyond your reach. For her sake also
it is best, since she is ambitious and born to rule, who henceforth will be
clothed with power for all her days. Moreover, had it been otherwise, in the
end she must have passed to that savage Ithobal, whom she hates. Now this is
scarcely possible, for the lady Baaltis can wed no man who is not of pure white
blood, and whom she does not choose of her own free will. That is a decree
which may not be broken even by Ithobal. So revile me not, but thank me, though
for a little while your heart be sore.”</p>
<p>“My heart is sore indeed,” answered Aziel, “and if you think
your words be wise, their medicine does not soothe, Phœnician. You may have
laboured for my welfare and for that of the lady Elissa, or, like the huckster
that you are, for your own advantage, or for both—I know not, and do not
care to know. But this I know, that you, and Issachar also, are striving to
snare Fate in a web of sand, and that Fate will be too strong for it and you. I
love this woman and she loves me, because such is our destiny, and no barriers
which man may build can serve to separate us. Also of this I am assured, that
by your plots you draw the evils you would ward away upon the heads of us all,
for from them shall spring war, and deaths, and misery.</p>
<p>“For the rest, do not think, Metem and Issachar, that I, whom you
betrayed, and the woman you have ruined with a crown of greatness she did not
seek, are clay to be moulded at your will. It is another hand than yours which
fashioned the vessel of our destiny; nor can you stay our lips from drinking of
the pure wine that fills it. Farewell,” and with a grave inclination of
the head he left the room.</p>
<p>Metem watched him go, then he turned to Issachar and said:—</p>
<p>“I have earned my hire well, and you must pay the price, but now it
troubles me to think that I touched this business. Why it is I cannot say, but
it comes upon me that the prince speaks truth, and that no plot of ours can
avail to separate these two who were born to each other, although it well may
happen that we shall unite them in death alone. Issachar,” he added with
fierce conviction, “I will not take your gold, for it is the price of
blood! I tell you it is the price of blood!”</p>
<p>“Take it or no, as you will, Phœnician,” answered the Levite;
“at least I am well pleased that the promise of it bought your service.
Even should the prince Aziel discharge this day’s work with his young
life, it is better that he should perish in the body than that he should lose
his soul for the bribe of a woman’s passing beauty. Whatever else be
lost, that is saved to him, since those sorceress lips of hers are set beyond
his reach. An Israelite cannot mate with the oracle of Baaltis, Metem.”</p>
<p>“You say so, Issachar, but I have seen men climb high to pluck such
fruit. Yes, I have seen them climb even when they knew that they must fall
before the fruit was reached.”</p>
<p>Then he went also, leaving Issachar alone and oppressed with a dread of the
future which was none the less real because it could not be defined.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>CHAPTER X<br/> THE EMBASSY</h2>
<p>Weak as she was still with recent illness, half-fainting also from the shock of
the terrible and unexpected fate which had overtaken her, Elissa was borne in
triumph to the palace that now was hers. Around her gilded litter priestesses
danced and sang their wild chants, half-bacchanalian and half-religious; before
it marched the priests of El, clashing cymbals and crying, “Make way,
make way for the new-born goddess! Make way for her whose throne is upon the
horned moon!” while all about the multitude of spectators prostrated
themselves in worship.</p>
<p>Elissa was borne in triumph. Vaguely she heard the shouts and music, dimly she
saw the dancing-girls and the bowing crowds. But all the while her heart was
alive with pain and her brain, crushed beneath the menace of this misery, could
grasp nothing clearly save the completeness of her loss. Loss! Yes, she was
lost indeed. One short hour ago and she was rejoicing in the presence of the
man she loved, and who, as she believed, loved her, while in her mind rose
visions of some happy life with him far away from this city and the dark rites
of the worshippers of Baal. And now she found herself the chief priestess of
that worship which already she had learned to fear if not to hate. More, as its
priestess, till death should come to comfort her, she was cut off for ever from
him whom she adored, cut off also from the hope of that new spiritual light
which had begun to dawn upon her soul.</p>
<p>Elissa looked upon the beautiful women who leapt and sang about her litter,
listening to the clash of their ornaments of gold, and as she listened and
looked her eyes seemed to gain power to behold the spirits within them. Surely
she could see these, dark and hideous things, with shifting countenances,
terrible to look on, and themselves wearing in their eyes of flame a stamp of
eternal terror, while in her ears the music of their golden necklaces was
changed to a clank as of fetters and of instruments of torment. Yes; and there
before the dancers in the red cloud of dust which rose from their beating feet,
floated the dim shape of that demon of whom she had been chosen the
high-priestess.</p>
<p>Look at her mocking, inhuman countenance, and her bent brow of power! Look at
her spread and flaming hair and her hundred hands outstretched to grasp the
souls of men! Hark! the clamour of the cymbals and the cry of the dancers
blended together and became her voice, a dreadful voice that gave greeting to
her princess, promising her pride of place and life-long power in payment for
her service.</p>
<p>“I desire none of these,” her heart seemed to answer; “I
desire him only whom I have lost.”</p>
<p>“Is it so?” replied the Voice. “Then bid him burn incense
upon my altar and take him to yourself. Have I not given you enough of beauty
to snare a single soul from among the servants of my enemy the God of the
Jews?”</p>
<p>“Nay, nay!” her heart cried; “I will not tempt him to do this
evil thing.”</p>
<p>“Yea, yea!” mocked the phantom Voice; “for your sake he shall
burn incense upon my altar.”</p>
<hr />
<p>The phantasy passed, and now the golden gates of the palace of Baaltis rolled
open before Elissa. Now, too, the priestesses bore her to the golden throne
shaped like a crescent moon, and threw over her a black veil spangled with
stars, symbol of the night. Then having shut out the uninitiated, they
worshipped her after their secret fashion till she sank down upon the throne
overcome with fear and weariness. Then at last they carried her to that wonder
of workmanship and allegorical art, the ivory bed of Baaltis, and laid her down
to sleep.</p>
<hr />
<p>At dawn upon the following day an embassy, headed by Sakon, governor of the
city, in whose train were Metem and Aziel, went to the camp of Ithobal. The
mission of these envoys was to give the king answer to his suit, for he refused
to come to Zimboe unless he were allowed to bring a larger force than it was
thought prudent to admit into the city gates. At some distance from the tents
they halted, while messengers were sent forward inviting Ithobal to a
conference on the plain, as it seemed scarcely safe to trust themselves within
the stout thorn fence which had been built about the camp. Metem, who said that
he had no fear of the king, went with these men, and on reaching the
<i>zeriba</i> was at once bidden to the pavilion of Ithobal. He found the great
man pacing its length sullenly.</p>
<p>“What seek you here, Phœnician?” he asked, glancing at him over
his shoulder.</p>
<p>“My fee, King. The king was pleased to promise me a hundred ounces of
gold if I saved the life of the Lady Elissa. I come, therefore, to assure him
that my skill has prevailed against the poisoned arrow of that treacherous dog
of the desert, which pierced her hand as she spoke with the prince Aziel the
other night, and to claim my reward. Here is a note of the amount,” and
he produced his tablets.</p>
<p>“If half of what I hear is true, rogue,” answered Ithobal savagely,
“the tormentor and the headsman alone could satisfy all my debt to you.
Say, merchant, what return have you made me for that sackful of gold which you
bore hence some few days gone?”</p>
<p>“The best of all returns, King,” answered Metem cheerfully,
although in truth he began to feel afraid. “I have kept my word, and
fulfilled the command of the king. I have made it impossible that the prince
Aziel should wed the daughter of Sakon.”</p>
<p>“Yes, rogue, you have made it impossible by causing her to be consecrated
Baaltis, and thus building a barrier which even I shall find too hard to climb.
It is scarcely to be hoped that now she will choose me of her own will, and to
offer violence to the Baaltis is a sacrilege from which any man—yes, even
a king—may shrink, for such deeds draw the curse of Heaven. Know that for
this service I am minded to settle my account with you in a fashion of which
you have not thought. Have you heard, Phœnician, that the chiefs of certain of
my tribes love to decorate their spear-shafts with the hide of white men, and
to bray their flesh into a medicine which gives courage to its eater?”</p>
<p>With this pleasing and suggestive query Ithobal paused, and looked towards the
door of the tent as though he were about to call his guard.</p>
<p>Now Metem’s blood ran cold, for he knew that this royal savage was not
one who uttered idle threats. Yet the coolness and cunning which had so often
served him well did not fail him in his need.</p>
<p>“I have heard that your people have strange customs,” he answered
with a laugh, “but I think that even a spear-shaft would scarcely gain
beauty from my wrinkled hide, and if anything, the eating of my flesh would
make tradesmen and not warriors of your chiefs. Well, let the jest pass, and
listen. King, in all my schemings one thought never crossed my mind, namely,
that you were a man to suffer scruples to stand between you and the woman you
would win. You think that now she is a goddess? Well, if that be so—and
it is not for me to say—who could be a fitter mate for the greatest king
upon the earth than a goddess from the heavens? Take her, king Ithobal, take
her, and this I promise you, that when your armies are encamped without the
walls, the priests of El will absolve you of the crime of aspiring to the fair
lips of Baaltis.”</p>
<p>“The lips of Baaltis,” broke in Ithobal; “do you think that I
shall find them sweet when another man has rifled them? Secret chambers are
many yonder in the palace of the gods, and doubtless the Jew will find his way
there.”</p>
<p>“Nay, King, for between these two I have indeed built a wall which cannot
be climbed. The worshipper of the Lord of Israel may not traffic with the
high-priestess of Ashtoreth. Moreover, I shall bring it about that ere long
Prince Aziel’s face is set seawards.”</p>
<p>“Do that, and I will believe you, merchant, though it would be better if
you could bring it about that his face was set earthwards, as I will if I can.
Well, this time I spare you, though be sure that if aught miscarry, you shall
pay the price, how, I have told you. Now I go to talk with these traders, these
outlanders, of Zimboe. Why do you wait? You are dismissed
and—alive.”</p>
<p>Metem looked steadily at the tablets which he still held in his hand.</p>
<p>“I have heard,” he said humbly, “that the king Ithobal, the
great king, always pays his debts, and as I—an outlander—shall be
leaving Zimboe shortly under his safe conduct, I desire to close this small
account.”</p>
<p>Ithobal went to the door of his tent and commanded that his treasurer should
attend him, bringing money. Presently he came, and at his lord’s bidding
weighed out one hundred ounces of gold.</p>
<p>“You are right, Phœnician,” said Ithobal; “I always pay my
debts, sometimes in gold and sometimes in iron. Be careful that I owe you no
more, lest you who to-day are paid in gold, to-morrow may receive the iron,
weighed out in the fashion of which I have spoken. Now, begone.”</p>
<p>Metem gathered up the treasure, and hiding it in his ample robe, bowed himself
from the royal presence and out of the thorn-hedged camp.</p>
<p>“Without doubt I have been in danger,” he said to himself, wiping
his brow, “since at one time that black brute, disregarding the sanctity
of an envoy, had it in his mind to torture and to kill me. So, so, king
Ithobal, Metem the Phœnician is also an honest merchant who ‘always pays
his debts,’ as you may learn in the market-places of Jerusalem, of Sidon
and of Zimboe, and I owe you a heavy bill for the fright you have given me
to-day. Little of Elissa’s company shall you have if I can help it; she
is too good for a cross-bred savage, and if before I go from these barbarian
lands I can set a drop of medicine in your wine, or an arrow in your gizzard,
upon the word of Metem the Phœnician, it shall be done, king Ithobal.”</p>
<hr />
<p>When Metem reached Sakon and the envoys, he found that a message had already
been sent to them announcing that Ithobal would meet them presently upon the
plain outside his camp. But still the king did not come; indeed, it was not
until Sakon had despatched another messenger, saying that he was about to
return to the city, that at length Ithobal appeared at the head of a bodyguard
of black troops. Arranging these in line in front of the camp, he came forward,
attended by twelve or fourteen counsellors and generals, all of them unarmed.
Half-way between his own line and that of the Phœnicians, but out of bowshot
of either, he halted.</p>
<p>Thereon Sakon, accompanied by a similar number of priests and nobles, among
whom were Aziel and Metem, all of them also unarmed, except for the knives in
their girdles, marched out to meet him. Their escort they left drawn up upon
the hillside.</p>
<p>“Let us to business, King,” said Sakon, when the formal words of
salutation had passed. “We have waited long upon your pleasure, and
already troops move out from the city to learn what has befallen us.”</p>
<p>“Do they then fear that I should ambush ambassadors?” asked Ithobal
hotly. “For the rest, is it not right that servants should bide at the
door of their king till it is his pleasure to open?”</p>
<p>“I know not what they fear,” answered Sakon, “but at least we
fear nothing, for we are too many,” and he glanced at his soldiers, a
thousand strong, upon the hillside. “Nor are the citizens of Zimboe the
servants of any man unless he be the king of Tyre.”</p>
<p>“That we shall put to proof, Sakon,” said Ithobal; “but say,
what does the Jew with you?” and he pointed to Aziel. “Is he also
an envoy from Zimboe?”</p>
<p>“Nay, King,” answered the prince laughing, “but my grandsire,
the mighty ruler of Israel, charged me always to take note of the ways of
savages in peace and war, that I might learn how to deal with them. Therefore,
I sought leave to accompany Sakon upon this embassy.”</p>
<p>“Peace, peace!” broke in Sakon. “This is no time for gibes.
King Ithobal, since you did not dare to venture yourself again within the walls
of our city, we have come to answer the demands you made upon us in the Hall of
Audience. You demanded that our fortifications should be thrown down, and this
we refuse, since we do not court destruction. You demanded that we should cease
to enslave men to labour in the mines, and to this we answer that for every man
we take we will pay a tax to his lawful chief, or to you as king. You demanded
that the ancient tribute should be doubled. To this, out of love and
friendship, and not from fear, we assent, if you will enter into a bond of
lasting peace, since it is peace we seek, and not war. King, you have our
answer.”</p>
<p>“Not all of it, Sakon. How of that first condition—that Lady Elissa
the fair, your daughter, should be given me to wife?”</p>
<p>“King, it cannot be, for the gods of heaven have taken this matter from
our hands, anointing the lady Elissa their high-priestess.”</p>
<p>“Then as I live,” answered Ithobal with fury, “I will take
her from the hands of the gods and anoint her my dancing-woman. Do you think to
make a mock of me, you people of Zimboe, whom I have honoured by desiring one
of your daughters in marriage? You seek to trick me with your priests’
juggling that you may keep her to be the toy of yonder princeling? So be it,
but I tell you that I will tear your city stone from stone, and anoint its
ruins with your blood. Yes, your young men shall labour in the mines for me,
and your high-born maidens shall wait upon my queens. Listen
you,”—and he turned to his generals—“let the messengers
who are ready start east and west, and north and south, to the chiefs whose
names you have, bidding them to meet me with their tribesmen, at the time and
place appointed. When next I speak with you, Elders of Zimboe, it shall be at
the head of a hundred thousand warriors.”</p>
<p>“Then, King, on your hands be all the innocent lives that these words of
yours have doomed, and may the weight of their wasted blood press you down to
ruin and death.”</p>
<p>Thus answered Sakon proudly, but with pale lips, for do what they would to hide
it, something of the fear they felt for the issue of this war was written on
the faces of all his company.</p>
<p>Ithobal turned upon his heel, deigning no reply, but as he went he whispered a
word into the ear of two of his captains, great men of war, who stayed behind
the rest of his party searching for something upon the ground. Sakon and his
counsellors also turned, walking towards their escort, but Aziel lingered a
little, fearing no danger, and being curious to learn what the men sought.</p>
<p>“What do you seek, captains?” he asked courteously.</p>
<p>“A gold armlet that one of us has lost,” they answered.</p>
<p>Aziel let his eyes wander on the ground, and not far away perceived the armlet
half-hidden in a tussock of dry grass, where, indeed, it had been placed.</p>
<p>“Is this the ring?” he asked, lifting it and holding it towards
them.</p>
<p>“It is, and we thank you,” they answered, advancing to take the
ornament.</p>
<p>The next moment, before Aziel even guessed their purpose, the captains had
gripped him by either arm and were dragging him at full speed towards their
camp. Understanding their treachery and the greatness of his danger, he cried
aloud for help. Then throwing himself swiftly to the ground, he set his feet
against a stone that chanced to lie in their path in such fashion that the
sudden weight tore his right arm from the grip of the man that held him. Now,
quick as thought, Aziel drew the dagger from his girdle, and, still lying upon
his back, plunged it into the shoulder of the second man so that he loosed him
in his pain. Next he sprang to his feet, and, leaping to one side to escape the
rush of his captors, ran like a deer towards the party of Sakon, who had
wheeled round at the sound of his cry.</p>
<p>Ithobal and his men had turned also and sped towards them, but at a little
distance they halted, the king shouting aloud:—</p>
<p>“I desired to hold this foreigner, who is the cause of war between us,
hostage for your daughter’s sake, Sakon, but this time he has escaped me.
Well, it matters nothing, for soon my turn will come. Therefore, if you and he
are wise, you will send him back to the sea, for thither alone I promise him
safe conduct.”</p>
<p>Then without more words he walked to his camp, the gates of which were closed
behind him.</p>
<hr />
<p>“Prince Aziel,” said Sakon, as they went towards the city,
“it is ill to speak such words to an honoured guest, but it cannot be
denied that you bring much trouble on my head. Twice now you have nearly
perished at the hands of Ithobal, and should that chance, doubtless I must earn
the wrath of Israel. On your behalf, also, the city of Zimboe is this day
plunged into a war that well may be her last, since it is because you have
grown suddenly dear to her that my daughter has continued to refuse the suit of
Ithobal, and because of his outraged pride at this refusal that he has raised
up the nations against us. Prince, while you remain in this city there is no
hope of peace. Do not, therefore, hate me, your servant, if I pray of you to
leave us while there is yet time.”</p>
<p>“Sakon,” answered Aziel, “I thank you for your open speech,
and will pay you back in words as honest as your own. Gladly would I go, for
here nothing but sorrow has befallen me, were it not for one thing which to you
may seem little, but to me, and perhaps to another, is all in all. I love your
daughter as I have never loved a woman before, and as my mind is to hers, so is
hers to mine. How, then, can I go hence when the going means that I must part
from her for ever?”</p>
<p>“How can you stay here, Prince, when the staying means that you must
bring her to shame and death, and yourself with her? Say now, are you prepared,
for the sake of this maiden, to abandon the worship of your fathers and to
become the servant of El and Baaltis?”</p>
<p>“You know well that I am not so prepared, Sakon. For nothing that the
world could give me would I do this sin.”</p>
<p>“Then, Prince, it is best that you should go, for that and no other is
the price you must pay if you would win my daughter Elissa. Should you seek to
do so by other means, I tell you that neither your high rank nor the power of
my rule and friendship, nor pity for your youth and hers, can save you both
from death, since to forgive you then would be to bring down the wrath of its
outraged gods upon Zimboe. Oh! Prince, for your own sake and for the sake of
her whom both you and I love thus dearly, linger no longer in temptation, but
turn your back upon it as a brave man should, for so shall my blessing follow
you to the grave and your years be filled with honour.”</p>
<p>Aziel covered his eyes with his hand, and thought a while; then he
answered:—</p>
<p>“Be it as you will, friend. I go, but I go broken-hearted.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI<br/> METEM SELLS IMAGES</h2>
<p>Upon reaching the palace, Aziel went to the apartments of Issachar. Finding no
keeper at the door, he entered, to discover the old priest kneeling in prayer
at the window, which faced towards Jerusalem. So absorbed was he in his
devotions that it was not until he had ended them and risen that Issachar saw
Aziel standing in the chamber.</p>
<p>“Behold, an answer to my prayer,” he said. “My son, they told
me that some fresh danger had overtaken you, though none knew its issue.
Therefore it was that I prayed, and now I see you unharmed.” And taking
him in his arms, he embraced him.</p>
<p>“It is true that I have been in danger, father,” answered Aziel,
and he told him the story of his escape from Ithobal.</p>
<p>“Did I not pray thee not to accompany this embassy?”</p>
<p>“Yes, father, yet I have returned in safety. Listen: I come with tidings
which you will think good. Not an hour ago I promised Sakon that I would leave
Zimboe, where it seems my presence breeds much trouble.”</p>
<p>“Good tidings, indeed!” exclaimed Issachar, “and never shall
I know a peaceful hour until we have seen the last of the towers of this doomed
city and its accursed people of devil-worshippers.”</p>
<p>“Yes, good for you, father, but for me most ill, for here I shall leave
my youth and happiness. Nay, I know what you think; that this is but some
passing fancy bred of the pleasant beauty of a woman, but it is not so. I say
that from the moment when first I saw Elissa, she became life of my life, and
soul of my soul and that I go hence beggared of joy and hope, and carrying with
me a cankering memory which shall eat my heart away. You deem her a witch, one
to whom Baaltis has given power to drag the minds of men to their destruction,
but I tell you that her only spell is the spell of her love for me, also that
she whom you named so grossly is no longer the servant of the demon
Baaltis.”</p>
<p>“Elissa not the servant of Baaltis? How comes she then to be her
high-priestess? Aziel, your passion has made you mad.”</p>
<p>“She is high-priestess because Metem and others brought about her
election without her will, urged on to it by I know not whom.” And he
looked hard at Issachar, who turned away. “But what matters it who did
the ill deed,” he continued, “since this, at least, is certain,
that here my presence breeds sorrow and bloodshed, and therefore I must go as I
have promised.”</p>
<p>“When do we depart, Prince?” queried Issachar.</p>
<p>“I know not, it is naught to me. Here comes Metem, ask of him.”</p>
<p>“Metem,” said the Levite, “the prince desires to leave Zimboe
and march to the coast, there to take ship to Tyre. When can your caravan be
ready?”</p>
<p>“So I have heard, Issachar, for Sakon tells me that he has come to an
agreement with the prince upon this matter. Well, I am glad to learn it, for
troubles thicken here, and I think that the woe you prophesied is not far from
this city of Zimboe where every man seeks to serve his own hand, and is ready
to sell his neighbour. When can the caravan be got ready? Well, the night after
next; at least, we can start that night. To-morrow evening, so soon as the sun
is down, I will send on the camels by ones and twos, and with them the baggage
and treasure, to a secret place I know of in the mountains, where we and the
prince’s guard can follow upon the mules and join them. As it chances, I
have a safe conduct from Ithobal. Still I should not wish to put his troops
into temptation by marching through them with twenty laden camels, or to lose
certain earnings of my own that will be hidden in the baggage. Moreover, if our
departure becomes known, half the city would wish to join us, having no love of
soldiering, and misdoubting them much of the issue of this war with
Ithobal.”</p>
<p>“As you will,” said Issachar, “you are captain of the
caravan, and charged with the safety of the prince upon his journeyings. I am
ready whenever you appoint, and the quicker that hour comes, the more praise
you will have from me.”</p>
<p>“Come with me, I wish to speak with you,” said Aziel to the
Phœnician as they left the presence of Issachar. “Listen,” he
added, when they had reached his chamber, “we leave this city soon, and I
have farewells to make.”</p>
<p>“To the Baaltis?” suggested Metem.</p>
<p>“To the lady Elissa. I desire to send her a letter of farewell; can you
deliver it into her own hand?”</p>
<p>“It may be managed, Prince, at a price—nay, from you I ask no
price. I have still some images that I wish to sell, and we merchants go
everywhere, even into the presence of the Baaltis if it pleases her to admit
them. Write your scroll and I will take it, though, to be plain, it is not a
task which I should have sought.”</p>
<p>So Aziel wrote slowly and with care. Then having sealed the writing he gave it
to Metem.</p>
<p>“Your face is sad, Prince,” he said, as he hid it in his robe,
“but, believe me, you are doing what is right and wise.”</p>
<p>“It may be so,” answered Aziel, “yet I would rather die than
do it, and may my curse lie heavy upon the heads of those who have so wrought
that it must be done. Now, I pray you, deliver this scroll into the hands of
her you know, and bring me the answer if there be any, betraying it to none,
for I will double whatever sum is offered for that treachery.”</p>
<p>“Have no fear, Prince,” said Metem quietly, but without taking
offence, “this errand is undertaken for friendship, not for profit. The
risk is mine alone; the gain—or loss—is yours.”</p>
<hr />
<p>An hour later the Phœnician stood in the palace of the gods, demanding, under
permit from Sakon, governor of the city, to be admitted into the presence of
the Baaltis, to whom he desired to sell certain sacred images cunningly
fashioned in gold. Presently it was announced that he was allowed to approach,
and the officers of the temple led him through guarded passages, to the private
chambers of the priestesses. Here he found Elissa in a long, low hall, sweet
with scented woods, rich with gold, and supported by pillars of cedar.</p>
<p>She was seated alone at the far end of this hall, beneath the window-plate,
clad in her white robes of office, richly broidered with emblems of the moon.
Her women, most of whom were employed in needle-work, though some whispered
idly to each other, were gathered at the lower end of the hall near to its
door.</p>
<p>Metem saluted them as he entered, and they detained him, answering his greeting
by requests for news and with jests, not too refined, or by demands for
presents of jewels, in return for which they promised him the blessings of the
goddess. To each he made some apt reply, for even the priestesses of Baaltis
could not abash Metem. But while he bandied words, his quick eyes noted one of
their number who did not join in this play. She was a spare, thin-lipped woman
whom he knew for Mesa, the daughter of the dead Baaltis, who had been a rival
candidate for the throne of the high-priestess when Elissa was chosen in her
place.</p>
<p>When he entered the hall Mesa was seated upon a canvas stool, a little apart
from the others, her chin resting upon her hand, staring with an evil look
towards the place where Elissa was enthroned. Nor did her face grow more gentle
at the sight of the cunning merchant, for she knew well it was through his
plots and bribery that she had been ousted from her mother’s place.</p>
<p>“A woman to be feared,” thought Metem to himself as, shaking off
the priestesses, he passed her upon his way up the long chamber. Presently he
had reached the end of it, and was saluting the presence of the Baaltis by
kneeling and touching the carpet with his brow.</p>
<p>“Rise, Metem,” said Elissa, “and set out your business, for
the hour of the sunset prayer is at hand, and I cannot talk long with
you.”</p>
<p>So he rose, and, looking at her while he laid out his store of images, saw that
her face was sad, and that her eyes were full of a strange fear.</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said, “on the second night from now I depart from
this city of yours, and glad shall I be to leave it living. Therefore I have
brought you these four priceless images of the most splendid workmanship of
Tyre, thinking that it might please you to purchase them for the service of the
goddess.”</p>
<p>“You depart,” she whispered; “alone?”</p>
<p>“No lady, not alone; the holy Issachar goes with me, also the escort of
the prince Aziel—and the prince himself, whose presence is no longer
desired in Zimboe.” Here he stopped, for he saw that Elissa was about to
betray her agitation, and whispered, “Be not foolish, for you are
watched; I have a letter for you. Lady,” he continued in a louder voice,
“if it will please you to examine this precious image in the light, you
will no longer hesitate or think the price too high,” and bowing low he
led the way behind the throne, whither Elissa followed him.</p>
<p>Now they were standing beneath the window-place, which they faced, and hidden
from the gaze of the women by the gilded back of the high seat.</p>
<p>“Here,” he said, thrusting the parchment into her hand, “read
quickly, and return it to me.”</p>
<p>She snatched the roll from him, and as her eyes devoured the lines, her face
fell in, and her lips grew pale with anguish.</p>
<p>“Be brave,” murmured Metem, for his heart was stirred to pity;
“it is best for all that he should go.”</p>
<p>“For him, perchance it is best,” she answered; as with an unwilling
hand she gave him back the letter which she dared not keep, “but what of
me? Oh! Metem, what of me?”</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said sadly, “I have no words to soothe your sorrow
save that the gods have willed it thus.”</p>
<p>“What gods?” she asked fiercely; “not those they bid me
worship.” She shuddered, then went on, “Metem, be pitiful! Oh! if
ever you have loved a woman, or have been loved of one, for her sake be
pitiful. I must see him for the last time in farewell, and you can help me to
it.”</p>
<p>“I! In the name of Baal, how?”</p>
<p>“When do you have to leave the city, Metem?”</p>
<p>“At moonrise on the night after next.”</p>
<p>“Then an hour before moonrise I will be in the temple, whither I can come
by the secret way that leads thither from this palace, and he can enter there,
for the little gate shall be left unbarred. Pray him to meet me, then—for
the last time.”</p>
<p>“Lady,” he urged, “this is but madness, and I refuse. You
must find another messenger.”</p>
<p>“Madness or not it is my will, and beware how you thwart me in it, Metem,
for at least I am the Lady Baaltis, and have power to kill without question. I
swear to you that if I do not see him, you shall never leave this city
living.”</p>
<p>“A shrewd argument, and to the point,” said Metem reflectively.
“Well, I have prepared myself a rock-hewn tomb at Tyre, and do not wish
that my graven sarcophagus of best Egyptian alabaster should be wasted, or sold
to some upstart for a song.”</p>
<p>“As assuredly it will be, if you do not obey me in this matter, Metem.
Remember—an hour before moonrise, at the foot of the pillar of El in the
inner court of the temple.”</p>
<p>As she spoke Metem started, for his quick ears had caught a sound.</p>
<p>“O Queen divine,” he said in a loud voice, as he led the way to the
front of the throne, “you are a hard bargainer! Were there many such, a
poor trader could not make a living. Ah! here is one who knows the value of
such priceless works of art,” and he pointed to Mesa, who, with folded
arms and downcast eyes, stood within five paces of the throne, as near, indeed,
as custom allowed her to approach. “Lady,” he went on addressing
you, “you will have heard the price I asked; say, now, is it too
much?”</p>
<p>“I have heard nothing, sir. I stand here, waiting the return of my holy
mistress that I may remind her that the hour of sunset prayer is at
hand.”</p>
<p>“Would that I had so fair a mentor,” exclaimed Metem, “for
then I should lose less time.” But to himself he said, “She
<i>has</i> heard something, though I think but little,” then added aloud:
“Well judge between us, lady. Is fifty golden shekels too much for these
images which have been blessed and sprinkled with the blood of children by the
high priest of Baal at Sidon?”</p>
<p>Mesa lifted her cold eyes and looked at them. “I think it too
much,” she said, “but it is for the lady Baaltis to judge. Who am I
that I should open my lips in the presence of the lady Baaltis?”</p>
<p>“I have appealed to the oracle, and it has spoken against me,” said
Metem, wringing his hands in affected dismay. “Well, I abide the result.
Queen, you offered me forty shekels and for forty you shall take them, for the
honour of the holy gods, though in truth I lose ten shekels by the bargain.
Give your order to the treasurer, and he will pay me to-morrow. So now
farewell,” and bowing till his forehead touched the ground, he kissed the
hem of her robe.</p>
<p>Elissa bent her head in acknowledgment of the salute, and as he rose her eyes
met his. In them was written a warning which he could not fail to understand,
and although she did not speak, her lips seemed to shape the word,
“Remember.”</p>
<p>Ten minutes later Metem stood in the chamber of Aziel.</p>
<p>“Has she seen the letter, and what did she answer?” asked the
prince, springing up almost as he passed the threshold.</p>
<p>“In the name of all the gods of all the nations I pray you not to speak
so loud,” answered Metem when he had closed the door and looked
suspiciously about him. “Oh! if ever I find myself safe in Tyre again, I
vow a gift, and no mean one, to each of them that has a temple there, and they
are many; for no single god is strong enough to bring me safe out of this
trouble. Have I seen the lady Elissa? Oh, yes, I have seen her. And what think
you that this innocent lamb, this undefiled dove of yours, threatens me with
now? Death! nothing less than death, if I will not carry out her foolish
wishes. More, she means the threat, and has the strength to fulfil it, for to
the lady Baaltis is given power over the lives of men, or at the least, if she
takes life none question the authority of the goddess. Unless I do her will I
am a dead man, and that is the reward I get for mixing myself up in your mad
love affairs.”</p>
<p>“Hold!” broke in Aziel, “and tell me, man, what is her
will?”</p>
<p>“Her will is—what do you think? To meet you in farewell an hour
before you leave this city. Well, as my throat is at stake, by Baal! it shall
be gratified if I can find the means, though I tell you that it is madness and
nothing else. But listen to the story——” and he repeated all
that had passed. “Now,” he added, “are you ready to take the
risk, Prince?”</p>
<p>“I should be a coward indeed if I did not,” answered Aziel,
“when she, a woman, dares a heavier.”</p>
<p>“And I am a coward, that is why I take it, for otherwise I also must dare
a heavier. But what of Issachar? This meeting can scarcely be kept a secret
from him.”</p>
<p>Aziel thought awhile and said:—</p>
<p>“Go fetch him here.” So Metem went, to return presently with the
Levite, to whom, without further ado, the prince told all, hiding nothing.</p>
<p>Issachar listened in silence. When both Aziel and Metem had done speaking, he
said:—</p>
<p>“At least, I thank you, Prince, for being open with me; and now without
more words I pray you to abandon this rash plan, which can end only in pain,
and perhaps in death.”</p>
<p>“Abandon it not, Prince,” interrupted Metem, “seeing that if
you do it will certainly end in my death, for the girl is mad, and will have
her way. Or if she does not, then I must pay the price.”</p>
<p>“Have no fear,” answered Aziel smiling. “Issachar, this must
be done or——”</p>
<p>“Or what, Prince?”</p>
<p>“I will not leave the city. It is true that Sakon may thrust me from it,
but it shall be as a dead man. Nay, waste no words, since she desires it; I
must and will meet the Lady Elissa for the last time, not as lover meets lover,
but as those meet who part for ever in the world.”</p>
<p>“You say so, Prince; then have I your permission to accompany you?”</p>
<p>“Yes, if you wish it, Issachar; but there is danger.”</p>
<p>“Danger! What care I for danger? The will of Heaven be done to me. So be
it, we will go together, but the end of it is not with us.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII<br/> THE TRYST</h2>
<p>Two days had gone by, and at the appointed hour three figures, wrapped in dark
cloaks, might have been seen walking swiftly towards the little entrance of the
temple fortress. Although it was near to midnight the city was still astir with
men, for this very evening news had reached it that Ithobal was advancing at
the head of tens of thousands of the warriors of the Tribes. More, it was
rumoured freely that within the next few days the siege of Zimboe would begin.
Late as it was, the council had been just summoned to the palace of Sakon to
consider the conduct of the defence, while in every street stood knots of men
engaged in anxious discussion, and from many a smithy rose the sound of
armourers at their work. Here marched parties of soldiers of various races,
there came long strings of mules laden with dried flesh and grain; yonder a
woman beat her breast, and wept loudly because her three sons had been
impressed by order of the council, two of them to serve as archers and the
third to carry blocks of stone for the fortifications.</p>
<p>Passing unnoticed through all this crowd and tumult, Aziel, Issachar and Metem
entered a winding passage in the temple wall, and came to the little gate.
Metem tried it, and whispered:—</p>
<p>“She has kept her word; it is unlocked. Now enter to your love-tryst,
holy Issachar.”</p>
<p>“Do you not come with us?” asked the Levite.</p>
<p>“No, I am too old for such adventures. Listen, I go to make ready. Within
an hour the mules with the prince’s bodyguard will stand in the archway
near the small gate of the palace, for by now the baggage and its escort await
us a day’s march from this accursed city. Will you meet me there? No; I
think it is best that I should come to your chambers to fetch you, and, I pray
you, let there be no delay, for it is dangerous in many ways. When once the
prince has done with his tender interview, and wiped away his tears, there
should be nothing to stay him, since the farewell cup with Sakon has been
already drunk. Enter now swiftly before some prowling priest happens upon you,
and pray that you may come out as sound as you go in. Oh! what a sight! A
prince of Israel and an aged Levite of established reputation going to keep a
tryst at midnight with the high-priestess of Baaltis in the sanctuary of her
god! Nay, answer not; there is no time”—and he was gone.</p>
<hr />
<p>Having passed the gate, Aziel and Issachar crept down the winding passages of
stone, groping their path by such light as fell from the narrow line of sky
above them, till at length they reached the court of the sanctuary. Here the
place was as silent as death, for the noise from the city without could not
pierce its towering walls of massive granite.</p>
<p>“It is the very pit of Tophet,” murmured Issachar, peering through
the dense shadows, “the house of Beelzebub, where his presence dwells.
Whither now, Aziel?”</p>
<p>The prince pointed to two objects that were visible in the starlight, and
answered:—</p>
<p>“Thither, at the foot of the pillar of El.”</p>
<p>“Ah! I remember,” said Issachar, “where the accursed woman
would have offered sacrifice, and the priests struck me down because I
prophesied to them of the wrath to come, and that is now at hand. An ill-omened
spot, indeed, and an ill-omened tryst with the fiends for witnesses. Well, lead
on, and I pray you to be brief as may be, for this place weighs down my soul,
and I feel danger in it—danger to the body and the spirit.”</p>
<p>So they went forward. “Be careful,” whispered Aziel presently.
“The pit of sacrifice is at your feet.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes,” he answered, “we walk upon the edge of the pit,
and, in truth, I grow fearful, for at the threshold of such places the angel of
the Lord deserts us.”</p>
<p>“There is nothing to fear,” said Aziel. But even as he spoke,
although he could not see it, a white face rose above the edge of the pit, like
that of some ghost struggling from the tomb, watched them a moment with cold
eyes, then disappeared again.</p>
<p>Now they were near the greater pillar, and now from its shadow glided a
black-veiled shape.</p>
<p>“Elissa?” murmured Aziel.</p>
<p>“It is I,” whispered a soft voice; “but who comes with
you?”</p>
<p>“I, Issachar,” said the Levite, “who would not suffer that he
of whom I am given charge should seek such company alone. Now, priestess, say
your say with the prince yonder and let us be gone swiftly from this
blood-stained place.”</p>
<p>“You speak harsh words to me, Issachar,” she said gently,
“yet I am most glad that you have come, for, believe me, I sought no
lovers’ meeting with the prince Aziel. Listen, both of you: you know that
they have consecrated me high-priestess of Baaltis against my will. Now, I tell
you, Issachar, what I have already told the prince Aziel—that I am no
longer a worshipper of Baaltis. Yes, here in her very temple I renounce her,
even though she takes my life in vengeance. Oh! since they made me priestess I
have been forced to learn all her worship, which before I never even guessed,
and to see sights that would chill your blood to hear of them. Now I tell you,
prince Aziel and Issachar, that I will bear no more. From El and Baaltis I turn
to Him you worship, though, alas! little time is left to me in which to plead
for pardon.”</p>
<p>“Why is little time left?” broke in Aziel.</p>
<p>“Because my death is very near me, Prince, for if I live, see what a fate
is mine. Either I must remain high-priestess of Baaltis and to her day by day
bow the knee, and month by month make sacrifice—of what think you? Well,
to be plain, of the blood of maids and children. Or, perhaps, should their
fears overcome their scruples, I shall be given by the council as a
peace-offering to Ithobal.</p>
<p>“I say that I will bear neither of these burdens of blood or shame; they
are too heavy for me. Prince, so soon as you are gone I too shall leave this
city, not in the body, but in the spirit, searching for peace or sleep. It was
for this reason that I sought to speak with you in farewell, since in my
weakness I desired that you should learn the truth of the cause and manner of
my end.</p>
<p>“Now you know all, and as for me there is no escape, farewell for ever,
prince Aziel, whom I have loved, and whom I can scarcely hope to meet again,
even beyond the grave.” Then with a little despairing motion of her hand
she turned to go.</p>
<p>“Stay,” said Aziel hoarsely, “we cannot be parted thus; since
by your own act you can dare to leave the world, will you not dare to fly this
place with me?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps, Prince,” she answered with a little laugh, “but
would you dare to take me, and if so, would Issachar here suffer it? No, no; go
your own path in life, and leave me death—it is the easier way.”</p>
<p>“In this matter I am master and not Issachar,” said Aziel,
“though it be true that should it please him, he can warn the priests of
El. Listen, Elissa: either you leave this city with me, or I stay in it with
you. You hear me, Issachar?”</p>
<p>“I hear you,” said the Levite, “but perchance before you
throw more sharp words at my head, you will suffer me to speak. Self-murder is
a crime, yet I honour this woman who would shed her own blood, rather than the
blood of the innocent in sacrifice to Baal, and who refuses to be given in
marriage to one she hates; who, moreover, has found strength and grace to
trample on her devil-worship, if so in truth she has. If therefore she will
come with us and we can escape with her, why, let her come. Only swear to me,
Aziel, that you will make no wife of her till the king, your grandsire, has
heard this tale and given judgment on it.”</p>
<p>“That I will swear for him,” exclaimed Elissa; “is it not so,
Aziel?”</p>
<p>“As you will, lady,” he answered. “Issachar, you have my word
that until then she shall be as my sister, and no more.”</p>
<p>“I hear and I believe you,” said Issachar, adding: “And now,
lady, we go at once, so if you desire to accompany us, come.”</p>
<p>“I am ready,” she replied, “and the hour is well chosen for I
shall not be missed till dawn.”</p>
<p>So they turned and left the temple. None stayed or hindered them, yet although
they reached the chambers of Aziel in safety, their hearts, which should have
been light, were still heavy with the presage of new sorrow to come.</p>
<p>Scarcely could they have been heavier, indeed, had they seen a white-faced
woman creep from the pit of death and follow them stealthily till they had
passed from the temple into the palace doors, then turn and run at full speed
towards the college of the priests of El.</p>
<p>In the chamber of Aziel they found Metem.</p>
<p>“I rejoice to see you back again in safety, since it is more than I
thought to do,” he said, while they entered, adding, as the black-veiled
shape of Elissa followed them into the room, “but who is the third? Ah! I
see, the lady Elissa. Does the Baaltis accompany us upon our journey?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered Aziel shortly.</p>
<p>“Then with her high Grace on the one side and the holy Issachar on the
other it should not lack for blessings. Surely that evil must be great from
which, separately or together, they are unable to defend us. But, lady, if I
may ask it, have you bid farewell to your most honoured father?”</p>
<p>“Torment me not,” murmured Elissa.</p>
<p>“Indeed, I did not wish to, though you may remember that not so long ago
you threatened to silence me for ever. Well, doubtless your departure is too
hurried for farewells, and, fortunately, foreseeing it, I have provided spare
mules. So my deeds are kinder than my words. I go to see that all is prepared.
Now eat before you start; presently I will return for you,” and he left
the chamber.</p>
<p>When he had gone they gathered round the table on which stood food, but could
touch little of it; for the hearts of all three of them were filled with sad
forebodings. Soon they heard a noise as of people talking excitedly outside the
palace gates.</p>
<p>“It is Metem with the mules,” said Aziel.</p>
<p>“I hope so,” answered Elissa.</p>
<p>Again there was silence, which, after a while, was broken by a loud knocking at
the door.</p>
<p>“Rise,” said Aziel, “Metem comes for us.”</p>
<p>“No, no,” cried Elissa, “it is Doom that knocks, not
Metem.”</p>
<p>As the words passed her lips the door was burst open, and through it poured a
mob of armed priests, at the head of whom marched the Shadid. By his side was
his daughter Mesa, in whose pale face the eyes burned like torches in a wind.</p>
<p>“Did I not tell you so?” she said in a shrill voice, pointing at
the three. “Behold the Lady Baaltis and her lover, and with them that
priest of a false faith who called down curses upon our city.”</p>
<p>“You told us indeed, daughter,” answered the Shadid; “pardon
us if we were loth to believe that such a thing could be.” Then with a
cry of rage he added, “Take them.”</p>
<p>Now Aziel drew his sword, and sprang in front of Elissa to protect her, but
before he could strike a blow it was seized from behind, and he was gripped by
many hands, gagged, bound and blindfolded. Then like a man in a dream he felt
himself carried away through long passages, till at length he reached an
airless place, where the gag and bandages were removed.</p>
<p>“Where am I?” Aziel asked.</p>
<p>“In the vaults of the temple,” answered the priests as they left
the prison, barring its great door behind them.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII<br/> THE SACRILEGE OF AZIEL</h2>
<p>How long he lay in his dungeon, lost in bitter thought and tormented by fears
for Elissa, Aziel could not tell, for no light came there to mark the passage
of the hours. In the tumult of his mind, one terrible thought grew clear and
ever clearer; he and Elissa had been taken red-handed, and must pay the price
of their sin against the religious customs of the city. For the Baaltis to be
found with any man who was not her husband meant death to him and her, a doom
from which there was little chance of escape.</p>
<p>Well, to his own fate he was almost indifferent, but for Elissa and Issachar he
mourned bitterly. Truly the Levite and Metem had been wise when they cautioned
him, for her sake and his own, to have nothing to do with a priestess of Baal.
But he had not listened; his heart would not let him listen—and now,
unless they were saved by a miracle—or Metem—in the fulness of
their youth and love, the lives of both of them were forfeited.</p>
<p>Worn out with sore fears and vain regrets Aziel fell at length into a heavy
sleep. He was awakened by the opening of the door of his dungeon, and the entry
of priests—grim, silent men who seized and blindfolded him. Then they led
him away up many stairs, and along paths so steep that from time to time they
paused to rest, till at length he knew, by the sound of voices, that he had
reached some place where people were assembled. Here the bandage was removed
from his eyes. He stepped backwards, recoiling involuntarily at the glare of
light that poured upon him from the setting sun, whereon, uttering an
exclamation, those who stood near seized and held him. Presently he saw the
reason. He was standing on the brink of a precipice at the back of and
dominating the dim and shadow-clad city, while far beneath him lay a gloomy
rift along which ran the trade road to the coast.</p>
<p>Here in this dizzy spot was a wide space of rock, walled in upon three sides.
The precipice formed the fourth side of its square, in which, seated upon
stones that seemed to have been set there in semi-circles to serve as judgment
chairs, were gathered the head priests and priestesses of El and Baaltis, clad
in their sacerdotal robes. To the right and left of these stood knots of
favoured spectators, among whom Aziel recognised Metem and Sakon, while at his
side, but separated from him by armed priests, were Elissa herself, wrapped in
a dark veil, and Issachar. Lastly, in front of him, a fire flickered upon a
little altar, and behind the altar stood a shrine containing a symbolical
effigy of Baaltis fashioned of gold, ivory and wood to the shape of a woman
with a hundred breasts.</p>
<p>Seeing all this, Aziel understood that they three had been brought here for
trial, and that the priests and priestesses before him were their judges.
Indeed, he remembered that the place had been pointed out to him as one where
those who had offended against the gods were carried for judgment. Thence, if
found guilty, such unfortunates were hurled down the face of the precipice and
left, a shapeless mass of broken bone, to crumble on the roadway at its foot.</p>
<p>After a long and solemn pause, at a sign from the Shadid, he who had been the
husband of the dead Baaltis, the veil was removed from Elissa. At once she
turned, looked at Aziel, and smiled sadly.</p>
<p>“Do you know the fate that waits us?” the prince asked of Issachar
in Hebrew.</p>
<p>“I know, and I am ready,” answered the old Levite, “for since
my soul is safe I care little what these dogs may do to my body. But, oh! my
son, I weep for you, and cursed be the hour when first you saw that
woman’s face.”</p>
<p>“Spare to reproach me in my misfortune,” murmured Elissa;
“have I not enough to bear, knowing that I have brought death upon him I
love? Oh! curse me not, but pray that my sins may be forgiven me.”</p>
<p>“That I will do gladly, daughter,” replied Issachar more gently,
“the more so that, although you seem to be the cause of them, these
things can have happened only by the will of Heaven. Therefore I was wrong to
revile you, and I ask your pardon.”</p>
<p>Before she could answer the Shadid commanded silence. At the same moment the
woman Mesa stepped from behind the effigy of the goddess on the shrine.</p>
<p>“Who are you and what do you here?” asked the Shadid, as though he
did not know her.</p>
<p>“I am Mesa, the daughter of her who was the lady Baaltis,” she
answered, “and my rank is that of Mother of the priestesses of Baaltis. I
appear to give true evidence against her, who is the anointed Baaltis, against
the Israelitish stranger named Aziel, and the priest of the Lord of the
Jews.”</p>
<p>“Lay your hand upon the altar and speak, but beware what you
speak,” said the Shadid.</p>
<p>Mesa bowed her head, took the oath of truth by touching the altar with her
fingers, and began:—</p>
<p>“From the time that she was appointed I have been suspicious of the lady
Baaltis.”</p>
<p>“Why were you suspicious?” asked the Shadid.</p>
<p>The witness let her eyes wander towards Metem, then hesitated. Evidently for
some reason of her own she did not wish to implicate him.</p>
<p>“I was suspicious,” she answered, “because of certain words
that came from the lips of the Baaltis, when she had been thrown into the holy
trance before the fire of sacrifice. As is my accustomed part, I bent over her
to hear and to announce the message of the gods, but in place of the hallowed
words there issued babblings about this Hebrew stranger and of a meeting to be
held with him at one hour before moonrise by the pillar of El in the courtyard
of the temple. Thereafter for several nights as was my duty I hid myself in the
pit of offerings in the courtyard and watched. Last night at an hour before the
moonrise the Lady Baaltis came disguised by the secret way and waited at the
pillar, where presently she was joined by the Jew Aziel and the Levite, who
spoke with her.</p>
<p>“What they said I could not hear, because they were too far from me, but
at length they left the temple and I traced them to the chambers of the Jew
Aziel, in the palace of Sakon. Then, Shadid, I warned you, and the priests and
you accompanied me and took them. Now, as Mother of the priestesses, I demand
that justice be done upon these wicked ones, according to the ancient custom,
lest the curse of Baaltis should fall upon this city.”</p>
<p>When she had finished her evidence, with a cold stare of triumphant hate at her
rival, Mesa stepped to one side.</p>
<p>“You have heard,” said the Shadid addressing his fellow-judges.
“Do you need further testimony? If so, it must be brief, for the sun
sinks.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” answered the spokesman, “for with you we took the
three of them together in the chamber of the prince Aziel. Set out the law of
this matter, O Judge, and let justice be done according to the strict letter of
the law—justice without fear or favour.”</p>
<p>“Hearken,” said the Shadid. “Last night this woman Elissa,
the daughter of Sakon, being the lady Baaltis duly elected, met men secretly in
the courts of the temple and accompanied them, or one of them, to the chamber
of Aziel, a prince of Israel, the guest of Sakon. Whether or no she was about
to fly with him from the city which he should have left last night, we cannot
tell, and it is needless to inquire, at least she was with him. This, however,
is sure, that they did not sin in ignorance of our law, since with my own mouth
I warned them both that if the lady Baaltis consorts with any man not her
husband duly named by her according to her right, she must die and her
accomplice with her. Therefore, Aziel the Israelite, we give you to death,
dooming you presently to be hurled from the edge of yonder precipice.”</p>
<p>“I am in your power,” said the prince proudly, “and you can
murder if you will, because, forsooth, I have offended against some law of
Baal, but I tell you, priest, that there are kings in Jerusalem and Egypt who
will demand my blood at your hands. I have nothing more to say except to
beseech you to spare the life of the lady Elissa, since the fault of the
meeting was not hers, but mine.”</p>
<p>“Prince,” answered the Shadid gravely, “we know your rank and
we know also that your blood will be required at our hands, but we who serve
our gods, whose vengeance is so swift and terrible, cannot betray their law for
the fear of any earthly kings. Yet, thus says this same law, it is not needful
that you should die since for you there is a way of escape that leads to safety
and great honour, and she who was the cause of your sin is the mistress of its
gate. Elissa, holder of the spirit of Baaltis upon earth, if it be your
pleasure to name this man husband before us all, then as the spouse of Baaltis
he goes free, for he whom the Baaltis chooses cannot refuse her gift of love,
but for so long as she shall live must rule with her as Shadid of El. But if
you name him not, then as I have said, he must die, and now. Speak.”</p>
<p>“It seems that my choice is small,” said Elissa with a faint smile.
“Praying you to pardon me for the deed, to save your life, prince Aziel,
according to the ancient custom and privilege of the Baaltis, I name you
consort and husband.”</p>
<p>Now Aziel was about to answer her when the Shadid broke in hurriedly, “So
be it,” he said. “Lady, we hear your choice, and we accept it as we
must, but not yet, prince Aziel, can you take your wife and with her my place
and power. Your life is safe indeed, for since the Baaltis, being unwed, names
you as her mate, you have done no sin. Yet she has sinned and doom awaits her,
for against the law she has chosen as husband one who worships a strange god,
and of all crimes that is the greatest. Therefore, either you must take incense
and before us all make offering to El and Baaltis upon yonder altar, thus
renouncing your faith and entering into ours, or she must die and you, your
rank having passed from you with her breath, will be expelled from the
city.”</p>
<p>Now Aziel understood the trap that had been laid for him, and saw in it the
handiwork of Sakon and Metem. Elissa having flagrantly violated the religious
law, and he, being the cause of her crime, even the authority of the governor
of the city could not prevent his daughter and his guest from being put upon
their trial. Therefore, they had arranged this farce, for so it would seem to
them, whereby both the offenders might escape the legal consequences of their
offence, trusting, doubtless, to accident and the future to unravel this web of
forced marriage, and to free Aziel from a priestly rank which he had not
sought. It was only necessary that Elissa should formally choose him as her
husband, and that Aziel should go through the rite of throwing a few grains of
incense upon an altar, and, the law satisfied, they would be both free and
safe. What Metem, and those who worked with him, had forgotten was, that this
offering of incense to Baal would be the most deadly of crimes in the eyes of
any faithful Jew—one, indeed, which, were he alone concerned, he would
die rather than commit.</p>
<p>When the prince heard this decree, and the full terror of the choice came home
to his mind, his blood turned cold, and for a while his senses were bewildered.
There was no escape for him; either he must abjure his faith at the price of
his own soul, or, because of it, the woman whom he loved, now, before his eyes,
must suffer a most horrible and sudden death. It was hideous to think of, and
yet how could he do this sin in the face of heaven and of these ministers of
Satan?</p>
<p>The moment was at hand; a priest held out to him a bowl of incense, a golden
bowl, he noticed idly, with handles of green stone fashioned in the likeness of
Baaltis, whose servant he was asked to declare himself. He, Aziel of the royal
house of Israel, a servant of Baal and Baaltis, nay, a high-priest of their
worship! It was monstrous, it might not be. But Elissa? Well, she must
die—if this was not a farce, and in truth they meant to murder her; her
life could not be bought at such a price.</p>
<p>“I cannot do it,” he gasped with dry lips, thrusting aside the
bowl.</p>
<p>Now all looked astonished, for his refusal had not been foreseen. There was a
pause, and once more the woman Mesa, in her character of prosecutrix on behalf
of the outraged gods, appeared before the altar, and said in her cold voice:</p>
<p>“The Jew whom the lady Baaltis has chosen as husband will not do homage
to her gods. Therefore, as Mother of the priestesses and Advocate of Baaltis, I
demand that Elissa, daughter of Sakon, be put to death, and the throne of
Baaltis be purged of one who has defiled it, lest the swift and terrible
vengeance of the goddess should fall upon this city.”</p>
<p>The Shadid motioned to her to be silent, and addressed Aziel:—</p>
<p>“We pray you to think a while,” he said, “before you give one
to death whose only sin is that, being the high-priestess of our worship, she
has named an unbeliever to fill the throne of El and be her husband. Out of
pity for her fate we give you time to think.”</p>
<p>Now Sakon, taking advantage of the pause, rushed forward, and throwing his arms
about Aziel’s knees, implored him in heart-breaking accents to preserve
his only child from so horrible a doom. He said that did he refuse to save her
because of his religious scruples, he would be a dog and a coward, and the
scorn of all honest men for ever. It was for love of him that she had broken
the priestly law, to violate which was death, and although he had been warned
of her danger, yet in his wickedness and folly he had brought her to this pass.
Would he then desert her now?</p>
<p>But Issachar thrust him aside, and broke in with fiery words:—</p>
<p>“Hearken not to this man, Aziel,” he said, “who strives to
work upon your weakness to the ruin of your soul. What! To save the life of one
woman, whose fair face has brought so much trouble upon us all, would you deny
your Lord and become the thrall of Baal and Ashtoreth? Let her die since die
she must, and keep your own heart pure, for be assured, should you do
otherwise, Jehovah, whom you renounce, will swiftly be avenged on you and her.
At the beginning I warned you, and you would not listen. Now, Aziel, I warn you
again, and woe! woe! woe! to you should you shut your ears to my
message.” Then lifting his hands towards the skies, he began to pray
aloud that Aziel might be constant in his trial.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Metem, who had drawn near, spoke in a low voice:—</p>
<p>“Prince,” he said, “I am not chicken-hearted, and there are
so many young women in the world that one more or less can scarcely matter;
still, although she threatened to murder me three days ago, I cannot bear to
see this one come to so dreadful a death. Prince, do not heed the howlings of
that old fanatic, but remember that after all you are the cause of this
lady’s plight, and play the part of a man. Can you for the sake of your
own scruples, however worthy, or of your own soul even, however valuable to
yourself, doom the fair body of a woman who risked all for you to such an end
as that?” And shuddering he nodded towards the gloomy precipice.</p>
<p>“Is there no other way?” Aziel asked him.</p>
<p>“None, I swear it. They did not wish to kill her, except that wild-cat
Mesa who seeks her place, but having put her on her public trial, if you
persist—they must.</p>
<p>“This is one of the few laws which cannot be broken for favour or for
gold, since the people, who are already half-mad with fear of Ithobal, believe
that to break it would bring the curses of heaven upon their city. Perhaps we
might have found some other plan, but none of us even dreamed that you would
refuse so small a thing for the sake of a woman whom you swore you
loved.”</p>
<p>“A small thing!” broke in Aziel.</p>
<p>“Yes, Prince, a very small thing. Remember, this offering of incense is
but a form to which you are forced against your will—you can do penance
for it afterwards when I have arranged for both of you to escape the city. If
your God can be angry with you for burning a pinch of dust to save a woman, who
at the least has dared much for you, then give me Baal, for he is less
cruel.”</p>
<p>Now Aziel looked towards him who held the bowl of incense. But Elissa who all
this while had stood silent, stepped forward and spoke:—</p>
<p>“Prince Aziel,” she said in a calm and quiet voice, “I named
you husband to save your life, but with all my strength I pray of you, do not
this thing to save mine, which is of little value and perhaps best ended.
Remember, prince Aziel, that being what you are, a Jew, this act of offering,
however small it seems, is yet the greatest of sins, and one with which you
should not dare to stain your soul for the sake of a woman, who has chanced to
love you to your sorrow. Be guided, therefore, by the true wisdom of Issachar
and by my humble prayer. Make an end of your doubts and let me die, knowing
that we do but part a while, since in the Gate of Death I shall wait for you,
prince Aziel.”</p>
<p>Before Aziel could answer, the Shadid, either because his patience was outworn,
or because he wished to put him to a sharper trial, uttered a command.
“Be it done to her as she desires.”</p>
<p>Thereon four priests seized Elissa by the wrists and ankles. Carrying her to
the edge of the precipice, they thrust her back till she hung over it, her long
hair streaming downwards, and the red light of the sunset shining upon her
upturned ghastly face. Then they paused, waiting for the signal to let her go.
The Shadid raised his wand and said:—</p>
<p>“Is it your pleasure that this woman should die or live, prince Aziel?
Decide swiftly, for my arm is weak, and when the wand falls opportunity for
choice will have passed from you.”</p>
<p>Now all eyes were fixed upon the wand, and the intense silence was only broken
by Sakon’s cry of despair. Metem wrung his hands in grief; even Issachar
veiled his eyes with his robe, to shut out the sight of dread, and the priest,
who bore the bowl of incense, thrust it towards Aziel imploringly.</p>
<p>For some seconds, three perhaps, though to him they seemed an age, the heart of
Aziel was racked and torn in this terrific contest. Then he glanced at the
agonized face of the doomed woman, and just as the wand began to bend, his
human love and pity conquered.</p>
<p>“May He Whom I blaspheme forgive me,” he murmured, adding aloud,
“I will do sacrifice.” Taking the incense in his hand now he cast
it into the flames upon the altar, repeating mechanically after the Shadid:
“By this sacrifice and homage, body and soul I give myself to you and
worship you, El and Baaltis, the only true gods.”</p>
<hr />
<p>The echo of Aziel’s voice died away, and the fumes of the incense rose in
a straight dense column upon that quiet air. To his tormented mind, it seemed
as though its smoke took the form of an avenging angel, holding in the hand a
sword of flame, wherewith to drive away his perjured soul from Heaven, as our
first forefathers were driven from the shining gates of paradise. Yes, and they
were not human, those spectators who, in the intense glow of the sunset, stood
in their still ranks and stared at him with wide and eager eyes. Surely they
were fiends red with the blood of men, fiends gathered from the Pit to bear
everlasting witness to the unpardonable sin of his apostasy.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV<br/> THE MARTYRDOM OF ISSACHAR</h2>
<p>It was done, and from the mouths of the circle of priests and priestesses leapt
a shrill and sudden cry of triumph. For had not their gods conquered? Had not
this high-placed servant of the hated Lord of Israel been caught by the bait of
a priestess of Baaltis, and seduced by her distress to deny and reject Him? Was
not evil once more triumphant, and must not they, its ministers, rejoice?</p>
<p>Again the Shadid raised his wand and they were silent.</p>
<p>“Brother you have, indeed, done well and wisely,” he said,
addressing Aziel. “Now take to wife the divine lady who has chosen
you,” and he pointed to Elissa, who lay prostrated on the rock.
“Yes, take her and be happy in her love, sitting in my seat, which
henceforth is yours, as ruler of the priests of El and master of their
mysteries, forgetting the follies of your former faith, and spitting on its
altars. Hail to you, Shadid, Lord of the Baaltis and chosen of El! Take him,
you priests, and with him the divine lady, his wife, to bear them in triumph to
their high house.”</p>
<p>“What of the Levite?” asked the woman Mesa.</p>
<p>The Shadid glanced at Issachar, who all this while had stood like one stricken
to the soul, woe stamped upon his face, and a stare of horror in his eyes.
“Jew,” he said, “I had forgotten you, but you also are on
your trial, who dared against the law to hold secret meeting with the lady
Baaltis. For this sin the punishment is death, nor, as I think, would any woman
name you husband to save you. Still in this hour of joy we will be merciful;
therefore do as your master did, cast incense on the altar, uttering the
appointed words, and go your way.”</p>
<p>“Before I make my offering on yonder altar according to your command, I
have indeed some words to say, O priest of El,” answered Issachar
quietly, but in a voice that chilled the blood of those who listened.</p>
<p>“First, I address myself to you, Aziel, and to you, woman,” and he
pointed to Elissa, who had risen, and leaned, trembling, upon her father.
“My dream is fulfilled. Aziel, you have sinned indeed, and must bear the
appointed punishment of your sin. Yet hear a message of mercy spoken through my
lips: Because you have sinned through love and pity, your offence is not unto
death. Still shall you sorrow for it all your life’s days, and in
desolation of heart and bitterness of soul shall creep back to the feet of Him
you have forsworn.</p>
<p>“Woman, your spirit is noble and your feet are set in the way of
righteousness, yet through you has this offence come. Therefore your love shall
bear no fruit, nor shall the blasphemy of your beloved save your flesh from
doom. Upon this earth there is no hope for you, daughter of Sakon; set your
eyes beyond it, for there alone is hope.</p>
<p>“Yonder she stands who swore our lives away?” and he fixed his
burning gaze on Mesa. “Priestess, you plotted this that you might succeed
to the throne of Baaltis; now hear your fate: You shall live to sweep the huts
and bear the babes of savages. You, priest,” and he pointed to the
Shadid, “I read your heart; you design to murder this apostate whom you
greet as your successor that you may usurp his place. I show you yours: it lies
in the bellies of the jackals of the desert.</p>
<p>“For you priests and priestesses of El and Baaltis, think of my words,
and raise the loud song of triumph to your gods when you yourselves are their
offering, and the red flame of the fire burns you up, all of you save your
sins, which are immortal. O citizens of an accursed city, look on the hill-top
yonder and tell me, what do you see in the light of the dying day? A sheen of
spears, is it not? They draw near to your hearts, you whose day is done indeed,
citizens of an accursed city whereof the very name shall be forgotten, and the
naked towers shall become but a source of wonder to men unborn.</p>
<p>“And now, O priest, having said my say, as you bid me, I make my offering
upon your altar.”</p>
<p>Then, while all stood fearful and amazed, Issachar the Levite sprang forward,
and seizing the ancient image of Baaltis, he spat upon it and dashed the
priceless consecrated thing down upon the altar, where it broke into fragments,
and was burned with the fire.</p>
<p>“My offering is made,” he said; “may He whom I serve accept
it. Now after the offering comes the sacrifice; son Aziel, fare you
well.”</p>
<hr />
<p>For a few moments a silence of horror and dismay fell upon the assembly as they
gazed at the shattered and burning fragments of their holy image. Then moved by
a common impulse, with curses and yells of fury, the priests and priestesses
sprang from their seats and hurled themselves upon Issachar, who stood awaiting
them with folded arms. They smote him with their ivory rods, they rent and tore
him with their hands and teeth, worrying him as dogs worry a fox of the hills,
till at length the life was beaten and trampled out of him and he lay dead.</p>
<p>Thus terribly, but yet by such a death of martyrdom as he would have chosen,
perished Issachar the Levite.</p>
<p>Unarmed though he was, Aziel had sprung to his aid, but Metem and Sakon,
knowing that he would but bring about his own destruction, flung themselves
upon him and held him back. Whilst he was still struggling with them the end
came, and Issachar grew still for ever. Then, as the sun sank and the darkness
fell, Aziel’s strength left him, and presently he slipped to the ground
senseless.</p>
<hr />
<p>Thereafter it seemed to Aziel that he was plunged in an endless and dreadful
dream, and that through its turmoil and shifting visions, he could see
continually the dreadful death of Issachar, and hear his stern accents
prophesying woe to him who renounces the God of his forefathers to bow the knee
to Baal.</p>
<p>At length he awoke from that horror-haunted sleep to find himself lying in a
strange chamber. It was night, and lamps burned in the chamber, and by their
light he saw a man whose face he knew mixing a draught in a glass phial. So
weak was he that at first he could not remember the man’s name, then by
slow degrees it came to him.</p>
<p>“Metem,” he said, “where am I?”</p>
<p>The Phœnician looked up from his task, smiled, and answered:—</p>
<p>“Where you should be, Prince, in your own house, the palace of the
Shadid. But you must not speak, for you have been ill; drink this and
sleep.”</p>
<p>Aziel swallowed the draught and was instantly overcome by slumber. When he
awoke the sun was shining brightly through the window place, and its rays fell
upon the shrewd, kindly face of Metem, who, seated on a stool, watched him, his
chin resting in his hand.</p>
<p>“Tell me all that has befallen, friend,” said Aziel presently,
“since——” and he shuddered.</p>
<p>“Since you were married after a new fashion and that bigoted but most
honourable fool, Issachar, went to his reward. Well, I will when you have
eaten,” answered Metem as he gave him food. “First,” he said,
after a while, “you have lain here for three days raving in a fever,
nursed by myself and visited by your wife the lady Baaltis, whenever she could
escape from her religious duties——”</p>
<p>“Elissa! Has she been here?” asked Aziel.</p>
<p>“Calm yourself, Prince, certainly she has, and, what is more, she will be
back soon. Secondly: Ithobal has been as good as his word, and invests the city
with a vast army, cutting off all supplies and possibilities of escape. It is
believed that he will try an assault within the next week, which many think may
be successful. Thirdly: to avoid this risk it is rumoured that the priests and
priestesses, at the instance of the council, are discussing the wisdom of
giving over to the king the person of the daughter of Sakon. This, it is said,
could be done on the plea that her election as the lady Baaltis was brought
about with bribery, and is, therefore, void, as she was not chosen by the pure
and unassisted will of the goddess.”</p>
<p>“But,” said Aziel, “she is my wife according to their
religious law; how then can she be given in marriage to another?”</p>
<p>“Nay, Prince, if she is not the lady Baaltis your husbandship falls to
the ground with the rest, for you are not the Shadid, an office with which
perchance you can dispense. But all this priestly juggling means little, the
truth being that the city in its terror is ready to throw her—or for the
matter of that, Baaltis herself if they could lay hands on her—as a sop
to Ithobal, hoping thereby to appease his rage. The lady Elissa knows her
danger—but here she comes to speak for herself.”</p>
<p>As he spoke the curtains at the end of the chamber were drawn, and through them
came Elissa, clad in her splendid robes of office and wearing upon her brow the
golden crescent of the moon.</p>
<p>“How goes it with the prince, Metem?” she asked in her soft voice,
glancing anxiously towards the couch which was half-hidden in the shadow of the
wall.</p>
<p>“Look for yourself, lady,” answered the Phœnician bowing before
her.</p>
<p>“Elissa, Elissa!” cried Aziel, raising himself and opening his
arms.</p>
<p>She saw and heard, then, with a low cry, she ran swiftly to him and was wrapped
in his embrace. Thus they stayed a while, murmuring words of love and greeting.</p>
<p>“Is it your pleasure that I should leave you?” asked Metem
presently. “No? Then, Prince, I would have you remember that you are
still very weak and should not give way to violent emotions.”</p>
<p>“Listen, Aziel,” said Elissa, untwining his arms from about her
neck, “there is no time for tenderness; moreover, you should show none to
one who, in name at least, is still the high-priestess of Baaltis, though in
truth she worships her no longer. It was noble of you indeed to offer incense
upon the altar of El that my life might be saved. But when I prayed you not, I
spoke from the heart, and bitterly, bitterly do I grieve that for my sake you
should have stained your hands with such a sin. Moreover, it will avail
nothing, for the doom of the prophet Issachar lies upon us, and I cannot escape
from death, neither can you escape remorse, and as I think, that worst of all
desires—the desire for the dead.”</p>
<p>“Can we not still flee the city?” asked Aziel.</p>
<p>“Metem will tell you that it is impossible; day and night I am watched
and guarded, yes, Mesa dogs me from door to door. Also Ithobal holds Zimboe so
firmly in his net that no sparrow could fly out of it and he not know. And
there is worse to tell: Beloved, they purpose to give me up as a peace-offering
to Ithobal. Yes, even my father is of the plot, for in his despair he thinks it
his duty to sacrifice his daughter to save the town, if, indeed, that will
suffice to save us.”</p>
<p>“But you are the Baaltis and inviolate.”</p>
<p>“In such a time the goddess herself would not be held inviolate in
Zimboe, much less her priestess, Aziel. I have discovered that this very night
they have laid their plans to seize me. Mesa and others have been chosen for
the deed, and afterwards they think to offer me as a bribe to Ithobal, who will
take no other price.”</p>
<p>Aziel groaned aloud: “It were better that we should die,” he said.</p>
<p>She nodded and answered: “It were better that <i>I</i> should die. But
hear me, for I also have a plan, and there is still hope, though very little.
Perhaps, as you drew near to Zimboe by the coast road, you may have noted three
miles or more from the gates of the city, and almost overhanging the path on
which you travelled, a shoulder of the mountain where the rock is cut away,
showing the narrow entrance to a cave closed with a gate of bronze?”</p>
<p>“I saw it,” answered Aziel, “and was told that there was the
most sacred burying-place of the city.”</p>
<p>“It is the tomb of the high-priestesses of Baaltis,” went on
Elissa, “and this day at sunset I must visit it to lay an offering upon
the shrine of her who was the Baaltis before me, entering alone, and closing
the gate, for it is not lawful that any one should pass in there with me. Now,
the plan is to lay hands on me as I go back from the tomb to the
palace—but I shall not go back. Aziel, I shall stay in the
tomb—nay, do not fear—not dead. I have hidden food and water there,
enough for many days, and there with the departed I shall live—till I am
of their number.”</p>
<p>“But if so, how can it help you, Elissa, for they will break in the gates
of the place, and drag you away?”</p>
<p>“Then, Aziel, they will drag away a corpse, and that they will scarcely
care to present to Ithobal. See, I have hidden poison in my breast, and here at
my girdle hangs a dagger; are not the two of them enough to make an end of one
frail life? Should they dare to touch me, I shall tell them through the bars
that most certainly I shall drink the bane, or use the knife; and when they
know it, they will leave me unharmed, hoping to starve me out, or trusting to
chance to snare me living.”</p>
<p>“You are bold,” murmured Aziel in admiration, “but
self-murder is a sin.”</p>
<p>“It is a sin that I will dare, beloved, as in past days I would have
dared it for less cause, rather than be given alive into the hands of Ithobal;
for to whoever else I may be false, to you through life and death I will be
true.”</p>
<p>Now Aziel groaned in his doubt and bitterness of heart; then turning to Metem,
he asked:—</p>
<p>“Have you anything to say, Metem?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Prince, two things,” answered the Phœnician. “First,
that the lady Elissa is rash, indeed, to speak so openly before me who might
carry her words to the council or the priests.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Metem, I am not rash, for I know that, although you love money, you
will not betray me.”</p>
<p>“You are right, lady, I shall not, for money would be of little service
to me in a city that is about to be taken by storm. Also I hate Ithobal, who
threatened my life—as you did also, by the way—and will do my best
to keep you from his clutches. Now for my second point: it is that I can see
little use in all this because Ithobal, being defrauded of you, will attack,
and then——”</p>
<p>“And then he may be beaten, Metem, for the citizens will at any rate
fight for their lives, and the Prince Aziel here, who is a general skilled in
war, will fight also if he has recovered strength——”</p>
<p>“Do not fear, Elissa; give me two days, and I will fight to the
death,” said Aziel.</p>
<p>“At the least,” she went on, “this scheme gives us breathing
time, and who knows but that fortune will turn. Or if it does not, since it is
impossible for me to escape from the city, I have no better.”</p>
<p>“No more have I,” said Metem, “for at length the oldest fox
comes to his last double. I could escape from this city, or the prince might
escape, or the lady Elissa even might possibly escape disguised, but I am sure
that all three of us could not escape, seeing that within the walls we are
watched and without them the armies of Ithobal await us. Oh! prince Aziel, I
should have done well to go, as I might have gone when you and Issachar were
taken after that mad meeting in the temple, from which I never looked for
anything but ill; but I grow foolish in my old age, and thought that I should
like to see the last of you. Well, so far we are all alive, except Issachar,
who, although bigoted, was still the most worthy of us, but how long we shall
remain alive I cannot say.</p>
<p>“Now our best chance is to defeat Ithobal if we can, and afterwards in
the confusion to fly from Zimboe and join our servants, to whom I have sent
word to await us in a secret place beyond the first range of hills. If we
cannot—why then we must go a little sooner than we expected to find out
who it is that really shapes the destinies of men, and whether or no the sun
and moon are the chariots of El and Baaltis. But, Prince, you turn pale.”</p>
<p>“It is nothing,” said Aziel, “bring me some water, the fever
still burns in me.”</p>
<p>Metem went to seek for water, while Elissa knelt by the couch and pressed her
lover’s hand.</p>
<p>“I dare stay no longer,” she whispered, “and Aziel, I know
not how or when we shall meet again, but my heart is heavy, for, alas! I think
that doom draws near me. I have brought much sorrow upon you, Aziel, and yet
more upon myself, and I have given you nothing, except that most common of all
things, a woman’s love.”</p>
<p>“That most perfect of all things,” he answered, “which I am
glad to have lived to win.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but not at the price that you have paid for it. I know well what it
must have cost you to cast that incense on the flame, and I pray to your God,
who has become my God, to visit the sin of it on my head and to leave yours
unharmed. Aziel, Aziel! woman or spirit, while I have life and memory, I am
yours, and yours only; clean-handed I leave you, and if we may meet again in
this or in any other world, clean and faithful I shall come to you again. Glad
am I to have lived, because in my life I have known you and you have sworn you
love me. Glad shall I be to live again if again I may know you and hear that
oath—if not, it is sleep I seek; for life without you to me would be a
hell. You grow weak, and I must go. Farewell, and living or dead, forget me
not; swear that you will not forget me.”</p>
<p>“I swear it,” he answered faintly; “and Heaven grant that I
may die for you, not you for me.”</p>
<p>“That is no prayer of mine,” she whispered; and, bending, kissed
him on the brow, for he was too weak to lift his lips to hers.</p>
<p>Then she was gone.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV<br/> ELISSA TAKES SANCTUARY</h2>
<p>Two more hours had passed, and in the evening light a procession of priestesses
might be seen advancing slowly towards the holy tomb along a narrow road of
rock cut in the mountain face. In front of this procession, wearing a black
veil over her broidered robes, walked Elissa with downcast eyes and hair
unbound in token of grief, while behind her came Mesa and other priestesses
bearing in bowls of alabaster the offerings to the dead, food and wine, and
lamps of oil, and vases filled with perfumes. Behind these again marched the
mourners, women who sang a funeral dirge and from time to time broke into a
wail of simulated grief. Nor, indeed, was their woe as hollow as might be
thought, since from that mountain path they could see the outposts of the army
of Ithobal upon the plain, and note with a shudder of fear the spear-heads of
his countless thousands shining in the gorges of the opposing heights. It was
not for the dead Baaltis that they mourned this day, but for the fate which
overshadowed them and their city of gold.</p>
<p>“May the curse of all the gods fall on her,” muttered one of the
priestesses as she toiled forward beneath her load of offerings; “because
she is beautiful and pettish, we must be put to the spear, or become the wives
of savages,” and she pointed with her chin to Elissa, who walked in
front, lost in her own thoughts.</p>
<p>“Have patience,” answered Mesa at her side, “you know the
plan—to-night that proud girl and false priestess shall sleep in the camp
of Ithobal.”</p>
<p>“Will he be satisfied with that,” asked the woman, “and leave
the city in peace?”</p>
<p>“They say so,” answered Mesa with a laugh, “though it is
strange that a king should exchange spoil and glory for one round-eyed,
thin-limbed girl who loves his rival. Well, let us thank the gods that made men
foolish, and gave us women wit to profit by their folly. If he wants her, let
him take her, for few will be poorer by her loss.”</p>
<p>“You at least will be richer,” said the other woman, “and by
the crown of Baaltis. Well, I do not grudge it you, and as for the daughter of
Sakon, she shall be Ithobal’s if I take her to him limb by limb.”</p>
<p>“Nay, sister, that is not the bargain; remember she must be delivered to
him without hurt or blemish; otherwise we shall do sacrilege in vain. Be
silent, here is the cave.”</p>
<p>Reaching the platform in front of the tomb, the procession of mourners ranged
themselves about it in a semi-circle. They stood with their backs to the edge
of a cliff that rose sheer for sixty feet or more from the plain beneath,
across which, but at a little distance from the foot of the precipice ran the
road followed by the caravans of merchants in their journeys to and from the
coast. Then, a hymn having been sung invoking the blessing of the gods on the
dead priestess, Elissa, as the Baaltis, unlocked the gates of bronze with a
golden key that hung at her girdle, and the bearers of the bowls of offerings
pushed them into the mouth of the tomb, whose threshold they were not allowed
to pass. Next, with bowed heads and hands crossed upon her breast, Elissa
entered the tomb, and locking the bronze gate behind her, took up two of the
bowls and vanished with them into its gloomy depths.</p>
<p>“Why did she lock the gates?” asked a priestess of Mesa. “It
is not customary.”</p>
<p>“Doubtless because it was her pleasure to do so,” answered Mesa
sharply, though she also wondered why Elissa had locked the gate.</p>
<p>When an hour was gone by and Elissa had not returned, her wonder turned to fear
and doubt.</p>
<p>“Call to the lady Baaltis,” she said, “for her prayers are
long, and I fear lest she should have come to harm.”</p>
<p>So they called, setting their lips against the bars of the gate till presently,
Elissa, holding a lamp in her hand, came and stood before them.</p>
<p>“Why do you disturb me in the sanctuary?” she asked.</p>
<p>“Lady, because they set the night watch on the walls,” answered
Mesa, “and it is time to return to the temple.”</p>
<p>“Return then,” said Elissa, “and leave me in peace. What, you
cannot, Mesa? Nay, and shall I tell you why? Because you had plotted to deliver
me this night to those who should lead me as a peace-offering to Ithobal, and
when you come to them empty-handed they will greet you with harsh words. Nay,
do not trouble to deny it, Mesa. I also have my spies, and know all the plan;
and, therefore, I have taken sanctuary in this holy place.”</p>
<p>Now Mesa pressed her thin lips together and answered:—</p>
<p>“Those who dare to lay hands upon the person of the living Baaltis will
not shrink from seeking her in the company of her dead sisters.”</p>
<p>“I know it, Mesa; but the gates are barred, and here I have food and
drink in plenty.”</p>
<p>“Gates, however strong, can be broken,” answered the priestess,
“so, lady, do not wait till you are dragged hence like some discovered
slave.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” replied Elissa, with a little laugh, “but what if
rather than be thus dishonoured, I should choose to break another gate, that of
my own life? Look, traitress, here is poison and here is bronze, and I swear to
you that should any lay a hand upon me, by one or other of them I will die
before their eyes. Then, if you will, bear these bones to Ithobal and take his
thanks for them. Now, begone, and give this message to my father and to all
those who have plotted with him, that since they cannot bribe Ithobal with my
beauty, they will do well to be men, and to fight him with their swords.”</p>
<p>Then she turned and left them, vanishing into the darkness of the tomb.</p>
<p>Great indeed was the dismay of the councillors of Zimboe and of the priests who
had plotted with them when, an hour later, Mesa came, not to deliver Elissa
into their hands, but to repeat to them her threats and message. In vain did
they appeal to Sakon, who only shook his head and answered:—</p>
<p>“Of this I am sure, that what my daughter has threatened that she will
certainly do if you force her to the choice. But if you will not believe me, go
ask her and satisfy yourselves. I know well what she will answer you, and I
hold that this is a judgment upon us, who first made her Baaltis against her
will, then threatened her with death because of the prince Aziel, and now would
do sacrilege to her sacred office and violence to herself by tearing her from
her consecrated throne, breaking her bond of marriage and delivering her to
Ithobal.”</p>
<p>So the leaders of the councillors visited the holy tomb and reasoned with
Elissa through the bars. But they got no comfort from her, for she spoke to
them with the phial of poison in her bosom and the naked dagger in her hand,
telling them what she had told Mesa—that they had best give up their
plottings and fight Ithobal like men, seeing that even if she surrendered
herself to him, when he grew weary of her the war must come at last.</p>
<p>“For a hundred years,” she added, “this storm has gathered,
and now it must burst. When it has rolled away it will be known who is master
of the land—the ancient city of Zimboe, or Ithobal king of the
Tribes.”</p>
<p>So they went back as they had come, and next day at the dawn, with a bold face
but heavy hearts, received the messengers of king Ithobal, and told them their
tale. The messengers heard and laughed.</p>
<p>“We are glad,” they answered, “since we, who are not in love
with the daughter of Sakon, desire war and not peace, holding as we do that the
time has come when you upstart white men—you outlanders—who have
usurped our country to suck away its wealth should be set beneath our heel. Nor
do we think that the task will be difficult for surely we have little to fear
from a city of low money seekers whose councillors cannot even conquer the will
of a single maid.”</p>
<p>Then in their despair the elders offered other girls to Ithobal in marriage, as
many as he would, and with them a great bribe in money. But the envoys took
their leave, saying that nothing would avail since they preferred spear-thrusts
to gold, for which they had little use, and Ithobal, their king, had fixed his
fancy on one woman alone.</p>
<p>So with a heavy and foreboding heart, the city of Zimboe prepared itself to
resist attack, for as they had guessed, when he learned all, the rage of
Ithobal was great. Nor would he listen to any terms that they could offer save
one which they had no power to grant—that Elissa should be delivered
unharmed into his hands. Councils of war were held, and to these, so soon as he
was sufficiently recovered from his sickness, the prince Aziel was bidden, for
he was known to be a skilled captain; therefore, though he had been the cause
of much of their trouble, they sought his aid. Also, should the struggle be
prolonged, they hoped through him to win Israel, and perhaps Egypt, to their
cause.</p>
<p>Aziel’s counsel was that they should sally out against the army of
Ithobal by night, since he expected to attack and not to be attacked, but to
that advice they would not listen, for they trusted to their walls. Indeed, in
this Metem supported them, and when the prince argued with him, he
answered:—</p>
<p>“Your tactics would be good enough, Prince, if you had at your back the
lions of Judah, or the wild Arab horsemen of the desert. But here you must deal
with men of my own breed, and we Phœnicians are traders, not fighting men.
Like rats, we fight only when there is no other chance for our lives; nor do we
strike the first blow. It is true that there are some good soldiers in the
city, but they are foreign mercenaries; and as for the rest, half-breeds and
freed slaves, they belong as much to Ithobal as to Sakon, and are not to be
trusted. No, no; let us stay behind our walls, for they at least were built
when men were honest and will not betray us.”</p>
<p>Now in Zimboe were three lines of defence; first, that of a single wall built
about the huts of the slaves upon the plain, then that of a double wall of
stone with a ditch between thrown round the Phœnician city, and lastly, the
great fortress-temple and the rocky heights above. These, guarded as they were
by many strongholds within whose circle the cattle were herded, as it was
thought, could only be taken with the sword of hunger.</p>
<p>At last the storm burst, for on the fifth morning after Elissa had barred
herself within the tomb, Ithobal attacked the native town. Uttering their wild
battle-cries, tens of thousands of his savage warriors, armed with great spears
and shields of ox-hide, and wearing crests of plumes upon their heads, charged
down upon the outer wall. Twice they were driven back, but the work was in bad
repair and too long to defend, so that at the third rush they flowed over it
like lines of marching ants, driving its defenders before them to the inner
gates. In this battle some were killed, but the most of the slaves threw down
their arms and went over to Ithobal, who spared them, together with their wives
and children.</p>
<p>Through all the night that followed, the generals of Zimboe made ready for the
onslaught which must come. Everywhere within the circuit of the inner wall
troops were stationed, while the double southern gateway, where prince Aziel
was the captain in command, was built up with loose blocks of stone.</p>
<p>A while before the dawn, just as the eastern sky grew grey, Aziel, watching
from his post above the gate of the wall, heard the fierce war-song of the
Tribes swell suddenly from fifty thousand throats and the measured tramp of
their innumerable feet. Then the day broke, and he saw them advancing in three
armies towards the three points chosen for attack, the largest of the armies,
headed by Ithobal the king, directing its march upon the walled gate of which
he was in command.</p>
<p>It was a wondrous and a fearful sight, that of these hordes of plumed warriors,
their broad spears flashing in the sunrise, and their fierce faces alight with
hereditary hate and the lust of slaughter. Never had Aziel seen such a
spectacle, nor could he look upon it without dreading the issue of the war, for
if they were savages, these foes were brave as the lions of their own plains,
and had sworn by the head of their king to drag down the sheltering walls of
Zimboe with their naked hands, or die to the last man.</p>
<p>Turning his head with a sigh of doubt, Aziel found Metem standing at his side.</p>
<p>“Have you seen her?” he asked eagerly.</p>
<p>“No, Prince. How could I see her at night when she sits in a tomb like a
fox in his burrow? But I have heard her.”</p>
<p>“What did she say? Quick man, tell me.”</p>
<p>“But little, Prince, for the tomb is watched and I dared not stay there
long. She sent you her greetings and would have you know that her heart will be
with you in the battle, and her prayers beseech the throne of Heaven for your
safety. Also she said that she is well, though it is lonesome there in the
grave among the bodies of the dead priestesses of Baaltis whose spirits, as she
vows, haunt her dreams, reviling her because she desecrates their sepulchre and
has renounced their god.”</p>
<p>“Lonesome, indeed,” said Aziel with a shudder; “but tell me,
Metem, had she no other word?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Prince, but not of good omen, for now as always she is sure that
her doom is at hand, and that you two will meet no more. Still she bade me tell
you that all your life long her spirit shall companion you though it be unseen,
to receive you at the last on the threshold of the underworld.”</p>
<p>Aziel turned his head away, and said presently:—</p>
<p>“If that be so, may it receive me soon.”</p>
<p>“Have no fear, Prince,” replied Metem with a grim laugh,
“look yonder,” and he pointed to the advancing hosts.</p>
<p>“These walls are strong and we shall beat them back,” said Aziel.</p>
<p>“Nay, Prince, for strong walls do not avail without strong hearts to
guard them, and those of the womanish citizens of Zimboe and their hired
soldiers are white with fear. I tell you that the prophecies of Issachar the
Levite, made yonder in the temple on the day of the sacrifice, and again in the
hour of his death, have taken hold of the people, and by eating out their
valour, fulfil themselves.</p>
<p>“Men hint at them, the women whisper them in closets, and the very
children cry them in the streets.</p>
<p>“More—one man last night pointed to the skies and shrieked that in
them he saw that fiery sword of doom of which the prophet spoke hanging point
downwards above the city, whereon all present vowed they saw it too, though, as
I think, it was but a cross of stars. Another tells how that he met the very
spirit of Issachar stalking through the market-place, and that peering into the
eyes of the wraith, as in a mirror, he saw a great flame wrapping the temple
walls, and by the light of it his own dead body. This man was the priest who
first struck down the holy Levite yonder in the place of judgment.</p>
<p>“Again, when the lady Mesa did sacrifice last night on behalf of the
Baaltis who has fled, the child they offered, an infant of six months, stirred
on the altar after it was dead and cried with a loud voice that before three
suns had set, its blood should be required at their hands. That is the story,
and if I do not believe it, this at least is true, that the priestesses fled
fast from the secret chamber of death, for I met them as they ran shrieking in
their terror and tearing at their robes. But what need is there to dwell on
omens, true or false, when cowards man the walls, and the spears of Ithobal
shine yonder like all the stars of heaven? Prince, I tell you that this ancient
city is doomed, and in it, as I fear, we must end our wanderings upon
earth.”</p>
<p>“So be it, if it must be,” answered Aziel, “at the least I
will die fighting.”</p>
<p>“And I also will die fighting, Prince, not because I love it, but because
it is better than being butchered in cold blood by a savage with a spear. Oh!
why did you ever chance to stumble upon the lady Elissa making her prayer to
Baaltis, and what evil spirit was it which filled your brains with this sudden
madness of love towards each other? That was the beginning of the trouble,
which, but for those eyes of hers, would have held off long enough to see us
safe at Tyre, though doubtless soon or late it must have come. But see, yonder
marches Ithobal at the head of his guard. Give me a bow, the flight is long,
but perchance I can reach his black heart with an arrow.”</p>
<p>“Save your strength,” answered Aziel, “the range is too
great, and presently you will have enough of shooting,” and he turned to
talk to the officers of the guard.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI<br/> THE CAGE OF DEATH</h2>
<p>An hour later the attack commenced at chosen points of the double wall, one of
them being the southern gate. In front of the advancing columns of savages were
driven vast numbers of slaves, many of whom had been captured, or had
surrendered in the outer town. These men were laden with faggots to fill the
ditch, rude ladders wherewith to scale the walls, and heavy trunks of trees to
be used in breaching them. For the most part, they were unarmed, and protected
only by their burdens, which they held before them as shields, and by the
arrows of the warriors of Ithobal. But these did little harm to the defenders,
who were hidden behind the walls, whereas the shafts of the garrison, rained on
them from above, killed or wounded the slaves by scores, who, poor creatures,
when they turned to fly, were driven onward by the spear-points of the savages,
to be slain in heaps like game in a pitfall. Still, some of them lived, and
running under the shelter of the wall, began to breach it with the rude
battering rams, and to raise the scaling ladders till death found them, or they
were worn out with excitement, fear and labour.</p>
<p>Then the real attack began. With fierce yells, the threefold column rushed at
the wall, and began to work the rams and scale the ladders, while the defenders
above showered spears and arrows upon them, or crushed them with heavy stones,
or poured upon their heads boiling pitch and water, heated in great cauldrons
which stood at hand.</p>
<p>Time after time they were driven back with heavy loss; and, time upon time,
fresh hordes of them advanced to the onslaught. Thrice, at the southern gate,
were the ladders raised, and thrice the stormers appeared above the level of
the wall, to be hurled back, crushed and bleeding, to the earth beneath.</p>
<p>Thus the long day wore on and still the defenders held their own.</p>
<p>“We shall win,” shouted Aziel to Metem, as a fresh ladder was cast
down with its weight of men to the death-strewn plain.</p>
<p>“Yes, here we shall win because we fight,” answered the Phœnician,
“but elsewhere it may be otherwise.” Indeed for a while the attack
upon the south gate slackened.</p>
<p>Another hour passed and presently to the left of them rose a wild yell of
triumph, and with it a shout of “Fly to the second wall. The foe is in
the fosse!”</p>
<p>Metem looked and there, down the great ditch, 300 paces to their left, a flood
of savages poured towards them. “Come,” he said, “the outer
wall is lost.” But as he spoke once more the ladders rose against the
gates and flanking towers and once more Aziel sprang to cast them down. When
the deed was done, he looked behind him to find that he was cut off and
surrounded. Metem and most of his men indeed had gained the inner wall in
safety, while he with twelve only of his bravest soldiers, Jews of his own
following, who had stayed to help him to throw back the ladders, were left upon
the gateway tower. Nor was escape any longer possible, for both the plain
without and the fosse within were filled with the men of Ithobal who advanced
also by hundreds down the broad coping of the captured wall.</p>
<p>“Now there is but one thing that we can do,” said Aziel;
“fight bravely till we are slain.”</p>
<p>As he spoke a javelin cast from the wall beneath struck him upon the
breastplate, and though the bronze turned the iron point, it brought him to his
knees. When he found his feet again, he heard a voice calling him by name, and
looking down, saw Ithobal clad in golden harness and surrounded by his
captains.</p>
<p>“You cannot escape, prince Aziel,” cried the king; “yield now
to my mercy.”</p>
<p>Aziel heard, and setting an arrow to his bow, loosed it at Ithobal beneath. He
was a strong and skilful archer, and the heavy shaft pierced the golden helmet
of the king, cutting his scalp down to the bone.</p>
<p>“That is my answer,” cried Aziel, as Ithobal rolled upon the ground
beneath the shock of the blow. But very soon the king was up and crying his
commands from behind the shield-hedge of his captains.</p>
<p>“Let the prince Aziel, and the Jews with him, be taken alive and brought
to me,” he shouted. “I will give a great reward in cattle to those
who capture them unharmed; but if any do them hurt, they themselves shall be
put to death.”</p>
<p>The captains bowed and issued their orders, and presently Aziel and his
companions saw lines of unarmed men creeping up ladders set at every side of
the lofty tower. Again and again they cast off the ladders, till at length,
being so few, they could stir them no more because of the weight upon them, but
must hack at the heads of the stormers as they appeared above the parapet,
killing them one by one.</p>
<p>In this fashion they slew many, but their arms grew weary at last, and ever
under the eye of their king, the brave savages crept upward, heedless of death,
till, with a shout, they poured over the battlements and rushed at the little
band of Jews.</p>
<p>Now rather than be taken, Aziel sought to throw himself from the tower, but his
companions held him, and thus at last it came about that he was seized and
bound.</p>
<p>As they dragged him to the stairway he looked across the fosse and saw the
mercenaries flying from the inner wall, although it was still unbreached, and
saw the citizens of Zimboe streaming by thousands to the narrow gateway of the
temple fortress.</p>
<p>Then Aziel groaned in his heart and struggled no more, for he knew that the
fate of the ancient town was sealed, and that the prophecy of Issachar would be
fulfilled.</p>
<hr />
<p>A while later Aziel and those with him, their hands bound behind their backs,
were led by hide ropes tied about their necks through the army of the Tribes
that jeered and spat upon them as they passed, to a tent of sewn hides on the
plain, above which floated the banner of Ithobal. Into this tent the prince was
thrust alone, and there forced upon his knees by the soldiers who held him.
Before him upon a couch covered with a lion skin lay the great shape of
Ithobal, while physicians washed his wounded scalp.</p>
<p>“Greeting, son of Israel and Pharaoh,” he said in a mocking voice;
“truly you are wise thus to do homage to the king of the world.”</p>
<p>“A poor jest,” answered Aziel, glancing at those who held him down;
“true homage is of the heart, king Ithobal.”</p>
<p>“I know it, Jew, and this also you shall give me when you are humbler.
Who taught you the use of the bow? You shoot well,” and he pointed to his
blood-stained helm, which was still transfixed by the arrow.</p>
<p>“Nay,” answered Aziel, “I shot but ill, for my arm was weary.
When next I draw a string against your breast, king Ithobal, I promise you a
straighter shaft.”</p>
<p>“Well said,” answered the king with a laugh, “but know, dog
of a Jew, that now it is my turn to draw the string—how, I will show you
afterwards. Have they told you that the city has fallen, and that my captains
hold the gates, while the cowards of Zimboe are penned like sheep within the
temple and on the cliff-edged height above? They have fled hither for safety,
but I tell you that they would be more safe on yonder plain, for I have the key
of their stronghold, a certain passage leading from the palace of the Baaltis
to the temple; you know of it, I think. Yes, and if I had not, very soon hunger
and thirst would work for me.</p>
<p>“Well, Jew, I have won, and with less trouble than I thought, and now I
hold the great city in hostage, to save or to destroy as it shall please me,
though that arrow of yours went near to robbing me of my crown of
victory.”</p>
<p>“So be it,” answered Aziel, indifferently; “I have played my
part, now things must go as Fate may will.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Jew, you fought well till they deserted you, and the doom of
cowards is little to a brave man. But what of the lady Elissa? Nay, I know all;
she has taken refuge in the tomb of Baaltis, has she not, with poison in her
bosom and bronze at her girdle to be used against her own life, should they lay
hands on her or give her to me? And all this she does for the love of you,
prince Aziel; for the love of you she refuses to become my queen, ruling over
that city which I have conquered, and all my unnumbered tribes.</p>
<p>“Do you guess now why I caused you to be taken living? I will tell you;
that you may be the bait to draw her to me. To kill you would be easy; but how
would that serve, seeing that then she herself would choose to die? But,
perchance, to save your life she will live also—yes, and give herself to
me. At least, I will try it; should the plan fail—then you can pay the
price of her pride with your blood, prince Aziel.”</p>
<p>“That I would do gladly,” answered Aziel, “but oh! what a
cross-bred hound you are who thus can seek to torture the heart of a helpless
woman! Have you then no manhood that you can stoop to such a coward’s
plot?”</p>
<p>“Fool! it is because of my manhood that I do stoop to it,” said
Ithobal angrily. “Doubtless you think that a mad fancy and naught else
drives me to the deed, but it is not so, although in truth my heart—like
yours—chooses this woman to be my wife and none other. That fondness I
might conquer, but look you, of all things living this lady alone has dared to
cross my will, so that to-day even the sentries on their rounds and the savage
women in the kraals tell each other of how Ithobal, the great king of an
hundred tribes, has been baffled and mocked at by a girl who despises him
because his blood is not all white. Thus I am become a laughing-stock, and
therefore I will win her, cost me what it may.”</p>
<p>“And I, king Ithobal, tell you that you will not win her—no, not if
you torture me to death before her eyes.”</p>
<p>“That we shall see,” said the king with a sneer. Then he called to
his guard and added, “Let this man and his companions be taken to the
place prepared for them.”</p>
<p>Now Aziel was dragged from the tent and thrust into a wooden cage, such as were
used for carrying slaves and women from place to place upon the backs of
camels. His soldiers, who had been taken with him, were thrust also into cages,
and, with himself laden upon camels that were waiting, two cages to each camel.
Then a cloth was thrown over them, and, rising to their feet, the camels began
to march.</p>
<p>When they had covered a league or more of ground Aziel learned from the motion
of the camel upon which he was secured, and the sound of the repeated blows of
its drivers, that they were ascending some steep place. At length they reached
the top of it, and were unloaded from the beasts like merchandise, but he could
see nothing, for by now the night had fallen. Then, still in the cages, they
were carried to a tent, where food and water were given them through the bars,
after which, so weary was Aziel with war, misery and the remains of recent
illness, that he fell asleep.</p>
<p>At daybreak he awoke, or rather was awakened, by the sound of a familiar voice,
and, looking through his bars, perceived Metem standing before them, guarded
but unbound, with indignation written on his face, and tears in his quick eyes.</p>
<p>“Alas!” he cried, “that I should have lived to see the seed
of Israel and Pharaoh thus fastened like a wild beast in a den, while
barbarians make a mock of him. Oh! Prince, it were better that you should die
rather than endure such shame.”</p>
<p>“Misfortunes are the master of man, not man of his misfortunes,
Metem,” said Aziel quietly, “and in them is no true disgrace. Even
if I had the means to kill myself, it would be a sin; moreover, it might bring
another to her death. Therefore, I await my doom, whatever it may be, with such
patience as I can, trusting that my sufferings and ignominy may expiate my
crimes in the sight of Him whom I renounced. But how come you here,
Metem?”</p>
<p>“I came under the safe-conduct of Ithobal who gave me leave to visit you,
doubtless for some ends of his own. Have you heard, Prince, that he holds the
gates of the city, though as yet no harm has been done to it, and that its
inhabitants are crowded within the temple, and upon the heights above; also
that in his despair Sakon has fallen on his sword and slain himself?”</p>
<p>“Is it so?” answered Aziel. “Well, Issachar foretold as much.
On their own heads be the doom of these devil-worshippers and cowards. Have you
any tidings of the lady Elissa?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Prince. She still sits yonder in the tomb, resolute in her purpose,
and giving no answer to those who come to reason with her.”</p>
<p>As he spoke the guard let fall the front of the tent so that the sunlight
flowed into it, revealing Aziel and his twelve companions, each fast in his
narrow and shameful prison. “See,” said Metem, “do you know
the place?”</p>
<p>The prince struggled to his knees, and saw that they were set upon the top of a
hill, built up of granite boulders, which rose eighty feet or more from the
surface of the plain. Opposite to them at a distance of under a hundred paces
was a precipice in the face of which could be seen a cave closed with barred
gates of bronze, while between the rocky hill and the precipice ran a road.</p>
<p>“I know it, Metem; there runs the path by which we travelled from the
coast, and there is the tomb of Baaltis. Why have we been brought here?”</p>
<p>“The lady Elissa sits behind the bars of yonder tomb whence her view of
all that happens upon this mount must be very good indeed,” answered
Metem with meaning. “Now, can you guess why you were brought here, prince
Aziel.”</p>
<p>“Is it that she may witness our sufferings under torment?” he
asked.</p>
<p>Metem nodded.</p>
<p>“How will they deal with us, Metem?”</p>
<p>“Wait and see,” he answered sadly.</p>
<p>As he spoke Ithobal himself appeared followed by certain evil-looking savages.
Having greeted Metem courteously he turned to the Hebrew soldiers in the cages
and asked them which of their number was most prepared to die.</p>
<p>“I, Ithobal, who am their leader,” said Aziel.</p>
<p>“No, Prince,” replied Ithobal with a cruel smile, “your time
is not yet. Look, there is a man who has been wounded; to put him out of his
pain will be a kindness. Slaves, bear that Jew to the edge of the rock,
and—as the prince will wish to study a new mode of death—bring his
cage also.”</p>
<p>The order was obeyed, Aziel being set down upon the very verge of the cliff.
Close to him a spur of granite jutted out twenty feet or so from the edge. At
the end of the spur a groove was cut and over this groove, suspended by a thin
chain from a pole, hung a wedge of pure crystal carefully shaped and polished.
While Aziel wondered what evil purpose this stone might serve, the slaves had
fastened a fine rope to the cage containing the wounded Hebrew soldier and
secured its end. Then they set the rope in the groove of the granite spur, and
pushed the cage over the edge of the cliff, so that it dangled in mid-air.</p>
<p>“Now I will explain,” said Ithobal. “This is a method of
punishment that I have borrowed from those followers of Baal who worship the
sun, by means of which Baal claims his own sacrifice, and none are guilty of
the victim’s blood. You see yonder crystal—well, at any appointed
hour, for it can be hung as you will, the rays of the sun shining through it
cause the fibres of the grass rope to smoke and smoulder till at length they
part and—Baal takes his sacrifice. Should a cloud hide the sun at the
appointed hour, then, Baal having spared him, the victim is set free. But, as
you will note, at this season of the year there are no clouds.</p>
<p>“What, Prince, have you nothing to say?” he went on, for Aziel had
listened in silence to the tale of this devilish device. “Well, learn
that it depends upon the lady Elissa yonder whether or not this fate shall be
yours. Send now and pray her to save you. Think what it will be to hang as at
this moment your servant hangs over that yawning gulf of space, waiting through
the long hours till at last you see the little wreaths of smoke begin to curl
from the tinder of the cord. Why! before the end found them I have known men go
mad, and, like wolves, tear with their teeth at the wooden bars.</p>
<p>“You will not. Then, Metem, do you plead for your friend. Bid the Baaltis
look forth at one hour before noon and see the sight of yonder wretch’s
death, remembering that to-morrow this fate shall be her lover’s unless
she foregoes her purpose of self-murder and gives herself to me. Nay, no words!
an escort shall lead you through the lower city to the gateway of the tomb and
there listen to your speech. See that it does not fail you, merchant, unless
you also seek to hang in yonder cage. Tell the lady Elissa that to-morrow at
sunrise I will come in person for her answer. If she yields, then the prince
and his companions shall be set free and with you, Metem, to guide them, be
mounted on swift camels to carry them unharmed to their retinue beyond the
mountains. But if she will not yield, then—Baal shall take his sacrifice.
Begone.”</p>
<p>So, having no choice, Metem bowed and went, leaving the caged Aziel upon the
edge of the cliff, and the Hebrew soldier hanging from the spur of rock.</p>
<p>Now Aziel roused himself from the horror in which his soul was sunk, and strove
to comfort his doomed comrade, praying with him to Heaven.</p>
<p>Slowly as they prayed, the hours drew on till at length, upon the opposite
cliff, he saw men whom he knew to be Metem and his escort, approach the mouth
of the tomb, and faintly heard him call through the bars of the gateway.
Turning himself in his cage, Aziel glanced at the rope, and watched the spot of
light born from the burning glass of the crystal creep to its side.</p>
<p>Now the fatal moment was at hand, and Aziel saw a little wreath of smoke rise
in the still air and bade his wretched servant close his eyes. Then came the
end. Suddenly the taut rope, eaten through by the sun’s fire, flew back
and the cage with the soldier in it vanished from his sight, while, from far
below, rose the sound of a heavy fall, and from the tomb of Baaltis rang the
echo of a woman’s shriek.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap17"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII<br/> “THERE IS HOPE”</h2>
<p>It was dawn. Ithobal the king stood without the gates of the tomb of Baaltis,
the grey light glimmering faintly on his harness, and knocked upon the brazen
bars with the handle of his sword.</p>
<p>“Who troubles me now?” said a voice within.</p>
<p>“Lady, it is I, Ithobal, who, as I promised by Metem the Phœnician, am
come to learn your will as to the fate of my prisoner, the Prince Aziel.
Already he hangs above the gulf, and within one short hour, if you so decree
it, he will fall and be dashed to pieces. Or, if you so decree it, he will be
set free to return to his own land.”</p>
<p>“At what price will he be set free, king Ithobal?”</p>
<p>“Lady, you know the price; it is yourself. Oh! I beseech you, be wise!
spare his life and your own. Listen: spare his life, and I will spare this city
which lies in the hollow of my hand, and you shall rule it with me.”</p>
<p>“You cannot bribe me thus, king Ithobal. My father whom I loved is dead,
and shall I give myself to you for the sake of a city and a Faith that would
have betrayed me into your hands?”</p>
<p>“Nay, but for the sake of the man to whom you are dear, you shall do even
this, Elissa. Think: if you refuse, his blood will be upon your head, and what
will you have gained?”</p>
<p>“Death, which I seek, for I weary of the struggle of my days.”</p>
<p>“Then end it in my arms, lady. Soon this fancy will escape your mind, and
you will remain one of the mightiest queens of men.”</p>
<p>Elissa returned no answer, and for a while there was silence.</p>
<p>“Lady,” said Ithobal at length, “the sun rises and my
servants yonder await a signal.”</p>
<p>Then she spoke like one who hesitates.</p>
<p>“Are you not afraid, king Ithobal, to trust your life to a woman won in
such a fashion?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” answered Ithobal, “for though you say that their fate
does not concern you, the lives of all those penned-up thousands are hostages
for my own. Should you by chance find a means to stab me unawares, then
to-night fire and sword would rage through the city of Zimboe. Nor do I fear
the future, since I know well that you who think you hate me now, very soon
will learn to love me.”</p>
<p>“You promise, king Ithobal, that if I yield myself you will set the
prince Aziel free; but how can I believe you who twice have tried to murder
him?”</p>
<p>“Doubt me if you will, Elissa, at least, you cannot doubt your own eyes.
Look, his road to the sea runs beneath this rock. Come from the tomb and take
your stand upon it and you shall see him pass; yes, and should you wish, speak
with him in farewell that you may be sure that it is he and alive. Further, I
swear to you by my head and honour, that no finger shall be laid upon you till
he is gone by, and that no pursuit of him shall be attempted. Now
choose.”</p>
<p>Again there was silence for a while. Then Elissa spoke in a broken voice.</p>
<p>“King Ithobal, I have chosen. Trusting to your royal word I will stand
upon the rock and when I have seen the prince Aziel go by in safety, then,
since you desire it, you shall put your arms about me and bear me whither you
will. You have conquered me, king Ithobal! Henceforward these lips of mine are
yours and no other man’s. Give the signal, I pray you, and I will cast
aside the dagger and the poison and come out living from this tomb.”</p>
<p>Aziel hung in his cage over the abyss of air, awaiting death, and glad to die,
because now he was sure that Elissa had refused to purchase his life at the
expense of her own surrender. There he hung, dizzy and sick at heart, making
his prayer to heaven and waiting the end, while the eagles that would prey upon
his shattered flesh swept past him.</p>
<p>Presently, from the opposing cliff, came the sound of a horn blown thrice.
Then, while Aziel wondered what this might mean, the cage in which he lay was
drawn in gently over the edge of the precipice, and carried down the steeps of
the granite hill as it had been carried up them.</p>
<p>At the foot of the hill its covering was torn aside, and he saw before him a
caravan of camels, and seated on each camel a comrade of his own. But one camel
had no rider, and Metem led it by a rope.</p>
<p>The servants of Ithobal took him from the cage and set him upon this camel,
though they did not loosen the bonds about the wrists.</p>
<p>“This is the command of the king,” said the captain to Metem
“that the arms of the prince Aziel shall remain bound until you have
travelled for six hours. Begone in safety, fearing nothing.”</p>
<hr />
<p>“What happens now, Metem,” asked Aziel, as the camels strode
forward, “and why am I set free who was expecting death? Is this some new
artifice of yours, or has the lady Elissa——” and he ceased.</p>
<p>“Upon the word of an honest merchant I cannot tell you, Prince.
Yesterday, as I was forced, I gave the message of king Ithobal to the lady
Elissa yonder in the tomb. She would answer me only one thing, which she
whispered in my ear through the bars of the holy tomb; that if we could escape
we should do so, moreover that you must have no fear for her since she also had
found a means of escape from Ithobal, and would certainly join us upon the
road.”</p>
<p>As Metem spoke, the camels passed round the little hill on to the path that ran
beneath the tomb of Baaltis. There, standing upon the rock some fifty feet
above them, was Elissa, and with her, but at a distance, Ithobal the king.</p>
<p>“Halt, prince Aziel,” she called in a clear voice, “and
hearken to my farewell. I have bought your life, and the lives of your
companions, and you are free, for the road is clear and nothing can overtake
the twelve swiftest camels in Zimboe. Go, therefore, and be happy, forgetting
no word that has passed my lips. For all my words are true, even to a certain
promise which I made you lately by the mouth of Metem, and which I now
fulfil—that I would join you on your road lest you should deem me
faithless to the troth which I have so often sworn to you.</p>
<p>“King Ithobal, this shape is yours; come now and take your prize. Prince
Aziel, my soul is yours, in life it shall companion you, and in death await
you. Prince Aziel, I come to you.” Then, before he could answer a single
word, with one swift and sudden spring she hurled herself from the cliff edge
to fall crushed upon the road beneath.</p>
<p>Aziel saw. In his agony he strained so fiercely at the bonds which held him
that they burst like rushes. He leapt from the camel and knelt beside Elissa.
She was not yet dead, for her eyes were open and her lips stirred.</p>
<p>“I have kept faith, keep it also, Aziel! the story is not yet
done,” she gasped. Then her life flickered out, and her spirit passed.</p>
<p>Aziel rose from beside the corpse and looked upward. There upon the edge of the
rock above him, leaning forward, his eyes blind with horror, stood Ithobal the
king. Aziel saw him, and a fury entered into his heart because this man, whose
jealous rage and evil doing had bred such woe and caused the death of his
beloved still lived upon the earth. By the prince was Metem, who, for once, had
no words, and from his hand he snatched a bow, set an arrow on the string and
loosed.</p>
<p>The shaft rushed upwards, it smote Ithobal between the joints of his harness so
that the point of it sunk through his neck.</p>
<p>“This gift, king Ithobal, from Aziel the Israelite,” he cried, as
the arrow sped.</p>
<p>For a moment the great man stood still, then he opened his arms wide and of a
sudden plunged downward, falling with a crash on the roadway, where he lay dead
at the side of dead Elissa.</p>
<hr />
<p>“The play is played, and the fate fulfilled,” cried Metem.
“See, the servants of the king speed yonder with their evil tidings; let
us away lest we bide here with these two for ever.”</p>
<p>“That is my desire,” said Aziel.</p>
<p>“A desire which may not be fulfilled,” answered Metem. “Come,
Prince, since we cannot go without you. Surely you do not wish to sacrifice the
lives of all of us as an offering to the great spirit of the lady who is dead.
It is one that she would not seek.”</p>
<p>Then Aziel knelt down and kissed the brow of the dead Elissa, and went his way,
saying no word.</p>
<hr />
<p>That night, when the darkness fell, the sky behind these travellers grew red
with fire.</p>
<p>“Behold the end of the golden city!” said Metem. “Zimboe is
food for flames and its children for the sword. Issachar was a prophet indeed,
who foretold that it should be so.”</p>
<p>Aziel bowed his head, remembering that Issachar had foretold also that for
Elissa and for him there was hope beyond the grave. As he thought it, a wind
beat upon his brow and through it a soft voice seemed to murmur to his
heart:—</p>
<p>“Be of good courage: Beloved, <i>there is hope</i>.”</p>
<hr />
<p>So, turning from the death behind him, this far away forgotten lover set his
face to the sea of Life and passed it, and long ago, at his appointed hour,
gained its further shore, to be welcomed there by her who watched for him.</p>
<p>And thus, because of the fateful and predestined loves of Aziel the prince, and
Elissa the priestess and daughter of Sakon, three thousand years and more ago,
the ancient city of Zimboe fell at the hand of king Ithobal and his Tribes, so
that to-day there remain of it nothing but a desolate grey tower of stone, and
beneath, the crumbling bones of men.</p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
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