The Yoke. Elizabeth Miller

The Yoke - Elizabeth  Miller


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how shall they appease Athor?" Kenkenes demanded warmly. "Ta-user loves Siptah, the son of Amon-meses, and Rameses will crown whom he loves though he had a thousand other crown-loving, treaty-dowered wives!"

      Hotep smiled. "I thought the four walls of thy world hedged thee, but it seems thou art right well acquainted with royalty."

      "Scoff!" Kenkenes cried. "But I can tell thee this: Rameses will put his foot on the neck of Amon-meses if the pretender trouble him, and will wed with a slave-girl if she break the armor over his iron heart."

      Hotep laughed again and suggested another subject.

      "The new fan-bearer," he began.

      "Nay, what of him?" Kenkenes broke in at once.

      "And shall we quarrel about him, also?"

      "Dost thou know him?" Hotep queried.

      "Right well—from afar and by hearsay."

      "Do thou express thyself first concerning him, and I shall treat thee to the courtier's diplomacy if I agree not."

      "I like him not," Kenkenes responded bluntly.

      Hotep leaned toward him, with the smile gone from his face, the jest from his manner, and laid his hand on the sculptor's. The pressure spoke eloquently of hearty concord. "But he has a charming daughter," he said.

      Kenkenes inspected his friend's face critically, but there was nothing to be read thereon.

      A palace attendant approached across the paved roof and bent before the scribe.

      "A summons from the Son of Ptah, my Lord," he said.

      "At this hour?" Hotep said in some surprise as he arose. "I shall return immediately," he told Kenkenes.

      "Nay," the sculptor observed, "my time is nearly gone. Let me depart now."

      "Not so. I would go with thee. This will be no more than a note. If it be more I shall put mine underlings to the task."

      He disappeared in the dark. Kenkenes lay back on the divan and thought on the many things that the scribe had told him. But chiefly he pondered on Har-hat and the Israelite.

      When Hotep returned he carried his cowl and mantle, and a scroll. "I too, am become a messenger," he said, "but I am self-appointed. This note was to go by a palace courier, but I relieved him of the task."

      The pair made ready and departed through the still populous streets of

       Thebes to the Nile. There they were ferried over to the wharves of Luxor.

      At the temple the porter conducted them into the chamber in which the ancient prelate spent his shortening hours of labor. He was there now, at his table, and greeted the young men with a nod. But taking a second look at Hotep, he beckoned him with a shaking finger.

      "Didst bring me aught, my son?" he asked as the scribe bent over him.

      "Aye, holy Father; this message to the taskmaster over Pa-Ramesu."

      "Ah," the old man said. "Is that not yet gone?"

      "Nay, the Pharaoh asks that thou insert the name of him whom thou didst recommend for Atsu's place. The Son of Ptah had forgotten him."

      The old man pushed several scrolls aside and prepared to make the addition..

      "But thou art weary, holy Father; let me do it," Hotep protested gently.

      "Nay, nay, I can do it," the old man insisted. "See!" drawing forth a scroll unaddressed, "I have written all this in an hour. O aye, I can write with the young men yet." He made the interlineation, rolled the scroll and sealed it. "I am sturdy, still." At that moment, he dropped his pen on the floor and bent to pick it up, but was forestalled by Hotep. Then he addressed the scrolls, carefully dried the ink with a sprinkling of sand and delivered one to Hotep, the other to Kenkenes. "This to the king, and that to Snofru. The gods give thee safe journey," he continued to Kenkenes. "Who art thou, my son?"

      "I am the son of Mentu, holy Father. My name is Kenkenes," the young man answered.

      "Mentu, the royal sculptor?"

      Kenkenes bowed.

      "Nay, but I am glad. I knew thy father, and since thou art of his blood, thou art faithful. Let neither death nor fear overtake thee, for thou hast the peace of Egypt in thy very hands. Fail not, I charge thee!"

      After a reverent farewell, the two young men went forth.

      A slender Egyptian youth went with them to the wharves and awakened the sleeping crew of a bari.

      Hotep they carried across and set ashore on the western side.

      "May the same favoring god that brought thee hither, grant thee a safe journey home, my friend. The court comes to Memphis shortly. Till then, farewell," said Hotep.

      "All Memphis will hail her illustrious son, O Hotep. Farewell."

      It was not long until the sculptor was drifting down toward Memphis under a starry sky—the shadowy temples of Thebes hidden by the sudden closing-in of the river-hills about her.

      [1] Set—the war-god.

      [2] Athor—the Egyptian Venus; the feminine love-deity.

       Table of Contents

      ATHOR, THE GOLDEN

      At sunrise the morning after his return from On, Kenkenes appeared at the Nile, attended by a burden-bearing slave.

      The first lean, brown boatman who touched his knee and offered his bari for hire, Kenkenes patronized. The slave had eased his load into the boat and Kenkenes was on the point of embarking when a four-oared bari, which had passed them like the wind a moment before, put about several rods above them and returned to the group on shore.

      A bent and withered servitor was standing in the bow of the boat, wildly gesticulating, as if he feared Kenkenes would insist on pulling away despite his efforts. The young man recognized the servant of Snofru, old Ranas.

      The large bari was beached and the servitor alighted with agility and, beckoning to Kenkenes, took him aside.

      "There has been an error—a grave error, concerning the message," the old man began in excitement; "but thou art in no wise at fault. Yet mayhap thou canst aid us in unraveling the tangle. See!"

      He displayed the linen-wrapped roll, the covering split where Snofru had opened it, but the wavering hieratic characters of the address in Loi's hand, still intact.

      When the young sculptor had gazed, the old servant nervously undid the roll, and showed within a letter to the commander over Pa-Ramesu, written in the strong epistolary symbols of the royal scribe.

      Kenkenes frowned with vexation. Innocent and efficient though he had been, the miscarriage of his mission stung him nevertheless. The blunder was not long a mystery to him.

      Summoning all the patience at his command, he recounted the events in the apartments of the ancient hierarch of Amen.

      "There were two Scrolls," he explained; "one to the Servant of Ra at On, the other to Atsu. The holy father sealed them both before he addressed them and confused the directions. The one which I should have brought to thine august master, hath gone to the taskmaster over Pa-Ramesu."

      "Thou madest all speed?" the servant demanded, trembling with eagerness.

      "A half-day's journey less than the usual time I made in returning. I doubt much, if the messenger with the other scroll hath passed Memphis yet, since he may not have been despatched in such hot haste. Furthermore, because of the festivities in Tape, it would have been well-nigh impossible for him to hire a boat until the next day."

      This


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