CHAPTER XV
WHAT PASSED IN THE TOWER
Nearly four months had gone by. Perhaps, during the whole history of
the world there never has been and never will be more cruel suffering
than was endured by the inhabitants of Jerusalem during that period,
or rather by the survivors of the nation of the Jews who were crowded
together within its walls. Forgetting their internecine quarrels in
the face of overwhelming danger, too late the factions united and
fought against the common foe with a ferocity that has been seldom
equalled. They left nothing undone which desperate men could do. Again
and again they sallied forth against the Romans, slaughtering
thousands of them. They captured their battering-rams and catapults.
They undermined the great wooden towers which Titus erected against
their walls, and burnt them. With varying success they made sally upon
sally. Titus took the third wall and the new city of Bezetha. He took
the second wall and pulled it down. Then he sent Josephus, the
historian, to persuade the Jews to surrender, but his countrymen
cursed and stoned him, and the war went on.
At length, as it seemed to be impossible to carry the place by
assault, Titus adopted a surer and more terrible plan. Enclosing the
first unconquered wall, the Temple, and the fortress by another wall
of his own making, he sat down and waited for starvation to do its
work. Then came the famine. At the beginning, before the maddened,
devil-inspired factions began to destroy each other and to prey upon
the peaceful people, Jerusalem was amply provisioned. But each party
squandered the stores that were within its reach, and, whenever they
could do so, burnt those of their rivals, so that the food which might
have supplied the whole city for months, vanished quickly in orgies of
wanton waste and destruction. Now all, or almost all, was gone, and by
tens and hundreds of thousands the people starved.
Those who are curious about such matters, those who desire to know how
much human beings can endure, and of what savagery they can be capable
when hunger drives them, may find these details set out in the pages
of Josephus, the renegade Jewish historian. It serves no good purpose
and will not help our story to repeat them; indeed for the most part
they are too terrible to be repeated. History does not record, and the
mind of man cannot invent a cruelty which was not practised by the
famished Jews upon other Jews suspected of the crime of having hidden
food to feed themselves or their families. Now the fearful prophecy
was fulfilled, and it came about that mothers devoured their own
infants, and children snatched the last morsel of bread from the lips
of their dying parents. If these things were done between those who
were of one blood, what dreadful torment was there that was not
practised by stranger upon stranger? The city went mad beneath the
weight of its abominable and obscene misery. Thousands perished every
day, and every night thousands more escaped, or attempted to escape,
to the Romans, who caught the poor wretches and crucified them beneath
the walls, till there was no more wood of which to make the crosses,
and no more ground whereon to stand them.
All these things and many others Miriam saw from her place of outlook
in the gallery of the deserted tower. She saw the people lying dead by
hundreds in the streets beneath. She saw the robbers hale them from
their houses and torture them to discover the hiding-place of the food
which they were supposed to have hidden, and when they failed, put
them to the sword. She saw the Valley of the Kidron and the lower
slopes of the Mount of Olives covered with captive Jews writhing on
their crosses, there to die as the Messiah whom they had rejected,
died. She saw the furious attacks, the yet more furious sallies and
the dreadful daily slaughter, till at length her heart grew so sick
within her, that although she still took refuge in the ruined tower to
escape the gloom beneath, Miriam would spend whole hours lying on her
face, her fingers thrust into her ears, that she might shut out the
sights and sounds of this unutterable woe.
Meanwhile, the Essenes, who still had stores of food, ventured forth
but rarely, lest the good condition of their bodies, although their
faces were white as death from dwelling in the darkness, should tempt
the starving hordes to seize and torture them in the hope of
discovering the hiding-places of their nutriment. Indeed, to several
of the brethren this happened; but in obedience to their oaths, as
will be seen in the instance of the past President Theophilus--who
went out and was no more heard of--they endured all and died without a
murmur, having betrayed nothing. Still, notwithstanding the danger,
driven to it by utter weariness of their confinement in the dark and
by the desire of obtaining news, from time to time one of them would
creep forth at night to return again before daybreak. From these men
Miriam heard that after the murder of the high priest Mathias and his
sons, together with sixteen of the Sanhedrim, on a charge of
correspondence with the Romans, her grandfather, Benoni, had been
elected to that body, in which he exercised much influence and caused
many to be put to death who were accused of treason or of favouring
the Roman cause. Caleb also was in the Temple and foremost in every
fight. He was said to have sworn an oath that he would slay the
Prefect of Horse, Marcus, with whom he had an ancient quarrel, or be
slain himself. It was told, indeed, that they had met once already and
struck some blows at each other, before they were separated by an
accident of war.
The beginning of August came at length, and the wretched city, in
addition to its other miseries, panted in the heat of a scorching
summer sun and was poisoned by the stench from the dead bodies that
filled the streets and were hurled in thousands from the walls. Now
the Romans had set up their battering engines at the very gates of the
Temple, and slowly but surely were winning their way into its outer
courts.
On a certain night, about an hour before the dawn, Miriam woke
Nehushta, telling her that she was stifling there in those vaults and
must ascend the tower. Nehushta said that it was folly, whereon Miriam
answered that she would go alone. This she would not suffer her to do,
so together they passed up the stairs according to custom, and, having
gained the base of the tower through the swinging door of stone,
climbed the steps that ran in the thickness of the wall till they
reached the topmost gallery. Here they sat, fanned by the faint night
wind, and watched the fires of the Romans stretched far and wide
around the walls and even among the ruins of the houses almost beneath
them, since that part of the city was taken.
Presently the dawn broke, a splendid, fearful dawn. It was as though
the angel of the daybreak had dipped his wing into a sea of blood and
dashed it against the brow of Night, still crowned with her fading
stars. Of a sudden the heavens were filled with blots and threads of
flaming colour latticed against the pale background of the twilight
sky. Miriam watched it with a kind of rapture, letting its glory and
its peace sink into her troubled soul, while from below arose the
sound of awakening camps making ready for the daily battle. Soon a ray
of burning light, cast like a spear from the crest of the Mount of
Olives across the Valley of Jehoshaphat, struck full upon the gold-
roofed Temple and its courts. At its coming, as though at a signal,
the northern gates were thrown wide, and through them poured a flood
of gaunt and savage warriors. They came on in thousands, uttering
fierce war-cries. Some pickets of Romans tried to stay their rush; in
a minute they were overcome and destroyed. Now they were surging round
the feet of a great wooden tower filled with archers. Here the fight
was desperate, for the soldiers of Titus rushed up by companies to
defend their engine. But they could not drive back that onset, and
presently the tower was on fire, and in a last mad effort to save
their lives its defenders were casting themselves headlong from the
lofty platform. With shouts of triumph the Jews rushed through the
breaches in the second wall, and leaving what remained of the castle
of Antonia on the left, poured down into the maze of streets and
ruined houses that lay immediately behind the Old Tower whence Miriam
watched.
In front of this building, which the Romans had never attempted to
enter, since for military purposes it was useless to them, lay the
open space, once, no doubt, part of its garden, but of late years used
as a cattle market and a place where young men exercised themselves in
arms. Bordering the waste on its further side were strong
fortifications, the camping ground of the twelfth and fifteenth
legions. Across this open space those who remained of the Romans fled
back towards their outer line, followed by swarms of furious Jews.
They gained them, such as were not overtaken, but the Jews who pursued
were met with so fierce a charge, delivered by the fresh troops behind
the defences, that they were in turn swept back and took refuge among
the ruined houses. Suddenly Miriam's attention became concentrated
upon the mounted officer who led this charge, a gallant-looking man
clad in splendid armour, whose clear, ringing voice, as he uttered the
words of command, had caught her ear even through the tumult and the
shouting. The Roman onslaught having reached its limit, began to fall
back again like the water from an exhausted wave upon a slope of sand.
At the moment the Jews were in no condition to press the enemy's
retreat, so that the mounted officer who withdrew last of all, had
time to turn his horse, and heedless of the arrows that sang about
him, to study the ground now strewn with the wounded and the dead.
Presently he looked up at the deserted tower as though wondering
whether he could make use of it, and Miriam saw his face. It was
Marcus, grown older, more thoughtful also, and altered somewhat by a
short curling beard, but still Marcus and no other.
"Look! look!" she said.
Nehushta nodded. "Yes, it is he; I thought so from the first. And now,
having seen him, lady, shall we be going?"
"Going?" said Miriam, "wherefore?"
"Because one army or the other may chance to think that this building
would be useful to them, and break open the walled-up door. Also they
might explore this staircase, and then----"
"And then," answered Miriam quietly, "we should be taken. What of it?
If the Jews find us we are of their party; if the Romans--well, I do
not greatly fear the Romans."
"You mean you do not fear one Roman. But who knows, but that he may
presently lie dead----"
"Oh! say it not," answered Miriam, pressing her hand upon her heart.
"Nay, safe or unsafe, I will see this fight out. Look, yonder is Caleb
--yes, Caleb himself, shouting to the Jews. How fierce is his face,
like that of a hyena in a snare. Nay, now I will not go--go you and
leave me in peace to watch the end."
"Since you are too heavy and strong for my old arms to carry down
those steep steps, so be it," answered Nehushta calmly. "After all, we
have food with us, and our angels can guard us as well on the top of a
tower as in those dirty cisterns. Also this fray is worth the
watching."
As she spoke, the Romans having re-formed, led by the Prefect Marcus
and other officers, advanced from their entrenchment, to be met half-
way by the Jews, now reinforced from the Temple, among whom was Caleb.
There, in the open space, they fought hand to hand, for neither force
would yield an inch. Miriam, watching through the stone bars from
above, had eyes for only two of all that multitude of men--Marcus,
whom she loved, and Caleb, whom she feared. Marcus was attacked by a
Jew, who stabbed his horse, to be instantly stabbed himself by a Roman
who came to the rescue of his commander. After this he fought on foot.
Caleb killed first one soldier than another. Watching him, Miriam grew
aware that he was cutting his way towards some point, and that the
point was Marcus. This Marcus seemed to know; at least, he also strove
to cut his way towards Caleb. Nearer and nearer they came, till at
length they met and began to rain blows upon each other; but not for
long, for just then a charge of some Roman horsemen separated them.
After this both parties retired to their lines, taking their wounded
with them.
Thus, with pauses, sometimes of two or three hours, the fight went on
from morning to noon, and from noon to sunset. During the latter part
of the time the Romans made no more attacks, but were contented with
defending themselves while they awaited reinforcements from without
the city, or perhaps the results of some counter-attack in another
part.
Thus the advantage rested, or seemed to rest, with the Jews, who held
all the ruined houses and swept the open space with their arrows. Now
it was that Nehushta's fears were justified, for having a little
leisure the Jews took a beam of wood and battered in the walled-up
doorway of the tower.
"Look!" said Nehushta, pointing down.
"Oh, Nou!" Miriam answered, "I was wrong. I have run you into danger.
But indeed I could not go. What shall we do now?"
"Sit quiet until they come to take us," said Nehushta grimly, "and
then, if they give us time, explain as best we may."
As it chanced, however, the Jews did not come, since they feared that
if they mounted the stair some sudden rush of Romans might trap such
of them as were within before they had time to descend again. Only
they made use of the base of the tower to shelter those of their
wounded whose hurts were so desperate that they dared not move them.
Now the fighting having ceased for a while, the soldiers of both sides
amused themselves with shouting taunts and insults at each other, or
challenges to single combat. Presently Caleb stepped forward from the
shelter of a wall and called out that if the Prefect Marcus would meet
him alone in the open space he had something to say which he would be
glad to hear. Thereupon Marcus, stepping out from his defences, where
several of his officers seemed to be striving to detain him, answered:
"I will come," and walked to the centre of the market, where he was
met by Caleb.
Here the two of them spoke together alone, but of what they said
Miriam and Nehushta, watching them from above, could catch no word.
"Oh! will they fight?" said Miriam.
"It seems likely, since each of them has sworn to slay the other,"
answered Nehushta.
While she spoke Marcus, shaking his head as though to decline some
proposal, and pointing to the men of his command, who stood up
watching him, turned to walk back to his own lines, followed by Caleb,
who shouted out that he was a coward and did not dare to stand alone
before him. At this insult Marcus winced, then went on again,
doubtless because he thought it his duty to rejoin his company,
whereon Caleb, drawing his sword, struck him with the flat of it
across the back. Now the Jews laughed, while the Romans uttered a
shout of rage at the intolerable affront offered to their commander.
As for Marcus, he wheeled round, sword in hand, and flew straight at
Caleb's throat.
But it was for this that the Jew had been waiting, since he knew that
no Roman, and least of all Marcus, would submit to the indignity of
such a blow. As his adversary came on, made almost blind with fury, he
leapt to one side lightly as a lion leaps, and with all the force of
his long sinewy arm brought down his heavy sword upon the head of
Marcus. The helm was good, or the skull beneath must have been split
in two by that blow, which, as it was, shore through it and bit deeply
into the bone. Beneath the shock Marcus staggered, threw his arms
wide, and let fall his sword. With a shout Caleb sprang at him to make
an end of him, but before he could strike the Roman seemed to recover
himself, and, knowing that his weapon was gone, did the only thing he
could, rushed straight at his foe. Caleb's sword fell on his shoulder,
but the tempered mail withstood it, and next instant Marcus had
gripped him in his arms. Down they came together to the earth, rolling
over each other, the Jew trying to stab the Roman, the Roman to choke
the Jew with his bare hand. Then from the Roman lines rose a cry of
"Rescue!" and from the Jews a cry of "Take him."
Out poured the combatants from either side of the market-place by
hundreds and by thousands, and there in its centre, round the
struggling forms of Caleb and of Marcus, began the fiercest fight of
all that day. Where men stood, there they fell, for none would give
back, since the Romans, outnumbered though they were, preferred to die
rather than leave a wounded and beloved captain a prisoner in the
hands of cruel enemies, while the Jews knew too well the value of such
a prize to let it escape them easily. So great was the slaughter that
presently Marcus and Caleb were hidden beneath the bodies of the
fallen. More and more Jews rushed into the fray, but still the Romans
pushed onwards with steady valour, fighting shoulder to shoulder and
shield to shield.
Then of a sudden, with a savage yell a fresh body of Jews, three or
four hundred strong, appeared at the west end of the market-place, and
charged upon the Romans, taking them in flank. The officer in command
saw his danger, and knowing that it was better that his captain should
die than that the whole company should be destroyed and the arms of
Cæsar suffer a grave defeat, gave orders for a retirement. Steadily,
as though they were on parade, and dragging with them those of their
wounded comrades who could not walk, the legionaries fell back,
heedless of the storm of spears and arrows, reaching their own lines
before the outflanking body of Jews could get among them. Then seeing
that there was nothing more to be gained, since to attempt to storm
the Roman works was hopeless, the victorious Jews also retreated, this
time not to the houses behind the tower, but only to the old market
wall thirty or forty paces in front of it, which they proceeded to
hold and strengthen in the fading light. Seeing that they were lost,
such of the wounded Romans as remained upon the field committed
suicide, preferring to fall upon their own spears than into the hands
of the Jews to be tortured and crucified. Also for this deed they had
another reason, since it was the decree of Titus that any soldier who
was taken living should be publicly disgraced by name and expelled
from the ranks of the legion, and, if recaptured, in addition suffer
death or banishment.
Gladly would Marcus have followed their example and thereby--though he
knew it not--save himself much misery and shame in the future, but he
had neither time nor weapon; moreover, so weak was he with struggling
and the loss of blood, that even as he and Caleb were dragged by
savage hands from among the fallen, he fainted. At first they thought
that he was dead, but one of the Jews, who chanced to be a physician
by trade, declared that this was not so, and that if he were left
quiet for a while, he would come to himself again. Therefore, as they
desired to preserve this Prefect alive, either to be held as an
hostage or to be executed in sight of the army of Titus, they brought
him into the Old Tower, clearing it of their own wounded, except such
of them as had already breathed their last. Here they set a guard over
him, though of this there seemed to be little need, and went under the
command of the victorious Caleb to assist in strengthening the market-
wall.
All of these things Miriam watched from above in such an agony of fear
and doubt, that at times she thought that she would die. She saw her
lover and Caleb fall locked in each other's arms; she saw the hideous
fray that raged around them. She saw them dragged from the heap of
slain, and at the end of it all, by the last light of day, saw Marcus,
living or dead, she knew not which, borne into the tower, and there
laid upon the ground.
"Take comfort," whispered Nehushta, pitying her dreadful grief. "The
lord Marcus lives. If he were dead they would have stripped him and
left his body with the others. He lives, and they purpose to hold him
captive, else they would have suffered Caleb to put his sword through
him, as you noted he wished to do so soon as he found his feet."
"Captive," answered Miriam. "That means that he will be crucified like
the others whom we saw yesterday upon the Temple wall."
Nehushta shrugged her shoulders.
"It may be so," she said, "unless he finds means to destroy himself or
--is saved."
"Saved! How can he be saved?" Then in her woe the poor girl fell upon
her knees clasping her hands and murmuring: "Oh! Jesus Christ whom I
serve, teach me how to save Marcus. Oh! Jesus, I love him, although he
is not a Christian; love him also because I love him, and teach me how
to save him. Or if one must die, take my life for his, oh! take my
life for his."
"Cease," said Nehushta, "for I think I hear an answer to your prayer.
Look now, he is laid just where the stair starts and not six feet from
the stone door that leads down into the cistern. Except for some dead
men the tower is empty; also the two sentries stand outside the breach
in the brickwork with which it was walled up, because there they find
more light, and their prisoner is unarmed and helpless, and cannot
attempt escape. Now, if the Roman lives and can stand, why should we
not open that door and thrust him through it?"
"But the Jews might see us and discover the secret of the hiding-place
of the Essenes, whom they would kill because they have hidden food."
"Once we were the other side of the door, they could never come at
them, even if they have time to try," answered Nehushta. "Before ever
they could burst the door the stone trap beneath can be closed and the
roof of the stair that leads to it let down by knocking away the props
and flooded in such a fashion that a week of labour would not clear it
out again. Oh! have no fear, the Essenes know and have guarded against
this danger."
Miriam threw her arms about the neck of Nehushta and kissed her.
"We will try, Nou, we will try," she whispered, "and if we fail, why
then we can die with him."
"To you that prospect may be pleasing, but I have no desire to die
with the lord Marcus," answered Nehushta drily. "Indeed, although I
like him well, were it not for your sake I should leave him to his
chance. Nay, do not answer or give way to too much hope. Remember,
perhaps he is dead, as he seems to be."
"Yes, yes," said Miriam wildly, "we must find out. Shall we go now?"
"Aye, while there is still a little light, for these steps are
breakneck in the dark. No, do you follow me."
So on they glided down the ancient, darksome stairway, where owls
hooted and bats flittered in their faces. Now they were at the last
flight, which descended to a little recess set at right angles to the
steps and flush with the floor of the basement, for once the door of
the stairway had opened here. Thus a person standing on the last stair
could not be seen by any in the tower. They reached the step and
halted. Then very stealthily Nehushta went on to her hands and knees
and thrust her head forward so that she could look into the base of
the tower. It was dark as the grave, only a faint gleam of starlight
reflected from his armour showed where Marcus lay, so close that she
could touch him with her hand. Also almost opposite to her the gloom
was relieved by a patch of faint grey light. Here it was that the wall
had been broken in, for Nehushta could see the shadows of the sentries
crossing and recrossing before the ragged opening.
She leant yet lower towards Marcus and listened. He was not dead, for
he breathed. More, she heard him stir his hand and thought that she
could see it move upwards towards his wounded head. Then she drew
back.
"Lady," she whispered, "he lives, and I think he is awake. Now you
must do the rest as your wit may teach you how, for if I speak to him
he will be frightened, but your voice he may remember if he has his
senses."
At these words all her doubts and fears seemed to vanish from Miriam's
heart, her hand grew steady and her brain clear, for Nature told her
that if she wished to save her lover she would need both clear brain
and steady hand. The timid, love-racked girl was transformed into a
woman of iron will and purpose. In her turn she kneeled and crept a
little forward from the stair, so that her face hung over the face of
Marcus. Then she spoke in a soft whisper.
"Marcus, awake and listen, Marcus; but I pray of you do not stir or
make a noise. I am Miriam, whom once you knew."
At this name the dim form beneath her seemed to quiver, and the lips
muttered, "Now I know that I am dead. Well, it is better than I hoped
for. Speak on, sweet shade of Miriam."
"Nay, Marcus, you are not dead, you are only wounded and I am not a
spirit, I am a woman, that woman whom once you knew down by the banks
of Jordan. I have come to save you, I and Nehushta. If you will obey
what I tell you, and if you have the strength to stand, we can guide
you into a secret place where the Essenes are hidden, who for my sake
will take care of you until you are able to return to the Romans. If
you do not escape I fear that the Jews will crucify you."
"By Bacchus, so do I," said the whisper beneath, "and that will be
worse than being beaten by Caleb. But this is a dream, I know it is a
dream. If it were Miriam I should see her, or be able to touch her. It
is but a dream of Miriam. Let me dream on," and he turned his head.
Miriam thought for a moment. Time was short and it was necessary to
make him understand. Well, it was not difficult. Slowly she bent a
little lower and pressed her lips upon his.
"Marcus," she went on, "I kiss you now to show you that I am no dream
and how needful it is that you should be awakened. Had I light I could
prove to you that I am Miriam by your ring which is upon my fingers
and your pearls which are about my neck."
"Cease," he answered, "most beloved, I was weak and wandering, now I
know that this is not a dream, and I thank Caleb who has brought us
together again, against his wish, I think. Say, what must I do?"
"Can you stand?" asked Miriam.
"Perhaps. I am not sure. I will try."
"Nay, wait. Nehushta, come hither; you are stronger than I. Now, while
I unlatch the secret door, do you lift him up. Be swift, I hear the
guard stirring without."
Nehushta glided forward and knelt by the wounded man, placing her arms
beneath him.
"Ready," she said. "Here is the iron."
Miriam took it, and stepping to the wall, felt with her fingers for
the crack, which in that darkness it took time to find. At length she
had it, and inserting the thin hooked iron, lifted the hidden latch
and pulled. The stone door was very heavy and she needed all her
strength to move it. At last it began to swing.
"Now," she said to Nehushta, who straightened herself and dragged the
wounded Marcus to his feet.
"Quick, quick!" said Miriam, "the guards enter."
Supported by Nehushta, Marcus took three tottering steps and reached
the open door. Here, on its very threshold indeed, his strength failed
him, for he was wounded in the knee as well as in the head. Groaning,
"I cannot," he fell to the ground, dragging the old Libyan with him,
his breastplate clattering loud against the stone threshold. The
sentry without heard the sound and called to a companion to give him
the lantern. In an instant Nehushta was up again, and seizing Marcus
by his right arm, began to drag him through the opening, while Miriam,
setting her back against the swinging stone to keep it from closing,
pushed against his feet.
The lantern appeared round the angle of the broken masonry.
"For your life's sake!" said Miriam, and Nehushta dragged her hardest
at the heavy, helpless body of the fallen man. He moved slowly. It was
too late; if that light fell on him all was lost. In an instant Miriam
took her resolve. With an effort she swung the door wide, then as
Nehushta dragged again she sprang forward, keeping in the shadow of
the wall. The Jew who held the lantern, alarmed by the sounds within,
entered hastily and, catching his foot against the body of a dead man
who lay there, stumbled so that he fell upon his knee. In her hand
Miriam held the key, and as the guard regained his feet, but not
before its light fell upon her, she struck with it at the lamp,
breaking and extinguishing it.
Then she turned to fly, for, as she knew well, the stone would now be
swinging on its pivot.
Alas! her chance had gone, for the man, stretching out his arm, caught
her about the middle and held her fast, shouting loudly for help.
Miriam struggled, she battered him with the iron and dragged at him
with her left hand, but in vain, for in that grip she was helpless as
a child who fights against its nurse. While she fought thus she heard
the dull thud of the closing stone, and even in her despair rejoiced,
knowing that until Marcus was beyond its threshold it could not be
shut. Ceasing from her useless struggle she gathered the forces of her
mind. Marcus was safe; the door was shut and could not be opened from
the further side until another iron was procured; the guard had seen
nothing. But her escape was impossible. Her part was played, only one
thing remained for her to do--keep silence and his secret.
Men bearing lights were rushing into the tower. Her right hand, which
held the iron, was free, and lest it should tell a tale she cast the
instrument from her towards that side of the deserted place which she
knew was buried deep in fallen stones, fragments of rotted timber and
dirt from the nests of birds. Then she stood still. Now they were upon
her, Caleb at the head of them.
"What is it?" he cried.
"I know not," answered the guard. "I heard a sound as of clanking
armour and ran in, when some one struck the lantern from my hand, a
strong rascal with whom I have struggled sorely, notwithstanding the
blows that he rained upon me with his sword. See, I hold him fast."
They held up their lights and saw a beautiful, dishevelled maid, small
and frail of stature, whereon they laughed out loud.
"A strong thief, truly," said one. "Why, it is a girl! Do you summon
the watch every time a girl catches hold of you?"
Before the words died upon the speaker's lips, another man called out,
"The Roman! The Prefect has gone! Where is the prisoner?" and with a
roar of wrath they began to search the place, as a cat searches for
the mouse that escapes her. Only Caleb stood still and stared at the
girl.
"Miriam!" he said.
"Yes, Caleb," she answered quietly. "This is a strange meeting, is it
not? Why do you break in thus upon my hiding-place?"
"Woman," he shouted, mad with anger, "where have you hidden the
Prefect Marcus?"
"Marcus?" she answered; "is he here? I did not know it. Well, I saw a
man run from the tower, perhaps that was he. Be swift and you may
catch him."
"No man left the tower," answered the other sentry. "Seize that woman,
she has hidden the Roman in some secret place. Seize her and search."
So they caught Miriam, bound her and began running round and round the
wall. "Here is a staircase," called a man, "doubtless he has gone up
it. Come, friends."
Then taking lights with them, they mounted the stairs to the very top,
but found no one. Even as they came down again a trumpet blew and from
without rose the sound of a mighty shouting.
"What happens now?" said one.
As he spoke an officer appeared in the opening of the tower.
"Begone," he cried. "Back to the Temple, taking your prisoner with
you. Titus himself is upon us at the head of two fresh legions, mad at
the loss of his Prefect and so many of his soldiers. Why! where is the
wounded Roman, Marcus?"
"He has vanished," answered Caleb sullenly. "Vanished"--here he
glanced at Miriam with jealous and vindictive hate--"and in his place
has left to us this woman, the grand-daughter of Benoni, Miriam, who
strangely enough was once his love."
"Is it so?" said the officer. "Girl, tell us what you have done with
the Roman, or die. Come, we have no time to lose."
"I have done nothing. I saw a man walk past the sentries, that is
all."
"She lies," said the officer contemptuously. "Here, kill this
traitress."
A man advanced lifting his sword, and Miriam, thinking that all was
over, hid her eyes while she waited for the blow. Before it fell,
however, Caleb whispered something to the officer which caused him to
change his mind.
"So be it," he said. "Hold your hand and take this woman with you to
the Temple, there to be tried by her grandfather, Benoni, and the
other judges of the Sanhedrim. They have means to cause the most
obstinate to speak, whereas death seals the lips forever. Swift, now,
swift, for already they are fighting on the market-place."
So they seized Miriam and dragged her away from the Old Tower, which
an hour later was taken possession of by the Romans, who destroyed it
with the other buildings.