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Literature Post > Haggard, H. Rider > Pearl-Maiden > Chapter 25

Pearl-Maiden by Haggard, H. Rider - Chapter 25

CHAPTER XXV

THE REWARD OF SATURIUS

Meanwhile, in one of the palaces of the Cæsars not far from the
Capitol, was being enacted another and more stormy scene. It was the
palace of Domitian, whither, the bewildering pomp of the Triumph
finished at last, the prince had withdrawn himself in no happy mood.
That day many things had happened to vex him. First and foremost, as
had been brought home to his mind from minute to minute throughout the
long hours, its glory belonged not to himself, not even to his father,
Vespasian, but to his brother, the conqueror of the Jews. Titus he had
always hated, Titus, who was as beloved of mankind for his virtues,
such as virtues were in that age, as he, Domitian, was execrated for
his vices. Now Titus had returned after a brilliant and successful
campaign to be crowned as Cæsar, to be accepted as the sharer of his
father's government, and to receive the ovations of the populace,
while his brother Domitian must ride almost unnoted behind his
chariot. The plaudits of the roaring mob, the congratulations of the
Senate, the homage of the knights and subject princes, the offerings
of foreign kings, all laid at the feet of Titus, filled him with a
jealousy that went nigh to madness. Soothsayers had told him, it was
true, that his hour would come, that he would live and reign after
Vespasian and Titus had gone down, both of them, to Hades. But even if
they spoke the truth this hour seemed a long way off.

Also there were other things. At the great sacrifice before the temple
of Jupiter, his place had been set too far back where the people could
not see him; at the feast which followed the master of the ceremonies
had neglected, or had forgotten, to pour a libation in his honour.

Further, the beautiful captive, Pearl-Maiden, had appeared in the
procession unadorned by the costly girdle which he had sent her;
while, last of all, the different wines that he had drunk had
disagreed with him, so that because of them, or of the heat of the
sun, he suffered from the headache and sickness to which he was
liable. Pleading this indisposition as an excuse, Domitian left the
banquet very early, and attended by his slaves and musicians retired
to his own palace.

Here his spirits revived somewhat, since he knew that before long his
chamberlain, Saturius, would appear with the lovely Jewish maiden upon
whom he had set his fancy. This at least was certain, for he had
arranged that the auction should be held that evening and instructed
him to buy her at all costs, even for a thousand sestertia. Indeed,
who would dare to bid for a slave that the Prince Domitian desired?

Learning that Saturius had not yet arrived, he went to his private
chambers, and to pass away the time commanded his most beautiful
slaves to dance before him, where he inflamed himself by drinking more
wine of a vintage that he loved. As the fumes of the strong liquor
mounted to his brain the pains in his head ceased, at any rate for a
while. Very soon he became half-drunk, and as was his nature when in
drink, savage. One of the dancing slaves stumbled and growing nervous
stepped out of time, whereon he ordered the poor half-naked girl to be
scourged before him by the hands of her own companions. Happily for
her, however, before the punishment began a slave arrived with the
intelligence that Saturius waited without.

"What, alone?" said the prince, springing to his feet.

"Nay, lord," said the slave, "there is a woman with him."

At this news instantly his ill-temper was forgotten.

"Let that girl go," he said, "and bid her be more careful another
time. Away, all the lot of you, I wish to be private. Now, slave, bid
the worthy Saturius enter with his charge."

Presently the curtains were drawn apart and through them came Saturius
rubbing his hands and smiling somewhat nervously, followed by a woman
wrapped in a long cloak and veiled. He began to offer the customary
salutations, but Domitian cut him short.

"Rise, man," he said. "That sort of thing is very well in public, but
I don't want it here. So you have got her," he added, eyeing the
draped form in the background.

"Yes," replied Saturius doubtfully.

"Good, your services shall be remembered. You were ever a discreet and
faithful agent. Did the bidding run high?"

"Oh! my lord, enormous, ee--normous. I never heard such bidding," and
he stretched out his hands.

"Impertinence! Who dared to compete with me?" remarked Domitian.
"Well, what did you have to give?"

"Fifty sestertia, my lord."

"Fifty sestertia?" answered Domitian with an air of relief. "Well, of
course it is enough, but I have known beautiful maidens fetch more. By
the way, dear one," he went on, addressing the veiled woman, "you
must, I fear, be tired after all that weary, foolish show."

The "dear one" making no audible reply, Domitian went on:

"Modesty is pleasing in a maid, but now I pray you, forget it for
awhile. Unveil yourself, most beautiful, that I may behold that
loveliness for which my heart has ached these many days. Nay, that
task shall be my own," and he advanced somewhat unsteadily towards his
prize.

Saturius thought that he saw his chance. Domitian was so intoxicated
that it would be useless to attempt to explain matters that night.
Clearly he should retire as soon as possible.

"Most noble prince and patron," he began, "my duty is done, with your
leave I will withdraw."

"By no means, by no means," hiccupped Domitian, "I know that you are
an excellent judge of beauty, most discriminating Saturius, and I
should like to talk over the points of this lady with you. You know,
dear Saturius, that I am not selfish, and to tell the truth, which you
won't mind between friends--who could be jealous of a wizened, last
year's walnut of a man like you? Not I, Saturius, not I, whom
everybody acknowledges to be the most beautiful person in Rome, much
better looking than Titus is, although he does call himself Cæsar. Now
for it. Where's the fastening? Saturius, find the fastening. Why do
you tie up the poor girl like an Egyptian corpse and prevent her lord
and master from looking at her?"

As he spoke the slave did something to the back of her head and the
veil fell to the ground, revealing a girl of very pleasing shape and
countenance, but who, as might be expected, looked most weary and
frightened. Domitian stared at her with his bleared and wicked eyes,
while a puzzled expression grew upon his face.

"Very odd!" he said, "but she seems to have changed! I thought her
eyes were blue, and that she had curling black hair. Now they are dark
and she has straight hair. Where's the necklace, too? Where's the
necklace? Pearl-Maiden, what have you done with your necklace? Yes,
and why didn't you wear the girdle I sent you to-day?"

"Sir," answered the Jewess, "I never had a necklace----"

"My lord Domitian," began Saturius with a nervous laugh, "there is a
mistake--I must explain. This girl is not Pearl-Maiden. Pearl-Maiden
fetched so great a price that it was impossible that I should buy her,
even for you----"

He stopped, for suddenly Domitian's face had become terrible. All the
drunkenness had left it, to be replaced by a mask of savage cruelty
through which glared the pale and glittering eyes. The man appeared as
he was, half satyr and half fiend.

"A mistake----" he said. "Oh! a mistake? And I have been counting on
her all these weeks, and now some other man has taken her from me--the
prince Domitian. And you--you dare to come to me with this tale, and
to bring this slut with you instead of my Pearl-Maiden----" and at the
thought he fairly sobbed in his drunken, disappointed rage. Then he
stepped back and began to clap his hands and call aloud.

Instantly slaves and guards rushed into the chamber, thinking that
their lord was threatened with some evil.

"Men," he said, "take that woman and kill her. No, it might make a
stir, as she was one of Titus's captives. Don't kill her, thrust her
into the street."

The girl was seized by the arms and dragged away.

"Oh! my lord," began Saturius.

"Silence, man, I am coming to you. Seize him, and strip him. Oh! I
know you are a freedman and a citizen of Rome. Well, soon you shall be
a citizen of Hades, I promise you. Now, bring the heavy rods and beat
him till he dies."

The dreadful order was obeyed, and for a while nothing was heard save
the sound of heavy blows and the smothered moans of the miserable
Saturius.

"Wretches," yelled the Imperial brute, "you are playing, you do not
hit hard enough. I will teach you how to hit," and snatching a rod
from one of the slaves he rushed at his prostrate chamberlain, the
others drawing back to allow their master to show his skill in
flogging.

Saturius saw Domitian come, and knew that unless he could change his
purpose in another minute the life would be battered out of him. He
struggled to his knees.

"Prince," he cried, "hearken ere you strike. You can kill me if you
will who are justly angered, and to die at your hands is an honour
that I do not merit. Yet, dread lord, remember that if you slay me
then you will never find that Pearl-Maiden whom you desire."

Domitian paused, for even in his fury he was cunning. "Doubtless," he
thought, "the knave knows where the girl is. Perhaps even he has
hidden her away for himself."

"Ah!" he said aloud, quoting the vulgar proverb, "'the rod is the
mother of reason.' Well, can you find her?"

"Surely, if I have time. The man who can afford to pay two thousand
sestertia for a single slave cannot easily be hidden."

"Two thousand sestertia!" exclaimed Domitian astonished. "Tell me that
story. Slaves, give Saturius his robe and fall back--no, not too far,
he may be treacherous."

The chamberlain threw the garment over his bleeding shoulders and
fastened it with a trembling hand. Then he told his tale, adding:

"Oh! my lord, what could I do? You have not enough money at hand to
pay so huge a sum."

"Do, fool? Why you should have bought her on credit and left me to
settle the price afterwards. Oh! never mind Titus, I could have
outwitted him. But the mischief is done; now for the remedy, so far as
it can be remedied," he added, grinding his teeth.

"That I must seek to-morrow, lord."

"To-morrow? And what will you do to-morrow?"

"To-morrow I will find where the girl's gone, or try to, and then--why
he who has bought her might die and--the rest will be easy."

"Die he surely shall be who has dared to rob Domitian of his darling,"
answered the prince with an oath. "Well, hearken, Saturius, for this
night you are spared, but be sure that if you fail for the second time
you also shall die, and after a worse fashion than I promised you. Now
go, and to-morrow we will take counsel. Oh! ye gods, why do you deal
so hardly with Domitian? My soul is bruised and must be comforted with
poesy. Rouse that Greek from his bed and send him to me. He shall read
to me of the wrath of Achilles when they robbed him of his Briseis,
for the hero's lot is mine."

So this new Achilles departed, now that his rage had left him, weeping
maudlin tears of disappointed passion, to comfort his "bruised soul"
with the immortal lines of Homer, for when he was not merely a brute
Domitian fancied himself a poet. It was perhaps as well for his peace
of mind that he could not see the face of Saturius, as the chamberlain
comforted his bruised shoulders with some serviceable ointment, or
hear the oath which that useful and industrious officer uttered as he
sought his rest, face downwards, since for many days thereafter he was
unable to lie upon his back. It was a very ugly oath, sworn by every
god who had an altar in Rome, with the divinities of the Jews and the
Christians thrown in, that in a day to come he would avenge Domitian's
rods with daggers. Had the prince been able to do so, there might have
risen in his mind some prescience of a certain scene, in which he must
play a part on a far-off but destined night. He might have beheld a
vision of himself, bald, corpulent and thin-legged, but wearing the
imperial robes of Cæsar, rolling in a frantic struggle for life upon
the floor of his bed-chamber, at death grips with one Stephanus, while
an old chamberlain named Saturius drove a dagger again and again into
his back, crying at each stroke:

"Oho! That for thy rods, Cæsar! Oho! Dost remember the Pearl-Maiden?
That for thy rods, Cæsar, and that--and that--and /that/----!"

But Domitian, weeping himself to sleep over the tale of the wrongs of
the god-like Achilles, which did but foreshadow those of his divine
self, as yet thought nothing of the rich reward that time should bring
him.



On the morrow of the great day of the Triumph the merchant Demetrius
of Alexandria, whom for many years we have known as Caleb, sat in the
office of the store-house which he had hired for the bestowal of his
goods in one of the busiest thoroughfares of Rome. Handsome, indeed,
noble-looking as he was, and must always be, his countenance presented
a sorry sight. From hour to hour during the previous day he had fought
a path through the dense crowds that lined the streets of Rome, to
keep as near as might be to Miriam while she trudged her long route of
splendid shame.

Then came the evening, when, with the other women slaves, she was put
up to auction in the Forum. To prepare for this sale Caleb had turned
almost all his merchandise into money, for he knew that Domitian was a
purchaser, and guessed that the price of the beautiful Pearl-Maiden,
of whom all the city was talking, would rule high. The climax we know.
He bid to the last coin that he possessed or could raise, only to find
that others with still greater resources were in the market. Even the
agent of the prince had been left behind, and Miriam was at last
knocked down to some mysterious stranger woman dressed like a peasant.
The woman was veiled and disguised; she spoke with a feigned voice and
in a strange tongue, but from the beginning Caleb knew her. Incredible
as it might seem, that she should be here in Rome, he was certain that
she was Nehushta, and no other.

That Nehushta should buy Miriam was well, but how came she by so vast
a sum of money, here in a far-off land? In short, for whom was she
buying? Indeed, for whom would she buy? He could think of one only--
Marcus. But he had made inquiries and Marcus was not in Rome. Indeed
he had every reason to believe that his rival was long dead, that his
bones were scattered among the tens of thousands which whitened the
tumbled ruins of the Holy City in Judæa. How could it be otherwise? He
had last seen him wounded, as he thought to death--and he should know,
for the stroke fell from his own hand--lying senseless in the Old
Tower in Jerusalem. Then he vanished away, and where Marcus had been
Miriam was found. Whither did he vanish, and if it was true that she
succeeded in hiding him in some secret hole, what chance was there
that he could have lived on without food and unsuccoured? Also if he
lived, why had he not appeared long before? Why was not so wealthy a
Patrician and distinguished a soldier riding in the triumphant train
of Titus?

With black despair raging in his breast, he, Caleb, had seen Miriam
knocked down to the mysterious basket-laden stranger whom none could
recognise. He had seen her depart together with the auctioneer and a
servant, also basket-laden, to the office of the receiving house,
whither he had attempted to follow upon some pretext, only to be
stopped by the watchman. After this he hung about the door until he
saw the auctioneer appear alone, when it occurred to him that the
purchaser and the purchased must have departed by some other exit,
perhaps in order to avoid further observation. He ran round the
building to find himself confronted only by the empty, star-lit spaces
of the Forum. Searching them with his eyes, for one instant it seemed
to him that far away he caught sight of a little knot of figures
climbing a black marble stair in the dark shadow of some temple. He
sped across the open space, he ran up the great stair, to find at the
head of it a young man in whom he recognised the auctioneer's clerk,
gazing along a wide street as empty as was the stair.

The rest is known to us. He followed, and twice perceived the little
group of dark-robed figures hurrying round distant corners. Once he
lost them altogether, but a passer-by on his road to some feast told
him courteously enough which way they had gone. On he ran almost at
hazard, to be rewarded in the end by the sight of them vanishing
through a narrow doorway in the wall. He came to the door and saw that
it was very massive. He tried it even, it was locked. Then he thought
of knocking, only to remember that to state his business would
probably be to meet his death. At such a place and hour those who
purchased beautiful slaves might have a sword waiting for the heart of
an unsuccessful rival who dared to follow them to their haunts.

Caleb walked round the house, to find that it was a palace which
seemed to be deserted, although he thought that he saw light shining
through one of the shuttered windows. Now he knew the place again. It
was here that the procession had halted and one of the Roman soldiers
who had committed the crime of being taken captive escaped the taunts
of the crowd by hurling himself beneath the wheel of a great pageant
car. Yes, there was no doubt of it, for his blood still stained the
dusty stones and by it lay a piece of the broken distaff with which,
in their mockery, they had girded the poor man. They were gentle
folk, these Romans! Why, measured by this standard, some such doom
would have fallen upon his rival, Marcus, for Marcus also was taken
prisoner--by himself. The thought made Caleb smile, since well he knew
that no braver soldier lived. Then came other thoughts that pressed
him closer. Somewhere in that great dead-looking house was Miriam, as
far off from him as though she were still in Judæa. There was Miriam--
and who was with her? The new-found lord who had spent two thousand
sestertia on her purchase? The thought of it almost turned his brain.

Heretofore, the life of Caleb had been ruled by two passions--ambition
and the love of Miriam. He had aspired to be ruler of the Jews,
perhaps their king, and to this end had plotted and fought for the
expulsion of the Romans from Judæa. He had taken part in a hundred
desperate battles. Again and again he had risked his life; again and
again he had escaped. For one so young he had reached high rank, till
he was numbered among the first of their captains.

Then came the end, the last hideous struggle and the downfall. Once
more his life was left in him. Where men perished by the hundred
thousand he escaped, winning safety, not through the desire of it, but
because of the love of Miriam which drove him on to follow her.
Happily for himself he had hidden money, which, after the gift of his
race, he was able to turn to good account, so that now he, who had
been a leader in war and council, walked the world as a merchant in
Eastern goods. All that glittering past had gone from him; he might
become wealthy, but, Jew as he was, he could never be great nor fill
his soul with the glory that it craved. There remained to him, then,
nothing but this passion for one woman among the millions who dwelt
beneath the sun, the girl who had been his playmate, whom he loved
from the beginning, although she had never loved him, and whom he
would love until the end.

Why had she not loved him? Because of his rival, that accursed Roman,
Marcus, the man whom time upon time he had tried to kill, but who had
always slipped like water from his hands. Well, if she was lost to him
she was lost to Marcus also, and from that thought he would take such
comfort as he might. Indeed he had no other, for during those dreadful
hours the fires of all Gehenna raged in his soul. He had lost--but who
had found her?

Throughout the long night Caleb tramped round the cold, empty-looking
palace, suffering perhaps as he had never suffered before, a thing to
be pitied of gods and men. At length the dawn broke and the light
crept down the splendid street, showing here and there groups of weary
and half-drunken revellers staggering homewards from the feast,
flushed men and dishevelled women. Others appeared also, humble and
industrious citizens going to their daily toil. Among them were people
whose business it was to clean the roads, abroad early this morning,
for after the great procession they thought that they might find
articles of value let fall by those who walked in it, or by the
spectators. Two of these scavengers began sweeping near the place
where Caleb stood, and lightened their toil by laughing at him, asking
him if he had spent his night in the gutter and whether he knew his
way home. He replied that he waited for the doors of the house to be
opened.

"Which house?" they asked. "The 'Fortunate House?'" and they pointed
to the marble palace of Marcus, which, as Caleb now saw for the first
time, had these words blazoned in gold letters on its portico.

He nodded.

"Well," said one of them, "you will wait for some time, for that house
is no longer fortunate. Its owner is dead, killed in the wars, and no
one knows who his heir may be."

"What was his name?" he asked.

"Marcus, the favourite of Nero, also called the Fortunate."

Then, with a bitter curse upon his lips Caleb turned and walked away.