<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<div class="epigram"><p>"Hope deferred maketh the heart sick."—<span class="smcap">Proverbs xiii. 12.</span></p>
</div>
<p>Alas, the Roman gods are the gods of the patricians! They take so little
heed of the sorrows and the trials of poor freedmen and slaves!</p>
<p>"Who ordered the hat to be put on this girl's head?" suddenly interposed
the harsh voice of the praefect.</p>
<p>He had not moved away from the rostrum all the while that the throng of
obsequious sycophants and idle lovesick youths had crowded round Dea
Flavia. Now he spoke over his shoulder at Hun Rhavas, who had no
thought, whilst his comfortable little plot was succeeding so well, that
the praefect was paying heed.</p>
<p>"She hath no guarantee, as my lord's grace himself hath knowledge," said
the African with anxious humility.</p>
<p>"Nay! thou liest as to my knowledge of it," said Taurus Antinor. "Where
is the list of goods compiled by the censor?"</p>
<p>Three pairs of willing hands were ready with the parchment rolls which
the praefect had commanded; one was lucky enough to place them in his
hands.</p>
<p>"What is the girl's name?" he asked as his deep-set eyes, under their
perpetual frown, ran down the minute writing on the parchment roll.</p>
<p>"Nola, the daughter of Menecreta, my lord," said one of the scribes.</p>
<p>"I do not see the name of Nola, daughter of Menecreta, amongst those
whom the State doth not guarantee for skill, health or condition,"
rejoined the praefect quietly, and his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span> rough voice, scarcely raised
above its ordinary pitch, seemed to ring a death-knell in poor
Menecreta's heart.</p>
<p>"Nola, the daughter of Menecreta," he continued, once more referring to
the parchment in his hand, "is here described as sixteen years of age,
of sound health and robust constitution, despite the spareness of her
body. The censor who compiled this list states that she has a fair
knowledge of the use of unguents and of herbs, that she can use a needle
and plait a lady's hair. Thou didst know all this, Hun Rhavas, for the
duplicate list is before thee even now."</p>
<p>"My lord's grace," murmured Hun Rhavas, his voice quivering now, his
limbs shaking with the fear in him, "I did not know—I——"</p>
<p>"Thou didst endeavour to defraud the State for purposes of thine own,"
interposed the praefect calmly. "Here! thou!" he added, beckoning to one
of his lictors, "take this man to the Regia and hand him over to the
chief warder."</p>
<p>"My lord's grace——" cried Hun Rhavas.</p>
<p>"Silence! To-morrow thou'lt appear before me in the basilica. Bring thy
witnesses then if thou hast any to speak in thy defence. To-morrow thou
canst plead before me any circumstance which might mitigate thy fault
and stay my lips from condemning thee to that severe chastisement which
crimes against the State deserve. In the meanwhile hold thy peace. I'll
not hear another word."</p>
<p>But it was not in the negro's blood to submit to immediate punishment
now and certain chastisement in the future without vigorous
protestations and the generous use of his powerful lungs. The praefect's
sentences in the tribunal where he administered justice were not
characterised by leniency; the galleys, the stone-quarries, aye! even
the cross were all within the bounds of possibility, whilst the scourge
was an absolute certainty.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Hun Rhavas set up a succession of howls which echoed from temple to
temple, from one end of the Forum to the other.</p>
<p>The frown on the praefect's forehead became even more marked than
before. He had seen the young idlers—who, but a moment ago, were
fawning round Dea Flavia's litter—turning eagerly back towards the
rostrum, where Hun Rhavas' cries and moans had suggested the likelihood
of one of those spectacles of wanton and purposeless cruelty in which
their perverted senses found such constant delight.</p>
<p>But this spectacle Taurus Antinor was not like to give them. All he
wanted was the quick restoration of peace and order. The fraudulent
auctioneer was naught in his sight but a breaker of the law. As such he
was deserving of such punishment as the law decreed and no more. But his
howls just now were the means of rousing in the hearts of the crowd that
most despicable of all passions to which the Roman—the master of
civilisation—was a prey—the love of seeing some creature, man or
beast, in pain, a passion which brought the Roman citizen down to the
level of the brute: therefore Taurus Antinor wished above all to silence
Hun Rhavas.</p>
<p>"One more sound from thy throat and I'll have thee scourged now and
branded ere thy trial," he said.</p>
<p>The threat was sufficient. The negro, feeling that in submission lay his
chief hope of mercy on the morrow, allowed himself to be led away
quietly whilst the young patricians—cheated of an anticipated
pleasure—protested audibly.</p>
<p>"And thou, Cheiron," continued the praefect, addressing a fair-skinned
slave up on the rostrum who had been assistant hitherto in the auction,
"do thou take the place vacated by Hun Rhavas."</p>
<p>He gave a few quick words of command to the lictors.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Take the hat from off that girl's head," he said, "and put the
inscribed tablet round her neck. Then she can be set up for sale as the
State hath decreed."</p>
<p>As if moved by clockwork one of the lictors approached the girl and
removed the unbecoming hat from her head, releasing a living stream of
gold which, as it rippled over the girl's shoulders, roused a quick cry
of admiration in the crowd.</p>
<p>In a moment Menecreta realised that her last hope must yield to the
inevitable now. Even whilst her accomplice, Hun Rhavas, received the
full brunt of the praefect's wrath she had scarcely dared to breathe,
scarcely felt that she lived in this agony of fear. Her child still
stood there on the platform, disfigured by the ugly headgear, obviously
most unattractive to the crowd; nor did the awful possibility at first
present itself to her mind that all her schemes for obtaining possession
of her daughter could come to naught. It was so awful, so impossible of
conception that the child should here, to-day, pass out of the mother's
life for ever and without hope of redemption; that she should become the
property of a total stranger who might for ever refuse to part from her
again—an agriculturist, mayhap, who lived far off in Ethuria or
Macedon—and that she, the mother, could never, never, hope to see her
daughter again—that was a thought which was so horrible that its very
horror seemed to render its realisation impossible.</p>
<p>But now the praefect, with that harsh, pitiless voice of his, was
actually ordering the girl to be sold in the usual way, with all her
merits exhibited to the likely purchaser: her golden hair—a perfect
glory—to tempt the artistic eye, her skill recounted in fulsomeness,
her cleverness with the needle, her knowledge of healing herbs.</p>
<p>The mother suddenly felt that every one in that cruel<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span> gaping crowd must
be pining to possess such a treasure, that the combined wealth of every
citizen of Rome would be lavished in this endeavour to obtain the great
prize. The praefect himself, mayhap, would bid for her, or the
imperator's agents!—alas! everything seemed possible to the anxious,
the ridiculous, the sublime heart of the doting mother, and when that
living mass of golden ripples glimmered in the noonday sun,
Menecreta—forgetting her timidity, her fears, her weakness—pushed her
way through the crowd with all the strength of her despair, and with a
cry of agonised entreaty, threw herself at the feet of the praefect of
Rome.</p>
<p>"My lord's grace, have mercy! have pity! I entreat thee! In the name of
the gods, of thy mother, of thy child if thou hast one, have pity on me!
have pity! have pity!"</p>
<p>The lictors had sprung forward in a moment and tried to seize the woman
who had dared to push her way to the praefect's closely guarded
presence, and was crouching there, her arms encircling his thighs, her
face pressed close against his knees. One of the men raised his flail
and brought it down with cruel strength on her thinly covered shoulders,
but she did not heed the blow, mayhap she never felt it.</p>
<p>"Who ordered thee to strike?" said Taurus Antinor sternly to the lictor
who already had the flail raised for the second time.</p>
<p>"The woman doth molest my lord's grace," protested the man.</p>
<p>"Have I said so?"</p>
<p>"No, my lord—but I thought to do my duty——"</p>
<p>"That thought will cost thee ten such lashes with the rods as thou didst
deal this woman. By Jupiter!" he added roughly, whilst for the first
time a look of ferocity as that of an angry beast lit up the
impassiveness of his deep-set eyes,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</SPAN></span> "if this turmoil continues I'll
have every slave here flogged till he bleed. Is the business of the
State to be hindered by the howlings of this miserable rabble? Get thee
gone, woman," he cried finally, looking down on prostrate Menecreta,
"get thee gone ere my lictors do thee further harm."</p>
<p>But she, with the obstinacy of a great sorrow, clung to his knees and
would not move.</p>
<p>"My lord's grace, have pity—'tis my child; an thou takest her from me
thou'lt part those whom the gods themselves have united—'tis my child,
my lord! hast no children of thine own?"</p>
<p>"What dost prate about?" he asked, still speaking roughly for he was
wroth with her and hated to see the gaping crowd of young, empty-headed
fools congregating round him and this persistent suppliant hanging round
his shins. "Thy child? who's thy child? And what hath thy child to do
with me?"</p>
<p>"She is but a babe, my lord," said Menecreta with timid, tender voice;
"her age only sixteen. A hand-maiden she was to Arminius Quirinius, who
gave the miserable mother her freedom but kept the daughter so that he
might win good money by and by through the selling of the child. My
lord's grace, I have toiled for six years that in the end I might buy my
daughter's freedom. Fifty aurei did Arminius Quirinius demand as her
price and I worked my fingers to the bone so that in time I might save
that money. But Arminius Quirinius is dead and I have only twenty aurei.
With the hat of disgrace on her head the child could have been knocked
down to me—but now! now! look at her, my lord, how beautiful she is!
and I have only twenty aurei!"</p>
<p>Taurus Antinor had listened quite patiently to Menecreta's tale. His
sun-tanned face clearly showed how hard<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</SPAN></span> he was trying to gather up the
tangled threads of her scrappy narrative. Nor did the lictors this time
try to interfere with the woman. The praefect apparently was in no easy
temper to-day, and when ill-humour seized him rods and flails were kept
busy.</p>
<p>"And why didst not petition me before?" he asked, after a while, when
Menecreta paused in order to draw breath.</p>
<p>And his face looked so fierce, his voice sounded so rough, no wonder the
poor woman trembled as she whispered through her tears:</p>
<p>"I did not dare, my lord—I did not dare."</p>
<p>"Yet thou didst dare openly to outrage the law!"</p>
<p>"I wanted my child."</p>
<p>"And how many aurei didst promise to Hun Rhavas for helping thee to
defraud the State?"</p>
<p>"Only five, my lord," she murmured.</p>
<p>"Then," he said sternly, "not only didst thou conspire to cheat the
State for whose benefit the sale of the late censor's goods was ordered
by imperial decree, but thou didst bribe another—a slave of the
treasury—to aid and abet thee in this fraud."</p>
<p>Menecreta's grasp round the praefect's knees did not relax and he made
no movement to free himself, but her head fell sideways against her
shoulder whilst her lips murmured in tones of utter despair:</p>
<p>"I wanted my child."</p>
<p>"For thy delinquencies," resumed the praefect, seemingly not heeding the
pathetic appeal, "thou shalt appear before my tribunal on the morrow
like unto Hun Rhavas thine accomplice, and thou shalt then be punished
no less than thou deservest. But this is no place for the delivery of my
judgment upon thee, and the sale must proceed as the law directs; thy
daughter must stand upon the catasta, thou canst renew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</SPAN></span> thy bid of
twenty aurei for her, and," he added with unmistakable significance, as
throwing his head back his imperious glance swept over the assembled
crowd, "as there will be no higher bid for Nola, daughter of Menecreta,
she will become thy property as by law decreed."</p>
<p>The true meaning of this last sentence was quite unmistakable. The crowd
who had gathered round the rostrum to watch, gaping, the moving
incident, looked on the praefect and understood no one was to bid for
Nola, the daughter of Menecreta. Taurus Antinor, surnamed Anglicanus,
had spoken and it would not be to anyone's advantage to quarrel with his
arbitrary pronouncement for the sake of any slave girl, however
desirable she might be. It was not pleasant to encounter the wrath of
the praefect of Rome nor safe to rouse his enmity.</p>
<p>So the crowd acquiesced silently, not only because it feared the
praefect, but also because Menecreta's sorrow, the call of the
despairing mother, the sad tragedy of this little domestic episode had
not left untouched the hearts of these Roman citizens. In matters of
sentiment they were not cruel and they held family ties in great esteem;
both these factors went far towards causing any would-be purchaser to
obey Taurus Antinor's commands and to retire at once from the bidding.</p>
<p>As for Menecreta, it seemed to her as if the heavens had opened before
her delighted gaze. From the depths of despair she had suddenly been
dragged forth into the blinding daylight of hope. She could scarcely
believe that her ears had heard rightly the words of the praefect.</p>
<p>Still clinging to his knees she raised her head to him; her eyes still
dimmed with tears looked strangely wondering up at his face whilst her
lips murmured faintly:</p>
<p>"Art thou a god, that thou shouldst act like this?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But obviously the small stock of patience possessed by the praefect was
now exhausted, for he pushed the woman roughly away from him.</p>
<p>"A truce on thy ravings now, woman. The midday hour is almost on us. I
have no further time to waste on thine affairs. Put the girl up on the
catasta," he added, speaking in his usual harsh, curt way, "and take
this woman's arms from round my shins."</p>
<p>And it was characteristic of him that this time he did not interfere
with his lictors when they handled the woman with their accustomed
roughness.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span></p>
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