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<h2> CHAPTER XII </h2>
<h3> THE RING, THE NECKLACE AND THE LETTER </h3>
<p>So Miriam came to Tyre, where, for many months, her life was peaceful and
happy enough. At first she had feared meeting Caleb, who she knew from her
grandfather was dwelling there; but as it chanced, he had left the city
upon business of his own, so for the while she was free of him. In Tyre
were many Christians with whom she made friends and worshipped, Benoni
pretending to know nothing of the matter. Indeed, at this time and place
it was the Jews rather than the Christians who were in danger at the hands
of the Syrians and Greeks, who hated them for their wealth and faith,
threatening them continually with robbery and massacre. But as yet that
storm did not burst, and in its brewing the Christians, who were few,
humble, and of all races, escaped notice.</p>
<p>Thus it came about that Miriam dwelt in quiet, occupying herself much with
her art of modelling and going abroad but little, since it was scarcely
safe for her, the grandchild of the rich Jew merchant, to show her face in
the streets. Though she was surrounded by every luxury, far more than she
needed, indeed, this lack of liberty irked her who had been reared in the
desert, till at times she grew melancholy and would sit for hours looking
on the sea and thinking. She thought of her mother who had sat thus before
her; of her father, who had perished beneath the gladiators' swords; of
the kindly old men who had nurtured her, and of the sufferings of her
brothers and sisters in the faith in Rome and at Jerusalem. But most of
all she thought of Marcus, her Roman lover, whom, strive as she would, she
could never forget—no, not for a single hour. She loved him, that
was the truth of it, and between them there was a great gulf fixed, not of
the sea only, which ships could sail, but of that command which the dead
had laid upon her. He was a pagan and she was a Christian, and they might
not wed. By now, too, it was likely that he had forgotten her, the girl
who took his fancy in the desert. At Rome there were many noble and lovely
women—oh! she could scarcely bear to think of it. Yet night by night
she prayed for him, and morn by morn his face arose before her
half-awakened eyes. Where was he? What was he doing? For aught she knew he
might be dead. Nay, for then, surely, her heart would have warned her.
Still, she craved for tidings, and alas! there were none.</p>
<p>At length tidings did come—the best of tidings. One day, wearying of
the house, with the permission of her grandfather, and escorted by
servants, Miriam had gone to walk in the gardens that he owned to the
north of that part of the city on the mainland, which was called
Pal�tyrus. They were lovely gardens, well watered and running down to the
sea-edge, and in them grew beautiful palms and other trees, with fruitful
shrubs and flowers. Here, when they had roamed a while, Miriam and
Nehushta sat down upon the fallen column of some old temple and rested.
Suddenly they heard a footstep, and Miriam looked up to see before her a
Roman officer, clad in a cloak that showed signs of sea-travel, and,
guiding him, one of Benoni's servants.</p>
<p>The officer, a rough but kindly looking man of middle age, bowed to her,
asking in Greek if he spoke to the lady Miriam, the granddaughter of
Benoni the Jew, she who had been brought up among the Essenes.</p>
<p>"Sir, I am she," answered Miriam.</p>
<p>"Then, lady, I, who am named Gallus, have an errand to perform"; and
drawing from his robe a letter tied with silk and sealed, and with the
letter a package, he handed them to her.</p>
<p>"Who sends these?" she asked, hope shining in her eyes, "and whence come
they?"</p>
<p>"From Rome, lady, as fast as sails could waft them and me. And the sender
is the noble Marcus, called the Fortunate."</p>
<p>"Oh!" said Miriam, blushing to her eyes, "tell me, sir, is he well?"</p>
<p>"Not so well but that such a look as that, lady, would better him, or any
other man, could he be here to see it," answered the Roman, gazing at her
with admiration.</p>
<p>"Did you then leave him ill? I do not understand."</p>
<p>"Nay, his health seemed sound, and his uncle Caius being dead his wealth
can scarce be counted, or so they say, since the old man made him his
heir. Perhaps that is why the divine Nero has taken such a fancy to him
that he can scarce leave the palace. Therefore I cannot say that Marcus is
well to-day, since sometimes Nero's friends are short-lived. Nay, be not
frightened, I did but jest; your Marcus is safe enough. Read the letter,
lady, and waste no time. As for me, my mission is fulfilled. Thank me not;
it is reward enough to have seen that sweet face of yours. Fortunate indeed
is the star of Marcus, and, though I am jealous of the man, for your sake
I pray that it may lead him back to you. Lady, farewell."</p>
<p>"Cut the silk, Nou," said Miriam when the Captain Gallus had gone. "Quick.
I have no knife."</p>
<p>Nehushta obeyed smiling and the letter was unrolled. It, or those parts of
it which concern us, ran thus:</p>
<p>"To the lady Miriam, from Marcus the Roman, her friend, by the hand of the
Captain Gallus.</p>
<p>"Dear friend and lady, greeting. Already since I came here I have written
you one letter, but this day news has reached me that the ship which bore
it foundered off the coast of Sicily. So, as Neptune has that letter, and
with it many good men, although I write more ill than I do most things, I
send you another by this occasion, hoping, I who am vain, that you have
not forgotten me, and that the reading of it may even give you pleasure.
Most dear Miriam, know that I accomplished my voyage to Rome in safety,
visiting your grandsire on the way to pay him a debt I owed. But that
story you will perhaps have heard.</p>
<p>"From Tyre I sailed for Italy, but was cast away upon the coasts of
Melita, where many of us were drowned. By the favour of some god, however—ah!
what god I wonder—I escaped, and taking another ship came safely to
Brundisium, whence I travelled as fast as horses would carry me to Rome.
Here I arrived but just in time, for I found my uncle Caius very will.
Believing, moreover, that I had been drowned in the shipwreck at Melita,
he was about to make a will bequeathing his property to the Emperor Nero,
but by good fortune of this he had said nothing. Had he done so I should,
I think, be as poor to-day as when I left you, dear, and perhaps poorer
still, for I might have lost my head with my inheritance.</p>
<p>"As it was I found favour in the sight of my uncle Caius, who a week after
my arrival executed a formal testament leaving to me all his land, goods,
and moneys, which on his death three months later I inherited. Thus I have
become rich—so rich that now, having much money to spend, by some
perversity which I cannot explain, I have grown careful and spend as
little as possible. After I had entered into my inheritance I made a plan
to return to Jud�a, for one reason and one alone—to be near to you,
most sweet Miriam. At the last moment I was stayed by a very evil chance.
That bust which you made of me I had managed to save from the shipwreck
and bring safe to Rome—now I wish it was at the bottom of the sea,
and you shall learn why.</p>
<p>"When I came into possession of this house in the Via Agrippa, which is
large and beautiful, I set it in a place of honour in the antechamber and
summoned that sculptor, Glaucus, of whom I have spoken to you, and others
who follow the art, to come and pass judgment upon the work. They came,
they wondered and they were silent, for each of them feared lest in
praising it he should exalt some rival. When, however, I told them that it
was the work of a lady in Jud�a, although they did not believe me, since
all of them declared that no woman had shaped that marble, knowing that
they had nothing to fear from so distant an artist whoever he might be,
they began to praise the work with one voice, and all that evening until
the wine overcame them, talked of nothing else. Also they continued
talking on the morrow, until at length the fame of the thing came to the
ears of Nero, who also is an artist of music and other things. The end of
it was that one day, without warning, the Emperor visited my house and
demanded to see the bust, which I showed to him. For many minutes he
examined it through the emerald with which he aids his sight, then asked:</p>
<p>"'What land had the honour to bear the genius who wrought this work?'</p>
<p>"I answered, 'Jud�a,' a country, by the way, of which he seemed to know
little, except that some fanatics dwelt there, who refused to worship him.
He said that he would make that artist ruler of Jud�a. I replied that the
artist was a woman, whereon he answered that he cared nothing—she
should still rule Jud�a, or if this could not be managed he would send and
bring her to Rome to make a statue of him to be set up in the Temple at
Jerusalem for the Jews to worship.</p>
<p>"Now I saw that I had been foolish, and knowing well what would have been
your fate, my Miriam, had he once set eyes on you, I sighed and answered,
that alas! it was impossible, since you were dead, as I proved to him by a
long story with which I will not trouble you. Moreover, now that he was
sure that you were dead, I showed him the little statuette of yourself
looking into water, which you gave me. Whereon he burst into tears, at the
thought that such an one had departed from the earth, while it was still
cursed with so many who are wicked, old and ugly.</p>
<p>"Still he did not go, but remained admiring the bust, till at length one
of his favourites who accompanied him, whispered in my ear that I must
present it to the Emperor. I refused, whereon he whispered back that if I
did not, assuredly before long it would be taken, and with it all my other
goods, and, perhaps, my life. So, since I must, I changed my mind and
prayed him to accept it; whereon he embraced, first the marble and then
me, and caused it to be borne away then and there, leaving me mad with
rage.</p>
<p>"Now I tell you all this silly story for a reason, since it has hindered
and still hinders me from leaving Rome. Thus: two days later I received an
Imperial decree, in which it was stated that the incomparable work of art
brought from Jud�a by Marcus, the son of Emilius, had been set up in a
certain temple, where those who would please their Emperor were desired to
present themselves and worship it and the soul of her by whom it was
fashioned. Moreover, it was commanded that I, Marcus, whose features had
served as a model for the work, should be its guardian and attend twice
weekly in the temple, that all might see how the genius of a great artist
is able to make a thing of immortal beauty from a coarse original of flesh
and blood. Oh, Miriam, I have no patience to write of this folly, yet the
end of it is, that except at the cost of my fortune and the risk of my
life, it is impossible for me to leave Rome. Twice every week, or by
special favour, once only, must I attend in that accursed temple where my
own likeness stands upon a pedestal of marble, and before it a marble
altar, on which are cut the words: 'Sacrifice, O passer-by, to the spirit
of the departed genius who wrought this divine work.'</p>
<p>"Yes, there I sit, I who am a soldier, while fools come in and gaze first
at the marble and then at me, saying things for which often I long to kill
them, and casting grains of incense into the little fire on the altar in
sacrifice to your spirit, whereby I trust it may be benefited. Thus,
Miriam, are we ruled in Rome to-day.</p>
<p>"Meanwhile, I am in great favour with Nero, so that men call me 'the
Fortunate,' and my house the 'Fortunate House,' a title of ill-omen.</p>
<p>"Yet out of this evil comes some good, since because of his present
affection for me, or my bust, I have now and again for your sake, Miriam,
been able to do service, even to the saving of their lives, to those of
your faith. Here there are many Christians whom it is an amusement to Nero
to persecute, torture, and slay, sometimes by soaking them in tar and
making of them living torches to illuminate his gardens, and sometimes in
other fashions. The lives of sundry of these poor people he has given to
me, when I begged them of him. Indeed, he has done more. Yesterday Nero
came himself to the temple and suggested that certain of the Christians
should be sacrificed in a very cruel fashion here as an offering to your
spirit. I answered that this could give it little pleasure, seeing that in
your lifetime you also were a Christian. Thereon he wrung his hands,
crying out, 'Oh! what a crime have I committed,' and instantly gave orders
that no more Christians should be killed. So for a little while, thanks to
your handiwork, and to me who am called 'the Model,' they are safe—those
who are left of them.</p>
<p>"I hear that there are wars and tumults in Jud�a, and that Vespasian, a
great general, is to be sent to quell them. If I can I will come with him,
but at present—such is the madness of my master—this is too
much to hope, unless, indeed, he wearies suddenly of the 'Divine Work' and
its attendant 'Model.'</p>
<p>"Meanwhile I also cast incense upon your altar, and pray that in these
troubles you may come to no harm.</p>
<p>"Miriam, I am most unhappy. I think of you always and yet I cannot come to
you. I picture you in many dangers, and I am not there to save you. I even
dare to hope that you would wish to see me again; but it is the Jew Caleb,
and other men, who see you and make offerings to your sweet beauty as I
make them to your spirit. I beseech you, Miriam, do not accept the
offerings, lest in some day to come, when I am once more a soldier, and
have ceased to be a custodian of busts, it should be the worse for those
worshippers, and especially for Caleb.</p>
<p>"What else have I to tell you? I have sought out some of the great
preachers of your faith, hoping that by the magic whereof they are said to
be masters, they would be able to assure me of your welfare. But to my
sorrow they gave me no magic—in which it seems they do not deal—only
maxims. Also, from these I bought for a great sum certain manuscripts
written by themselves containing the doctrines of your law, which I intend
to study so soon as I have time. Indeed, this is a task which I wish to
postpone, since did I read I might believe and turn Christian, to serve in
due course as a night-light in Nero's gardens.</p>
<p>"I send you a present, praying that you will accept it. The emerald in the
ring is cut by my friend, the sculptor Glaucus. The pearls are fine and
have a history which I hope to tell you some day. Wear them always,
beloved Miriam, for my sake. I do not forget your words; nay, I ponder
them day and night. But at least you said you loved me, and in wearing
these trinkets you break no duty to the dead. Write to me, I pray you, if
you can find a messenger. Or, if you cannot write, think of me always as I
do of you. Oh, that we were back together in that happy village of the
Essenes, to whom, as to yourself, be all good fortune! Farewell.</p>
<p>"Your ever faithful friend and lover,</p>
<p>"Marcus."</p>
<p>Miriam finished her letter, kissed it, and hid it in her bosom. Then she
opened the packet and unlocked the ivory box within by a key that hung to
it. Out of the casket she took a roll of soft leather. This she undid and
uttered a little cry of joy, for there lay a necklace of the most lovely
pearls that she had ever seen. Nor was this all, for threaded on the
pearls was a ring, and cut upon its emerald bezel the head of Marcus, and
her own head taken from the likeness she had given him.</p>
<p>"Look! Nou, look!" said Miriam, showing her the beauteous trinkets.</p>
<p>"A sight to make old eyes glisten," answered Nehushta handling them. "I
know something of pearls, and these are worth a fortune. Happy maid, to
whom is given such a lover."</p>
<p>"Unhappy maid who can never be a happy wife," sighed Miriam, her blue eyes
filling with tears.</p>
<p>"Grieve not; that still may chance," answered Nehushta, as she fastened
the pearls about Miriam's neck. "At least you have heard from him and he
still loves you, which is much. Now for the ring—the marriage finger—see,
how it fits."</p>
<p>"Nay, I have no right," murmured Miriam; still she did not draw it off
again.</p>
<p>"Come, let us be going," said Nehushta, hiding the casket in her amble
robe, "for the sun sinks, and to-night there are guests to supper."</p>
<p>"What guests?" asked Miriam absently.</p>
<p>"Plotters, every one," said Nehushta, shrugging her shoulders. "The great
scheme to drive the Romans from the Holy City ripens fast, and your
grandsire waters its root. I pray that we may not all of us gather bitter
grapes from that vine. Have you heard that Caleb is back in Tyre?"</p>
<p>"Caleb!" faltered Miriam, "No."</p>
<p>"Well, he is. He arrived yesterday and will be among the guests to-night.
He has been fighting up in the desert there, and bravely, for I am told
that he was one of those who seized the fortress of Masada and put its
Roman garrison to the sword."</p>
<p>"Then he is against the Romans?"</p>
<p>"Yes, because he hopes to rule the Jews, and risks much to gain more."</p>
<p>"I do not wish to meet him," said Miriam.</p>
<p>"Nay, but you must, and the sooner the better. Why do you fear the man?"</p>
<p>"I know not, but fear him I do, now and always."</p>
<p>When Miriam entered the supper chamber that night, the guests to the
number of twelve were already seated on their couches, waiting for the
feast to begin. By her grandfather's command she was arrayed in her
richest robes fashioned and broidered after the Grecian fashion, having
her hair gathered into coils upon her head and held with a golden net.
Round her waist was a girdle of gold set with gems, about her throat the
necklace of pearls which Marcus had sent her, and on her hand a single
ring—that with his likeness and her own. As she entered the great
chamber, looking most lovely, notwithstanding her lack of height, her
grandfather came forward to meet her and present her to the guests, who
rose in greeting. One by one they bowed to her and one by one she searched
their faces with her eyes—faces for the most part stern and fierce.
Now all had passed and she sighed with relief, for among them there was no
Caleb. Even as she did so a curtain swung aside and Caleb entered.</p>
<p>It was he, of that there could be no doubt; but oh! how changed since last
she had seen him two years before. Then he had been but a raw, passionate
youth; now he was a tall and splendid young man, very handsome in his dark
fashion, very powerful of frame also and quick of limb. His person was
matched by his attire, which was that of an Eastern warrior noble, and his
mien was proud and conquering. As he advanced the guests bowed to him in
respect, as to a man of great and assured position who may become greater
still. Yes, even Benoni showed him this respect, stepping forward to greet
him. All these greetings Caleb acknowledged lightly, even haughtily, till
of a sudden he saw Miriam standing somewhat in the shadow, and heedless of
the other guests pushed his way towards her.</p>
<p>"Thus we meet again, Miriam," he said, his proud face softening as he
spoke and his eyes gazing on her with a sort of rapture. "Are you pleased
to see me?"</p>
<p>"Surely, Caleb," she answered. "Who would not be well pleased to meet the
playfellow of her childhood?"</p>
<p>He frowned, for childhood and its play were not in his thoughts. Before he
could speak again Benoni commanded the company to be seated, whereon
Miriam took her accustomed place as mistress of the house.</p>
<p>To her surprise Caleb seated himself beside her on the couch that should
have been reserved for the oldest guest, who for some moments was left a
wanderer and wrathful, till Benoni, seeing what had passed, called him to
his side. Then, golden vessels of scented water having been handed by
slaves to each guest in turn, the feast began. As Miriam was about to dip
her fingers in the water she remembered the ring upon her left hand and
turned the bezel inwards. Caleb noted the action, but said nothing.</p>
<p>"Whence come you, Caleb?" she asked.</p>
<p>"From the wars, Miriam. We have thrown down the gate to Rome, and she has
picked it up."</p>
<p>She looked at him inquiringly and asked, "Was it wise?"</p>
<p>"Who can tell?" he answered. "At least it is done. For my part I hesitated
long, but your grandfather won me over, so now I must follow my fate."</p>
<p>Then he began to tell her of the taking of Masada and of the bloody
struggles of the factions in Jerusalem.</p>
<p>After this he spoke of the Essenes, who still occupied their village,
though in fear, for all about them was much fighting; and of their
childish days together—talk which pleased her greatly. Whilst they
spoke thus, a messenger entered the room and whispered something into the
ear of Benoni, who raised his hands to Heaven as though in gratitude.</p>
<p>"What tidings?" asked one.</p>
<p>"This, my friends. Cestius Gallus the Roman has been hunted from the walls
of Jerusalem and his army is destroyed in the pass of Beth-horon."</p>
<p>"God be praised!" said the company as though with one voice.</p>
<p>"God be praised," repeated Caleb, "for so great and glorious a victory!
The accursed Romans are fallen indeed."</p>
<p>Only Miriam said nothing.</p>
<p>"What is in your mind?" he asked looking at her.</p>
<p>"That they will spring up again stronger than before," she replied, then
at a signal from Benoni, rose and left the feast.</p>
<p>From the supper chamber Miriam passed down a passage to the portico and
there seated herself, resting her arms upon the marble balustrade and
listening to the waves as they lapped against the walls below.</p>
<p>That day had been disturbed, different, indeed, from all the peaceful days
which she was wont to spend. First had come the messenger bearing her
lover's gifts and letter which already she longed to read again; then hard
upon his heels, like storm upon the sunshine, he who, unless she was
mistaken, still wished to be her lover—Caleb. How curious was the
lot of all three of them! How strangely had they been exalted! She, the
orphan ward of the Essenes, was now a great and wealthy lady with
everything her heart could desire—except one thing, indeed, which it
desired most of all. And Marcus, the debt-saddled Roman soldier of
fortune, he also, it seemed, had suddenly become great and wealthy, pomps
that he held at the price of playing some fool's part in a temple to
satisfy the whimsy of an Imperial madman.</p>
<p>Caleb, too, had found fortune, and in these tumultuous times risen
suddenly to place and power. All three of them were seated upon pinnacles,
but as Miriam felt, they were pinnacles of snow, which for aught she knew,
might be melted by the very sun of their prosperity. She was young, she
had little experience, yet as Miriam sat there watching the changeful sea,
there came upon her a great sense of the instability of things, and an
instinctive knowledge of their vanity. The men who were great one day,
whose names sounded in the mouths of all, the next had vanished, disgraced
or dead. Parties rose and parties fell, high priest succeeded high priest,
general supplanted general, yet upon each and all of them, like the
following waves that rolled beneath her, came dark night and oblivion. A
little dancing in the sunshine, a little moaning in the shade, then death,
and after death——</p>
<p>"What are you thinking of, Miriam?" said a rich voice at her elbow, the
voice of Caleb.</p>
<p>She started, for here she believed herself alone, then answered:</p>
<p>"My thoughts matter nothing. Why are you here? You should be with your
fellow——"</p>
<p>"Conspirators. Why do you not say the word? Well, because sometimes one
wearies even of conspiracy. Just now we triumph and can take our ease. I
wish to make the most of it. What ring is that you wear upon your finger?"</p>
<p>Miriam straightened herself and grew bold.</p>
<p>"One which Marcus sent me," she answered.</p>
<p>"I guessed as much. I have heard of him; he has become a creature of the
mad Nero, the laughing-stock of Rome."</p>
<p>"I do not laugh at him, Caleb."</p>
<p>"No, you were ever faithful. But, say, do you laugh at me?"</p>
<p>"Indeed not; why should I, since you seem to fill a great and dangerous
part with dignity?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Miriam, my part is both great and dangerous. I have risen high and I
mean to rise higher."</p>
<p>"How high?"</p>
<p>"To the throne of Jud�a."</p>
<p>"I think a cottage stool would be more safe, Caleb."</p>
<p>"Mayhap, but I do not like such seats. Listen, Miriam, I will be great or
die. I have thrown in my lot with the Jews, and when we have cast out the
Romans I shall rule."</p>
<p>"<i>If</i> you cast out the Romans, and <i>if</i> you live. Caleb, I have
no faith in the venture. We are old friends, and I pray of you to escape
from it while there is yet time."</p>
<p>"Why, Miriam?"</p>
<p>"Because He Whom your people crucified and Whom I serve prophesied its
end. The Romans will crush you, Caleb. His blood lies heavy upon the head
of the Jews, and the hour of payment is at hand."</p>
<p>Caleb thought a while, and when he spoke again the note of confidence had
left his voice.</p>
<p>"It may be so, Miriam," he said, "though I put no faith in the sayings of
your prophet; but at least I have taken my part and will see the play
through. Now for the second time I ask you to share its fortunes. I have
not changed my mind. As I loved you in childhood and as a youth, so I love
you as a man. I offer to you a great career. In the end I may fall, or I
may triumph, still either the fall or the triumph will be worth your
sharing. A throne, or a glorious grave—both are good; who can say
which is the better? Seek them with me, Miriam."</p>
<p>"Caleb, I cannot."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"Because it is laid upon me as a birthright, or a birth-duty, that I
should wed no man who is not a Christian. You know the story."</p>
<p>"Then if there were no such duty would you wed me, Miriam?"</p>
<p>"No," she answered faintly.</p>
<p>"Why not?"</p>
<p>"Because I love another man whom also I am forbid to wed, and until death
I am pledged to him."</p>
<p>"The Roman, Marcus?"</p>
<p>"Aye, the Roman Marcus. See, I wear his ring," and she lifted her hand,
"and his gift is about my throat," and she touched the necklet of pearls.
"Till death I am his and his alone. This I say, because it is best for all
of us that you should know the truth."</p>
<p>Caleb ground his teeth in bitter jealousy.</p>
<p>"Then may death soon find him!" he said.</p>
<p>"It would not help you, Caleb. Oh! why cannot we be friends as we were in
the old times!"</p>
<p>"Because I seek more than friendship, and soon or late, in this way or in
that, I swear that I will have it."</p>
<p>As the words left his lips footsteps were heard, and Benoni appeared.</p>
<p>"Friend Caleb," he said, "we await you. Why, Miriam, what do you here? To
your chamber, girl. Affairs are afoot in which women should have no part."</p>
<p>"Yet as I fear, grandfather, women will have to bear the burden," answered
Miriam. Then, bowing to Caleb, she turned and left them.</p>
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