MARCUS
That night those of the curators who
were engaged in prayer and fasting were disturbed
by the return of an officer of those Jews that had
robbed them, who complained violently that a man of
his company had been murdered by one of the Essenes.
They asked how and when, and were told that the man
had been shot down with an arrow, in a gully upon the
road to Jericho, by a person unknown. They replied
that robbers sometimes met with robbers, and asked
to see the arrow, which proved to be of a Roman make,
such as these men carried in their own quivers.
This the Essenes pointed out, and at length, growing
angry at the unreasonableness of a complaint made
by persons of the worst character, drove him and his
escort from their doors, bidding them take their story
to the high priest Ananos, with the goods which they
had stolen, or, if they preferred it, to that still
greater thief, the Roman procurator, Albinus.
This they did not neglect to do, with
the result that presently the Essenes were commanded
to send some of their head men to appear before Albinus
to answer the charges laid against them. Accordingly
they dispatched Ithiel and two others, who were kept
waiting three months at Jerusalem before they could
even obtain a hearing. At length the cause came
on, and after some few minutes of talk was adjourned,
being but a petty matter. That same evening Ithiel
was informed by an intermediary that if his Order
would pay a certain large sum of money to Albinus,
nothing more would be heard of the question. This
the Essenes refused to do, as it was against their
principles, saying that they demanded nothing but
justice, which they were not prepared to buy.
So they spoke, being ignorant that one of their neophytes,
Caleb, had in fact aimed the fatal arrow.
Then Albinus, wearying of the business
and finding that there was no profit to be made out
of the Essenes, commanded them to be gone, saying
that he would send an officer to make inquiry on the
spot.
Another two months went by, and at
length this officer arrived, attended by an escort
of twenty soldiers.
As it chanced, on a certain morning
in the winter season, Miriam with Nehushta was walking
on the Jericho road, when suddenly they saw approaching
towards them this little body of armed men. Perceiving
that they were Romans, they turned out of the path
to hide themselves among the thorns of the desert.
Thereon he who seemed to be the officer spurred his
horse forward to intercept them.
“Do not run stand
still,” said Nehushta to Miriam, “and show
no sign of fear.”
So Miriam halted and began to gather
a few autumn flowers that still bloomed among the
bushes, till the shadow of the officer fell upon her that
shadow in which she was destined to walk all her life-days.
“Lady,” said a pleasant
voice in Greek, spoken with a somewhat foreign accent “lady,
pardon, and I pray you, do not be alarmed. I am
a stranger to this part of the country, which I visit
on official business. Will you of your kindness
direct me to the village of a people called Essenes,
who live somewhere in this desert?”
“Oh, sir!” answered Miriam,
“do you, who come with Roman soldiers, mean
them any harm?”
“Not I. But why do you ask?”
“Because, sir, I am of their community.”
The officer stared at her this
beautiful, blue-eyed, white-skinned, delicate-featured
girl, whose high blood proclaimed itself in every tone
and gesture.
“You, lady, of the community
of the Essenes! Surely then those priests in
Jerusalem lie more deeply than I thought. They
told me that the Essenes were old ascetics who worship
Apollo, and could not bear so much as the sight of
a woman. And now you say you are an Essene you,
by Bacchus! you!” and he looked at her with
an admiration which, although there was nothing brutal
or even rude about it, was amusingly undisguised.
“I am their guest,” she said.
“Their guest? Why, this
is stranger still. If these spiritual outlaws the
word is that old high priest’s, not mine share
their bread and water with such guests, my sojourn
among them will be happier than I thought.”
“They brought me up, I am their
ward,” Miriam explained again.
“In truth, my opinion of the
Essenes rises, and I am convinced that those priests
slandered them. If they can shape so sweet a lady,
surely they must themselves be good and gentle”;
and he bowed gravely, perhaps to mark the compliment.
“Sir, they are both good and
gentle,” answered Miriam; “but of this
you will be able to judge for yourself very shortly,
seeing that they live near at hand. If you will
follow us over yonder rise we will show you their
village, whither we go.”
“By your leave, I will accompany
you,” he said, dismounting before she could
answer; then added, “Pardon me for one moment I
must give some orders,” and he called to a soldier,
who, with his companions, had halted at a little distance.
The man advanced saluting, and, turning
aside, his captain began to talk with him, so that
now, for the first time, Miriam could study his face.
He was young not more than five or six and
twenty years of age of middle height, and
somewhat slender, but active in movement and athletic
in build. Upon his head, which was round and not
large, in place of the helmet that hung at his saddle-bow,
he wore a little cap, steel lined and padded as a
protection against the sun, and beneath it she could
see that his short, dark brown hair curled closely.
Under the tan caused by exposure to the heat, his
skin was fair, and his grey eyes, set rather wide
apart, were quick and observant. For the rest,
his mouth was well-shaped, though somewhat large,
and the chin clean-shaved, prominent and determined.
His air was that of a soldier accustomed to command,
but very genial, and, when he smiled, showing his
regular white teeth, even merry the air
of one with a kind and generous heart.
Miriam looked at him, and in an instant
was aware that she liked him better than any man that
is any young man she had ever seen.
This, however, was no great or exclusive compliment
to the Roman, since of such acquaintances she had
but few, if, indeed, Caleb was not the only one.
However, of this she was sure, she liked him better
than Caleb, because, even then and there, comparing
them in her thoughts, this truth came home to her;
with it, too, a certain sense of shame that the newcomer
should be preferred to the friend of her childhood,
although of late that friend had displeased her by
showing too warm a friendship.
Having given his instructions, the
captain dismissed the orderly, commanding him to follow
at a distance with the men. Then saying, “Lady,
I am ready,” he began to walk forward, leading
his horse by the bridle.
“You will forgive me,”
he added, “if I introduce myself more formally.
I am called Marcus, the son of Emilius a
name which was known in its day,” and he sighed,
“as I hope before I have done with it, mine will
be. At present I cannot boast that this is so,
who, unless it should please my uncle Caius to decease
and leave me the great fortune he squeezes out of
the Spaniards neither of which things he
shows any present intention of doing am
but a soldier of fortune: an officer under the
command of the excellent and most noble procurator
Albinus,” he added sarcastically. “For
the rest,” he went on, “I have spent a
year in this interesting and turbulent but somewhat
arid land of yours, coming here from Egypt, and am
now honoured with a commission to investigate and
make report on a charge laid at the door of your virtuous
guardians, the Essenes, of having murdered, or been
privy to the murder of, a certain rascally Jew, who,
as I understand, was sent with others to steal their
goods. That, lady, is my style and history.
By way of exchange, will you be pleased to tell me
yours?”
Miriam hesitated, not being sure whether
she should enter on such confidences at so short a
notice. Thereon, Nehushta, who was untroubled
by doubts, and thought it politic to be quite open
with this Roman, a man in authority, answered for
her.
“Lord, this maiden, whose servant
I am, as I was that of her grandmother and mother
before her ”
“Surely you cannot be so old,”
interrupted Marcus. He made it a rule to be polite
to all women, whatever their colour, having noticed
that life went more easily with those who were courteous
to the sex.
Nehushta smiled a little as she answered for
at what age does a woman learn to despise a compliment? “Lord,
they both died young”; then repeated, “This
maiden is the only child of the high-born Graeco-Syrian
of Tyre, Demas, and his noble wife, Rachel ”
“I know Tyre,” he interrupted.
“I was quartered there till two months ago”;
adding in a different tone, “I understand that
this pair no longer live.”
“They died,” said Nehushta
sadly, “the father in the amphitheatre at Berytus
by command of the first Agrippa, and the mother when
her child was born.”
“In the amphitheatre at Berytus?
Was he then a malefactor?”
“No, sir,” broke in Miriam proudly; “he
was a Christian.”
“Oh! I understand.
Well, they are ill-spoken of as enemies of the human
race, but for my part I have had to do with several
Christians and found them very good people, though
visionary in their views.” Here a doubt
struck him and he said, “But, lady, I understand
that you are an Essene.”
“Nay, sir,” she replied
in the same steady voice, “I also am a Christian,
who have been protected by the Essenes.”
He looked at her with pity and replied,
“It is a dangerous profession for one so young
and fair.”
“Dangerous let it be,”
she said; “at least it is mine from the beginning
to the end.”
Marcus bowed, perceiving that the
subject was not to be pursued, and said to Nehushta,
“Continue the story, my friend.”
“Lord, the father of my lady’s
mother is a very wealthy Jewish merchant of Tyre,
named Benoni.”
“Benoni,” he said, “I
know him well, too well for a poor man! a
Jew of the Jews, a Zealot, they say. At least
he hates us Romans enough to be one, although many
is the dinner that I have eaten at his palace.
He is the most successful trader in all Tyre, unless
it be his rival Amram, the Phoenician, but a hard
man, and as able as he is hard. Now I think of
it, he has no living children, so why does not your
lady, his grandchild, dwell with him rather than in
this desert?”
“Lord, you have answered your
own question. Benoni is a Jew of the Jews; his
granddaughter is a Christian, as I am also. Therefore
when her mother died, I brought her here to be taken
care of by her uncle Ithiel the Essene, and I do not
think Benoni knows even that she lives. Lord,
perhaps I have said too much; but you must soon have
heard the story from the Essenes, and we trust to
you, who chance to be Benoni’s friend, to keep
our secret from him.”
“You do not trust in vain; yet
it seems sad that all the wealth and station which
are hers by right should thus be wasted.”
“Lord, rank and station are
not everything; freedom of faith and person are more
than these. My lady lacks for nothing, and this
is all her story.”
“Not quite, friend; you have not told me her
name.”
“Lord, it is Miriam.”
“Miriam, Miriam,” he repeated,
his slightly foreign accent dwelling softly on the
syllables. “It is a very pretty name, befitting
such a ” and he checked himself.
By now they were on the crest of the
rise, and, stopping between two clumps of thorn trees,
Miriam broke in hastily:
“See, sir, there below lies
the village of the Essenes; those green trees to the
left mark the banks of Jordan, whence we irrigate our
fields, while that grey stretch of water to the right,
surrounded by a wall of mountain, is the Dead Sea.”
“Is it so? Well, the green
is pleasant in this desert, and those fields look
well cultivated. I hope to visit them some day,
for I was brought up in the country, and, although
I am a soldier, still understand a farm. As for
the Dead Sea, it is even more dreary than I expected.
Tell me, lady, what is that large building yonder?”
“That,” she answered,
“is the gathering hall of the Essenes.”
“And that?” he asked,
pointing to a house which stood by itself.
“That is my home, where Nehushta and I dwell.”
“I guessed as much by the pretty
garden.” Then he asked her other questions,
which she answered freely enough, for Miriam, although
she was half Jewish, had been brought up among men,
and felt neither fear nor shame in talking with them
in a friendly and open fashion, as an Egyptian or
a Roman or a Grecian lady might have done.
While they were still conversing thus,
of a sudden the bushes on their path were pushed aside,
and from between them emerged Caleb, of whom she had
seen but little of late. He halted and looked
at them.
“Friend Caleb,” said Miriam,
“this is the Roman captain Marcus, who comes
to visit the curators of the Order. Will you lead
him and his soldiers to the council hall and advise
my uncle Ithiel and the others of his coming, since
it is time for us to go home?”
Caleb glared at her, or rather at
the stranger, with sullen fury; then he answered:
“Romans always make their own
road; they do not need a Jew to guide them,”
and once more he vanished into the scrub on the further
side of the path.
“Your friend is not civil,”
said Marcus, as he watched him go. “Indeed,
he has an inhospitable air. Now, if an Essene
could do such a thing, I should think that here is
a man who might have drawn an arrow upon a Jewish
tax-gatherer,” and he looked inquiringly at Miriam.
“That lad!” put in Nehushta.
“Why, he never shot anything larger than a bird
of prey.”
“Caleb,” added Miriam
in excuse, “does not like strangers.”
“So I see,” answered Marcus;
“and to be frank, lady, I do not like Caleb.
He has an eye like a knife-point.”
“Come, Nehushta,” said
Miriam, “this is our road, and there runs that
of the captain and his company. Sir, farewell,
and thank you for your escort.”
“Lady, for this while farewell,
and thank you for your guidance.”
Thus for that day they parted.
The dwelling which many years before
had been built by the Essenes for the use of their
ward and her nurse, stood next to the large guest-house.
Indeed, it occupied a portion of the ground which
originally belonged to it, although now the plot was
divided into two gardens by an irrigation ditch and
a live pomegranate fence, covered at this season of
the year with its golden globes of fruit. That
evening, as Miriam and Nehushta walked in the garden,
they heard the familiar voice of Ithiel calling to
them from the other side of this fence, and presently
above it saw his kindly face and venerable white head.
“What is it, my uncle?” asked Miriam running
to him.
“Only this, child; the noble
Roman captain, Marcus, is to stay in the guest-house
during his visit to us, so do not be frightened if
you hear or see men moving about in this garden If,
indeed, Romans care to walk in gardens. I am
to bide here also, to play host to him and see that
he lacks nothing. Also I do not think that he
will give you any trouble, since, for a Roman, he
seems both courteous and kindly.”
“I am not afraid, my uncle,”
said Miriam; “indeed,” she added, blushing
a little in spite of herself, “Nehushta and I
have already become acquainted with this captain”;
and she told him of their meeting beyond the village.
“Nehushta, Nehushta,”
said Ithiel reprovingly, “have I not said to
you that you should not walk so far afield without
some of the brethren as an escort? You might,
perchance, have met thieves, or drunken men.”
“My lady wished to gather some
flowers she sought,” answered Nehushta, “as
she has done without harm for many a year; and being
armed, I did not fear thieves, if such men are to
be found where all are poor.”
“Well, well, as it chances,
no harm has happened; but do not go out unattended
again, lest the soldiers should not be so courteous
as their captain. They will not trouble you by
the way, since, with the exception of a single guard,
they camp yonder by the streamlet. Farewell for
this night, my child; we will meet to-morrow.”
Then Miriam went to rest and dreamed
of the Roman captain, and that he, she, and Nehushta
made a journey together and met with many great adventures,
wherein Caleb played some strange part. In that
dream the captain Marcus protected them from all these
dangers, till at length they came to a calm sea, on
which floated a single white ship wherein they must
embark, having the sign of the Cross woven in its sails.
Then she awoke and found that it was morning.
Of all the arts she had been taught,
Miriam was fondest of that of modelling in clay, for
which she had a natural gift. Indeed, so great
had her skill become, that these models which she made,
after they had been baked with fire, were, at her
wish, sold by the Essenes to any who took a fancy
to them. As to the money which they fetched, it
was paid into a fund to be distributed among the poor.
This art Miriam carried on in a reed-thatched
shed in the garden, where, by an earthen pipe, water
was delivered into a stone basin, which she used to
damp her clay and cloths. Sometimes also, with
the help of masons and the master who had taught her,
now a very old man, she copied these models in marble,
which the Essenes brought to her from the ruins of
a palace near Jericho. At the time that the Romans
came she was finishing a work more ambitious than
any which she had undertaken as yet; namely, a life-sized
bust cut from the fragment of an ancient column to
the likeness of her great-uncle, Ithiel. On the
afternoon following the day that she met Marcus, clad
in her white working-robe, she was occupied in polishing
this bust, with the assistance of Nehushta, who handed
her the cloths and grinding-powder. Suddenly
shadows fell upon her, and turning, she beheld Ithiel
and the Roman.
“Daughter,” said Ithiel,
smiling at her confusion, “I have brought the
captain Marcus to see your work.”
“Oh, my uncle!” she replied
indignantly, “am I in a state to receive any
captain?” and she held out her wet hands and
pointed to her garments begrimed with clay and powder.
“Look at me.”
“I look,” said Ithiel innocently, “and
see naught amiss.”
“And I look, lady,” added
Marcus in his merry voice, “and see much to
admire. Would that more of your sex could be found
thus delightfully employed.”
“Alas, sir,” she replied,
adroitly misunderstanding him, for Miriam did not
lack readiness, “in this poor work there is little
to admire. I am ashamed that you should look
on the rude fashionings of a half-trained girl, you
who must have seen all those splendid statues of which
I have been told.”
“By the throne of Caesar, lady,”
he exclaimed in a voice that carried a conviction
of his earnestness, staring hard at the bust of Ithiel
before him, “as it chances, although I am not
an artist, I do know something of sculpture, since
I have a friend who is held to be the best of our
day, and often for my sins have sat as model to him.
Well, I tell you this never did the great
Glaucus produce a bust like that.”
“I daresay not,” said
Miriam smiling. “I daresay the great Glaucus
would go mad if he saw it.”
“He would with envy.
He would say that it was the work of one of the glorious
Greeks, and of no modern.”
“Sir,” said Ithiel reprovingly,
“do not make a jest of the maid, who does the
best she can; it pains her and is not fitting.”
“Friend Ithiel,” replied
Marcus, turning quite crimson, “you must indeed
think that I lack manners who would come to the home
of any artist to mock his work. I say what I
mean, neither more nor less. If this bust were
shown in Rome, together with yourself who sat for it,
the lady Miriam would find herself famous within a
week. Yes,” and he ran his eye quickly
over various statuettes, some of them baked and
some in the raw clay, models, for the most part, of
camels or other animals or birds, “yes, and
it is the same with all the rest: these are the
works of genius, no less.”
At this praise, to them so exaggerated,
Miriam, pleased as she could not help feeling, broke
into clear laugher, which both Ithiel and Nehushta
echoed. Now, so wroth was he, the face of Marcus
grew quite pale and stern.
“It seems,” he said severely,
“that it is not I who mock. Tell me, lady,
what do you with these things?” and he pointed
to the statuettes.
“I, sir? I sell them; or at least my uncles
do.”
“The money is given to the poor,” interposed
Ithiel.
“Would it be rude to ask at what price?”
“Sometimes,” replied Ithiel
with pride, “travellers have given me as much
as a silver shekel. Once indeed, for a group of
camels with their Arabian drivers, I received four
shekels; but that took my niece three months to do.”
About 2d. of English money.
“A shekel! Four shekels!”
said Marcus in a voice of despair; “I will buy
them all no, I will not, it would be robbery.
And this bust?”
“That, sir, is not for sale;
it is a gift to my uncle, or rather to my uncles,
to be set up in their court-room.”
An idea struck Marcus. “I
am here for a few weeks,” he said. “Tell
me, lady, if your uncle Ithiel will permit it, at what
price will you execute a bust of myself of the same
size and quality?”
“It would be dear,” said
Miriam, smiling at the notion, “for the marble
costs something, and the tools, which wear out.
Oh, it would be very dear!” This she repeated,
wondering what she could ask in her charitable avarice.
“It would be ” yes,
she would venture it “fifty shekels!”
“I am poor enough,” replied
Marcus quietly, “but I will give you two hundred.”
“Two hundred!” gasped
Miriam. “It is absurd. I could never
accept two hundred shekels for a piece of stonework.
Then indeed you might say that you had fallen among
thieves on the banks of Jordan. No. If my
uncles will permit it and there is time, I will do
my poor best for fifty only, sir, I advise
you against it, since to win that bad likeness you
must sit for many weary hours.”
“So be it,” said Marcus.
“As soon as I get to any civilised place I will
send you enough commissions to make the beggars in
these parts rich for life, and at a very different
figure. Let us begin at once.”
“Sir, I have no leave.”
“The matter,” explained
Ithiel, “must be laid before the Court of Curators,
which will decide upon it to-morrow. Meanwhile,
as we are talking here, I see no harm if my niece
chooses to work a lump of clay, which can be broken
up later should the Court in its wisdom refuse your
request.”
“I hope for its own sake that
the Court in its wisdom will not be such a fool,”
muttered Marcus to himself; adding aloud, “Lady,
where shall I place myself? You will find me
the best of sitters. Have I not the great Glaucus
for a friend until I show him this work
of yours?”
“If you will, sir, be seated
on that stool and be pleased to look towards me.”
“I am your servant,” said
Marcus, in a cheerful voice; and the sitting began.