THE ESSENES FIND THEIR QUEEN AGAIN
They went on towards the gates of
the Temple, but many a long day was destined to go
by ere Miriam reached them. The entrance by which
they were told they must approach if they sought speech
of the high priest, was one of the two Huldah Gates
on the south side of the Royal Cloister, and thither
they came across the valley of Tyropaeon. As they
drew near to them of a sudden that gate which stood
most to the east was flung wide, and out of it issued
a thousand or more of armed men, like ants from a
broken nest, who, shouting and waving swords, rushed
towards their company. As it chanced, at the
moment they were in the centre of an open space that
once had been covered with houses but was now cumbered
with hundreds of blackened and tottering walls, for
fire had devoured them.
“It is the men of John who attack
us,” cried a voice, whereon, moved by a common
impulse, the little band turned and fled for shelter
among the ruined houses; yes, even Caleb and Benoni
fled.
Before they reached them, lo! from
these crumbling walls that they had thought untenanted
save by wandering dogs, out rushed another body of
savage warriors, the men of Simon who held the Lower
City.
After this, Miriam knew little of
what happened. Swords and spears flashed round
her, the factions fell upon each other, slaughtering
each other. She saw Caleb cut down one of the
soldiers of John, to be instantly assaulted in turn
by a soldier of Simon, since all desired to kill,
but none cared whom they slew. She saw her grandfather
rolling over and over on the ground in the grip of
a man who looked like a priest; she saw women and
children pierced with spears. Then Nehushta seized
her by the hand, and plunging a knife into the arm
of a man who would have stayed them, dragged her away.
They fled, an arrow sang past her ear; something struck
her on the foot. Still they fled, whither she
knew not, till at length the sound of the tumult died
away. But not yet would Nehushta stop, for she
feared that they might be followed. So on they
went, and on, meeting few and heeded by none, till
at length Miriam sank to the ground, worn out with
fear and flight.
“Up,” said Nehushta.
“I cannot,” she answered. “Something
has hurt my foot. See, it bleeds!”
Nehushta looked about her, and saw
that they were outside the second wall in the new
city of Bezetha, not far from the old Damascus Gate,
for there, to their right and a little behind them,
rose the great tower of Antonia. Beneath this
wall were rubbish-heaps, foul-smelling and covered
over with rough grasses and some spring flowers, which
grew upon the slopes of the ancient fosse. Here
seemed a place where they might lie hid awhile, since
there were no houses and it was unsavoury. She
dragged Miriam to her feet, and, notwithstanding her
complaints and swollen ankle, forced her on, till
they came to a spot where, as it is to-day, the wall
was built upon foundations of living rock, roughly
shaped, and lined with crevices covered by tall weeds.
To one of these crevices Nehushta brought Miriam,
and, seating her on a bed of grass, examined her foot,
which seemed to have been bruised by a stone from a
sling. Having no water with which to wash the
bleeding hurt, she made a poultice of crushed herbs
and tied it about the ankle with a strip of linen.
Even before she had finished her task, so exhausted
was Miriam that she fell fast asleep. Nehushta
watched her a while, wondering what they should do
next, till, in that lonely place bathed by the warm
spring sun, she also began to doze.
Suddenly she awoke with a start, having
dreamed that she saw a man with white face and beard
peering at them from behind a rough angle of rock.
She stared: there was the rock as she had dreamed
of it, but no man. She looked upward. Above
them, piled block upon gigantic block, rose the wall,
towering and impregnable. Thither he could not
have gone, since on it only a lizard could find foothold.
Nor was he anywhere else, for there was no cover;
so she decided that he must have been some searcher
of the rubbish-heap, who, seeing them hidden in the
tall grasses, had fled away. Miriam was still
sound asleep, and in her weariness presently Nehushta
again began to doze, till at length it may
have been one hour later, or two or three, she knew
not some sound disturbed her. Opening
her eyes, once more behind that ridge of rock she saw,
not one white-bearded face, but two, staring at her
and Miriam. As she sat up they vanished.
She remained still, pretending to sleep, and again
they appeared, scanning her closely and whispering
to each other in eager tones. Suddenly one of
the faces turned a little so that the light fell on
it. Now Nehushta knew why in her dream it had
seemed familiar, and in her heart thanked God.
“Brother Ithiel,” she
said in a quiet voice, “why do you hide like
a coney in these rocks?”
Both heads disappeared, but the sound
of whispering continued. Then one of them rose
again among the green grasses as a man might rise out
of water. It was Ithiel’s.
“It is indeed you, Nehushta?”
said his well-remembered voice.
“Who else?” she asked.
“And that lady who sleeps at your side?”
“Once they called her Queen
of the Essenes; now she is a hunted fugitive, waiting
to be massacred by Simon, or John, or Eleazer, or
Zealots, or Sicarii, or any other of the holy
cut-throats who inhabit this Holy City,” answered
Nehushta bitterly.
Ithiel raised his hands as though in thankfulness,
then said:
“Hush! hush! Here the very
birds are spies. Brother, creep to that rock
and look if any men are moving.”
The Essene obeyed, and answered, “None;
and they cannot see us from the wall.”
Ithiel motioned to him to return.
“Does she sleep sound?” he asked of Nehushta,
pointing to Miriam.
“Like the dead.”
Then, after another whispered conference,
the pair of them crept round the angle of the rock.
Bidding Nehushta follow them, they lifted the sleeping
Miriam, and carried her between them through a dense
growth of shrubs to another rock. Here they moved
some grass and pushed aside a stone, revealing a hole
not much larger than a jackal would make. Into
this the brother entered, heels first. Then Nehushta,
by his directions, taking the feet of the senseless
Miriam, with her help he bore her into the hole, that
opened presently into a wide passage. Last of
all Ithiel, having lifted the grasses which their
feet had trodden, followed them, pulling the stone
back to its place, and cutting off the light.
Once more they were in darkness, but this did not
seem to trouble the brethren, for again lifting Miriam,
they went forward a distance of thirty or forty paces,
Nehushta holding on to Ithiel’s robe. Now,
at length, the cold air of this cave, or perhaps its
deep gloom and the motion, awoke Miriam from her swoon-like
sleep. She struggled in their hands, and would
have cried out, had not Nehushta bade her to be silent.
“Where am I?” she said. “Is
this the hall of death?”
“Nay, lady. Wait a while, all shall be
explained.”
While she spoke and Miriam clung to
her affrighted, Ithiel struck iron and flint together.
Catching the spark upon tinder he blew it to a flame
and lighted a taper which burnt up slowly, causing
his white beard and face to appear by degrees out
of the darkness, like that of a ghost rising from
the tomb.
“Oh! surely I am dead,”
said Miriam, “for before me stands the spirit
of my uncle Ithiel.”
“Not the spirit, Miriam, but
the flesh,” answered the old man in a voice
that trembled with joy. Then, since he could restrain
himself no longer, he gave the taper to the brother,
and, taking her in his arms, kissed her again and
again.
“Welcome, most dear child,”
he said; “yes, even to this darksome den, welcome,
thrice welcome, and blessed be the eternal God Who
led our feet forth to find you. Nay, do not stop
to talk, we are still too near the wall. Give
me your hand and come.”
Miriam glanced up as she obeyed, and
by the feeble light of the taper saw a vast rocky
roof arching above them. On either side of her
also were walls of rough-hewn rock down which dripped
water, and piled upon the floor or still hanging half-cut
from the roof, boulders large enough to fashion a
temple column.
“What awful place is this, my uncle?”
she asked.
“The cavern whence Solomon,
the great king, drew stone for the building of the
Temple. Look, here are his mason’s marks
upon the wall. Here he fashioned the blocks and
thus it happened that no sound of saw or hammer was
heard within the building. Doubtless also other
kings before and since his day have used this quarry,
as no man knows its age.”
While he spoke thus he was leading
her onwards over the rough, stone-hewn floor, where
the damp gathered in little pools. Following the
windings of the cave they turned once, then again and
yet again, so that soon Miriam was utterly bewildered
and could not have found her way back to the entrance
for her life’s sake. Moreover, the air had
become so hot and stifling that she could scarcely
breathe.
“It will be better presently,”
said Ithiel, noticing her distress, as he drew her
limping after him into what seemed to be a natural
crevice of rock hardly large enough to allow the passage
of his body. Along this crevice they scrambled
for eight or ten paces, to find themselves suddenly
in a tunnel lined with masonry, and so large that they
could stand upright.
“Once it was a watercourse,”
explained Ithiel, “that filled the great tank,
but now it has been dry for centuries.”
Down this darksome shaft hobbled Miriam,
till presently it ended in a wall, or what seemed
to be a wall for when Ithiel pressed upon
a stone it turned. Beyond it the tunnel continued
for twenty or thirty paces, leading them at length
into a vast chamber with arched roof and cemented
sides and bottom, which in some bygone age had been
a water-tank. Here lights were burning, and even
a charcoal fire, at which a brother was engaged in
cooking. Also the air was pure and sweet, doubtless
because of the winding water-channels that ran upwards.
Nor did the place lack inhabitants, for there, seated
in groups round the tapers, or watching the cooking
over the charcoal fire, were forty or fifty men, still
clad, for the most part, in the robes of the Essenes.
“Brethren,” cried Ithiel,
in answer to the challenge of one who was set to watch
the entry, “I bring back to you her whom we lost
a while ago, the lady Miriam.”
They heard, and seizing the tapers, ran forward.
“It is she!” they cried,
“our queen and none other, and with her Nehushta
the Libyan! Welcome, welcome, a thousand times,
dear lady!”
Miriam greeted them one and all, and
before these greetings were finished they brought
her food to eat, rough but wholesome, also good wine
and sweet water. Then while she ate she heard
all their story. It seemed that more than a year
ago the Romans, marching on Jericho, had fallen upon
their village and put a number of them to death, seizing
others as slaves. Thereon the remnant fled to
Jerusalem, where many more perished, for, being peaceable
folk, all the factions robbed and slew them.
Seeing, at last, that to live at large in the city
would be to doom themselves to extinction, and yet
not daring to leave it, they sought a refuge in this
underground place, of which, as it chanced, one of
their brethren had the secret. This he had inherited
from his father, so that it was known to no other
living man.
Here by degrees they laid up a great
store of provisions of all sorts, of charcoal for
burning, and other necessaries, carrying into the place
also clothes, bedding, cooking utensils and even some
rough furniture. These preparations being made,
the fifty of them who remained removed themselves
to the vaults where now they had already dwelt three
months, and here, so far as was possible, continued
to practise the rules of their order. Miriam
asked how they kept their health in this darkness,
to which they replied that sometimes they went out
by that path which she had just followed, and mingled
with the people in the city, returning to their hole
at night. Ithiel and his companion were on such
a journey when they found her. Also they had another
passage to the upper air which they would show her
later.
When Miriam had finished eating, dressed
her hurt, and rested a while, they took her to explore
the wonders of the place. Beyond this great cistern,
that was their common room, lay more to the number
of six or seven, one of the smallest of which was
given to Nehushta and herself to dwell in. Others
were filled with stores enough to last them all for
months. Last of all was a cave, not very large,
but deep, which always held sweet water. Doubtless
there was a spring at the bottom of it, which, when
the other rain-fed tanks grew dry, still kept it supplied.
From this cistern that had been used for generations
after the others were abandoned, a little stair ran
upwards, worn smooth by the feet of folk long dead,
who had come hither to draw water.
“Where does it lead?” asked Miriam.
“To the ruined tower above,”
answered Ithiel. “Nay, another time I will
show you. Now your place is made ready for you,
go, let Nehushta bathe your foot, and sleep, for you
must need it sorely.”
So Miriam went and laid herself down
to rest in the little cemented vault which was to
be her home for four long months; and being worn out,
notwithstanding the sufferings she had passed and her
fears for her grandfather, slept there as soundly
as ever she had done in her wind-swept chamber at
the palace of Tyre, or in her house at the village
of the Essenes.
When she awoke and saw the darkness
all about her, she thought that it must be night;
then remembering that in this place it was always night,
called to Nehushta, who uncovered the little lamp that
burned in a corner of the vault, and went out, to
return presently with the news that according to the
Essenes, it was day. So she rose and put on her
robes, and they passed together into the great chamber.
Here they found the Essenes at prayer and making their
révérences to the sun which they could not see,
after which they ate their morning meal. Now Miriam
spoke to Ithiel, telling him of her trouble about
her grandfather, who, if he himself still lived, would
think that she was dead.
“One thing is certain,”
replied her great-uncle: “that you shall
not go out to seek him, nor must you tell him of your
hiding-place, since soon or late this might mean that
all of us would be destroyed, if only for the sake
of the food which we have hoarded.”
Miriam asked if she could not send
a message. He answered:
“No, since none would dare to
take it.” In the end, however, after she
had pleaded with him long and earnestly, it was agreed
that she should write the words, “I am safe
and well, but in a place that I must not tell you
of,” and sign her name upon a piece of parchment.
This letter Ithiel, who purposed to creep out into
the city that evening disguised as a beggar, to seek
for tidings, said he would take, and, if might be,
bribe some soldier to deliver it to Benoni at the house
of the high priest, if he were there.
So Miriam wrote the letter, and at
nightfall Ithiel and another brother departed, taking
it with them.
On the following morning they returned,
safe, but with a dreadful tale of the slaughters in
the city and in the Temple courts, where the mad factions
still fought furiously.
“Your tidings, my uncle?”
said Miriam, rising to meet him. “Does he
still live?”
“Be of good comfort,”
he answered. “Benoni reached the house of
Mathias in safety, and Caleb also, and now they are
sheltering within the Temple walls. This much
I had from one of the high priest’s guards, who,
for the price of a piece of gold I gave him, swore
that he would deliver the letter without fail.
But, child, I will take no more, for that soldier
eyed me curiously and said it was scarcely safe for
beggars to carry gold.”
Miriam thanked him for his goodness
and his news, saying that they lifted a weight from
her heart.
“I have other tidings that may
perhaps make it lighter still,” went on the
old man, looking at her sideways. “Titus
with a mighty host draws near to Jerusalem from Caesarea.”
“There is no joy in that tale,”
replied Miriam, “for it means that the Holy
City will be besieged and taken.”
“Nay, but among that host is
one who, if all the stories are true,” and again
he glanced at her face, “would rather take you
than the city.”
“Who?” she said, pressing
her hands against her heart and turning redder than
the lamplight.
“One of Titus’ prefects
of horse, the noble Roman, Marcus, whom in byegone
days you knew by the banks of Jordan.”
Now the red blood fled back to Miriam’s
heart, and she turned so faint that had not the wall
been near at hand she would have fallen.
“Marcus?” she said.
“Well, he swore that he would come, yet it will
bring him little nearer me;” and she turned and
sought her chamber.
So Marcus had come. Since he
sent the letter and the ring that was upon her hand,
and the pearls which were about her throat, she had
heard no more of him. Twice she had written and
forwarded the writings by the most trusty messenger
whom she could find, but whether they reached him
she did not know. For more than two years the
silence between them had been that of death, till,
indeed, at times she thought that he must be dead.
And now he was come back, a commander in the army of
Titus, who marched to punish the rebellious Jews.
Would she ever see him again? Miriam could not
tell. Yet she knelt and prayed from her pure heart
that if it were once only, she might speak with him
face to face. Indeed, it was this hope of meeting
that, more than any other, supported her through all
those dreadful days.
A week went by, and although the hurt
to her foot had healed, like some flower in the dark
Miriam drooped and languished in those gloomy vaults.
Twice she prayed her uncle to be allowed to creep to
the mouth of the hole behind the ridge of rock, there
to breathe the fresh air and see the blessed sky.
But this he would not suffer. The thing was too
dangerous, he said; for although none knew the secret
of their hiding-place, already two or three fugitives
had found their way into the quarries by other entrances,
and these it was very difficult to pass unseen.
“So be it,” answered Miriam, and crept
back to her cell.
Nehushta looked after her anxiously, then said:
“If she cannot have air I think
that she will soon die. Is there no way?”
“One,” answered Ithiel,
“but I fear to take it. The staircase from
the spring leads to an ancient tower that, I am told,
once was a palace of the kings, but now for these
many years has been deserted, for its entrance is
bricked up lest thieves should make it their home.
None can come into that tower, nor is it used for
purposes of war, not standing upon any wall, and there
she might sit at peace and see the sun; yet I fear
to let her do so.”
“It must be risked,” answered
Nehushta. “Take me to visit this place.”
So Ithiel led her to the cistern,
and from the cistern up a flight of steps to a little
vaulted chamber, into which they entered through a
stone trap-door, made of the same substance as the
paving of the chamber, so that, when it was closed,
none would guess that there was a passage beneath.
From this old store-room, for such it doubtless was,
ran more steps, ending, to all appearance, in a blank
wall. Coming to it, Ithiel thrust a piece of
flat iron, a foot or more in length, into a crack
in this wall, lifted some stone latch within, and pushed,
whereon a block of masonry of something more than
the height and width of a man, and quite a yard in
thickness, swung outwards. Nehushta passed through
the aperture, followed by Ithiel.
“See,” he said, loosing
his hold of the stone, which without noise instantly
closed, so that behind them there appeared to be nothing
but a wall, “it is well hung, is it not? and
to come hither without this iron would be dangerous.
Here is the crack where it must be set to lift the
latch within.”
“Whoever lived here guarded
their food and water well,” answered Nehushta.
Then Ithiel showed her the place.
It was a massive tower of a square of about forty
feet, whereof the only doorway, as he told her, had
been bricked up many years before to keep the thieves
and vagabonds from sheltering there. In height
it must have measured nearly a hundred feet, and its
roof had long ago rotted away. The staircase,
which was of stone, still remained, however, leading
to four galleries, also of stone. Perhaps once
there were floors as well, but if so these had vanished,
only the stone galleries and their balustrades remaining.
Ithiel led Nehushta up the stair, which, though narrow,
was safe and easy. Resting at each story, at
length they came to that gallery which projected from
its sides within ten feet of the top of the tower,
and saw Jerusalem and the country round spread like
a map beneath. Then, as it was sunset, they returned.
At the foot of the stair Ithiel gave Nehushta the
piece of iron and showed her how to lift the secret
latch and pull upon the block of hewn stone that was
a door, so that it opened to swing to again behind
them.
Next morning, before it was dawn in
the world above, Miriam aroused Nehushta. She
had been promised that this day she should be taken
up the Old Tower, and so great was her longing for
the scent of the free air and the sight of the blue
sky that she had scarcely closed her eyes this night.
“Have patience, lady,”
said Nehushta, “have patience. We cannot
start until the Essenes have finished their prayers
to the sun, which, down in this black hole, they worship
more earnestly than ever.”
So Miriam waited, though she would
eat nothing, till at length Ithiel came and led them
past the cistern up the stairs to the store or treasure
chamber, where the trap-door stood wide, since, except
in case of some danger, they had no need to shut it.
Next, they reached the door of solid stone which Ithiel
showed her how to open, and entered the base of the
massive building. There, far above her, Miriam
saw the sky again, red from the lights of morning,
and at the sight of it clapped her hands and called
aloud.
“Hush!” said Ithiel.
“These walls are thick, yet it is not safe to
raise a voice of joy in Jerusalem, that home of a
thousand miseries, lest, perchance, some should hear
it through a cleft in the masonry, and cause search
to be made for the singer. Now, if you will, follow
me.”
So they went up and up, till at last
they reached the topmost gallery, where the wall was
pierced with loopholes and overhanging platforms,
whence stones and other missiles could be hurled upon
an attacking force. Miriam looked out eagerly,
walking round the gallery from aperture to aperture.
To the south lay the marble courts
and glittering buildings of the Temple, whence, although
men fought daily in them, the smoke of sacrifice still
curled up to heaven. Behind these were the Upper
and the Lower City, crowded with thousands of houses,
packed, every one of them, with human beings who had
fled hither for refuge, or, notwithstanding the dangers
of the time, to celebrate the Passover. To the
east was the rugged valley of Jehoshaphat, and beyond
it the Mount of Olives, green with trees soon to be
laid low by the Romans. To the north the new city
of Bezetha, bordered by the third wall and the rocky
lands beyond. Not far away, also, but somewhat
in front of them and to the left, rose the mighty
tower of Antonia, now one of the strongholds of John
of Gischala and the Zealots, while also to the west,
across the width of the city, were the towers of Hippicus,
Phasael and Mariamne, backed by the splendid palace
of Herod. Besides these were walls, fortresses,
gates and palaces without number, so intricate and
many that the eye could scarcely follow or count them,
and, between, the numberless narrow streets of Jerusalem.
These and many other things Ithiel pointed out to Miriam,
who listened eagerly till he wearied of the task.
Then they looked downwards through the overhanging
platforms of stone to the large market-place beneath
and to the front, and upon the roofs of the houses,
mostly of the humbler sort, that were built behind
almost up to the walls of the Old Tower, whereon many
people were gathered as though for safety, eating their
morning meal, talking anxiously together, and even
praying.
Whilst they were thus engaged, Nehushta
touched Miriam and pointed to the road which ran from
the Valley of Thorns on the northeast. She looked,
and saw a great cloud of dust that advanced swiftly,
and presently, through the dust, the sheen of spears
and armour.
“The Romans!” said Nehushta quietly.
She was not the only one who had caught
sight of them, for suddenly the battlement of every
wall and tower, the roof of every lofty house, the
upper courts of the Temple, and all high places became
crowded with thousands and tens of thousands of heads,
each of them staring towards that advancing dust.
In silence they stared as though their multitudes
were stricken dumb, till presently, from far below
out of the maze of winding streets, floated the wail
of a single voice.
“Woe, woe to Jerusalem!”
said the voice. “Woe, woe to the City and
the Temple!”
They shuddered, and as it seemed to
them, all the listening thousands within reach of
that mournful cry shuddered also.
“Aye!” repeated Ithiel,
“woe to Jerusalem, for yonder comes her doom.”
Now on the more rocky ground the dust
grew thinner, and through it they could distinguish
the divisions of the mighty army of destroyers.
First came thousands of Syrian allies and clouds of
scouts and archers, who searched the country far and
wide. Next appeared the road-makers and the camp-setters,
the beasts of burden with the general’s baggage
and its great escort, followed by Titus himself, his
bodyguard and officers, by pikemen and by horsemen.
Then were seen strange and terrible-looking engines
of war beyond count, and with them the tribunes, and
the captains of cohorts and their guards who preceded
the engines, and that “abomination of desolation,”
the Roman Eagles, surrounded by bands of trumpeters,
who from time to time uttered their loud, defiant note.
After them marched the vast army in ranks six deep,
divided into legions and followed by their camp-bearers
and squadrons of horse. Lastly were seen the
packs of baggage, and mercenaries by thousands and
tens of thousands. On the Hill of Saul the great
host halted and began to encamp. An hour later
a band of horsemen five or six hundred strong emerged
out of this camp and marched along the straight road
to Jerusalem.
“It is Titus himself,”
said Ithiel. “See, the Imperial Standard
goes before him.”
On they came till, from their lofty
perch, Miriam, who was keen-sighted, could see their
separate armour and tell the colour of their horses.
Eagerly she searched them with her eyes, for well she
guessed that Marcus would be one of those who accompanied
his general upon this service. That plumed warrior
might be he, or that with the purple cloak, or that
who galloped out from near by the Standard on an errand.
He was there; she was sure he was there, and yet they
were as far apart as when the great sea rolled between
them.
Now, as they reconnoitred and were
passing the Tower of Women, of a sudden the gate opened,
and from alleys and houses where they had lain in
ambush were poured out thousands of Jews. Right
through the thin line of horsemen they pierced, uttering
savage cries, then doubled back upon the severed ends.
Many were cut down; Miriam could see them falling from
their horses. The Imperial Standard sank, then
rose and sank again to rise once more. Now dust
hid the combat, and she thought that all the Romans
must be slain. But no, for presently they began
to appear beyond the dust, riding back by the way
they had come, though fewer than they were. They
had charged through the multitude of Jews and escaped.
But who had escaped and who were left behind?
Ah! that she could not tell; and it was with a sick
and anxious heart that Miriam descended the steps
of the tower into the darkness of the caves.