<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<div class="epigram"><p>"I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and
the last."—<span class="smcap">Revelations xxii. 13.</span></p>
</div>
<p>And after that silence and peace.</p>
<p>Silence save for the moanings of the child Nola, who in a passionate
outburst of grief had thrown herself on the body of her mother.</p>
<p>Dea Flavia stood there still and calm, her young face scarce less white
than the clinging folds of her tunic, her unfathomable eyes fixed upon
the pathetic group at her feet: the weeping girl and the dead woman.</p>
<p>She seemed almost dazed—like one who does not understand and a quaint
puzzled frown appeared upon the whiteness of her brow.</p>
<p>Once she raised her eyes to the praefect and encountered his
gaze—strangely contemptuous and wrathful—fixed upon her own, and anon
she shuddered when a pitiable moan from Nola echoed from end to end
along the marble walls around.</p>
<p>And the crowd of idlers began slowly to disperse. In groups of twos and
threes they went, their sandalled feet making a soft rustling noise
against the flagstones of the Forum, and their cloaks of thin woollen
stuff floating out behind them as they walked.</p>
<p>The young patricians were the first to go. The scene had ceased to be
amusing and Dea Flavia was not like to bestow another smile. They
thought it best to retire to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</SPAN></span> their luxurious homes, for they vaguely
resented the majesty of death which clung round the dead freedwoman and
the young living slave. They hoped to forget in the course of the
noonday sleep, and the subsequent delights of the table, the painful
events which had so unpleasantly stirred their shallow hearts.</p>
<p>Dea Flavia paid no heed to them as they murmured words of leave-taking
in her ear. 'Tis doubtful if she saw one of them or cared if they went
or stayed.</p>
<p>At an order from the praefect the auction sale was abruptly suspended.
The lictors drove the herds of human cattle together preparatory to
taking them to their quarters on the slopes of the Aventine where they
would remain until the morrow; whilst the scribes and auctioneers made
haste to scramble down from the heights of the rostrum, the heat of the
day having rendered that elevated position well-nigh unbearable. Only
Dea Flavia's retinue lingered in the Forum. Standing at a respectful
distance they surrounded the gorgeously draped litter, waiting, silently
and timorous, the further pleasure of their mistress; and behind Dea
Flavia her two Ethiopian slaves, stolidly holding the palm leaves to
shield her head against the blazing sun which so mercilessly seared
their own naked shoulders.</p>
<p>"Grant me leave to escort thee to thy litter, Augusta!" murmured a timid
voice.</p>
<p>It was young Hortensius Martius who spoke. He had approached the catasta
and now stood timid, and a suppliant, beside Dea Flavia, with his curly
head bare to the scorching sun and his back bent in slave-like
deference. But the young girl seemed not to hear him and even after he
had twice repeated his request she turned to him with uncomprehending
eyes.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I would not leave thee, Dea," he said, "until I saw thee safely among
thy slaves and thy clients."</p>
<p>Then at last did she speak. But her voice sounded toneless and dull, as
of one who speaks in a dream.</p>
<p>"I thank thee, good Hortensius," she said, "but my slaves are close at
hand and I would prefer to be left alone."</p>
<p>To insist further would have been churlish. Hortensius Martius, well
versed in every phase of decorum, bowed his head in obedience and
retired to his litter. But he told his slaves not to bear him away from
the Forum altogether but to place the litter down under the arcades of
the tabernae, and then to stand round it so that it could not be seen,
whilst he himself could still keep watch over the movements of Dea
Flavia.</p>
<p>But she in the meanwhile remained in the same inert position, standing
listlessly beside the body of Menecreta, her face expressing puzzlement
rather than horror, as if within her soul she was trying to reconcile
the events of the last few moments with her previous conceptions of what
the tenor of her life should be.</p>
<p>The curse of Menecreta had found sudden and awful fulfilment, and Dea
Flavia remained vaguely wondering whether the gods had been asleep on
this hot late summer's day and forgotten to shield their favoured
daughter against the buffetings of fate. A freedwoman had roused
superstitious fear in the heart of a daughter of the Cæsars! Surely
there must be something very wrong in the administration of the affairs
of this world. Nay, more! for the freedwoman, unconscious of her own
impiety, had triumphed in the end; her death—majestic and sublime in
its suddenness—had set the seal upon her malediction.</p>
<p>And Dea Flavia marvelled that the dead woman remained so calm, her eyes
so still, when—if indeed Jupiter<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</SPAN></span> had been aroused by the monstrous
sacrilege—she must now be facing the terrors of his judgments.</p>
<p>And Taurus Antinor watched her in silence whilst she stood thus,
unconscious of his gaze, a perfect picture of exquisite womanhood set in
a frame of marble temples and colonnades, a dome of turquoise above her
head, the palm leaves above her throwing a dense blue shadow on her
golden hair and the white tunic on her shoulders.</p>
<p>He had heard much of Dea Flavia—the daughter of Claudius Octavius and
now the ward of the Emperor Caligula—since his return from Syria a year
ago, and he had oft seen her gilded and rose-draped litter gliding along
the Sacra Via or the Via Appia, surrounded with its numberless retinue:
but he had never seen her so close as this, nor had he heard her speak.</p>
<p>She was a mere child and still under the tutelage of her despotic father
when he—Taurus Antinor—tired of the enervating influences of decadent
Rome, had obtained leave from the Emperor Tiberius to go to Syria as its
governor. The imperator was glad enough to let him go. Taurus Antinor,
named Anglicanus, was more popular with the army and the plebs than any
autocratic ruler could wish.</p>
<p>He went to Syria and remained there half a dozen years. The jealousy of
one emperor had sent him thither and 'twas the jealousy of another that
called him back to Rome. Syria had liked its governor over well, and
Caius Julius Cæsar Caligula would not brook rivalry in the allegiance
owed to himself alone by his subjects—even by those who dwelt in the
remotest provinces of the Empire.</p>
<p>But on his return to Rome the powerful personality of Taurus Antinor
soon imposed itself upon the fierce and maniacal despot.
Caligula—though he must in reality have hated the Anglicanus as much
and more than he hated all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</SPAN></span> men—gave grudging admiration to his
independence of spirit and to his fearless tongue. In the midst of an
entourage composed of lying sycophants and of treacherous minions, the
Cæsar seemed to feel in the presence of the stranger a sense of security
and of trust. Some writers have averred that Caligula looked on Taurus
Antinor as a kind of personal fetish who kept the wrath of the gods
averted from his imperial head. Be that as it may, there is no doubt
that tyrant exerted his utmost power to keep Taurus near his person,
showering upon him those honours and titles of which he would have been
equally ready to deprive him had the stranger at any time run counter to
his will. Anon, when the Cæsar thought it incumbent upon his dignity to
start on a military expedition, he forced Antinor to accept the
praefecture of the city in order to keep him permanently settled in
Rome.</p>
<p>The Anglicanus accepted the power—which was almost supreme in the
absence of the Cæsar. He even gave the oath demanded of him by the
Emperor that he would remain at his post until the termination of the
proposed military expedition, but it was easy to see that the dignities
for which others would have fought and striven to their uttermost were
not really to the liking of Taurus Antinor.</p>
<p>Avowedly wilful of temper, he had since his return from Syria become
even more silent, more self-centred than before. Many called him morose
and voted him either treacherous or secretly ambitious; others averred
that he was either very arrogant or frankly dull. Certain it is that he
held himself very much aloof from the society of his kind and
persistently refused to mix with the young elegants of the day either in
their circles or their baths, their private parties or public
entertainments.</p>
<p>Thus it was that the praefect found himself to-day for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</SPAN></span> the first time
in the near presence of Dea Flavia, the acknowledged queen of that same
society which he declined to frequent, and as he grudgingly admitted to
himself that she was beautiful beyond what men had said of her, he
remembered all the tales which he had heard of her callous pride, her
cold dignity, and of that cruel disdain with which she rejected all
homage and broke the hearts of those whom her beauty had brought to her
feet.</p>
<p>For the moment, however, she struck him as more pathetic than fearsome;
she looked lonely just now like a stately lily blooming alone in a
deserted garden. He was wroth with her for what she had done to
Menecreta and for her childish caprice and opposition to his will, but
at the same time he who so seldom felt pity for those whom a just
punishment had overtaken, was sorry for this young girl, for in her case
retribution had been severe and out of all proportion to her fault.</p>
<p>Therefore he approached her almost with deference and forced his rough
voice to gentleness, as he said to her:</p>
<p>"The hour is late, O Dea Flavia. I myself must leave the Forum now. I
would wish to see thee safe amongst thy women."</p>
<p>She turned her blue eyes upon him. His voice had roused her from her
meditations and recalled her to that sense of proud dignity with which
she loved to surround herself as with invisible walls. She must have
seen the pity in his eyes for he did not try to hide it, but it seemed
to anger her as coming from this man who—to her mind—was the primary
cause of her present trouble. She looked for a moment or two on him as
if trying to recollect his very existence, and no importunate slave
could ever encounter such complete disdain as fell on the praefect at
this moment from Dea Flavia's glance.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I will return to my palace at the hour which pleaseth me most, O
praefectus," she said coldly, "and when the child Nola, being more
composed, is ready to accompany me."</p>
<p>"Nay!" he rejoined in his accustomed rough way, "the slave Nola is
naught to thee now. She will be looked after as the State directs."</p>
<p>"The slave is mine," she retorted curtly. "She shall come with me."</p>
<p>And even as she spoke she drew herself up to her full height, more like,
he thought, than ever to a stately lily now. The crown of gold upon her
head caught a glint from the noonday sun, and the folds of her white
tunic fell straight and rigid from her shoulders down to her feet.</p>
<p>It seemed strange to him that one so young, so exquisitely pure, should
thus be left all alone to face the hard moments of life; her very
disdain for him, her wilfulness, seemed to him pathetic, for they showed
her simple ignorance of the many cruelties which life must of necessity
have in store for her.</p>
<p>As for yielding to her present mood, he had no thought of it. It was
caprice originally which had caused her to defy his will and to break
old Menecreta's heart. She had invoked strict adherence to the law for
the sole purpose of indulging this caprice. Now he was tempted also to
stand upon the law and to defy her tyrannical will, even at the cost of
his own inclinations in the matter.</p>
<p>He would not trust her with the child Nola now. He had other plans for
the orphan girl, rendered lonely and desolate through a great lady's
whim, and he would have felt degradation in the thought that Dea Flavia
should impose her will on him in this.</p>
<p>He knew her power of course. She was a near kins<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</SPAN></span>woman of the Emperor,
and the child of his adoption; she was all-powerful with the Cæsar as
with all men through the might of his personality as much as through
that of her wealth.</p>
<p>But he had no thought of yielding nor any thought of fear. It seemed as
if in the heat-laden atmosphere two mighty wills had suddenly clashed
one against the other, brandishing ghostly steels. His will against
hers! The might of manhood and of strength against the word of a
beautiful woman. Nor was the contest unequal. If he could crush her with
a touch of his hand, she could destroy him with one word in the Cæsar's
ear. She had as her ally the full unbridled might of the House of Cæsar,
while against her there was only this stranger, a descendant of a
freedwoman from a strange land. For the nonce his influence was great
over the mind of the quasi-madman who sat on the Empire's throne, but
any moment, any event, the whisper of an enemy, the word of a woman,
might put an end to his power.</p>
<p>All this Dea Flavia knew, and knowing it found pleasure in toying with
his wrath. Armed with the triple weapon of her beauty, her purity and
her power, she taunted him with his impotence and smiled with scornful
pity upon the weakness of his manhood.</p>
<p>Even now she turned to Nola and said with gentle firmness:</p>
<p>"Get up, girl, and come with me."</p>
<p>But at her words the last vestige of deference fled from the praefect's
manner; pity now would have been weak folly. Had he yielded he would
have despised himself even as this proud girl now affected to scorn him.</p>
<p>He interposed his massive figure between Dea Flavia and the slave and
said loudly:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"By thy leave, Nola, the daughter of Menecreta, is the property of the
State and 'tis I will decide whither she goeth now."</p>
<p>"Until to-morrow only, Taurus Antinor," she rejoined coldly, "for
to-morrow she must be in the slave market again, when my agents will bid
for and buy her according to my will."</p>
<p>"Nay! she shall not be put up for sale to-morrow."</p>
<p>"By whose authority, O praefectus?"</p>
<p>"By mine. The State hath given me leave to purchase privately a number
of slaves from the late censor's household. 'Tis my intention to
purchase Nola thus."</p>
<p>"Thou hast no right," she said, still speaking with outward calm, though
her whole soul rebelled against the arrogance of this man who dared to
thwart her will, to gainsay her word, and set up his dictates against
hers, "thou hast no right thus to take the law in thine own hands."</p>
<p>"Nay! as to that," he replied with equal calm, "I'll answer for mine own
actions. But the slave Nola shall not pass into thy hands, Augusta! Thou
hast wrought quite enough mischief as it is; be content and go thy way.
Leave the child in peace."</p>
<p>In these days of unbridled passions and unfettered tyranny, a man who
spoke thus to a daughter of the Cæsars spoke at peril of his life. Both
Dea Flavia and Taurus Antinor knew this when they faced one another eye
to eye, their very souls in rebellion one against the other—his own
turbulent and fierce, with the hot blood from a remote land coursing in
his veins, blinding him to his own advantage, to his own future, to
everything save to his feeling of independence at all cost from the
oppression of this family of tyrants; her own almost serene in its
consciousness of limitless power.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>For the moment her sense of dignity prevailed. Whatever she might do in
the future, she was comparatively helpless now. The praefect in the
discharge of his functions—second only to the Cæsar—was all-powerful
where he stood.</p>
<p>Taurus Antinor was still the praefect of Rome, still a member of the
Senate and favourite of Caligula. He had her at a disadvantage now, just
as she had held him a while ago when she forced on the public sale of
the girl Nola. Therefore, though with a look she would have crushed the
insolent, and her delicate hands were clenched into fists that would
have chastised him then and there if they had the strength, she returned
his look of fierce defiance with her usual one of calm.</p>
<p>"Thou hast spoken, Taurus Antinor," she said coldly, "and in deference
to the law which thou dost represent I bow to thy commands. Art thou
content?" she added, seeing that he made no reply.</p>
<p>"Content?" he asked, puzzled at her meaning.</p>
<p>"Aye!" she said; "I asked thee if thou wert content. Thou hast
humiliated a daughter of Cæsar, a humiliation which she is not like to
forget."</p>
<p>"I crave thy pardon if I have transgressed beyond the limits of my
duty."</p>
<p>"Thy duty? Nay, Taurus Antinor, a man's duties are as varied as a
woman's moods, and he is wisest who knows how to adapt the one to the
other. 'Tis not good, remember, to run counter to Dea Flavia's will.
'Tis much that thou must have forgotten, O praefect, ere thou didst set
thy so-called duty above the fulfilment of my wish."</p>
<p>"Nay, gracious lady," he said simply, "I had forgotten nothing. Not even
that Archelaus Menas, the sculptor, died for having angered thee; nor
that Julius Campanius perished in exile and young Decretas in fetters,
because of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</SPAN></span> thine enmity. Thou seest that—though somewhat of a stranger
in Rome—I know much of its secret history, and though mine eyes had
until now never beheld thy loveliness, yet had mine ears heard much of
thy power."</p>
<p>"Yet at its first encounter thou didst defy it."</p>
<p>"I have no mother to mourn o'er my death like young Decretas," he said
curtly, "nor yet a wife to make into a sorrowing widow like the sculptor
Menas."</p>
<p>If it was his desire to break through the barrier of well-nigh insolent
calm which she seemed to have set round her dainty person, then he
succeeded over well, for she winced at his words like one who has
received a blow and her eyes, dark with anger, narrowed until they
became mere slits fringed by her golden lashes.</p>
<p>"But thou hast a life, Taurus Antinor," she said, "and life is a
precious possession."</p>
<p>He shrugged his massive shoulders, and a curious smile played round his
lips.</p>
<p>"And thou canst order that precious possession to be taken from me," he
said lightly. "Is that what thou wouldst say?"</p>
<p>"That and more, for thou hast other precious treasures more precious,
mayhap, than life; so guard them well, O Taurus Antinor!"</p>
<p>"Nay, gracious lady," he rejoined, still smiling, "I have but one soul
as I have one life, and that too is in the hands of God."</p>
<p>"Of which god?" she asked quaintly.</p>
<p>He did not reply but pointed upwards at the vivid dome of blue against
which the white of Phrygian marbles glittered in the sun.</p>
<p>"Of Him Whose Empire is mightier than that of Rome."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She looked on him in astonishment. Apparently she did not understand
him, nor did he try to explain, but it seemed to her as if his whole
appearance had changed suddenly, and her thoughts flew back to that
which she had witnessed a year ago when she was in Ostia and she had
seen a raging tempest become suddenly stilled. "There is no mightier
empire than that of Rome," she said proudly, "and methinks thou art a
traitor, oh Taurus Antinor, else thou wouldst not speak of any emperor
save of Cæsar, my kinsman."</p>
<p>"I spoke not of an emperor, gracious lady," he said simply.</p>
<p>"But thy thoughts were of one whose empire was mightier than that of
Rome."</p>
<p>"My thoughts," he said, "were of a Man Whom I saw whilst travelling
through Judæa a few years ago. He was poor and dwelt among the fishermen
of Galilee. They stood around Him and listened whilst He talked; when He
walked they followed Him, for a halo of glory was upon Him and the words
which He spoke were such that once heard they could never be forgotten."</p>
<p>"Didst thou too hear those marvellous words, O Taurus Antinor?" she
asked.</p>
<p>"Only twice," he replied, "did I hear the words which He spoke. I
mingled with the crowd, and once when His eyes fell upon me, it seemed
to me as if all the secrets of life and death were suddenly revealed to
me. His eyes fell upon me.... I was one of a multitude ... but from that
moment I knew that life on this earth would never be precious to me
again—since the most precious gift man hath is his immortality."</p>
<p>"Thou speakest of strange matters, O praefect," she rejoined, "and
meseems there's treason in what thou sayest.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</SPAN></span> Who is this man, whose
very look hath made a slave of thee?"</p>
<p>"A slave to His will thou sayest truly, O daughter of Cæsar! Could I
hear His command I would follow Him through life and to death. At times
even now meseems that I can hear His voice and see His eyes ... thou
hast never seen such eyes, Augusta—fixed upon my very soul. I saw them
just now, right across the Forum, when the wretched freedwoman clung
shrieking round my shins. They looked at me and <i>asked</i> me to be
merciful; they did not command, they begged ... <i>asking</i> for the pity
that lay dormant in my soul. And now I know that if those same eyes
looked at me again and asked for every drop of my blood, if they asked
me to bear death, torture, or even shame, I would become as thou truly
sayest—a slave."</p>
<p>Once or twice whilst he spoke she had tried to interrupt him, but every
time the words she would have spoken had died upon her lips. He looked
so strange—this praefect of Rome—whose judgments everyone feared,
whose strict adherence to duty the young elegants of the day were ever
fond of deriding. He looked very strange now and spoke such strange
words—words that she resented bitterly, for they sounded like treason
to the House of Cæsar of which she was so coldly proud.</p>
<p>To her Cæsar was as a god, and she as his kinswoman had been brought up
to worship in him not the man—that might be vile—but the supreme power
in the Empire which he represented. She did not pause to think if he
were base, tyrannical, a half-crazy despot without mind or heart or
sensibilities. She knew what was said about him, she had even seen at
times things from which she recoiled in unspeakable horror; but her
soul, still pure and still proud, was able to dissociate the abstract
idea of the holy and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</SPAN></span> mighty Cæsar from its present hideous embodiment.
And this same holy reverence for Cæsar she looked for in all those who
she deemed were worthy to stand—not as his equals, for only the gods
were that—but nigh to his holy person—his own kinsmen first, then his
Senate, his magistrates, and his patricians, and above all this
man—almost a stranger—whom the Cæsar had deigned to honour with his
confidence.</p>
<p>And yet this same stranger spoke calmly of another, of a man whom he
would obey as a slave in all things, whom he would follow even to death;
a man whose might he proclaimed above that of Cæsar himself.</p>
<p>"But who is this man?" she exclaimed at last, almost involuntarily.</p>
<p>"A poor Man from Galilee," he replied.</p>
<p>"What is he called?"</p>
<p>"Out there they called Him Jesus of Nazareth."</p>
<p>"And where is he now?"</p>
<p>"He died upon the cross, in Jerusalem, seven years ago."</p>
<p>"Upon the cross?" she exclaimed; "what had he done?"</p>
<p>"He had dwelt among the poor and brought them contentment and peace; He
had lived amongst men and taught them love and charity. So the Roman
proconsul ordered Him to be crucified, and those whom He had rendered
happy rejoiced over His death."</p>
<p>"Methinks that I did hear something of this. I was a child then but
already I took much interest in the affairs of State, and my father
spoke oft freely in my presence. I remember his talking of a demagogue
over in Judæa who claimed to be the King of the Jews and who was
punished for treason and sedition. But I also heard that he did but
little mischief, since only a troop of ignorant fisher-folk followed and
listened to him."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Ignorant fisher-folk thou saidst it truly, O Dea Flavia, yet I have it
in my mind that anon the knee of every patrician—aye! of every
Cæsar—shall bend before the mighty throne of that Man from Galilee."</p>
<p>"And thus didst learn thy lesson of treason, O praefect," she retorted;
"demagogues and traitors from Judæa have sown the seeds of treachery in
thy mind, and whilst thou dost receive with both hands the gifts of the
Cæsar my kinsman, thou dost set up another above him and dost homage to
him in thy heart."</p>
<p>"Aye! in my heart, gracious lady; for I am even more ignorant than those
fishermen from Galilee who heard every word spoken by Jesus of Nazareth.
I heard Him but twice in my life and once only did His eyes rest upon
me, and they enchained my heart to His service, though I know but little
yet of what He would have me do."</p>
<p>"No doubt he would have thee turn traitor to thine Emperor and to
acclaim him—the demagogue—as imperator before the Senate and the army.
He——"</p>
<p>"I told thee that He was dead," he interposed simply.</p>
<p>"And that his words had made thee rebellious to Cæsar and insolent to
me."</p>
<p>"Thine humble servant, O Augusta," he rejoined, smiling in spite of
himself, for now she was just like an angry child. "Wilt but command and
see how I will obey."</p>
<p>"The girl Nola!" she said haughtily.</p>
<p>"In that alone I must deny thee."</p>
<p>"Then tie my shoe, it hath come undone."</p>
<p>The tone with which she said this was so arrogant and so harsh that even
her slaves behind her turned frightened eyes on the praefect who was
known to be so proud, and on whom the curt command must have had the
effect of a sudden whip-lash on the face.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She had spoken as if to the humblest of her menials, finding pleasure in
putting this insult on the man who had dared to thwart and irritate her;
but she had not spoken deliberately; it had been an impulse, an
irresistible desire to see him down on his knees, in a position only fit
for slaves.</p>
<p>Directly the words had left her mouth, she already regretted them, for
his refusal now would have been doubly humiliating for herself, and her
good sense had told her already that no patrician—least of all Taurus
Antinor—would submit quietly to public insult and ridicule even from
her.</p>
<p>The quick, more gentle word was already on her lips, the look of mute
apology was struggling to her eyes, when to her astonishment the
praefect, without a word, was down on his knees before her.</p>
<p>"Nay!" she said, "I did but jest."</p>
<p>"The honour," he said quietly, "is too great, O daughter of Cæsar, that
I should forego it now."</p>
<p>His powerful shoulders were bent almost to the level of the ground, and
she looked down on him, more puzzled than ever at this stranger whose
every action seemed different from those of his fellow-men. She put her
little foot slightly forward, and as he tied the string of her shoe she
saw how slender was his hand, firm yet tapering down to the elegant
finger-tips; the hand of a patrician even though he hailed from the
barbaric North.</p>
<p>Suddenly she smiled. But this he did not see for he was still intent
upon the shoe, but she felt that those slender hands of his were
singularly clumsy. And she smiled because she had recollected how like
his fellowmen he really was, how he evidently forgot his wrath and sank
his pride for the pleasure of kneeling at her feet.</p>
<p>To this homage she was well accustomed. Many there<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</SPAN></span> were in Rome who at
this moment would gladly have changed places with the praefect. More
than one great patrician had craved the honour of tying her shoe, more
than one patrician hand had trembled whilst performing this service.</p>
<p>And Dea Flavia smiled because already she guessed—or thought that she
guessed—what would follow the tying of her shoe—a humble kiss upon her
foot, the natural homage of a man to her beauty and to her power.</p>
<p>The daughter of Cæsar smiled because the spirit of child-like
waywardness was in her, and she thought that she would like the
slave-like homage from this man whom her wrath and threats had left
impassive but whom her beauty had at last brought down to his knees; and
thus smiling she waited patiently, content that he should be clumsy,
glad that in the distance, under the arcade of the tabernae, she had
spied Hortensius Martius watching with wrathful eyes every movement of
the praefect. She wondered if the young exquisite had heard the wordy
warfare between herself and the proud man who now knelt quite awkwardly
at her feet, and she guessed that what Hortensius had seen and heard,
that he would retail at full length to his friends in the course of the
banquet given by Caius Nepos to-morrow night.</p>
<p>For the moment she felt almost sorry for the giant brought down to his
knees; the kiss which she so confidently anticipated would of a truth
complete his surrender, since she had resolved to make him kiss the dust
by suddenly withdrawing her foot from under his lips, and then to laugh
at him, and to allow her slaves to laugh and jeer at him as he lay
sprawling in the dust, his huge arms lying crosswise on the flagstones
before her.</p>
<p>The spirit of mischief was in her, the love to tease a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span> helpless giant;
so for the nonce anger almost died out within her and her eyes looked
clear and blue as triumph and joy danced within their depths.</p>
<p>But now Taurus Antinor had finished tying her shoe. He did not stoop
further nor did he embrace the dust; but he straightened his broad
shoulders and raised himself from his knees without rendering that
homage which was expected of him.</p>
<p>"Hast further commands for thy servant, O daughter of Cæsar?" he asked
calmly.</p>
<p>"None," she replied curtly.</p>
<p>And calling her slaves to her she entered her litter, and drew its
curtains closely round her so that she should no longer be offended by
his sight.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span></p>
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