<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<p class="center"><strong>A STARTLING EVENT.</strong></p>
<p>It was some days later that Chebron and Amuba again
paid a visit to the temple by moonlight. It was well-nigh
a month since they had been there; for, save when
the moon was up, the darkness and gloom of the courts,
lighted only by the lamps of the altars, was so great that
the place offered no attractions. Amuba, free from the
superstitions which influenced his companion, would
have gone with him had he proposed it, although he too
felt the influence of the darkness and the dim, weird figures
of the gods, seen but faintly by the lights that
burned at their feet. But to Chebron, more imaginative
and easily affected, there was something absolutely terrible
in the gloomy darkness, and nothing would have
induced him to wander in the silent courts save when the
moon threw her light upon them.</p>
<p>On entering one of the inner courts they found a massive
door in the wall standing ajar.</p>
<p>“Where does this lead to?” Amuba asked.</p>
<p>“I do not know. I have never seen it open before. I
think it must have been left unclosed by accident. We
will see where it leads to.”</p>
<p>Opening it they saw in front of them a flight of stairs
in the thickness of the wall.</p>
<p>“It leads up to the roof,” Chebron said in surprise.
“I knew not there were any stairs to the roof, for when
repairs are needed the workmen mount by ladders.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></SPAN></span>
“Let us go up, Chebron; it will be curious to look
down upon the courts.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but we must be careful, Amuba; for, did any
below catch sight of us, they might spread an alarm.”</p>
<p>“We need only stay there a minute or two,” Amuba
urged. “There are so few about that we are not likely
to be seen, for if we walk noiselessly none are likely to
cast their eyes so far upward.”</p>
<p>So saying Amuba led the way up the stairs, and Chebron
somewhat reluctantly followed him. They felt
their way as they went, and after mounting for a considerable
distance found that the stairs ended in a narrow
passage, at the end of which was an opening scarce three
feet high and just wide enough for a man to pass
through. This evidently opened into the outer air, as
sufficient light passed through to enable them to see
where they were standing. Amuba crept out through
the opening at the end. Beyond was a ledge a foot
wide; beyond that rose a dome some six feet high and
eight or ten feet along the ledge.</p>
<p>“Come on, Chebron; there is plenty of room for both
of us,” he said, looking backward. Chebron at once
joined him.</p>
<p>“Where can we be?” Amuba asked. “There is the
sky overhead. We are twenty feet from the top of the
wall, and where this ledge ends, just before it gets to the
sides of this stone, it seems to go straight down.”</p>
<p>Chebron looked round him.</p>
<p>“This must be the head of one of the statues,” he said
after a pause. “What a curious place! I wonder what
it can have been made for. See, there is a hole here!”</p>
<p>Just in front of them was an opening of some six
inches in diameter in the stone.</p>
<p>Amuba pushed his hand down.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></SPAN></span>
“It seems to go a long way down,” he said; “but it is
narrowing,” and removing his arm he looked down the
hole.</p>
<p>“There is an opening at the other end,” he said; “a
small narrow slit. It must have been made to enable any
one standing here to see down, though I don’t think they
could see much through so small a hole. I should think,
Chebron, if this is really the top of the head of one of
the great figures, that slit must be where his lips are.
Don’t you think so?”</p>
<p>Chebron agreed that it was probable.</p>
<p>“In that case,” Amuba went on, “I should say that
this hole must be made to allow the priests to give answers
through the mouth of the image to supplications
made to it. I have heard that the images sometimes
gave answers to the worshipers. Perhaps this is the
secret of it.”</p>
<p>Chebron was silent. The idea was a painful one to
him; for if this were so, it was evident that trickery was
practiced.</p>
<p>“I think we had better go,” he said at last. “We
have done wrong in coming up here.”</p>
<p>“Let me peep over the side first,” Amuba said. “It
seems to me that I can hear voices below.”</p>
<p>But the projection of the head prevented his seeing
anything beyond. Returning he put his foot in the hole
and raised himself sufficiently to get on the top of the
stone, which was here so much flattened that there was
no risk of falling off. Leaning forward he looked over
the edge. As Amuba had guessed would be the case, he
found himself on the head of the principal idol in the
temple. Gathered round the altar at its foot were seven
or eight men, all of whom he knew by the whiteness of
their garment to be priests. Listening intently he could
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></SPAN></span>
distinctly hear their words. After waiting a minute he
crawled back.</p>
<p>“Come up here, Chebron; there is something important
going on.”</p>
<p>Chebron joined him, and the two, lying close together,
looked down at the court.</p>
<p>“I tell you we must do away with him,” one of the
group below said in tones louder than had been hitherto
used. “You know as well as I do that his heart is not in
the worship of the gods. He has already shown himself
desirous of all sorts of innovations, and unless we take
matters in our hands there is no saying to what lengths
he may go. He might shatter the very worship of the
gods. It is no use to try to overthrow him openly; for
he has the support of the king, and the efforts that have
been made have not in any way shaken his position.
Therefore he must die. It will be easy to put him out
of the way. There are plenty of small chambers and
recesses which he might be induced to enter on some
pretext or other, and then be slain without difficulty, and
his body taken away by night and thrown into some of
the disused catacombs.</p>
<p>“It would be a nine days’ wonder when he was missed,
but no one could ever learn the truth of his disappearance.
I am ready to kill him with my own hands, and
should regard the deed as one most pleasing to the gods.
Therefore if you are ready to undertake the other arrangements,
and two of you will join me in seeing that
the deed is carried out without noise or outcry, I will
take the matter in hand. I hate him, with his airs of
holiness and his pretended love for the people. Besides,
the good of our religion requires that he shall die.”</p>
<p>There was a chorus of approbation from the others.</p>
<p>“Leave me to determine the time and place,” the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168"></SPAN></span>
speaker went on, “and the excuse on which we will lead
him to his doom. Those who will not be actually engaged
with me in the business must be in the precincts
of the place, and see that no one comes that way, and
make some excuse or other should a cry by chance be
heard, and must afterward set on foot all sorts of rumors
to account for his actions. We can settle nothing to-night;
but there is no occasion for haste, and on the
third night hence we will again gather here.”</p>
<p>Chebron touched Amuba, and the two crept back to
where they had been standing on the ledge.</p>
<p>“The villains are planning a murder in the very
temple!” Chebron said. “I will give them a fright;”
and applying his mouth to the orifice he cried:</p>
<p>“Beware, sacrilegious wretches! Your plots shall fail
and ruin fall upon you!”</p>
<p>“Come on, Chebron!” Amuba exclaimed, pulling his
garment. “Some of the fellows may know the secret of
this statue, and in that case they will kill us without
mercy if they find us here.”</p>
<p>Passing through the opening they groped their way
to the top of the stairs, hurried down these as fast as
they could in the darkness, and issued out from the door.</p>
<p>“I hear footsteps!” Amuba exclaimed as they did so.
“Run for your life, Chebron!”</p>
<p>Just as they left the court they heard the noise of
angry voices and hurried footsteps close by. At full
speed they ran through several courts and apartments.</p>
<p>“We had better hide, Amuba.”</p>
<p>“It will be no use trying to do that. They will guard
the entrance gates, give the alarm, and set all the priests
on duty in the temple in search. No, come along
quickly. They cannot be sure that it is we who spoke to
them, and will probably wait until one has ascended the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169"></SPAN></span>
stairs to see that no one is lurking there. I think we
are safe for the moment; but there are no good hiding-places.
I think you had better walk straight to the
entrance, Chebron. Your presence here is natural
enough, and those they post at the gates would let you
pass out without suspicion. I will try and find myself a
hiding-place.”</p>
<p>“I certainly will not do that, Amuba. I am not going
to run away and leave you in the scrape, especially as it
was I who got us into it by my rashness.”</p>
<p>“Is there any place where workmen are engaged on
the walls?” Amuba asked suddenly.</p>
<p>“Yes, in the third court on the right after entering,”
Chebron replied. “They are repainting the figures on
the upper part of the wall. I was watching them at
work yesterday.”</p>
<p>“Then in that case there must be some ladders. With
them we might get away safely. Let us make for the
court at once, but tread noiselessly, and if you hear a
footstep approaching hide in the shadow behind the
statue. Listen! they are giving the alarm. They know
that their number would be altogether insufficient to
search this great temple thoroughly.”</p>
<p>Shouts were indeed heard, and the lads pressed on
toward the court Chebron had spoken of. The temple
now was echoing with sounds, for the priests on duty,
who had been asleep as usual when not engaged in attending
to the lights, had now been roused by one of
their number, who ran in and told them some sacrilegious
persons had made their way into the temple.</p>
<p>“Here is the place,” Chebron said, stopping at the
foot of the wall.</p>
<p>Here two or three long light ladders were standing.
Some of these reached part of the distance only up the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></SPAN></span>
walls, but the top of one could be seen against the skyline.</p>
<p>“Mount, Chebron! There is no time to loose. They
may be here at any moment.”</p>
<p>Chebron mounted, followed closely by his companion.
Just as he gained the top of the wall several men carrying
torches ran into the court and began to search along
the side lying in shadow. Just as Amuba joined Chebron
one of the searchers caught sight of them, and with
a shout ran toward the ladder.</p>
<p>“Pull, Chebron!” Amuba exclaimed as he tried to haul
up the ladder.</p>
<p>Chebron at once assisted him, and the foot of the ladder
was already many feet above the ground before the
men reached it. The height of the wall was some fifty
feet, and light as was the construction of the ladder, it
was as much as the lads could do to pull it up to the top.
The wall was fully twelve feet in thickness, and as soon
as the ladder was up Amuba said:</p>
<p>“Keep away from the edge, Chebron, or it is possible
that in this bright moonlight we may be recognized.
We must be going on at once. They will tie the short
ladders together and be after us directly.”</p>
<p>“Which way shall we go?”</p>
<p>“Toward the outer wall, as far as possible from the
gate. Bring the ladder along.”</p>
<p>Taking it upon their shoulders they hurried along.
Critical as the position was, Amuba could not help remarking
on the singularity of the scene. The massive
walls were all topped with white cement and stretched
like broad ribbons, crossing and recrossing each other in
regular parallelograms on a black ground.</p>
<p>Five minutes’ running took them to the outer wall,
and the ladder was again lowered and they descended,
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></SPAN></span>
and then stood at its foot for a moment to listen. Everything
was still and silent.</p>
<p>“It is lucky they did not think of sending men to
watch outside the walls when they first caught sight of
us, or we should have been captured. I expect they
thought of nothing but getting down the other ladders
and fastening them together. Let us make straight out
and get well away from the temple, and then we will
return to your house at our leisure. We had better get
out of sight if we can before our pursuers find the top of
the ladder, then as they will have no idea in which direction
we have gone they will give up the chase.”</p>
<p>After an hour’s walking they reached home. On the
way they had discussed whether or not Chebron should
tell Ameres what had taken place, and had agreed that it
would be best to be silent.</p>
<p>“Your father would not like to know that you have
discovered the secret of the image, Chebron. If it was
not for that I should say you had best have told him.
But I do not see that it would do any good now. We
do not know who the men were who were plotting or
whom they were plotting against. But one thing is
pretty certain, they will not try to carry out their plans
now, for they cannot tell how much of their conversation
was overheard, and their fear of discovery will put an
end for the present to this scheme of theirs.”</p>
<p>Chebron agreed with Amuba’s views, and it was decided
to say nothing about the affair unless circumstances
occurred which might alter their intentions.
They entered the house quietly and reached their apartment
without disturbing any of the inmates.</p>
<p>On the following morning one of the priests of the
temple arrived at an early hour and demanded to see
Ameres.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></SPAN></span>
“I have evil tidings to give you, my lord,” he said.
“Your son Neco has this morning been killed.”</p>
<p>“Neco killed?” Ameres repeated.</p>
<p>“It is, alas! but too true, my lord. He left the house
where he lives with two other priests but a short distance
from the gate of the temple at his usual hour. It was
his turn to offer the sacrifices at dawn, and it must have
been still dark when he left the house. As he did not
arrive at the proper time a messenger was sent to fetch
him, and he found him lying dead but a few paces from
his own door, stabbed to the heart.”</p>
<p>Ameres waved his hand to signify that he would be
alone, and sat down half-stunned by the sudden shock.</p>
<p>Between himself and his eldest son there was no great
affection. Neco was of a cold and formal disposition,
and although Ameres would in his own house have gladly
relaxed in his case, as he had done in that of Chebron,
the rigid respect and deference demanded by Egyptian
custom on the part of sons toward their father, Neco had
never responded to his advances and had been punctilious
in all the observances practiced at the time. Except when
absolutely commanded to do so, he had never taken a
seat in his father’s presence, had never addressed him
unless spoken to, had made his appearance only at stated
times to pay his respects to him, and when dismissed
had gladly hurried away to the priest who acted as his
tutor.</p>
<p>As he grew up the gap had widened instead of closing.
Ameres saw with regret that his mind was narrow and
his understanding shallow, that in matters of religion he
was bigoted; while at the same time he perceived that
his extreme zeal in the services of the temple, his absorption
in ceremonial observances of all kinds, were due in
no slight degree to ambition, and that he was endeavoring
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></SPAN></span>
to obtain reputation for distinguished piety with a
view to succeeding some day to the office of high priest.
He guessed that the eagerness with which Neco embraced
the first opportunity of withdrawing himself from his
home and joining two other young priests in their establishment
was due to a desire to disassociate himself from
his father, and thus to make an unspoken protest against
the latitude of opinion that had raised up a party hostile
to Ameres.</p>
<p>Although living so close it was very seldom that he
had, after once leaving the house, again entered it; generally
choosing a time when his father was absent and so
paying his visits only to his mother. Still the news of
his sudden death was a great shock, and Ameres sat
without moving for some minutes until a sudden outburst
of cries in the house betokened that the messenger
had told his tidings to the servants, and that these had
carried them to their mistress. Ameres at once went to
his wife’s apartment and endeavored to console her, but
wholly without success.</p>
<p>Amense was frantic with grief. Although herself
much addicted to the pleasures of the world, she had the
highest respect for religion, and the ardor of Neco in the
discharge of his religious duties had been a source of
pride and gratification to her. Not only was it pleasant
to hear her son spoken of as one of the most rising of the
young priesthood, but she saw that he would make his
way rapidly and would ere long become the recognized
successor to his father’s office. Chebron and Mysa bore
the news of their brother’s death with much more resignation.
For the last three years they had scarcely seen
him, and even when living at home there had been nothing
in common between him and them. They were
indeed more awed by the suddenness of his death than
grieved at his loss.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></SPAN></span>
When he left them Ameres went at once to the house
of Neco to make further inquiries into the matter. There
he could learn nothing that could afford any clew. Neco
had been late at the temple and had not returned until
long after the rest of the household were in bed, and
none had seen him before he left in the morning. No
sound of a struggle or cry for help had been heard. His
death had apparently been instantaneous. He had been
stabbed in the back by some one who had probably been
lurking close to the door awaiting his coming out.</p>
<p>The general opinion there and in the temple was that
he must have fallen a victim to a feeling of revenge on
the part of some attendant in the building who on his
report had undergone disgrace and punishment for some
fault of carelessness or inattention in the services or in
the care of the sacred animals. As a score of attendants
had at one time or other been so reported by Neco, for
he was constantly on the lookout for small irregularities,
it was impossible to fix the crime on one more than
another.</p>
<p>The magistrates, who arrived soon after Ameres to investigate
the matter, called the whole of those who could
be suspected of harboring ill-will against Neco to be
brought before them and questioned as to their doings
during the night. All stoutly asserted that they had
been in bed at the time of the murder, and nothing occurred
to throw a suspicion upon one more than another.
As soon as the investigation was concluded Ameres
ordered the corpse to be brought to his own house.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/img003.jpg" width-obs="302" height-obs="500" alt="image" title="" /> <strong>C. of B. <span class="smcap">Amense and Mysa Bewail the Death of Neco.</span>—Page <SPAN href="#Page_175">175</SPAN>.</strong></div>
<p> </p>
<p>Covered by white cloths it was placed on a sort of
sledge. This was drawn by six of the attendants of the
temple; Ameres and Chebron followed behind, and after
them came a procession of priests. When it arrived at
the house, Amense and Mysa, with their hair unbound
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></SPAN></span>
and falling around them, received the body—uttering
loud cries of lamentation, in which they were joined by
all the women of the house. It was carried into an inner
apartment, and there until evening a loud wailing was
kept up, many female relatives and friends coming in
and joining in the outcry. Late in the evening the body
was taken out, placed upon another sledge, and, followed
by the male relatives and friends and by all the attendants
and slaves of the house, was carried to the establishment
of Chigron the embalmer. During the forty days
occupied by the process the strictest mourning was
observed in the house. No meat or wheaten bread was
eaten, nor wine served at the table—even the luxury of
the bath was abandoned. All the males shaved their
eyebrows, and sounds of loud lamentation on the part of
the women echoed through the house.</p>
<p>At the end of that time the mummy was brought back
in great state, and placed in the room which was in all
large Egyptian houses set apart for the reception of the
dead. The mummy-case was placed upright against the
wall. Here sacrifices similar to those offered at the
temple were made. Ameres himself and a number of the
priests of the rank of those decorated with leopard skins
took part of the services. Incense and libation were
offered. Amense and Mysa were present at the ceremony,
and wailed with their hair in disorder over their
shoulders and dust sprinkled on their heads. Oil was
poured over the head of the mummy, and after the ceremony
was over Amense and Mysa embraced the mummied
body, bathing its feet with their tears and uttering
expressions of grief and praises of the deceased.</p>
<p>In the evening a feast was held in honor of the dead.
On this occasion the signs of grief were laid aside, and
the joyful aspect of the departure of the dead to a happy
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></SPAN></span>
existence prevailed. A large number of friends and relatives
were present. The guests were anointed and decked
with flowers, as was usual at these parties, and after the
meal the mummy was drawn through the room in token
that his spirit was still present among them. Amense
would fain have kept the mummy for some time in the
house, as was often the practice, but Ameres preferred
that the funeral should take place at once.</p>
<p>Three days later the procession assembled and started
from the house. First came servants bearing tables
laden with fruit, cakes, flowers, vases of ointment, wine,
some young geese in a crate for sacrifice, chairs, wooden
tables, napkins, and other things. Then came others
carrying small closets containing the images of the gods;
they also carried daggers, bows, sandals, and fans, and
each bore a napkin upon his shoulder. Then came a
table with offerings and a chariot drawn by a pair of
horses, the charioteer driving them as he walked behind
the chariot. Then came the bearers of a sacred boat and
the mysterious eye of Horus, the god of stability.
Others carried small images of blue pottery representing
the deceased under the form of Osiris, and the bird emblematic
of the soul. Then eight women of the class of
paid mourners came along beating their breasts, throwing
dust upon their heads, and uttering loud lamentations.
Ameres, clad in a leopard skin, and having in his hands
the censer and vase of libation, accompanied by his attendants
bearing the various implements used in the services,
and followed by a number of priests also clad in
leopard skins, now came along. Immediately behind
them followed the consecrated boat placed upon a sledge,
and containing the mummy-case in a large exterior case
covered with paintings. It was drawn by four oxen and
seven men. In the boat Amense and Mysa were seated.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></SPAN></span>
The sledge was decked with flowers, and was followed by
Chebron and other relatives and friends of the deceased,
beating their breasts and lamenting loudly.</p>
<p>When they arrived at the sacred lake, which was a
large piece of artificial water, the coffin was taken from
the small boat in which it had been conveyed and placed
in the baris, or consecrated boat of the dead. This was
a gorgeously painted boat with a lofty cabin. Amense,
Mysa, and Chebron took their places here. It was towed
by a large boat with sails and oars. The members of the
procession then took their places in other richly decorated
sailing boats, and all crossed the lake together.
The procession was then reformed and went in the same
order to the tomb. Here the mummy-case was placed on
the slab prepared for it, and a sacrifice with libation and
incense offered. The door of the tomb was then closed,
but not fastened, as sacrificial services would be held
there periodically for many years. The procession then
returned on foot to the house.</p>
<p>During all this time no certain clew had been obtained
as to the authors of the murder. Upon going up to the
temple on the day of Neco’s death Chebron found all
sorts of rumors current. The affair of the previous night
had been greatly magnified, and it was generally believed
that a strong party of men had entered the temple with
the intention of carrying off the sacred vessels, but that
they had been disturbed just as they were going to break
into the subterranean apartments where these were kept,
and had then fled to the ladders and escaped over the
wall before a sufficient force could be collected to detain
them. It was generally supposed that this affair was in
some way connected with the death of Neco. Upon Chebron’s
return with this news he and Amuba agreed that it
was necessary to inform Ameres at once of their doings
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></SPAN></span>
on the previous night. After the evening meal was over
Ameres called Chebron into his study.</p>
<p>“Have you heard aught in the temple, Chebron, as to
this strange affair that took place there last night? I
cannot see how it can have any connection with your
brother’s death; still, it is strange. Have you heard
who first discovered these thieves last night? Some say
that it was Ptylus, though what he should be doing
there at that hour I know not. Four or five others are
named by priests as having aroused them; but curiously
not one of these is in the temple to-day. I have received
a letter from Ptylus saying that he has been suddenly
called to visit some relations living on the seashore
near the mouths of the Nile. The others sent
similar excuses. I have sent to their houses, but all
appear to have left at an early hour this morning. This
is most strange, for none notified to me yesterday that
they had occasion to be absent. What can be their
motive in thus running away when naturally they would
obtain praise and honor for having saved the vessels of
the temple? Have you heard anything that would seem
to throw any light upon the subject?”</p>
<p>“I have heard nothing, father; but I can tell you
much. I should have spoken to you the first thing this
morning had it not been for the news about Neco.”
Chebron then related to Ameres how he and Amuba had
the night before visited the temple, ascended the stairs
behind the image of the god, and overheard a plot to
murder some unknown person.</p>
<p>“This is an extraordinary tale, Chebron,” Ameres said
when he had brought his story to a conclusion. “You
certainly would have been slain had you been overtaken.
How the door that led to the staircase came to be open I
cannot imagine. The place is only used on very rare
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></SPAN></span>
occasions, when it is deemed absolutely necessary that
we should influence in one direction or another the
course of events. I can only suppose that when last
used, which is now some months since, the door must
have been carelessly fastened, and that it only now
opened of itself. Still, that is a minor matter, and it is
fortunate that it is you who made the discovery. As to
this conspiracy you say you overheard, it is much more
serious. To my mind the sudden absence of Ptylus and
the others would seem to show that they were conscious of
guilt. Their presence in the temple so late was in itself
singular; and, as you say, they cannot know how much
of their conversation was overheard. Against whom
their plot was directed I can form no idea; though,
doubtless, it was a personage of high importance.”</p>
<p>“You do not think, father,” Chebron said hesitatingly,
“that the plot could have been to murder Neco? This is
what Amuba and I thought when we talked it over this
afternoon.”</p>
<p>“I do not think so,” Ameres said after a pause. “It
is hardly likely that four or five persons would plot together
to carry out the murder of one in his position; it
must be some one of far greater importance. Neco may
not have been liked, but he was certainly held in esteem
by all the priests in the temple.”</p>
<p>“You see, father,” Chebron said, “that Ptylus is an
ambitious man, and may have hoped at some time or
other to become high priest. Neco would have stood in
his way, for, as the office is hereditary, if the eldest son
is fitted to undertake it, Neco would almost certainly be
selected.”</p>
<p>“That is true, Chebron, but I have no reason to credit
Ptylus with such wickedness; beside, he would hardly
take other people into his confidence did he entertain
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></SPAN></span>
such a scheme. Moreover, knowing that they were overheard
last night, although they cannot tell how much
may have been gathered by the listener, they would
assuredly not have carried the plan into execution; besides
which, as you say, no plan was arrived at, and
after the whole temple was disturbed they would hardly
have met afterward and arranged this fresh scheme of
murder. No. If Neco was killed by them, it must have
been that they suspected that he was one of those who
overheard them. His figure is not unlike yours. They
may probably have obtained a glimpse of you on the
walls, and have noticed your priest’s attire. He was in
the temple late, and probably left just before you were
discovered. Believing, then, that they were overheard,
and thinking that one of the listeners was Neco, they
decided for their own safety to remove him. Of course
it is mere assumption that Ptylus was one of those you
overheard last night. His absence to-day is the only
thing we have against him, and that alone is wholly insufficient
to enable us to move in the matter. The
whole affair is a terrible mystery; be assured I will do
my best to unravel it. At present, in any case, we can
do nothing. Ptylus and the four priests who are absent
will doubtless return when they find that no accusation
is laid against them. They will suppose that the
other person who overheard them, whoever he was, is
either afraid to come forward, or perhaps heard only a
few words and is ignorant of the identity of the speakers.
Indeed, he would be a bold man who would venture to
prefer so terrible an accusation against five of the priests
of the temple. I do not blame you in the matter, for you
could not have foreseen the events that have happened.
It was the will of the gods that you should have learned
what you have learned; perhaps they intend some day
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></SPAN></span>
that you shall be their instrument for bringing the guilty
to justice. As to the conspiracy, no doubt, as you say,
the plot, against whomsoever it was directed, will be
abandoned, for they will never be sure as to how much is
known of what passed between them, and whether those
who overheard them may not be waiting for the commission
of the crown to denounce them. In the meantime
you will on no account renew your visit to the temple or
enter it at any time, except when called upon to do so by
your duties.”</p>
<p>The very day after Neco’s funeral Mysa and her mother
were thrown into a flutter of excitement by a message
which arrived from Bubastes. Some months before the
sacred cat of the great temple there—a cat held in as
high honor in Lower Egypt as the bull Apis in the
Thebaid—had fallen sick, and, in spite of the care and
attendance lavished upon it, had died. The task of finding
its successor was an important and arduous one, and,
like the bull of Apis, it was necessary not only that the
cat should be distinguished for its size and beauty, but
that it should bear certain markings. Without these
particular markings no cat could be elevated to the sacred
post, even if it remained vacant for years; therefore as
soon as the cat was dead a party of priests set out from
Bubastes to visit all the cities of Egypt in search of its
successor.</p>
<p>The whole country was agitated with the question of
the sacred cat, and at each town they visited lists were
brought to the priests of all the cats which, from size,
shape, and color, could be considered as candidates for
the office. As soon as one of the parties of the priests
had reached Thebes Amense had sent to them a description
of Mysa’s great cat Paucis. Hitherto Amense had
evinced no interest whatever in her daughter’s pets, seldom
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></SPAN></span>
going out into the garden, except to sit under the
shade of the trees near the fountain for a short time in
the afternoon when the sun had lost its power.</p>
<p>In Paucis, indeed, she had taken some slight interest;
because, in the first place, it was only becoming that the
mistress of the house should busy herself as to the welfare
of animals deemed so sacred; and in the second,
because all who saw Paucis agreed that it was remarkable
alike in size and beauty, and the presence of such a
creature in the house was in itself a source of pride and
dignity. Thus, then, she lost no time in sending a message
to the priests inviting them to call and visit her and
inspect the cat. Although, as a rule, the competitors for
the post of sacred cat of Bubastes were brought in
baskets by their owners for inspection, the priests were
willing enough to pay a visit in person to the wife of so
important a man as the high priest of Osiris.</p>
<p>Amense received them with much honor, presented
Mysa to them as the owner of the cat, and herself accompanied
the priests in their visit to the home of Mysa’s
pets. Their report was most favorable. They had,
since they left Bubastes, seen no cat approaching Paucis
in size and beauty, and although her markings were not
precisely correct, they yet approximated very closely to
the standard. They could say no more than this, because
the decision could not be made until the return of all the
parties of searchers to Bubastes. Their reports would
then be compared, and unless any one animal appeared
exactly to suit all requirements, a visit would be made by
the high priest of the temple himself to three or four of
the cats most highly reported upon. If he found one of
them worthy of the honor, it would be selected for the
vacant position.</p>
<p>If none of them came up to the lofty standard the post
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></SPAN></span>
would remain unfilled for a year or two, when it might
be hoped that among the rising generation of cats a
worthy successor to the departed one might be found.
For themselves, they must continue their search in
Thebes and its neighborhood, as all claimants must be
examined; but they assured Amense that they thought it
most improbable that a cat equal to Paucis would be
found.</p>
<p>Some months had passed, and it was not until a week
after the funeral of Neco that a message arrived, saying
that the report concerning Paucis by the priests who had
visited Thebes was so much more favorable than that
given by any of the other searchers of the animals they
had seen, that it had been decided by the high priest
that it alone was worthy of the honor.</p>
<p>The messenger stated that in the course of a fortnight
a deputation consisting of the high priest and several
leading functionaries of the temple, with a retinue of the
lower clergy and attendants, would set out from Bubastes
by water in order to receive the sacred cat, and to conduct
her with all due ceremony to the shrine of Bubastes.
Mysa was delighted at the honor which had befallen her
cat. Privately she was less fond of Paucis than of some
of the less stately cats; for Paucis, from the time it grew
up, had none of the playfulness of the tribe, but deported
itself with a placid dignity which would do honor to its
new position, but which rendered it less amusing to
Mysa than its humbler but more active companions.</p>
<p>Amense was vastly gratified at the news. It was considered
the highest honor that could befall an Egyptian
for one of his animals to be chosen to fill the chief post
in one of the temples, and next in dignity to Apis himself
was the sacred cat of the great goddess known as
Baste, Bubastes, or Pasht.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></SPAN></span>
As soon as the news was known, all the friends and
acquaintances of the family flocked in to offer their
congratulations; and so many visits were paid to Mysa’s
inclosure that even the tranquility of Paucis was
disturbed by the succession of admirers, and Amense,
declaring that she felt herself responsible for the animal
being in perfect health when the priests arrived for it,
permitted only the callers whom she particularly desired
to honor to pay a visit of inspection to it.</p>
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