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CHAPTER XIII
THE COMING OF THE PHARAOH
On the first day of February, runners, dusty, breathless and excited, pa.s.sed the sentries of the Memphian palace of Meneptah with the news that the Pharaoh was but a day's journey from his capital. They were the last of a series of couriers that had kept the city informed of the king's advance. For days before, public drapers were to be seen clinging cross-legged to obelisk and peristyle; moving in spread-eagle fas.h.i.+on, hung in a jacket of sail-cloth attached to cables, across the fronts of buildings, looping garlands, besticking banners and spreading tapestries. Scattering sounds of hammer and saw continued even through the night. The city's metals were polished, her streets were sprinkled and rolled, her stone wharves scoured, her landings painted, her flambeaux new-soaked in pitch. The gardens, the storehouses and the wine-lofts felt unusual draft for the festivities, and the great capital was decked and scented like a bride.
Now, on the eve of the Pharaoh's coming, the preparations were complete. The city was full of excitement and pleasant expectancy.
Only once before during the six years of Meneptah's reign had such enthusiasm prevailed. When the Rebu horde descended upon Egypt, Meneptah had sent his generals out to meet the invader, but he, himself, had remained under cover in Memphis because he said the stars were unpropitious. And this was the son of Rameses II, than whom, if the historians and the singer Pentaur say true, there was never a more puissant monarch! But when the marauder was overthrown and routed, and his generals turned toward Memphis with their captives in chains, Meneptah hastened to meet them, decked his chariot with war trophies and entered his capital in triumph. He was hailed with exultant acclaim.
"Hail, mighty Pharaoh! who smites with his glance and annihilates with his spear. He overthrew companies alone, and with his lions he routed armies. His enemies crumbled before him like men of clay, for he breathed hot coals in his wrath and flames in his vengeance." And the enthusiasm that inspired the eulogy was sincere. Meneptah was none the less loved because Memphis understood him. The Pharaoh was the apple of her eye and she wors.h.i.+ped him stubbornly.
Now he was returning from a bloodless campaign--one that neither required nor brought forth any generals.h.i.+p--but it was a victory and had been personally conducted by Meneptah, so Memphis was preparing to fall into paroxysms of delight, little short of hysteria.
An hour after sunrise on the day of the Pharaoh's coming a gorgeous regatta a.s.sembled off the wharves of Memphis. It was a flotilla of the rank and wealth of the capital, with that of On, Bubastis, Busiris, and even Mendes and Tanis. The boats were high-riding, graceful and finished at head and stern with sheaves of carved lotus. Hull and superstructure were painted in gorgeous colors with a preponderance of ivory and gold. Masts, rigging and oars were wrapped with lotus, roses and mimosa. Sails and canopies were brilliant with dyes and undulant with fringes. Troops of tiny boys, innocent of raiment, were posted about the sides of the vessels holding festoons. Oarsmen wore chaplets on the head or garlands around the loins, and half-clad slave-girls were scattered about with fans of dyed plumes. Bridges of boats had been hastily run out between the vessels, and over these the embarking voyagers or visitors pa.s.sed in a stream. On sh.o.r.e was a great mult.i.tude and every advantageous point of survey was occupied. And here were catastrophes and riots, panics and love-making, gambling and gossip and all the other things that mark the a.s.sembly of a crowd. But these incidents drew the attention of the populace only momentarily from the revel of the n.o.bility on the Nile. For there were laughter and songs, strumming of the lyre, shouts, polite contention and the drone of general conversation among such numbers that the sound was of great volume.
At the head of the pageant were the boats of the nomarch and the courtiers to Meneptah who remained in Memphis. Near the forefront of these was the pleasure-boat of Mentu.
Kenkenes dropped from its deck to the walk rising and falling at its side, and made his way through the crowd in search of a vessel bearing a winged sun and the oval containing the symbols of On. As he pa.s.sed the prow of a tall pleasure-boat he was caught in a rope of flowers let down from above and looped about him with a dexterous hand. He turned in the pretty fetters and looked up. Above him was a row of a dozen little girl-faces, set like apple-blossoms along the side of the vessel. The youngest was not over twelve years of age, the oldest, fourteen. Each rosy countenance was rippled with laughter, but the sound was lost in the great turmoil about them. In the center of the group, a pair of hands put forth under the chin of an older girl, held the ends of the garland with a determined grip. Her eyes were gray, her hair was chestnut, her face very fair. Kenkenes recognized her with a sudden warmth about his heart. The others were strangers to him. A glance at the plate on the side of the boat showed him that this was the one he sought. Most willingly he obeyed the insistent summons of the garland and permitted himself to be drawn to the barge.
There, the same hands showed him the ladder against the side, and a dozen pretty arms were extended to haul him aboard as he climbed.
But the instant he planted foot on the deck the lovely rout retreated to shelter at the side of a smiling woman seated in the shadow of fans.
Only his fair-faced captor stood her ground.
"Hail, Hapi," [1] she cried, doing obeisance. "Pity the desert." She flung wide her hands. With the exception of the youths at the oars there was no other man on the boat.
"Ye may call me forth," Kenkenes replied, "but how shall ye return me to my banks? Hither, sweet On," he continued, catching the hand of the fair-faced girl, "submit first to submergence." She took his kisses willingly. "This for Seti, thy lover; this for Hotep, thy brother, and this for me who am both in one. How thou art grown, Io!"
"But she hath not denied thee the babyhood privileges for all that, Kenkenes," the smiling woman said.
"It is an excellent example of submission she hath set, Lady Senci," he replied, advancing toward the young girls about her. "Let us see if it prevail."
But the troop scattered with little cries of dismay.
"Nay," he observed, as he bent over Senci's hand, "never were two maids alike, and I shall not strive to make them so."
"Thy father hath most graciously kept his word in sending us a protector," Senci continued, "My nosegay of beauties drooped last night when they arrived from On with my brother sick, aboard. They feared they must stop with me in Memphis for want of a man."
"It was the first word I heard from my father this morning and the last when I left him even now: 'Io's father hath failed her through sickness, so do thou look after the Lady Senci--and the G.o.ds give thee grace for once to do a thing well!'"
The lady smiled and patted his arm. "He did not fear; he knew whom he chose. But behold our gallant escort--the nomarch ahead, beside us the new cup-bearer and behind us all the rank of the north."
"Aye, and when we cast off thou mayest look for the new murket on thy right."
The lady blushed. "I have not seen thy father yet, this morning."
"So? His robes must fit poorly."
At that moment a gang-plank was run across from the broad flat stern of the nomarch's boat to the prow of Senci's, a carpet was spread on it, and Ta-meri, with little shrieks and tottering steps, came across it.
Kenkenes put out his arms to her and lifted her down when she arrived.
"Wonder brought me," she cried. "I dreamed I saw thee kiss a maiden thrice and I came to see if it were true."
"O most honest vision! It is true and this is she," Kenkenes answered, indicating Io.
Ta-meri flung up her hands and gazed at the blus.h.i.+ng girl with wide eyes.
"Enough," she said at last. "It is indeed a marvel. Never have I seen such a thing before, and never shall I see it again."
"And if that be true, fie and for shame, Kenkenes," Senci chid laughingly.
"Ta-meri always shuts her eyes," the sculptor defended himself stoutly.
The nomarch's daughter caught his meaning first and covered her face with her hands. The chorus of laughter did not drown her protests.
"Kenkenes, thou art a mortal plague!" she exclaimed behind her defense.
"Truce," he said. "Thou didst accuse me and I did defend myself. We are even."
"Nay, but am I also even with Ta-meri?" Io asked shyly.
"Now," Senci cried, "which of ye will say 'aye' or 'nay' to that!"
Ta-meri retreated protesting to the prow again, but the gang-plank had been withdrawn. An army of slaves were breaking up the bridges of boats. The oars of the nomarch's barge rose and fell and the vessel bore away. Ta-meri cried out again when she saw it depart but she made no effort to stay it.
"Come back, Ta-meri," Io called. "I shall not press thee for an accounting."
The lanes of water between the boats cleared, the scented sails filled, the bristling fringes of oars dipped and flashed, a great shout arose from the populace on sh.o.r.e and the s.h.i.+ning pageant moved away toward Thebes. The barge of Nechutes swung into position on the left of Senci--the oars on Mentu's boat rose and halted and the vessel drifted till it was alongside her right. Kenkenes put his arm about Io, who stood beside him and whispered exultantly or irreverently concerning the vigilance of the cup-bearer and the murket.
"And," he continued oracularly, "there will be a third attending us when we return, if thou hast been coy with the gentle Seti during his long absence."
"Nay, I have sent him messages faithfully and in no little point have I failed him in constancy. But I can not see why he should love me, who am to the court-ladies as a thrush to peafowls. He writes me such praise of Ta-user."
"Now, Io! Art thou so little versed in the ways of men that thou dost wonder why we love or how we love or whom we love? The very fact that thou art different from Seti's surroundings is like to make him love thee best."
"I am not jealous; only he hath so much to tell of Ta-user."
"Aye, since she is like to become his sister, it is not strange. But what says he of her?"
Io thrust her hand into the mist of gauzes over her bosom and with a soft flush on her cheeks drew forth a small, flattened roll of linen.
Kenkenes made a place for her on his chair and drew her down beside him. Together the pair undid the scroll and Kenkenes, following the tiny pink finger, came upon these words:
"Ah, thou shouldst see her, my sweet. Thou knowest she was born of a prince of Egypt and a lovely Tahennu, and the mingling of our dusky blood with that of a fair-haired northern people, hath wrought a marvelous beauty in Ta-user. Her hair is like copper and like copper her eyes. There is no brownness nor any flush in her skin. It is like thick cream, smooth, soft and cool. And when she walks, she minds me of my grandsire's leopardess, which once did stride from shadow to shadow in the palace with that undulatory, unearthly grace. In nature, she is world-compelling. When first she met me, she took my face between her palms and gazed into mine eyes. Ai! she bewitched me, then and there. My individuality died within me--I felt an unreasoning submission, strangely mingled with aversion. I was compelled--divorced from mine own forces, which vaguely protested from afar. . . . And yet, thou shouldst see her meet Rameses. He makes me marvel. He knows--she knows--aye, all Egypt knows why she hath come to court, and yet they meet--she salutes him with bewildering grace--he inclines his proud head with never a tremor and they pa.s.s. Or, if they tarry to talk, it is an awesome sight to see the determined encounter of two mighty souls--tremendous charm against tremendous resistance--and Io, I know that they have sounded to the deepest the depth of each other's strength. I long to see Ta-user conquer--and yet, again I would not."
Thereafter followed matters which Kenkenes did not read. He rolled the letter and gave it back to Io. The little girl sat expectantly watching his face.
"Nay, I would not take Seti's boyish transports seriously," he said gently. "His very frankness disclaims any heart interest in Ta-user.
Besides, she is as old as I--three whole Nile-floods older than the prince. She thinks on him as Senci looks on me--he regards her as a lad looks up to gracious womanhood. Nay, fret not, thou dear jealous child."
Io's lips quivered as she looked away.
"It is over and over--ever the same in every letter--Ta-user, Ta-user, till I hate the name," she said at last.