The Yoke eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 582 pages of information about The Yoke.

The Yoke eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 582 pages of information about The Yoke.

Hotep’s face showed light at the taskmaster’s words.

“Is she also gone?” he asked mildly.  “Then let me give you my word, that the discovery of one will also find the other.”

Atsu gazed with growing hope at the scribe.

“How is he favored?” he asked at last.

“He is tall, half a palm taller than his fellows; comely of countenance; young; in manner, amiable and courteous—.”

Atsu interrupted him with a wave of his hand.  “I saw him once—­good three months agone, but not since.”

The reply baffled Hotep for a moment.  He realized that to find Kenkenes he must begin a search for Rachel.

“Good Atsu, he whom we seek is a friend to the maiden.  He is much beloved by me—­by us.  Whomsoever he befriendeth we shall befriend.  Wilt thou tell us when and from whom the maiden fled?”

Atsu had become willing by this time.  This amiable young noble might be able to lift the suspense that burdened his unhappy heart.

“Har-hat—­Set make a cinder of his heart!—­asked her at the hands of the Pharaoh for his harem—­”

Mentu interrupted him with a growling imprecation and Hotep’s fair face darkened.

“Yesterday morning he sent three men to me,” the taskmaster continued, “with the document of gift from the Son of Ptah, but she saw them in time and fled into the desert.  At that hour there were only women in the camp, and the three men made short work of me when I would have held them till she escaped.  In three hours, two of them returned—­one, sick from hard usage, and the third, they said, had been pitched over the cliff-front into the valley of the Nile.  They had not captured her and they were too much enraged to explain why they had not.  During their absence I emptied the quarries of Israelites and posted them along the Nile to halt the Egyptians, if they came to the river with Rachel.  But we let them return to Memphis empty-handed, and thereafter searched the hills till sunset.  The maiden’s foster-mother, it seems, fled with her, but neither of them, nor any trace of them, was to be found.”

“Does it not appear to thee,” Hotep asked, after a little silence, “that the same hand which so forcibly persuaded the Egyptians to abandon the pursuit may have led the maiden to a place of safety?  My surmises have been right in general, O noble Mentu, but not in detail,” he continued, turning to the murket.  “There is, however, the element of danger now to take the place of the gracelessness we would have laid to him.  Thou knowest Har-hat, my Lord.”

He thanked the dark-faced taskmaster.  “Have no concern for the maiden.  She is safe, I doubt not.”

He took Mentu’s arm and passing up through the Israelitish camp, climbed the slope behind it.

“It is my duty and thine to hide this lovely folly up here, ere these searching minions of Har-hat or frantic Israelites come upon it.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Yoke from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.