[Moon of Israel by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookMoon of Israel CHAPTER XIII 14/20
I thought that she looked very beautiful with her hair outspread over her white robe, and held back from her temples by a little fillet of god.
But as I looked, I rejoiced to find that my heart no longer yearned for her as it had upon that night when I had seen her seated beneath the trees without the pleasure-house.
Now she was its friend, no more, and so she remained until all was finished, as both the Prince and she knew well enough. When he saw me Seti sprang from his seat and came to greet me, as a man does the friend whom he loves.
I kissed his hand, and going to Merapi, kissed hers also noting that on it now shone that ring which once she had rejected as too large. "Tell me, Ana, all that has befallen you," he said in his pleasant, eager voice. "Many things, Prince; one of them very strange and terrible," I answered. "Strange and terrible things have happened here also," broke in Merapi, "and, alas! this is but the beginning of woes." So saying, she rose, as though she could trust herself to speak no more, bowed first to her lord and then to me, and left the chamber. I looked at the Prince and he answered the question in my eyes. "Jabez has been here," he said, "and filled her heart with forebodings. If Pharaoh will not let the Israelites go, by Amon I wish he would let Jabez go to some place whence he never could return.
But tell me, have you also met blood travelling against the stream of Nile? It would seem so," and he glanced at the rusty stains that no washing would remove from my garments. I nodded and we talked together long and earnestly, but in the end were no wiser for all our talking.
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