"I crave leave to kiss thy feet," he said, "for thy graciousness to me."
"Thou art well, O Taurus Antinor?" she asked timidly; "thy wounds...."
"Are healed, O gracious lady," he broke in gently, whilst a smile lit up his dark face, "since thy lips did deign to ask after them."
"It was presumptuous of me to bring thee here," she said after a while.
"I feared that thou wast dead, and the Caesar...."
"Would have defiled my body. Then would I kiss the ground where the hem of thy gown did touch it, for thy graciousness hath made it sacred."
"I pray thee rise," she said, "thou art weak."
"May I not kneel?"
"Not to me."
"Not to thee, but before thee, Augusta; before thy beauty and thy purity, the exquisite creations of G.o.d."
"Of thy G.o.d, O Taurus Antinor," she said with a little sigh. "He hath naught to do with me."
"He made thee for man"s delight, to gladden the heart of those on whom thy glance doth rest."
She had ordered him to sit on a pile of cushions which lay not far from her chair. Thus was he almost at her feet, and she could look down upon his ma.s.sive shoulders and on his head bent slightly forward as he spoke.
She thought then how like unto a ruler of men he was, how much strength and power did his whole person express. She wondered, with a happy little feeling of antic.i.p.ation, how he would take the news which she would impart to him, what he would say, how he would look when he knew that she was prepared to crown him with the diadem of Augustus, and to bestow on him the full gifts of her love.
Time was precious, and the next few moments would satisfy her wonderment. She longed to see the fire of ambition light up his earnest face: the glow of love smouldering in his eyes would render their glance exquisitely sweet.
But for the moment she would have liked to put the more serious issues off for a while, she would have liked to sit here for many hours to come, with him close by at her feet, her ears pleasantly tickled by his gentle words of bold admiration yet profound respect. Had he not said that she was made to gladden the heart of those on whom her glance did rest? And a sense of sadness had crept into her heart as he thus spoke, for memory had conjured up before her mind the miseries which had followed in her wake these few days past.
"I have brought naught but misery," she said with a sigh, "to those whom I would bless."
"Joy to me, Augusta," he rejoined earnestly, "since the day I first beheld thee."
"Menecreta is dead," she whispered; "dost remember?"
"I remember."
She paused a while, then said abruptly:
"And the Caesar is a fugitive."
"Heavens above!" he exclaimed, and the whole expression of his face changed suddenly; "a fugitive?... when?... where...?"
"The people are wrathful against him," she said; "they surrounded his palace, and even...."
The words died on her lips. The shout of "Death to the Caesar! Death!"
had come distinctly from afar. He jumped to his feet, and she saw that his face now looked careworn and anxious.
"Where is the Caesar?" he asked hurriedly.
"He is a fugitive, I tell thee. The rabble fired his palace to force him to come out of it and face them. But he ran away through the secret pa.s.sage which leads through the house of Germanicus to mine."
"He is here then?"
"No! He grovelled at my feet and begged me to hide him ... here ... in my private chamber where he thought he would be safe ... but I would not let him come for I thought thee helpless in thy bed, and feared that he would kill thee."
"Great G.o.d!"
"Nay! why shouldst thou call to thy G.o.d on behalf of a tyrant and a coward," she said excitedly; "thou shouldst have seen that man cowering at my feet like a beaten dog. I could have spurned him with my foot, as I would a cur."
"The Caesar, Augusta, the Caesar!"
"Aye!" she rejoined firmly, "the Caesar, my kinsman! Were he not that, I would have rushed to my door and called to the people, and would have handed over unto them that miserable bundle of rags which stood for the majesty of Caesar!"
"And I lay a helpless log," he rejoined bitterly, "while the destinies of Rome lay in thy hands."
"Aye! The destinies of Rome," she said proudly, whilst a glow of intense excitement filled her whole personality, "but not in my hands, O praefect, but in thine!"
"In mine?"
She rose and went up to him and placed her white fingers upon his arm.
"Listen!" she said.
She held up her other hand and thus stood beside him with slender neck stretched slightly forward, her lips parted, a look of intentness expressed in the whole of her exquisite face.
"Dost hear?" she whispered.
Obedient to her will he listened too. The cry of "Death to the Caesar!"
monotonous and weird, seemed to strike him with horror, for his wan cheeks a.s.sumed a yet paler hue and his lips murmured words which, however, she could not understand. Then suddenly the cry was followed by another--indistinct at first, yet gaining in clearness as it rose on the waves of the storm from the Forum below.
"The praefect of Rome! Where is the praefect of Rome? Hail Taurus Antinor Caesar! Hail!"
"Hark!" she said triumphantly, "dost hear? The people call to thee!
They are ready to deify thee. They call for thee, dost hear them, O praefect?"
But though she turned her eager, questioning gaze on him, though excitement and enthusiasm seemed to emanate from her from every pore, the look of horror only deepened on his face and the whispered prayer did not cease to tremble on his lips.
"Dost hear them?" she reiterated once more.
He was looking on her now, and gradually horror faded from his eyes and pallor from his cheeks. A wave of tenderness seemed to pa.s.s right over his face, making the harsh lines seem marvellously soft.
"I hear thy voice," he murmured, "soft as the breath of spring among the leaves of roses."
"The people call for thee."
"And thy hand is on my arm and I feel the magic of thy touch."