The City of Delight - Page 137/174

Though the place held a great number of refugees, the footstep of the

Maccabee wakened resounding emptiness. At the threshold he slackened

his step and looked with pathetic anxiety at whatever light on

Laodice's face would show her opinion of her refuge. But the uncertain

torch revealed nothing and he led her in and across to a solitary

place where rugs from some looted house had been folded up for a

pallet and spread about for carpets. She sat down and awaited his

speech.

He motioned to the spacious barrenness about him.

"Canst thou content thyself in this place?" he asked, hesitating.

She nodded, but feeling that her reply had not shown all that words

might, she lifted her face that he might see therein that which she

could not trust her lips to say.

It was her undoing. Her weakness overwhelmed her and burying her face

in the folds of her mantle, she wept.

After a dismayed silence, he bent over her and said with a quiver of

distress in his voice: "I--I have work, here, to do, but I shall take thee out of the city

for better refuge--"

That she should seem to be grieving over the nature of the shelter

given her, stirred her deeply. She half rose and with the light

shining on her face, filled with gratitude in spite of her tears, took

his hand in both of hers and pressed it with pathetic insistence.

He understood her.

He laid a hand unsteady with its tremor of delight and young eagerness

upon the vitta and it slipped off her hair. As it dropped, the subtle

warm fragrance of the heavy locks, now braided in maidenly style,

reached him; the liveliness of her relaxed young figure communicated

itself to him without his touch; all the invitation of her

helplessness swept him to the very edge of abandoning his restraint.

On his dark face a transformation occurred. All the hardness, even his

years and his experience vanished from him and a soft recovering flush

faintly colored his cheeks. In that sudden bloom of beauty in his face

was stamped a realization of the far progress of his triumph. She was

in his house and dependent on him, within the very reach of his arms.

When she looked up at him again, she read all this in his face, and

instantly there returned to her, with warning intensity, the fear of

her love of him. The last obstacle but her own conscience that stood

between her and his perfect supremacy over her life had suddenly been

swept away.

She started away from him, and put up her hands to ward off his touch.

"If you do that," she said in a tone sharp with distress, "it is sin

and I shall be cursed! I shall have to go back to him!"