"Then expect me," the Maccabee said.

The shepherd boy smiled contentedly and blessed the Maccabee and let

him go. As long as the man could see, his young host watched him, and

at the summit of the hill the Maccabee turned to wave his final

farewell. When the path dipped down the other side of the hill, the

man felt that more than the sunshine had been cut off by its great

shadow.

He did not go forward with a light heart. The whole of his purpose had

suddenly resolved itself into duty. There had been a certain nervous

expectancy that was almost fear in the thought of meeting the grown

woman he had married in her babyhood. He had lived in Ephesus with an

unengaged heart in all the crowd of opportunities for love, good and

bad. He had magnetism, strength, aloofness and a certain beauty--four

qualifications which had made him over and over again immensely

attractive to all classes of Ephesian women. But whatever his response

to them, he had not loved. Love and marriage were things so apart from

his activities as to be uninteresting. When finally he was called in

full manhood to assume without preliminary both of these things, he

was uncomfortable and apprehensive. But after he had met the girl in

the hills, his sensations of reluctance became emphatic, became an

actual dread, so that he thrust away all thought of the domestic side

of the life that confronted him, and bitterly resigned all hope in the

tender things that were the portion of all men. The villainy of Julian

of Ephesus engaged him chiefly, and his punishment. After that, then

the establishment of his kingdom, politics, conquest and power--but

not love!

Late that afternoon, he stepped out of a wady west of Jerusalem and

halted.

Ahead of him ran a road depressed between worn, hard, bare banks of

earth, past a deserted pool, marged with stone, up shining surfaces of

outcropping rock, through avenues of clustered tombs, pillars, pagan

monuments which were tracks of the Herods, dead and abandoned,

splendid pleasure gardens, suburban palaces lifeless and still, toward

the looming Tower of Hippicus, brooding over a fast-closed gate.

The Maccabee nodded. It was as he had expected. The city was besieged.

It was afternoon, a week-day at the busiest portal of Jerusalem; but

save for the fixed and pygmy sentry upon the tower, there was no

living thing to be seen, no single sound to be heard.

Beyond the mounting hills of the City of David stood up, shouldering

like mantles of snow their burden of sun-whitened houses. Above it

all, supreme over the blackened masonry of Roman Antonia, stood a

glittering vision in marble and gold--the Temple. At a distance it

could not be seen that any of those inwalled splendors lacked;

Jerusalem appeared intact, but the multitudes at the gate were absent

and the voice of the city was stilled.




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