[Queen Sheba’s Ring by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookQueen Sheba’s Ring CHAPTER XX 26/36
This I know because he has told me that he alone saw through my plan to save all their lives, but said nothing of it because he desired to escape from Mur, where certain death waited on him and his companions.
Perhaps, however, he lies to please me. Now, for the truth of the matter, which not being skilled in writing I will tell briefly. I was carried out of the cave city with my lord and the others, starving, starving, too weak to kill myself, which otherwise I would have done rather than fall into the hands of my accursed uncle, Joshua. Yet I was stronger than the rest, because as I have learned, they tricked me about those biscuits, pretending to eat when they were not eating, for which never will I forgive them.
It was Japhet, a gallant man on one side, but a coward on the other like the rest of the Abati, who betrayed us, driven thereto by emptiness within, which, after all, is an ill enemy to fight.
He went out and told Joshua where we lay hid, and then, of course, they came. Well, they took away my lord and the others, and me too they bore to another place and fed me till my strength returned, and oh! how good was that honey which first I ate, for I could touch nothing else.
When I was strong again came Prince Joshua to me and said, "Now I have you in my net; now you are mine." Then I answered Joshua, "Fool, your net is of air; I will fly through it." "How ?" he asked.
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