[Moon of Israel by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookMoon of Israel CHAPTER IV 19/23
So it seems that the fountain of the royal blood is running dry----" "Now it is coming," whispered Seti below his breath so that only I could hear. "Therefore," continued Pharaoh, "as you know, Prince Seti, for the royal Princess of Egypt by my command went to speak to you of this matter last night, I make a decree----" "Pardon, O Pharaoh," interrupted the Prince, "my sister spoke to me of no decree last night, save that I should attend at the court here to-day." "Because I could not, Seti, seeing that another was present with you whom you refused to dismiss," and she let her eyes rest on me. "It matters not," said Pharaoh, "since now I will utter it with my own lips which perhaps is better.
It is my will, Prince, that you forthwith wed the royal Princess Userti, that children of the true blood of the Ramessides may be born.
Hear and obey." Now Userti shifted her eyes from me to Seti, watching him very closely. Seated at his side upon the ground with my writing roll spread across my knee, I, too, watched him closely, and noted that his lips turned white and his face grew fixed and strange. "I hear the command of Pharaoh," he said in a low voice making obeisance, and hesitated. "Have you aught to add ?" asked Meneptah sharply. "Only, O Pharaoh, that though this would be a marriage decreed for reasons of the State, still there is a lady who must be given in marriage, and she my half-sister who heretofore has only loved me as a relative.
Therefore, I would know from her lips if it is her will to take me as a husband." Now all looked at Userti who replied in a cold voice: "In this matter, Prince, as in all others I have no will but that of Pharaoh." "You have heard," interrupted Meneptah impatiently, "and as in our House it has always been the custom for kin to marry kin, why should it not be her will? Also, who else should she marry? Amenmeses is already wed. There remains only Saptah his brother who is younger than herself----" "So am I," murmured Seti, "by two long years," but happily Userti did not hear him. "Nay, my father," she said with decision, "never will I take a deformed man to husband." Now from the shadow on the further side of the throne, where I could not see him, there hobbled forward a young noble, short in stature, light-haired like Seti, and with a sharp, clever face which put me in mind of that of a jackal (indeed for this reason he was named Thoth by the common people, after the jackal-headed god).
He was very angry, for his cheeks were flushed and his small eyes flashed. "Must I listen, Pharaoh," he said in a little voice, "while my cousin the Royal Princess reproaches me in public for my lame foot, which I have because my nurse let me fall when I was still in arms ?" "Then his nurse let his grandfather fall also, for he too was club-footed, as I who have seen him naked in his cradle can bear witness," whispered old Bakenkhonsu. "It seems so, Count Saptah, unless you stop your ears," replied Pharaoh. "She says she will not marry me," went on Saptah, "me who from childhood have been a slave to her and to no other woman." "Not by my wish, Saptah.
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