Thorny Path, a — Complete eBook

Georg Ebers
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 769 pages of information about Thorny Path, a — Complete.

Thorny Path, a — Complete eBook

Georg Ebers
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 769 pages of information about Thorny Path, a — Complete.

Heron had never liked the freedman.  The man’s firm character had always gone against the gemcutter’s surly, capricious nature; and it was no little satisfaction to him to let him feel his superiority, and boast before him of the apparent good luck that had befallen the artist’s family.

But Andreas had already heard from the physician that Caracalla had informed his mother’s envoys of his intended marriage with an Alexandrian, the daughter of an artist of Macedonian extraction.  This could only refer to Melissa, and it was this news which had caused him to urge the maiden to instant flight.

Pale, incapable of uttering a word, Melissa stood before her father; but the freedman grasped her hand, looked Heron reproachfully in the face, and asked, quietly, “And you would really have the heart to join this dear child’s life to that of a bloody tyrant?”

“Certainly I have,” returned Heron with decision, and he drew his daughter’s hand out of that of Andreas, who turned his back upon the artist with a meaning shrug of the shoulders.  But Melissa ran after him, and, clinging to him, cried as she turned first to him and then to her father: 

“I am promised to Diodoros, and shall hold fast to him and my love; tell him that, Andreas!  Come what may, I will be his and his alone!  Caesar—­”

“Swear not!” broke in Heron, angrily, “for by great Serapis—­”

But Alexander interposed between them, and begged his father to consider what he was asking of the girl.  Caesar’s proposals could scarcely have been very pleasing to him, or why had he concealed till now what Caracalla was whispering to him in the adjoining room?  He might imagine for himself what fate awaited the helpless child at the side of a husband at whose name even men trembled.  He should remember her mother, and what she would have said to such a union.  There was little, time to escape from this terrible wooer.

Then Melissa turned to her brother and begged him earnestly:  “Then you take me to the ship Alexander; take charge of me yourself!”

“And I?” asked Heron, his eye cast gloomily on the ground.

“You must come with us!” implored the girl, clasping her hands.—­“O Andreas! say something!  Tell him what I have to expect!”

“He knows that without my telling him,” replied the freedman.  “I must go now, for two lives are at stake, Heron.  If I can not keep the physician away from Caesar, your daughter, too, will be in danger.  If you desire to see your daughter forever in fear of death, give her in marriage to Caracalla.  If you have her happiness at heart, then escape with her into a far country.”

He nodded to the brother and sister, and returned to the sick-room.

“Fly!—­escape!” repeated the old man, and he waived his hand angrily.  “This Andreas—­the freedman, the Christian—­always in extremes.  Why run one’s head against the wall?  First consider, then act; that was what she taught us whose sacred memory you have but now invoked, Alexander.”

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Thorny Path, a — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.