The Coming of the King
o moved slowly about preparing the evening meal. She stopped beside a dingy little oven on one end of the bed platform, and bending stiffly to the floor gathered up a few handsful of stub
in the days of
young girl who had entered the room, until an armful of ch
t like a thief in the night. S
three score rents to mend and the day is done." She turned to the doorway and for a moment stood looking out, barefooted, meanly clad and unkept,
ad from the oven and placed it on a wooden ta
the small table. "Bread and u
other Rachael, as she poured the con
a stool at the table side, the aged woman
wn hard," Sa
Then there was plenty and each man sat under his own vine and fig tree, for b
e short skirt of his garment scarce reached his knees. His heavy dark hair was pushed back from his forehead and the dying
Jael," she cried, lo
l exclaimed, laughing. "The blessing of God on t
answered, "yet could I not swallow food i
?" Sara asked, con
tripped are our bodies of covering. Yet doth the tax ever increase that Herod may add to his vast stores. It is tax-tax-tax until at night the waves of the sea beat against the shore
thers," Grandmother Rachael muttered
the King even though her lips make much muttering," Sar
in the days o
That they should till the soil and be robbed of the increase that Herod might buy gold platters in which to serve good Jew heads to dancing harlots? It hath been and ever will be among men struggling for bread, as among
dropped the leather curtain hang
again the days of our
ael
est from the oppressor
st thou forgotten the
ousand followers rise u
wers hanged on two tho
ine broke their fas
n the flesh of thy Jael's father! Forget not shall I until the stone of my father's tomb be rolled against my bones, how he was hung
saw the curtain move. Fear even now doth
, the fisherman, nigh? Look thou at the strength of my arm and the kee
thing were thy fierce words heard by the dogs of Rome. Thy knife is long and ke
stay thy fear
ken only a step when the leather was t
ng arm! Thy kni
is sword. "Give me, else will I strike thy head from thy body and kick it l
's reply as he flung it t
of justice to answer the charge of sedition aga
ox whose brother's wife doth defile his
of a
of a
ed on each side by one of the soldiers, the first spittin
uth in the face of the soldier, who struck him across the cheek with h
p and was wringing her hands and muttering prayers,
oldier when the cross was mentioned.
r replied without looking at her, "el
ose to go if there my J
ring glances on Sara, said, "She is a
ont of her bodice and laying it open. "A fair maiden indeed. Not thine,
rs strike thee dead!"
no more power than yonder driveling granny. By Rome hath the
id to his companion, "of all the spoil that hath been taken between us,
mine. Then shal
your polluted lips pass back and forth? Is it the virgin i
dark the struggle continued, but when Sara returned with the knife she found Jael on the floor with blood running from a wound in the head. She screamed, but no attention was paid her until her lover had
against her breast she whispered, "If
her," the second soldie
"else will I tie thee in the fish net with the Jew
" she commande
nets, as he said, "Flame doth become thy cheek and fire thine eye! Come, nay-thou comest not? Then will Jael hang on a cross. Then will Jael's flayed back draw many stingin
ied Sara. "Wilt
ine, then Jael s
-Jael-Jael," she called, drawin
when thou art mine. Come," and the soldier lay hands upon her, bu
l-Jael-s
second, "thy sword. A live Roman is better
oldier, Sara caught the upraised
ou come
e I leave my home forever, let me have the blessing of my mother Racha
and pushing the other soldier in front of him, he stepped outside and stood where
ra whispered, "th
muttered and cursed, the aged woman fastened Sara's torn
Romance
Romance
Romance
Werewolf
Romance
Romance