Page:Wisdom's daughter; the life and love story of She-who-must-be-obeyed (IA wisdomsdaughterl00hagg 0).pdf/325

Rh He hung his head, confused, and even the bold eyes of Amenartas were troubled.

Now I could bear no more.

O Grecian Kallikrates, I said, aforetime captain of Pharaoh's guard, aforetime priest of Isis, and O Amenartas, daughter of Nectanebes, by birth Royal Princess of Egypt, why do you waste words, hoping to fool one who cannot be deceived? Doubtless you have bribed yonder Philo to hide the truth, as once you bribed him to hide a certain lady upon his ship and to set the two of you ashore upon a certain island.

If so, he has betrayed us, stammered Kallikrates, the red blood rising to his brow.

Nay, he has not betrayed you, being one who ever keeps faith with those who pay him well. Is it not so, Philo my servant?

I waited for an answer, but none came, for Philo had gone. Then I continued,

Nay, Philo did not betray you, nor was it needed. Royal Amenartas, whence had you that scarab ring upon your hand?

It was my lord's gift to me, she answered.

Then tell me, Kallikrates, whence had you the ring, also if there be graven on its bezel in the Egyptian writing, signs that mean Royal Son of the Sun ?

Those signs are cut upon the ring, O Queen, which in bygone years was given to me as a talisman by a certain divine priestess whom I saved in battle, that its virtues might recover me of wounds which I received in the battle. This, as I was told afterward, it had the power to do because that ring was blessed, having been fashioned like to one which Isis the Mother set as her love gift upon the hand of dead Osiris ere she breathed his soul into him