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<h2> CHAPTER XXI: THE GAULISH SLAVE </h2>
<p>On arriving at the mansion of Gracchus, Sempronius led Malchus to the
apartment occupied by Flavia. Her face lighted with satisfaction.</p>
<p>“You have done well, my Sempronius,” she said; “I shall not forget your
ready gratification of my wish. So this is the young Carthaginian? My
friends will all envy me at having so handsome a youth to attend upon me.
Do you speak our tongue?” she asked graciously.</p>
<p>“A few words only,” Malchus answered. “I speak Greek.”</p>
<p>“It is tiresome,” Flavia said, addressing Sempronius, “that I do not know
that language; but Julia has been taught it. Tell him, Sempronius, that
his duties will be easy. He will accompany me when I walk abroad, and will
stand behind me at table, and will have charge of my pets. The young lion
cub that Tiberius procured for me is getting troublesome and needs a firm
hand over him; he nearly killed one of the slaves yesterday.”</p>
<p>Sempronius translated Flavia's speech to Malchus.</p>
<p>“I shall dress him,” Flavia said, “in white and gold; he will look
charming in it.”</p>
<p>“It is hardly the dress for a slave,” Sempronius ventured to object.</p>
<p>“I suppose I can dress him as I please. Lesbia, the wife of Emilius,
dresses her household slaves in blue and silver, and I suppose I have as
much right as she has to indulge my fancies.”</p>
<p>“Certainly, Lady Flavia,” Sempronius said reverentially. “I only thought
that such favours shown to the Carthaginian might make the other slaves
jealous.”</p>
<p>Flavia made no answer, but waved her fan to Sempronius in token of
dismissal. The young Roman, inwardly cursing her haughty airs, took his
leave at once, and Flavia handed Malchus over to the charge of the chief
of the household, with strict directions as to the dress which was to be
obtained for him, and with orders to give the animals into his charge.</p>
<p>Malchus followed the man, congratulating himself that if he must serve as
a slave, at least he could hardly have found an easier situation. The pets
consisted of some bright birds from the East, a Persian greyhound, several
cats, a young bear, and a half grown lion. Of these the lion alone was
fastened up, in consequence of his attack upon the slave on the previous
day.</p>
<p>Malchus was fond of animals, and at once advanced boldly to the lion. The
animal crouched as if for a spring, but the steady gaze of Malchus
speedily changed its intention, and, advancing to the full length of its
chain, it rubbed itself against him like a great cat. Malchus stroked its
side, and then, going to a fountain, filled a flat vessel with water and
placed it before it. The lion lapped the water eagerly. Since its assault
upon the slave who usually attended to it, none of the others had ventured
to approach it. They had, indeed, thrown it food, but had neglected to
supply it with water.</p>
<p>“We shall get on well together, old fellow,” Malchus said. “We are both
African captives, and ought to be friends.”</p>
<p>Finding from the other slaves that until the previous day the animal had
been accustomed to run about the house freely and to lie in Flavia's room,
Malchus at once unfastened the chain and for some time played with the
lion, which appeared gentle and good tempered. As the master of the
household soon informed the others of the orders he had received
respecting Malchus, the slaves saw that the newcomer was likely, for a
time at least, to stand very high in the favour of their capricious
mistress, and therefore strove in every way to gain his goodwill.</p>
<p>Presently Malchus was sent for again, and found Julia sitting on the couch
by the side of her mother, and he at once acknowledged to himself that he
had seldom seen a fairer woman. She was tall, and her figure was full and
well proportioned. Her glossy hair was wound in a coil at the back of her
head, her neck and arms were bare, and she wore a garment of light green
silk, and embroidered with gold stripes along the bottom, reaching down to
her knees, while beneath it a petticoat of Tyrian purple reached nearly to
the ground.</p>
<p>“Is he not good looking, Julia?” Flavia asked. “There is not a slave in
Rome like him. Lesbia and Fulvia will be green with envy.”</p>
<p>Julia made no reply, but sat examining the face of Malchus with as much
composure as if he had been a statue. He had bowed on entering, as he
would have done in the presence of Carthaginian ladies, and now stood
composedly awaiting Flavia's orders.</p>
<p>“Ask him, Julia, if it is true that he is a cousin of Hannibal and the
captain of his guard. Such a youth as he is, I can hardly believe it; and
yet how strong and sinewy are his limbs, and he has an air of command in
his face. He interests me, this slave.”</p>
<p>Julia asked in Greek the questions that her mother had dictated.</p>
<p>“Ask him now, Julia,” Flavia said, when her daughter had translated the
answer, “how he came to be captured.”</p>
<p>Malchus recounted the story of his being blown by a gale into the Roman
ports; then, on her own account, Julia inquired whether he had been
present at the various battles of the campaign. After an hour's
conversation Malchus was dismissed. In passing through the hall beyond he
came suddenly upon a female who issued from one of the female apartments.
They gave a simultaneous cry of astonishment.</p>
<p>“Clotilde!” Malchus exclaimed, “you here, and a captive?”</p>
<p>“Alas! yes,” the girl replied. “I was brought here three months since.”</p>
<p>“I have heard nothing of you all,” Malchus said, “since your father
returned with his contingent after the battle of Trasimene. We knew that
Postumius with his legion was harrying Cisalpine Gaul, but no particular
has reached us.”</p>
<p>“My father is slain,” the girl said. “He and the tribe were defeated. The
next day the Romans attacked the village. We, the women and the old men,
defended it till the last. My two sisters were killed. I was taken
prisoner and sent hither as a present to Flavia by Postumius. I have been
wishing to die, but now, since you are here, I shall be content to live
even as a Roman slave.”</p>
<p>While they were speaking they had been standing with their hands clasped.
Malchus, looking down into her face, over which the tears were now
streaming as she recalled the sad events at home, wondered at the change
which eighteen months had wrought in it. Then she was a girl, now she was
a beautiful woman—the fairest he had ever seen, Malchus thought,
with her light brown hair with a gleam of gold, her deep gray eyes, and
tender, sensitive mouth.</p>
<p>“And your mother?” he asked.</p>
<p>“She was with my father in the battle, and was left for dead on the field;
but I heard from a captive, taken a month after I was, that she had
survived, and was with the remnant of the tribe in the well nigh
inaccessible fastnesses at the head of the Orcus.”</p>
<p>“We had best meet as strangers,” Malchus said. “It were well that none
suspect we have met before. I shall not stay here long—if I am not
exchanged. I shall try to escape whatever be the risks, and if you will
accompany me I will not go alone.”</p>
<p>“You know I will, Malchus,” Clotilde answered frankly. “Whenever you give
the word I am ready, whatever the risk is. It should break my heart were I
left here alone again.”</p>
<p>A footstep was heard approaching, and Clotilde, dropping Malchus' hands,
fled away into the inner apartments, while Malchus walked quietly on to
the part of the house appropriated to the slaves. The next day, having
assumed his new garments, and having had a light gold ring, as a badge of
servitude, fastened round his neck, Malchus accompanied Flavia and her
daughter on a series of visits to their friends.</p>
<p>The meeting with Clotilde had delighted as much as it had surprised
Malchus. The figure of the Gaulish maiden had been often before his eyes
during his long night watches. When he was with her last he had resolved
that when he next journeyed north he would ask her hand of the chief, and
since his journey to Carthage his thoughts had still more often reverted
to her. The loathing which he now felt for Carthage had converted what
was, when he was staying with Allobrigius, little more than an idea, into
a fixed determination that he would cut himself loose altogether from
corrupt and degenerate Carthage, and settle among the Gauls. That he
should find Clotilde captive in Rome had never entered his wildest
imagination, and he now blessed, as a piece of the greatest good fortune,
the chance, which had thrown him into the hands of the Romans, and brought
him into the very house where Clotilde was a slave. Had it not been for
that he would never again have heard of her. When he returned to her
ruined home he would have found that she had been carried away by the
Roman conquerors, but of her after fate no word could ever have reached
him.</p>
<p>Some weeks passed, but no mode of escape presented itself to his mind.
Occasionally for a few moments he saw Clotilde alone, and they were often
together in Flavia's apartment, for the Roman lady was proud of showing
off to her friends her two slaves, both models of their respective races.</p>
<p>Julia had at first been cold and hard to Malchus, but gradually her manner
had changed, and she now spoke kindly and condescendingly to him, and
would sometimes sit looking at him from under her dark eyebrows with an
expression which Malchus altogether failed to interpret. Clotilde was more
clear sighted. One day meeting Malchus alone in the atrium she said to
him: “Malchus, do you know that I fear Julia is learning to love you. I
see it in her face, in the glance of her eye, in the softening of that
full mouth of hers.”</p>
<p>“You are dreaming, little Clotilde,” Malchus said laughing.</p>
<p>“I am not,” she said firmly; “I tell you she loves you.”</p>
<p>“Impossible!” Malchus said incredulously. “The haughty Julia, the fairest
of the Roman maidens, fall in love with a slave! You are dreaming,
Clotilde.”</p>
<p>“But you are not a common slave, Malchus, you are a Carthaginian noble and
the cousin of Hannibal. You are her equal in all respects.”</p>
<p>“Save for this gold collar,” Malchus said, touching the badge of slavery
lightly.</p>
<p>“Are you sure you do not love her in return, Malchus? She is very
beautiful.”</p>
<p>“Is she?” Malchus said carelessly. “Were she fifty times more beautiful it
would make no difference to me, for, as you know as well as I do, I love
some one else.”</p>
<p>Clotilde flushed to the brow. “You have never said so,” she said softly.</p>
<p>“What occasion to say so when you know it? You have always known it, ever
since the day when we went over the bridge together.”</p>
<p>“But I am no fit mate for you,” she said. “Even when my father was alive
and the tribe unbroken, what were we that I should wed a great
Carthaginian noble? Now the tribe is broken, I am only a Roman slave.”</p>
<p>“Have you anything else to observe?” Malchus said quietly.</p>
<p>“Yes, a great deal more,” she went on urgently. “How could you present
your wife, an ignorant Gaulish girl, to your relatives, the haughty dames
of Carthage? They would look down upon me and despise me.”</p>
<p>“Clotilde, you are betraying yourself,” Malchus said smiling, “for you
have evidently thought the matter over in every light. No,” he said,
detaining her, as, with an exclamation of shame, she would have fled away,
“you must not go. You knew that I loved you, and for every time you have
thought of me, be it ever so often, I have thought of you a score. You
knew that I loved you and intended to ask your hand from your father. As
for the dames of Carthage, I think not of carrying you there; but if you
will wed me I will settle down for life among your people.”</p>
<p>A footstep was heard approaching. Malchus pressed Clotilde for a moment
against his breast, and then he was alone. The newcomer was Sempronius. He
was still a frequent visitor, but he was conscious that he had lately lost
rather than gained ground in the good graces of Julia. Averse as he had
been from the first to the introduction of Malchus into the household, he
was not long in discovering the reason for the change in Julia, and the
dislike he had from the first felt of Malchus had deepened to a feeling of
bitter hatred.</p>
<p>“Slave,” he said haughtily, “tell your mistress that l am here.”</p>
<p>“I am not your slave,” Malchus said calmly, “and shall not obey your
orders when addressed in such a tone.”</p>
<p>“Insolent hound,” the young Roman exclaimed, “I will chastise you,” and he
struck Malchus with his stick. In an instant the latter sprang upon him,
struck him to the ground, and wrenching the staff from his hand laid it
heavily across him. At that moment Flavia, followed by her daughter,
hurried in at the sound of the struggle. “Malchus,” she exclaimed, “what
means this?”</p>
<p>“It means,” Sempronius said rising livid with passion, “that your slave
has struck me—me, a Roman patrician. I will lodge a complaint
against him, and the penalty, you know, is death.”</p>
<p>“He struck me first, Lady Flavia,” Malchus said quietly, “because I would
not do his behests when he spoke to me as a dog.”</p>
<p>“If you struck my slave, Sempronius,” Flavia said coldly, “I blame him not
that he returned the blow. Although a prisoner of war, he is, as you well
know, of a rank in Carthage superior to your own, and I wonder not that,
if you struck him, he struck you in return. You know that you had no right
to touch my slave, and if you now take any steps against him I warn you
that you will never enter this house again.”</p>
<p>“Nor will I ever speak a word to you,” Julia added.</p>
<p>“But he has struck me,” Sempronius said furiously; “he has knocked me down
and beaten me.”</p>
<p>“Apparently you brought it upon yourself,” Flavia said. “None but
ourselves know what has happened; therefore, neither shame nor disgrace
can arise from it. My advice to you is, go home now and remain there until
those marks of the stick have died out; it will be easy for you to assign
an excuse. If you follow the matter up, I will proclaim among my friends
how I found you here grovelling on the ground while you were beaten. What
will then be said of your manliness? Already the repeated excuses which
have served you from abstaining to join the armies in the field have been
a matter for much comment. You best know whether it would improve your
position were it known that you had been beaten by a slave. Why, you would
be a jest among young Romans.”</p>
<p>Sempronius stood irresolute. His last hopes of winning Julia were
annihilated by what had happened. The tone of contempt in which both
mother and daughter had spoken sufficiently indicated their feelings, and
for a moment he hesitated whether he would not take what revenge he could
by denouncing Malchus. But the thought was speedily put aside. He had been
wrong in striking the domestic slave of another; but the fact that Malchus
had been first attacked, and the whole influence of the house of Gracchus,
its relations, friends, and clients exerted in his behalf, would hardly
suffice to save him. Still the revenge would be bought dearly in the
future hostility of Flavia and her friends, and in the exposure of his own
humiliating attitude. He, therefore, with a great effort subdued all signs
of anger and said:</p>
<p>“Lady Flavia, your wish has always been law to me, and I would rather that
anything should happen than that I should lose your favour and patronage,
therefore, I am willing to forget what has happened, the more so as I own
that I acted wrongly in striking your slave. I trust that after this
apology you will continue to be the kindly friend I have always found
you.”</p>
<p>“Certainly, Sempronius,” Flavia said graciously, “and I shall not forget
your ready acquiescence in my wishes.”</p>
<p>It was the more easy for Sempronius to yield, inasmuch as Malchus had,
after stating that he had been first struck, quietly left the apartment.
For some little time things went on as before. Malchus was now at home in
Rome. As a slave of one of the most powerful families, as was indicated by
the badge he wore on his dress, he was able, when his services were not
required, to wander at will in the city. He made the circuit of the walls,
marked the spots which were least frequented and where an escape would be
most easily made; and, having selected a spot most remote from the busy
quarter of the town, he purchased a long rope, and carrying it there
concealed it under some stones close to one of the flights of steps by
which access was obtained to the summit of the wall.</p>
<p>The difficulty was not how to escape from Rome, for that, now that he had
so much freedom of movement, was easy, but how to proceed when he had once
gained the open country. For himself he had little doubt that he should be
able to make his way through the territories of the allies of Rome, but
the difficulty of travelling with Clotilde would be much greater.</p>
<p>“Clotilde,” he said one day, “set your wits to work and try and think of
some disguise in which you might pass with me. I have already prepared for
getting beyond the walls; but the pursuit after us will be hot, and until
we reach the Carthaginian lines every man's hand will be against us.”</p>
<p>“I have thought of it, Malchus; the only thing that I can see is for me to
stain my skin and dye my hair and go as a peasant boy.”</p>
<p>“That is what I, too, have thought of, Clotilde. The disguise would be a
poor one, for the roundness of your arms and the colour of your eyes would
betray you at once to any one who looked closely at you. However, as I can
see no better way, I will get the garments and some for myself to match,
and some stuff for staining the skin and hair.”</p>
<p>The next day Malchus bought the clothes and dye and managed to bring them
into the house unobserved, and to give to Clotilde those intended for her.</p>
<p>The lion, under the influence of the mingled firmness and kindness of
Malchus, had now recovered his docility, and followed him about the house
like a great dog, sleeping stretched out on a mat by the side of his
couch.</p>
<p>Sempronius continued his visits. Malchus was seldom present when he was
with Flavia, but Clotilde was generally in the room. It was now the height
of summer, and her duty was to stand behind her mistress with a large fan,
with which she kept up a gentle current of air over Flavia's head and
drove off the troublesome flies. Sometimes she had to continue doing so
for hours, while Flavia chatted with her friends.</p>
<p>Sempronius was biding his time. The two slaves were still high in Flavia's
favour, but he was in hopes that something might occur which would render
her willing to part with them. He watched Julia narrowly whenever Malchus
entered the room, and became more and more convinced that she had taken a
strong fancy for the Carthaginian slave, and the idea occurred to him that
by exciting her jealousy he might succeed in obtaining his object. So
careful were Malchus and Clotilde that he had no idea whatever that any
understanding existed between them. This, however, mattered but little;
nothing was more likely than that these two handsome slaves should fall in
love with each other, and he determined to suggest the idea to Julia.</p>
<p>Accordingly one day when he was sitting beside her, while Flavia was
talking with some other visitors, he remarked carelessly, “Your mother's
two slaves, the Carthaginian and the Gaul, would make a handsome couple.”</p>
<p>He saw a flush of anger in Julia's face. For a moment she did not reply,
and then said in a tone of indifference:</p>
<p>“Yes, they are each well favoured in their way.”</p>
<p>“Methinks the idea has occurred to them,” Sempronius said. “I have seen
them glance at each other, and doubt not that when beyond your presence
they do not confine themselves to looks.”</p>
<p>Julia was silent, but Sempronius saw, in the tightly compressed lips and
the lowering brow with which she looked from one to the other, that the
shaft had told.</p>
<p>“I have wondered sometimes,” he said, “in an idle moment, whether they
ever met before. The Carthaginians were for some time among the Cisalpine
Gauls, and the girl was, you have told me, the daughter of a chief there;
they may well have met.”</p>
<p>Julia made no reply, and Sempronius, feeling that he had said enough,
began to talk on other subjects. Julia scarcely answered him, and at last
impatiently waved him away. She sat silent and abstracted until the last
of the visitors had left, then she rose from her seat and walked quietly
up to her mother and said abruptly to Clotilde, who was standing behind
her mistress: “Did you know the slave Malchus before you met here?”</p>
<p>The suddenness of the question sent the blood up into the cheeks of the
Gaulish maiden, and Julia felt at once that the hints of Sempronius were
fully justified.</p>
<p>“Yes,” Clotilde answered quietly, “I met him when, with Hannibal, he came
down from the Alps into our country.”</p>
<p>“Why did you not say so before?” Julia asked passionately. “Mother, the
slaves have been deceiving us.”</p>
<p>“Julia,” Flavia said in surprise, “why this heat? What matters it to us
whether they have met before?”</p>
<p>Julia did not pay any attention, but stood with angry eyes waiting for
Clotilde's answer.</p>
<p>“I did not know, Lady Julia,” the girl said quietly, “that the affairs of
your slaves were of any interest to you. We recognized each other when we
first met. Long ago now, when we were both in a different position—”</p>
<p>“And when you loved each other?” Julia said in a tone of concentrated
passion.</p>
<p>“And when we loved each other,” Clotilde repeated, her head thrown back
now, and her bearing as proud and haughty as that of Julia.</p>
<p>“You hear that, mother? you hear this comedy that these slaves have been
playing under your nose? Send them both to the whipping post.”</p>
<p>“My dear Julia,” Flavia exclaimed, more and more surprised at her anger,
“what harm has been done? You astonish me. Clotilde, you can retire. What
means all this, Julia?” she went on more severely when they were alone;
“why all this strange passion because two slaves, who by some chance have
met each other before, are lovers? What is this Gaulish girl, what is this
Carthaginian slave, to you?”</p>
<p>“I love him, mother!” Julia said passionately.</p>
<p>“You!” Flavia exclaimed in angry surprise; “you, Julia, of the house of
Gracchus, love a slave! You are mad, girl, and shameless.”</p>
<p>“I say so without shame,” Julia replied, “and why should I not? He is a
noble of Carthage, though now a prisoner of war. What if my father is a
consul? Malchus is the cousin of Hannibal, who is a greater man than Rome
has ever yet seen. Why should I not wed him?”</p>
<p>“In the first place, it seems, Julia,” Flavia said gravely, “because he
loves someone else. In the second place, because, as I hear, he is likely
to be exchanged very shortly for a praetor taken prisoner at Cannae, and
will soon be fighting against us. In the third place, because all Rome
would be scandalized were a Roman maiden of the patrician order, and of
the house of Gracchus, to marry one of the invaders of her country. Go to,
Julia, I blush for you! So this is the reason why of late you have behaved
so coldly to Sempronius. Shame on you, daughter! What would your father
say, did he, on his return from the field, hear of your doings? Go to your
chamber, and do not let me see you again till you can tell me that you
have purged this madness from your veins.”</p>
<p>Without a word Julia turned and left the room. Parental discipline was
strong in Rome, and none dare disobey a parent's command, and although
Julia had far more liberty and license than most unmarried Roman girls,
she did not dare to answer her mother when she spoke in such a tone.</p>
<p>Flavia sat for some time in thought, then she sent for Malchus. He had
already exchanged a few words with Clotilde, and was therefore prepared
for her questions.</p>
<p>“Malchus, is it true that you love my Gaulish slave girl?”</p>
<p>“It is true,” Malchus replied quietly. “When we met in Gaul, two years
since, she was the daughter of a chief, I a noble of Carthage. I loved
her; but we were both young, and with so great a war in hand it was not a
time to speak of marriage.”</p>
<p>“Would you marry her now?”</p>
<p>“Not as a slave,” Malchus replied; “when I marry her it shall be before
the face of all men—I as a noble of Carthage, she as a noble Gaulish
maiden.”</p>
<p>“Hannibal is treating for your exchange now,” Flavia said. “There are
difficulties in the way, for, as you know, the senate have refused to
allow its citizens who surrender to be ransomed or exchanged; but the
friends of the praetor Publius are powerful and are bringing all their
influence to bear to obtain the exchange of their kinsman, whom Hannibal
has offered for you. I will gladly use what influence I and my family
possess to aid them. I knew when you came to me that, as a prisoner of
war, it was likely that you might be exchanged.”</p>
<p>“You have been very kind, my Lady Flavia,” Malchus said, “and I esteem
myself most fortunate in having fallen into such hands. Since you know now
how it is with me and Clotilde, I can ask you at once to let me ransom her
of you. Any sum that you like to name I will bind myself, on my return to
the Carthaginian camp, to pay for her.”</p>
<p>“I will think it over,” Flavia said graciously. “Clotilde is useful to me,
but I can dispense with her services, and will ask you no exorbitant
amount for her. If the negotiations for your exchange come to aught, you
may rely upon it that she shall go hence with you.”</p>
<p>With an expression of deep gratitude Malchus retired. Flavia, in thus
acceding to the wishes of Malchus, was influenced by several motives. She
was sincerely shocked at Julia's conduct, and was most desirous of getting
both Malchus and Clotilde away, for she knew that her daughter was
headstrong as she was passionate, and the presence of Clotilde in the
house would, even were Malchus absent, be a source of strife and
bitterness between herself and her daughter.</p>
<p>In the second place, it would be a pretty story to tell her friends, and
she should be able to take credit to herself for her magnanimity in
parting with her favourite attendant. Lastly, in the present state of
affairs it might possibly happen that it would be of no slight advantage
to have a friend possessed of great power and influence in the
Carthaginian camp. Her husband might be captured in fight—it was not
beyond the bounds of possibility that Rome itself might fall into the
hands of the Carthaginians. It was, therefore, well worth while making a
friend of a man who was a near relation of Hannibal.</p>
<p>For some days Julia kept her own apartment. All the household knew that
something had gone wrong, though none were aware of the cause. A general
feeling of uneasiness existed, for Julia had from a child in her fits of
temper been harsh with her slaves, venting her temper by cruelly beating
and pinching them. Many a slave had been flogged by her orders at such a
time, for her mother, although herself an easy mistress, seldom interfered
with her caprices, and all that she did was good in the eyes of her
father.</p>
<p>At the end of the week Flavia told Malchus that the negotiations for his
release had been broken off, the Roman senate remaining inflexible in the
resolve that Romans who surrendered to the enemy should not be exchanged.
Malchus was much disappointed, as it had seemed that the time of his
release was near; however, he had still his former plan of escape to fall
back upon.</p>
<p>A day or two later Julia sent a slave with a message to Sempronius, and in
the afternoon sallied out with a confidential attendant, who always
accompanied her when she went abroad. In the Forum she met Sempronius, who
saluted her.</p>
<p>“Sempronius,” she said coming at once to the purpose, “will you do me a
favour?”</p>
<p>“I would do anything to oblige you, Lady Julia, as you know.”</p>
<p>“That is the language of courtesy,” Julia said shortly; “I mean would you
be ready to run some risk?”</p>
<p>“Certainly,” Sempronius answered readily.</p>
<p>“You will do it the more readily, perhaps,” Julia said, “inasmuch as it
will gratify your revenge. You have reason to hate Malchus, the
Carthaginian slave.”</p>
<p>Sempronius nodded.</p>
<p>“Your suspicion was true, he loves the Gaulish slave; they have been
questioned and have confessed it. I want them separated.”</p>
<p>“But how?” Sempronius asked, rejoicing inwardly at finding that Julia's
wishes agreed so nearly with his own.</p>
<p>“I want her carried off,” Julia said shortly. “When once you have got her
you can do with her as you will; make her your slave, kill her, do as you
like with her, that is nothing to me—all I want is that she shall
go. I suppose you have some place where you could take her?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Sempronius said, “I have a small estate among the Alban Hills where
she would be safe enough from searchers; but how to get her there? She
never goes out except with Lady Flavia.”</p>
<p>“She must be taken from the house,” Julia said shortly; “pretty slaves
have been carried off before now, and no suspicion need light upon you.
You might find some place in the city to hide her for a few days, and then
boldly carry her through the gates in a litter. None will think of
questioning you.”</p>
<p>“The wrath of Lady Flavia would be terrible,” Sempronius said doubtfully.</p>
<p>“My mother would be furious at first,” Julia said coldly; “but get her a
new plaything, a monkey or a Numidian slave boy, and she will soon forget
all about the matter.”</p>
<p>“But how do you propose it should be done?” Sempronius asked.</p>
<p>“My slave shall withdraw all the bolts of the back entrance to the house,”
Julia said; “do you be there at two in the morning, when all will be sound
asleep; bring with you a couple of barefooted slaves. My woman will be at
the door and will guide you to the chamber where the girl sleeps; you have
only to gag her and carry her quietly off.”</p>
<p>Sempronius stood for a moment in doubt. The enterprise was certainly
feasible. Wild adventures of this kind were not uncommon among the
dissolute young Romans, and Sempronius saw at once that were he detected
Julia's influence would prevent her mother taking the matter up hotly.
Julia guessed his thoughts.</p>
<p>“If you are found out,” she said, “I will take the blame upon myself, and
tell my mother that you were acting solely at my request.”</p>
<p>“I will do it, Julia,” he agreed; “tonight at two o'clock I will be at the
back door with two slaves whom I can trust. I will have a place prepared
to which I can take the girl till it is safe to carry her from the city.”</p>
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