Oh! Since that was the last time I saw her, let, oh, let me tell you

of Antinea, how she looked in that supreme moment.

Did she feel the danger hovering over her and did she wish to brave it

by her surest artifices? I had in mind the slender; unadorned body,

without rings, without jewels, which I had pressed to my heart the

night before. And now I started in surprise at seeing before me,

adorned like an idol, not a woman, but a queen!

The heavy splendor of the Pharaohs weighted down her slender body. On

her head was the great gold pschent of Egyptian gods and kings;

emeralds, the national stone of the Tuareg, were set in it, tracing

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and retracing her name in Tifinar characters. A red satin schenti,

embroidered in golden lotus, enveloped her like the casket of a jewel.

At her feet, lay an ebony scepter, headed with a trident. Her bare

arms were encircled by two serpents whose fangs touched her armpits as

if to bury themselves there. From the ear pieces of the pschent

streamed a necklace of emeralds; its first strand passed under her

determined chin; the others lay in circles against her bare throat.

She smiled as I entered.

"I was expecting you," she said simply.

I advanced till I was four steps from the throne, then stopped before

her.

She looked at me ironically.

"What is that?" she asked with perfect calm.

I followed her gesture. The handle of the dagger protruded from my

pocket.

I drew it out and held it firmly in my hand, ready to strike.

"The first of you who moves will be sent naked six leagues into the

red desert and left there to die," said Antinea coldly to her women,

whom my gesture had thrown into a frightened murmuring.

She turned to me.

"That dagger is very ugly and you hold it badly. Shall I send Sydya to

my room to get the silver hammer? You are more adroit with it than

with the dagger."

"Antinea," I said in a low voice, "I am going to kill you."

"Do not speak so formally. You were more affectionate last night. Are

you embarrassed by them?" she said, pointing to the women, whose eyes

were wide with terror.

"Kill me?" she went on. "You are hardly reasonable. Kill me at the

moment when you can reap the fruits of the murder of...."

"Did--did he suffer?" I asked suddenly, trembling.

"Very little. I told you that you used the hammer as if you had done

nothing else all your life."

"Like little Kaine," I murmured.




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