have given the cup to the old man."
"No," replied Keraunus, "business is business, but by and bye I will
repay him tenfold for all he does for you now, by giving him my painting
by Apelles. And Julia shall have the pair of sandal-straps set with
cut-gems that came off a sandal of Cleopatra's."
Arsinoe looked down, for she knew what these treasures were worth, and
said:
"We can consider all that later."
Then she and her father got into the litters that had been waiting for
them, and without which Keraunus thought he could no longer exist, and
they were carried to the garden of Pudeus' widow.
Their visit came to interrupt Selene's blissful dreams. Keraunus
behaved with icy coldness to dame Hannah, for it afforded him a certain
satisfaction to make a display of contempt for every thing Christian.
When he expressed his regret that Selene should have been obliged to
remain in her house, the widow replied:
"She is better here than in the street, at any rate." And when Keraunus
went on to say that he would take nothing as a gift and would pay her
for her care of his daughter, Hannah answered:
"We are happy to do all we can for your child, and Another will reward
us."
"That I certainly forbid," exclaimed the steward wrathfully.
"We do not understand each other," said the Christian pleasantly. "I do
not allude to any mortal being, and the reward we work for is not gold
and possessions, but the happy consciousness of having mitigated the
sufferings of a fellow-creature."
Keraunus shrugged his shoulders, and after desiring Selene to ask the
physician when she might be taken home, he went away.
"I will not leave you here an instant longer than is necessary," he said
as urgently as though she were in some infected house; he kissed her
forehead, bowed to Hannah as loftily as though he had just bestowed an
alms upon her, and departed, without listening to Selene's assurances
that she was extremely happy and comfortable with the widow.
The ground had long burnt under his feet, and the money in his pocket,
he was now possessed of ample means to acquire a good new slave,
perhaps, if he threw old Sebek into the bargain, they might even suffice
to procure him a handsome Greek, who might teach the children to
read and write. He could direct his first attention to the external
appearance of the new member of his household, if he were a scholar
as well, he would feel justified in the high price he expected to be
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