BOOK THE FOURTH
6. Chapter VI
(continued)
At this the bystanders reverently laid the corpse of Apaecides on the
ground, with the face upwards; and some of them went in search of some
contrivance to bear the body, untouched by the profane.
It was just at that time that the crowd gave way to right and left as a
sturdy form forced itself through, and Olinthus the Christian stood
immediately confronting the Egyptian. But his eyes, at first, only rested
with inexpressible grief and horror on that gory side and upturned face, on
which the agony of violent death yet lingered.
'Murdered!' he said. 'Is it thy zeal that has brought thee to this? Have
they detected thy noble purpose, and by death prevented their own shame?'
He turned his head abruptly, and his eyes fell full on the solemn features
of the Egyptian.
As he looked, you might see in his face, and even the slight shiver of his
frame, the repugnance and aversion which the Christian felt for one whom he
knew to be so dangerous and so criminal. It was indeed the gaze of the bird
upon the basilisk--so silent was it and so prolonged. But shaking off the
sudden chill that had crept over him, Olinthus extended his right arm
towards Arbaces, and said, in a deep and loud voice:
'Murder hath been done upon this corpse! Where is the murderer? Stand
forth, Egyptian! For, as the Lord liveth, I believe thou art the man!'
An anxious and perturbed change might for one moment be detected on the
dusky features of Arbaces; but it gave way to the frowning expression of
indignation and scorn, as, awed and arrested by the suddenness and vehemence
of the charge, the spectators pressed nearer and nearer upon the two more
prominent actors.
'I know,' said Arbaces, proudly, 'who is my accuser, and I guess wherefore
he thus arraigns me. Men and citizens, know this man for the most bitter of
the Nazarenes, if that or Christians be their proper name! What marvel that
in his malignity he dares accuse even an Egyptian of the murder of a priest
of Egypt!'
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