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The Yoke - A Romance of the Days when the Lord Redeemed the Children of Israel from the Bondage of Egypt by Elizabeth Miller
page 120 of 656 (18%)
the message that Kenkenes had brought to Snofru. While Atsu undid the
roll the old servant made voluble apologies for the broken seal. The
commander stepped to the doorway for better light and read the writing.

The old servant back in the dusk of the interior saw the stern face
harden, the heavy brows knit blackly, the dusky red fade from the
cheek. Ranas knew what the soldier read, for he had had the roll with
its broken seal, from On to Memphis and from Memphis back to On again.
But with all his astuteness he could not have guessed what extremes of
wrath and grief the insulted taskmaster suffered. The sheet rolled
itself together again and was broken and crushed in the iron fingers
that gripped it. Presently he tossed it aside. Hardly had it left his
hand before he hastened to pick it up, straightened it out and re-read
it feverishly. He forgot the old servant; but had he remembered the
man's curious gaze, no resolution could have hidden that joy which
slowly wrote itself upon his face. There was balm in the barb for all
the wound it made. This is what he read:


"To Atsu, Commander over the Builders of Pa-Ramesu, These: To mine ears
hath come report of mutiny and idleness through thy weak government of
my bond-people. Also that thou hast enforced my commands but feebly,
and so defeated my purposes, which were my sire's, after whose
illustrious example I reign.

"For these and kindred inefficiencies art thou removed from the
government over Pa-Ramesu.

"I hereby bestow upon thee another office within the limits of thy
capacity. Thou wilt take up the flagellum over Masaarah when thou hast
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