“Coel of Britain, traitor to the Roman people and to thy lord the Emperor, hear thou! In the name of the Senate and People of Rome, I, Constantius the prefect, charge thee to deliver up to them ere this day’s sun shall set, this, their City of Camalodunum, and thine own rebel body as well. Which done they will in mercy pardon the crime of treason to the city, and will work their will and punishment only upon thee—the chief rebel. And if this be not done within the appointed time, then will the walls of this their town of Camalodunum be overthrown, and thou and all thy people be given the certain death of traitors.”
King Coel heard the summons, and some spark of that very patriotism that had inspired and incited his valiant little daughter flamed in his heart. He would have returned an answer of defiance. “I can at least die with my people,” he said, but young Helena interposed.
“Leave this to me, my father,” she said. “As I have been the cause, so let me be the end of trouble. Say to the prefect that in three hours’ time the British envoy will come to his camp with the king’s answer to his summons.”
The old king would have replied otherwise, but his daughter’s entreaties and the counsels of his captains who knew the hopelessness of resistance, forced him to assent, and his herald made answer accordingly.
Constantius the prefect—a manly, pleasant looking young commander, called Chlorus or “the sallow,” from his pale face,—sat in his tent within the Roman camp. The three hours’ grace allowed had scarcely expired when his sentry announced the arrival of the envoy of Coel of Britain.
“Bid him enter,” said the prefect. Then, as the curtains of his tent were drawn aside, the prefect started in surprise, for there before him stood, not the rugged form of a British fighting man, but a fair young girl, who bent her graceful head in reverent obeisance to the youthful representative of the Imperial Caesars.
“What would’st thou with me, maiden?” asked the prefect.
“I am the daughter of Coel of Britain,” said the girl, “and I am come to sue for pardon and for peace.”
“The Roman people have no quarrel with the girls of Britain,” said the prefect. “Hath then King Coel fallen so low in state that a maiden must plead for him?”
“He hath not fallen at all, O Prefect,” replied the girl proudly; “the king, my father, would withstand thy force but that I, his daughter, know the cause of this unequal strife, and seek to make terms with the victors.”