"'By order of the crown prince, Rameses, the prisoner, Kenkenes, held for slave-stealing and sacrilege, is sentenced to imprisonment for one year—'"
Hotep lifted his pen, and looked his rebellion.
"Write!" the prince exclaimed. "I do him a kindness, with a lesson added. Were it in my power to free him I would not—till he had learned that the law is inexorable and the power of its ministers supreme. Go on—'at such labor as the prisoner may elect. No further punishment may be added thereto.' Affix my seal and send this without fail. Thou canst write whatever thou wilt to Kenkenes. For the Israelite, I shall not concern myself. The nearer friends to Kenkenes may look to her. Mine shall be the care only to see that they are not harassed by the fan-bearer. In this, I fulfil the law. Let Har-hat help himself."
He dropped back on his divan and Hotep slowly collected his writing materials and made ready to depart. Having finished, he lingered a little.
"A word further, O Rameses. Kenkenes is proud. He would liefer die than suffer the humiliation of public shame. Memphis believes him dead. None but thyself, Har-hat, the noble Mentu and I know of his plight. Har-hat hath no call to tell it. Mentu will not; I shall not. Wilt thou keep his secret also, my Prince?"
"Far be it from me to humiliate him publicly. Let him have a care, hereafter, that he does not humiliate himself."
"I thank thee, O Rameses."
Saluting the prince, Hotep departed.
That night he wrote to Kenkenes and to Mentu, and the two messengers departed ere midnight.