"Out with it," he said. "Within the four walls of my world I hear naught but the clink of mallet and falling stone."
"The breach between Meneptah and Amon-meses, his mutinous brother, may be healed by a wedding."
"So?"
"Of a surety—nay, and not of a surety, either, but mayhap. A match between the niece of Amon-meses, the Princess Ta-user, and the heir, Rameses."
Kenkenes sat up again in his earnestness. "Nay," he exclaimed. "Never!"
"Wherefore, I pray thee?" Hotep asked with a deprecating smile.
"There is no mating between the lion and the eagle; the stag and the asp!
They could not love."
"Thou dreamy idealist!" Hotep laughed. "The half of great marriages are moves of strategy, attended more by Set[1] than Athor.[2] Ta-user is mad for the crown, Rameses for undisputed power. Each has one of these two desirable things to give the other."
"And how shall they appease Athor?" Kenkenes demanded warmly. "Ta-user loves Siptah, the son of Amon-meses, and Rameses will crown whom he loves though he had a thousand other crown-loving, treaty-dowered wives!"
Hotep smiled. "I thought the four walls of thy world hedged thee, but it seems thou art right well acquainted with royalty."