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Historic Girls by Elbridge Streeter Brooks
page 15 of 178 (08%)

Forgotten it? Not he. And then he told Bath Zabbai how in all his
wanderings he had kept their vow in mind, and with that, too, her
other words of counsel, "Watch and Wait." He told her that, far
and wide, he was known to all the Arabs of the desert and the
Armenians of the hills, and how, from sheikh to camel-boy, the
tribes were ready to join with Palmyra against both Rome and
Persia.

"Your time will indeed come, my Odhainat," said the fearless
girl, with proud looks and ringing voice. "See, even thus our
omen gives the proof," and she pointed to the net, beneath whose
meshes both eagle and lion, fluttering and panting, lay wearied
with their struggles, while the cheetah kept watch above them.
"Now make your peace with Hairan, your brother; return to Palmyra
once again, and still let us watch and wait."

Three more years passed. Valerian, Emperor of Rome, leading his
legions to war with Sapor, whom men called the "Great King," had
fallen a victim to the treachery and traps of the Persian
monarch, and was held a miserable prisoner in the Persian
capital, where, richly robed in the purple of the Roman emperors
and loaded with chains, he was used by the savage Persian tyrant
as a living horse-block for the sport of an equally savage court.
In Palmyra, Hairan was dead, and young Odhainat, his brother, was
now Septimus Odaenathus--"headman" of the city and to all
appearances the firm friend of Rome.

There were great rejoicings in Palmyra when the wise
Zenobia--still scarce more than a girl--and the fearless young
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