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He wild bull froze, staring at young Ramses. The animal was huge and dark, with legs thick as pil- lars, drooping ears, and a stiff, pointed beard. It had just sensed the young man’s presence. Ramses was fascinated by its horns, broad and almost joined at the base, then flaring out and upward in a helmet shape, tipped with two lethal points. In all his fourteen years, Ramses had never seen such an enormous bull. Even the abl est hunter s st eere d c lear of this particula r bre ed. Calm i n his o wn surround ings, pr otecti ve of the sic k and wounded, a watchful parent, the dominant male trans- formed into a terrifying warrior as soon as his territory was invaded.

The slightest provocation could send him charging furiously and with amazing speed, retreating only when his opponent was trampled. Ramses took a step backward. The bull’s tail whipped the air as he kept a fierce eye on this intruder into his marshy domain. By the tall reeds, a co w was calving, her sisters in a ring around her. Handbook Of Solid Phase Microextraction Pdf.

In this soli. Tary bac kw ater of the Nile, the hug e male r eigned o ver hi s herd and permitted no challenge to his authority. The young man had hoped the thick grass would hide him, but the bull’s brown eyes, deep in their sockets, were trained on him. Ramses knew there would be no escape.

Ashen, he turned slowly toward his father. Seti, Phara oh of Egypt, stood a f ew f eet be hind h is son. “V ictorious Bull, ” they called him: his mere pr esence w as said to paralyze his enemies. His mind, sharp as a falcon’s beak, perceived all; there was nothing he did not know. Slender, stern-faced, with a high for ehead, hooked nose, jut- ting cheekbones, Seti was authority incarnate.

Worshiped and feared, the monarch had restored Egypt to her former glory. Ramses had just met his father for the first time.

Until no w, he had been i n the car e of ro yal g uar dians, who taught him all a king’s son must know in preparation for a high government position. But this morning Seti had pulled the boy away from his hieroglyph class and driven him deep into the country.

Not a word had yet passed between them. When the vegetation grew too dense, the two had aban- doned their two-horse chariot and waded into the tall g rass.

Once c lear, they had ent ered the r ealm of the b ull. Which was more frightening, the wild beast or Pharaoh? Ramses felt unequal to the power that emanated from each of them.

In leg end, th e bul l w as a ce lestia l ani mal, b urning with the f ire of the other w orld, and Pharaoh w alk ed among the gods. Though Ramses was taller than most grown men and naturally courageous, still he felt trapped between two almost conspiring forces. “He spotted me, ” the bo y said, trying to sound assured. The first word his father spoke to him rang like a death sentence. “He’s so big, he...” “And you, who are you?” The question t hrew R amses off guar d.

The bull pa w ed the ground with his left front hoof, faster and faster; egrets and her ons flew off, a s if clea ring t he batt lef ield. “ Are you a co war d or a kin g’ s son? ” Seti’ s gaze pie rced his soul.

“I like to fight, but...” “ A cour age ous man g oes t o the lim it of his str ength. A king g oes bey ond it. If that is not i n yo u, y ou ar e not meant to rule and we will never see each other again. No test should dau nt you. Lea ve, if y ou wish; otherw ise, captu re the bull.” Ramses dared to raise his eyes and hold his father’s gaze.

“You’re sending me to my death.” “My o wn father told me, ‘T ake f or yourself the pow er of a bull, forever young, with a stout heart and sharp horns, str ong er th an an y ene m y. ’ Ram ses, y ou ca me ou t of y our mother’s womb like a bull calf. You must become the light of your people, shining lik e the sun. Y ou wer e hidden in my hand like a star; today I am setting you free. To shine—or to vanish.” The bu ll snorted, irrita ted b y the sound of their voic es. All around them, a hush fell over the countryside; from burrower to bird in flight, every creature sensed conflict brewing.