Beulah pulled away to look soberly at her daughter. ‘Achish’s example is one we should all follow. None of us is better than the other, and this match is Achish’s way of signalling that to his own community as well as to ours. He foresees a time when Israelites pay the same taxes as Philistines, when families can eat and shop together. When we’re equals.’
Delilah bit back the easy retort that Hemin’s equal could only be found in Lotan, the God of Destruction. She seriously doubted that one marriage would sow the seeds of conciliation, but it was typical of her stepfather’s optimism. ‘Of course, Mother,’ she said.
‘Anyway,’ murmured Beulah, the corners of her mouth twitching into the slyest of smiles, ‘Hemin should be grateful for this match, for Samson is apparently quite without equal in one particular area.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Well, I think it’s Hemin who will have to pray to Qadeshtu, for Samson is clearly one of her most gifted disciples already.’
‘Mother!’ squealed Delilah. ‘How do you know such things?’
‘Samson’s reputation goes far and wide—’ Beulah smirked. ‘Perhaps that’s not quite the right way to put it.’
Delilah began to giggle, and soon mother and daughter were laughing together.
On the floor above, a shutter opened and Ekron peered out into the courtyard. ‘What’s going on down there? I’m trying to study – Oh, Lilah, it’s you.’
Delilah wiped her eyes with the corner of her shawl and pressed her hand on her ribs to calm her breathing. ‘We just got back from shopping.’
‘Did you manage to choose a dress for the betrothal ceremony?’
‘Two, actually,’ she said breezily. ‘Would you like to see them?’
Ekron leaned further out through the window. ‘You’ll try them on for me?’
‘I suppose so.’
‘I’m coming down. Meet me in the hall.’
Delilah shrugged at him but Ekron had already disappeared from the window and she could hear his bare feet on the rush matting upstairs.
‘You should be careful of Ekron’s feelings,’ said her mother.
‘A second opinion will be useful!’ Delilah replied.
‘You have never needed anyone else’s opinion. Besides, you know that you look beautiful in both dresses. And Ekron will surely tell you so.’
Delilah ignored the awkward implications of her mother’s words and led her into the hallway. The housegirl had left the packages in two neat piles on a table by the stairs and Delilah picked through them, discarding rolls of napkins for the betrothal, and another parcel that they had collected for Ariadnh from the cloth merchant. The betrothal ceremony was to take place a full month before the wedding, as was the Philistine custom. Convenient as well, Delilah thought, in case either party wanted to back out.
Ekron stopped halfway down the stairs and sank down onto a step, his head level with Delilah’s.
‘Did you have fun, Lilah?’
‘I wish you wouldn’t call me that.’
Ekron rolled his eyes. ‘De-lilah.’
‘As it happens, I did. They have some very beautiful fabrics in town, sailed in from all ports on the Great Sea. Even fancy Phicol would find something to please his vain old head.’
‘Don’t let him hear you call him that,’ said Ekron. ‘Besides, if you want me to call you Delilah, then you should call my employer by his proper title too.’
‘Fancy Lord Phicol, Grand Ruler of the Philistine City of Ashkelon?’
‘Lilah!’
Delilah grinned at Ekron and began untying each of the packages. Nominally Phicol was merely the chief of the Philistine lords who administered the city and its immediate vicinity, but over the past years his personal estate seemed to have expanded, with an ever greater retinue of servants. An outsider might think he fancied himself as a king rather than a governor.
From the first package, Delilah pulled out a shift of coarse linen in a vivid burnt orange, which the merchant explained had been coloured with a mixture of red and yellow madder roots imported from a land far to the west. The dress was designed to lie flatteringly low across the shoulders and beneath the neck, but the fabric was still stiff with newness. Three or four careful washes with the launder stone would soften it. She pulled the straps of her own tunic off her shoulders, leaving them bare, and held the dress against her body, turning to the mirror stone in the hallway. Her skin had lost the deep brown of her youth, when she’d spent most of her time in the fields, and now glowed like rich honey. The material worked well against it, and Delilah scooped her long dark hair back over her shoulder. Her tunic slipped a little further down her chest, but Delilah rescued her modesty.
Behind her, she saw Ekron blush and shift on the stair. ‘You will look like the falling sun in that,’ he said.
She pouted at herself: her face had become thinner these last few years, and she’d lost the dimples in her cheeks. But now her cheekbones were more defined too, angling sharply beneath the dark pools of her eyes.
‘Does that mean you like it?’
Ekron swallowed. ‘It’s beautiful.’
Out of the corner of her eye, Delilah could see Beulah shake her head, so she covered her shoulders again and busied herself unwrapping the second dress. This was of a much finer linen, in a beautiful deep purple, and cut more plainly at the neck. It would need a belt to accentuate her waist, but its skirt was a little longer and fuller than the orange dress. The seller had rattled on about how fashionable the colour was in Egypt, and how the Pharaoh’s wife had adorned the neck of a very similar dress with a collar of amethysts. From the moment she stepped into it, Delilah had thought it the loveliest thing she’d ever seen. Even now, she wanted to press it against her face as if breathing it in would somehow make her more beautiful too. She was just about to show it off for Ekron’s benefit when she heard the unmistakeably angry slap of sandals crossing the courtyard.
‘Oh, it’s you,’ said Hemin, entering the hallway. The path to womanhood had been generous to Hemin, softening her mean little face with curved cheeks and a neat snub nose. Sadly it had done nothing for the sharpness of her tongue. ‘I thought it was the housegirl. Did you collect Ariadnh’s things?’
‘It’s one of these on the floor.’ Delilah kicked lightly at the packages, then danced back a step or two as Hemin tried to reach for the skirt of the purple dress.
‘What in the name of Anat do you think you are doing with something that colour?’
‘Oh, but isn’t it beautiful, Hemin? I bought it today.’
‘It’s my betrothal ceremony, Delilah. You were told not to buy anything dark in colour because it would distract from my banquet dress.’
‘That plain old blue thing you got last week? Yes, I expect it will.’
‘Shame you wasted so much of my father’s money on it then, because you won’t be allowed to wear it.’
‘I suppose it wouldn’t do to look prettier than the bride, but then that wouldn’t be difficult—’
‘Can’t you two leave it for just a few hours?’ sighed Ekron.